Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
AR 109 Arkansas Longest Bridge Morrison Bluff 35°24′40″N 93°31′55″W / 35.411221°N 93.532038°W / 35.411221; -93.532038 ( Morrison Bluff
Ouachita River Bridge: 1930 removed 1999-08-11 Calion: Union: Parker through truss: Pulaski County Road 67D Bridge: 1939 removed 2000-07-20 Jacksonville: Pulaski: Open masonry Pulaski County Road 71D Bridge: 1939 removed 2002-01-14 Jacksonville: Pulaski: Open masonry Red River Bridge: 1931 removed 1999-08-11 Garland City: Miller: Pennsylvania ...
The Fourche LaFave River Bridge carries Arkansas Highway 7 across the Fourche LaFave River in western Perry County, Arkansas, downstream of the Nimrod Dam.It is a three-span open spandrel concrete arch bridge, with its longest span measuring 184 feet (56 m), and its total length 518 feet (158 m).
One of the most famous feature on the route is the Morrison Bluff Bridge, also known as the Ada Mills Bridge, over the Arkansas River. This 1.6-mile (2.6 km) bridge claims to be the longest over the Arkansas River and also the longest bridge in Arkansas. [1] However, it is shorter than two current Mississippi River bridges partially located in ...
The park offers fishing, boating and hiking in addition to an Arkansas Welcome Center and restored 1886 Kansas City, Fort Scott and Memphis Railroad (later the St. Louis–San Francisco Railway or "Frisco") depot operating as a railroad museum. [2] The site became a state park in 1957, but the park continued to add area until 1975. [1]
The Fourche La Fave River (pronounced "Foosh (like push but with an f-sound) Luh Fave"; shown as Fourche LaFave River on federal maps [2]) is a tributary of the Arkansas River, approximately 151 miles (243 km) long, [3] in western Arkansas in the United States. It drains part of the northern Ouachita Mountains west of Little Rock.
The South Fourche LaFave River Bridge is a historic bridge in rural western Perry County, Arkansas. It is a two-span Parker pony truss bridge, carrying Arkansas Highway 7 across the South Fourche La Fave River, roughly midway between Ola and Jessieville in the eastern reaches of Ouachita National Forest. The bridge was built in 1933, and has a ...
As a pedestrian bridge, it is lit with hundreds of colored lights at night. Renovation work on the Clinton Presidential Park Bridge began in May 2010. [3] The railroad bridge, originally constructed in 1899 as the Rock Island Bridge, [4] is the eastern pedestrian and bicycle connection for the River Trail.