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The land had been acquired by Hendrix College when it relocated to Conway in the 1890s, and was developed as a way to pay off some of the debts incurred because of the move. It was one of the city's first formally platted subdivisions. [2] The district was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2007. [1]
Arkansas Highway 365 (AR 365 and Hwy. 365) is a north–south state highway in Central Arkansas. The route of 69.31 miles (111.54 km) runs from US 65B / US 79B in Pine Bluff north through Little Rock to US 65B in Conway . [ 2 ]
It expanded service to Conway, Arkansas, on October 24, 2022, marking the city's first modern-day public transit service. [9] In 2024 Metro connect also expanded to Sherwood AR. The service which started in 2020 with one test zone in John Barrow now has 6 service areas covering Little Rock, North Little Rock, Sherwood and Conway.
US 65B passes through the campus of Hendrix College during its Conway routing. U.S. Highway 65 Business (US 65B) is a 4.22-mile (6.79 km) business route of U.S. Route 65 in Faulkner County, Arkansas. [2] The route's northern terminus is at Interstate 40/US 65 in north Conway.
Central Arkansas, the Little Rock–North Little Rock–Conway, AR Metropolitan Statistical Area, is ranked the 76th most populous in the United States with 734,622 people in 2016. [4] Conway is part of the larger Little Rock–North Little Rock, AR Combined Statistical Area , which in 2016 had a population of 905,847, and ranked the country's ...
The following highways are numbered 683: United States. SR 683; MD 683 (former) PR-683; FM 683; ... Contact Wikipedia; Code of Conduct; Developers; Statistics; Cookie ...
Highway 319 (AR 319, Ark. 319, and Hwy. 319) is a designation for two state highways in central Arkansas. The main segment runs 18.01 miles (28.98 km) from AR 38 in Ward to AR 107 south of Vilonia. [1] [2] A short segment runs 1.65 miles (2.66 km) from Cadron Settlement Park to US 64 in Conway. [3]
In 1936, he built his first complete school bus body. One of the first manufacturers of the time to use all-metal construction, the first school bus made by Ward Body Works featured removable safety-glass windows and perimeter and center-mounted seating. [4] In 1939, the company opened a 10,000 square-foot factory in Conway, Arkansas. [4]