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Other notable buildings include the City Hall (1910), Sentinel Building (1867-1871), Clifford Banking Company (c. 1887), La Crosse Lumber Company (1923), Presbyterian Church, Methodist Church (1906), Masonic Temple (1903), and Clarksville Public Library (1910).
Clarksville Island is in the Mississippi east of the Missouri-Illinois state line. [ 8 ] According to the United States Census Bureau , the city has a total area of 0.82 square miles (2.12 km 2 ), of which 0.46 square miles (1.19 km 2 ) is land and 0.36 square miles (0.93 km 2 ) is water.
105 S. 2nd Street, Clarksville, Missouri: ... It is located in the Clarksville Historic District. References This page was last edited on 31 May 2022, at ...
Map of the United States with Missouri highlighted. ... Town and Country: 11,553 ... Clarksville: 376 376 0.00% Pike: 531: Novinger: 376 376
Lock and Dam No. 24 is a lock and dam located near Clarksville, Missouri around river mile 273.4 on the Upper Mississippi River. The main lock is 110 feet (33.5 m) wide and 600 feet (182.9 m) long with its bottom at an elevation of 430 feet. The auxiliary lock is not operational. Normal pool elevation behind the dam is 449 feet.
Missouri Route 340 (also called Clarkson Road or Olive Boulevard) is a Missouri state highway in the St. Louis metropolitan area. Its western terminus is Route 100 (Manchester Road) in Ellisville, and its eastern terminus is at an intersection with Ferguson Avenue and Olive Boulevard in University City.
Charlbury hosts a number of public events each year: the Riverside Music Festival in July which is free to enter, the Wilderness Festival in August, [34] the Charlbury Street Fair in September, which dates back to 1955, [35] and the Charlbury Beer Festival [36] in late June or July, which hosts the Aunt Sally Singles World Championship.
Missouri folklorist Margot Ford McMillen wrote that early settlers were attracted by Clark County's good and inexpensive agricultural land. One section was called "Bit Nation" because land was sold there for just twelve and one-half cents ("one bit" of a Spanish dollar) an acre.