Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Frog Bayou Bridge is a historic bridge in Crawford County, Arkansas, just south of Mountainburg. It is a single-span steel Parker through truss, which formerly carried Arkansas Highway 282 across Frog Bayou, a tributary of the Arkansas River. The bridge is now closed to traffic, and is located at the southern end of Silver Bridge Road.
Arkansas & Missouri tourist railroad 35°25′58″N 94°21′53″W / 35.432806°N 94.364721°W / 35.432806; -94.364721 ( Arkansas & Missouri tourist railroad Arkansas RiverBridge Arkansas - Oklahoma
St. Francis River Bridge: Extant Swing span: 1933 1988 US 70: St. Francis River: Forrest City: St. Francis: AR-21: White River Bridge: Demolished Vertical-lift bridge: 1924 1988 US 70: White River: De Valls Bluff: Prairie
Frogmore Cottage was divided into five separate housing units in the early 21 st century and was occupied by Windsor estate workers. In 2019, Harry and Meghan renovated it prior to the birth of ...
While Congress approved the Arkansas River Compact in 1949, [14] the compact did not stop further disputes by the two states over water rights to the river. The Kansas–Oklahoma Arkansas River Basin Compact was created in 1965 to promote mutual consideration and equity over water use in the basin shared by those states.
Dalton, Arkansas: 1833 Residences Squared log house Old State House (Little Rock, Arkansas) Little Rock, Arkansas: 1833–1842 Government The oldest surviving state capitol building west of the Mississippi River. [4] Methodist Manse: Cane Hill, Arkansas: 1834 Church/ Residence Disputed by recent evidence [5] Tom Smith House: Washington County ...
The people who built the mounds at Plum Bayou Mounds had a culture distinct from other contemporary Native American groups in the Mississippi Valley. Plum Bayou sites are found throughout the White River and Arkansas River floodplains of central and eastern Arkansas, but are also found as far west as the eastern Ozark Mountains. Plum Bayou ...
Frogmore Mound Site is an archaeological site of the Late Coles Creek culture in Concordia Parish, Louisiana. The site is located 7 miles (11 km) west of Ferriday on US 84 . [ 3 ] It was added to the National Register of Historic Places on July 28, 2004.