Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Queen Wilhelmina State Park is a unit of Arkansas Department of Parks and Tourism in the Ouachita Mountains. The original "Castle in the Sky" lodge was built in 1898 on 2,681-foot Rich Mountain, in Polk County, Arkansas. The park is on Talimena Scenic Drive — northwest of Mena, Arkansas and east of the Oklahoma state line. It is the only ...
[1] [2] Atop its summit is the Rich Mountain Lookout Tower, which is approximately 2.4 mi (3.9 km) east-southeast of the Queen Wilhelmina Lodge. Arkansas State Highway 88 and Oklahoma State Highway 1, collectively known as the Talimena Scenic Drive, traverse the entire top of Rich Mountain and provide excellent vistas of the surrounding ...
East End of Maintenance Ln., Queen Wilhelmina State Park 34°41′06″N 94°21′54″W / 34.6851°N 94.3649°W / 34.6851; -94.3649 ( Heathcliff Mena vicinity
Queen Wilhelmina: Polk: 460 acres (190 ha) 1957: None: Lodge atop Rich Mountain offers 38 guest rooms and is surrounded by forested slopes with creeks, trails, and mountain vistas. Located along the Talimena Scenic Drive. South Arkansas Arboretum: Union
The C. E. Foster House is a historic house on Skyline Drive (Arkansas Highway 88) in Queen Wilhelmina State Park, located in central western Arkansas.It is a rustic stone structure, with two parts connected by a breezeway, located just outside the park entrance on the north side of the highway.
English: Queen Wilhelmina State Park Lodge at Queen Wilhelmina State Park on the Talimena National Scenic Byway in Arkansas (United States). Date 5 November 2016
Highway 272 (AR 272, Ark. 272, and Hwy. 272) is a designation for two east–west state highways in the Ouachita Mountains region of western Arkansas. One segment of 2.06 miles (3.32 km) runs west from U.S. Route 71 Business (US 71B) in Waldron to the Waldron Municipal Airport .
The engine is currently on display in Queen Wilhelmina State Park. [9] The town of Dierks, Arkansas was named for Hans Dierks, the oldest of the four Dierks brothers associated with the company. [10] The city of Broken Bow, Oklahoma started as a private development by a subsidiary of the Choctaw Lumber Company. [11]