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Greenbrier is a city in Faulkner County, Arkansas, United States. It is part of the Central Arkansas region. The population was 5,707 at the 2020 census , [ 3 ] up from 4,706 at the 2010 census.
The Titan II ICBM Launch Complex 374-5 Site is a historic military installation in rural Faulkner County, Arkansas. It is located roughly midway between Greenbrier and Conway, on the east side of United States Route 65 about 0.4 miles (0.64 km) north of its junction with East Cadron Ridge Road. It is an underground complex on 10 acres (4.0 ha ...
Woolly Hollow State Park is a 375-acre (152 ha) Arkansas state park in Faulkner County, near Greenbrier, Arkansas in the United States.The park was built and is based on a dam lake, Bennett Lake, built by the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) located at nearby Camp Halsey and Works Progress Administration (WPA) beginning in 1933.
between Norfolk, Arkansas and Mountain Home, Arkansas: 1829 Residence/ Government Building Oldest public building in Arkansas started as a house before becoming a County seat building; Squared log house. [3] Hudson-Grace-Borreson House: Pine Bluff, Arkansas: 1830 Residence Plummer's Station: Conway County, Arkansas: 1830 Residence Block-Catts House
Originally located at the Baxter Cabin near Greenbrier Mountain Farm Museum Meathouse: Just off US-441 Originally located in Cataloochee Mountain Farm Museum Blacksmith Shop: 1900 Just off US-441 Originally located in Cades Cove Mountain Farm Museum Springhouse: Just off US-441 Originally located in Cataloochee Mountain Farm Museum Corncrib ...
Approved in 1987 and completed in 1999, at a cost of $458 million, the alternate route, I-540, eventually renamed I-49, [2] had an obstacle of an unnamed 1,800-foot-tall (550 m) peak just north of the Washington—Crawford county line, in what John Haman of Arkansas Business called "smack in the middle of motoring wilderness."
The Guy–Greenbrier earthquake swarm occurred in central Arkansas beginning in August 2010. [2] The epicenters of earthquakes in the swarm showed a linear distribution, with a clear overall shift in activity towards the southwest with time, [3] and the largest event in the swarm was the 2011 Arkansas earthquake, at 4.7 on the moment magnitude scale.
Reinforced concrete closed-spandrel arch: 1914 2008 CR 86 (Miller Creek Road) Miller Creek Batesville: Independence: TN-14: Memphis Bridge [a] Extant Cantilever: 1892 1985 BNSF Railway: Mississippi River: West Memphis, Arkansas, and Memphis, Tennessee