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The name Park Hills was submitted by Mildred Lee, a lifelong resident and a former teacher of Flat River. The inspiration came from its hilly terrain in the foothills of the Ozark Mountains and the many parks that surround the area. Park Hills is located 7 miles northwest of Farmington, Missouri and approximately 65 miles south of St. Louis.
Missouri Mines State Historic Site occupies Federal Mill No. 3 in Park Hills, Missouri, United States, which processed the lead and zinc ore that was mined in the immediate area for many decades. The site's old power building features a geological and mining history museum and interpretive center focusing on the state's historic Old Lead Belt .
St. Joe State Park is a public recreation area consisting of 8,243 acres (3,336 ha) on the south side of Park Hills, Missouri, along the flanks of the Saint Francois Mountains. [4] The state park includes the Missouri Mines State Historic Site with its former St. Joe Minerals mill buildings and museum of geology and mining. [ 5 ]
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Eugene Field School is a historic school building located at Park Hills, St. Francois County, Missouri. It was built in 1907, and is a two-story, "T"-plan, Late Victorian style red brick school building with an addition completed by 1911. It has a low-pitched hipped roof and sits on a raised concrete foundation. It features arched openings and ...
Route 32 west / US 67 Bus. north – Leadington, Park Hills: Interchange; northern end of Route 32 concurrency; access to Mineral Area College, Missouri Mines State Historic Site, and St. Joe State Park: Koen Creek Turnaround: Interchange: Parkway Drive: Interchange: Desloge: Route 8 west / US 67 Bus. south – Desloge, Park Hills: Interchange ...
Immaculate Conception (Park Hills) 1020 W. Main St.,Park Hills, MO 63601-0066 St. Anne (French Village) 5391 Hwy Y, French Village, MO 63036 [19]
Clark's Hill/Norton State Historic Site is located on the eastern edge of Jefferson City Missouri, United States. [4] The park preserves one of the campsites used by the Lewis and Clark Expedition as well as a lookout point from which William Clark viewed the confluence of the Osage and Missouri rivers.