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The Hot Spring County Courthouse is located at 210 Locust Street in Malvern, the county seat of Hot Spring County, Arkansas. The Hot Spring County Courthouse is a 2 + 1 ⁄ 2-story frame structure, its exterior clad in brick. It is an H-shaped structure, with slightly projecting end wings and a central connecting section, where the main ...
Hot Springs County 34°21′46″N 92°48′53″W / 34.36278°N 92.81472°W / 34.36278; -92.81472 ( Hot Springs County Courthouse 210 Locust Street
This is a list of current and former courthouses of the United States federal court system located in Arkansas. Each courthouse entry of the United States federal court system indicates the name of the building, placed in a table alongside its depiction (a photo, if available), its location, and the jurisdiction it serves. [ 1 ]
Quorum court chambers of the Desha County Courthouse in Arkansas City, Arkansas. The quorum court is the legislative branch of the county government and controls all spending and revenue collection. Representatives are called justices of the peace and are elected from county districts every even-numbered year. The number of districts in a ...
Hot Spring County is a county located in the U.S. state of Arkansas.As of the 2020 census, the population was 33,040. [2] The county seat is Malvern. [3] Established on November 2, 1829, in the Arkansas Territory from a part of Clark County; it was named after the hot springs at Hot Springs, Arkansas, which were formerly in the county.
The Hot Springs Federal Courthouse is located at 100 Reserve Street in Hot Springs, Arkansas. It is a three-story building, with a steel frame clad in orange brick, with porcelain panels and aluminum-clad windows.
Confederate Governor Henry M. Rector moved his staff and state records to Hot Springs. Union forces did not attack Little Rock, and the government returned to the capital city on July 14, 1862. Many residents of Hot Springs fled to Texas or Louisiana and remained there until the end of the war. In September 1863, Union forces occupied Little Rock.
Izard County and then later from Lawrence County (prior 1850) William S. Fulton (1795–1844), the last Governor of the Arkansas Territory prior to statehood 12,421: 620.32 sq mi (1,607 km 2) Garland County: 051: Hot Springs: Apr 5, 1873: Montgomery, Hot Spring, and Saline counties: Augustus Hill Garland (1832–1899), U.S. Senator and 11th ...