Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Hot Springs vicinity: Stone retaining wall and outdoor oven built in part by CCC and in part by German POW labor 22: Lawyers' Row Historic District: Lawyers' Row Historic District: September 28, 2015 : 118, 120, 130, 132 W. 2nd St.
Bathhouse Row is a collection of bathhouses, associated buildings, and gardens located at Hot Springs National Park in the city of Hot Springs, Arkansas.The bathhouses were included in 1832 when the Federal Government took over four parcels of land to preserve 47 natural hot springs, their mineral waters which lack the sulphur odor of most hot springs, and their area of origin on the lower ...
Pages in category "National Register of Historic Places in Hot Springs, Arkansas" The following 72 pages are in this category, out of 72 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Hot Springs: 66: Missouri-Pacific Railroad Depot-Hot Springs: Missouri-Pacific Railroad Depot-Hot Springs: June 11, 1992 : Junction of Broadway and Market St. Hot Springs: 67: W. H. Moore House: W. H. Moore House
The following are tallies of current listings in Arkansas on the National Register of Historic Places. These counts are based on entries in the National Register Information Database as of April 24, 2008 [2] and new weekly listings posted since then on the National Register of Historic Places web site. [3]
Hot Springs Garland ca. 1890-1953 9/1/1999 Arthur Daniel Malone House Address Restricted Plumerville Conway c.1883 12/2/2009 Ashley's and Jones' Station Battlefield Beginning near Bayou Two Prairie west of Carlisle and running 10.8 miles along U.S. 70 to Hazen Carlisle Lonoke August 24, 1864 4/1/2009 Barron-Craig House 16484 12th St. Paron Saline
October 9, 1960 (Gillett: Arkansas: Commemorates the first semi-permanent European settlement in the Lower Mississippi Valley (1686); an American Revolutionary War skirmish (1783); the first territorial capital of Arkansas (1819–1821); and the American Civil War Battle of Fort Hindman (1863)
The Quapaw–Prospect Historic District is a predominantly residential historic district on the northwest side of Hot Springs, Arkansas.It covers a roughly nine-block stretch of Quapaw and Prospect Streets, from their junction in the east to Grand Avenue in the west, including properties on streets running between the two.