enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Visitors Chapel AME - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visitors_Chapel_AME

    The Visitors Chapel AME is a historic church building at 319 Church Street in Hot Springs, Arkansas.It is a Three story brick building, designed in a distinctive combination of Classical and Gothic Revival styles by J.H. Northington and built in 1913.

  3. Whittington Park Historic District - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whittington_Park_Historic...

    The Whittington Park Historic District encompasses a mainly residential area in northwestern Hot Springs, Arkansas. The district is centered on Whittington Park, a landscaped design of Frederick Law Olmsted built in the 1890s by the National Park Service. The park is lined to the north and south by a neighborhood built out in two phases, 1920 ...

  4. National Register of Historic Places listings in Hot Spring ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Register_of...

    Hot Spring County Courthouse: Hot Spring County Courthouse: November 7, 1996 : 210 Locust St. Malvern: 13: Hot Springs Railroad Roundhouse: Hot Springs Railroad Roundhouse: May 29, 2003 : 132 Front St.

  5. Arkansas Alligator Farm and Petting Zoo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arkansas_Alligator_Farm...

    The Arkansas Alligator Farm and Petting Zoo is a privately owned zoo located on Whittington Avenue in Hot Springs, Arkansas. [2] The farm houses but does not raise alligators and has done so since it was founded in 1902. [3] The farm includes a small museum with a collection of mounted alligators, a souvenir shop but there’s no snack bar.

  6. Blakely House (Social Hill, Arkansas) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blakely_House_(Social_Hill...

    Blakely House is a dogtrot house located on Arkansas Highway 84 in Social Hill, Arkansas. Greenberry Blakely, one of the first settlers of Hot Spring County, built the house in 1874. The two-room log house is representative of Arkansas homes at the time, as dogtrot houses were popular in the state during the late 1800s.

  7. Hell's Half Acre (Hot Springs, Arkansas) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hell's_Half_Acre_(Hot...

    Hell's Half Acre is an area of exposed rocks and boulders in a clearing near Hot Springs, ArkansasIn the 1870s there was a hotel nearby and guests would walk a trail to see the site, often referred to as a "bottomless pit". [1]

  8. Arlington Hotel (Hot Springs National Park) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arlington_Hotel_(Hot...

    The building's huge size, Spanish-Colonial Revival style, and placement at the terminus of the town's most important vista made the building a key Hot Springs landmark. The original site became a park at the north end of Bathhouse Row. [5] In the 1930s, the Arlington Hotel was a favorite vacation spot for Al Capone at room 443. The whole floor ...

  9. Jack Tar Hotel and Bathhouse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jack_Tar_Hotel_and_Bathhouse

    An elevated pedestrian bridge joins the main hotel to the bathhouse, across Oriole Street. The hotel was built in 1950 by Vance Bryan to a design by local architect Irven McDaniel, and is a rare surviving example of a 1950s hotel in Hot Springs. [2] The building now houses a senior living facility known as the Garland Towers.