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Gurdon is located in southern Clark County. U.S. Route 67 passes through the city, leading northeast 15 miles (24 km) to Arkadelphia, the county seat, and southwest 16 miles (26 km) to Prescott.
Location of Clark County in Arkansas. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Clark County, Arkansas. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties on the National Register of Historic Places in Clark County, Arkansas, United States. The locations of National Register properties for which the latitude ...
The Hoo Hoo Monument on First Street in Gurdon, Arkansas, is a commemoration of the creation of the International Concatenated Order of the Hoo Hoo, a fraternal society of lumbermen founded in Gurdon in 1892. The granite monument with bronze plaque is located near the site of the Hotel Hall where the Hoo Hoo organization was founded.
The Horace Estes House is a historic house at 614 East Main Street in Gurdon, Arkansas.It is a single-story structure with a wood frame and brick veneer exterior. It was built in 1934, and is the city's best example of Tudor Revival architecture, featuring an irregular plan, multiple gables in the roofline, a tall ornamental chimney, and narrow windows.
The June Sandidge House is a historic house at 811 Cherry Street in Gurdon, Arkansas. It is a single-story wood-frame house with a brick veneer exterior, and represents an excellent and unusual local example of English Revival architecture. The house was built in 1938 by Mr. June Sandidge, an engineer for the Missouri Pacific Railroad.
Note: Unlike most Arkansas counties, Clark County has only one township. That township encompasses the entire county. Townships in Arkansas are the divisions of a county. Each township includes unincorporated areas; some may have incorporated cities or towns within part of their boundaries. Arkansas townships have limited purposes in modern times.
The Missouri-Pacific Railroad Depot-Gurdon is a historic railroad station building at North 1st Street and East Walnut Street in Gurdon, Arkansas. The single-story masonry building was built c. 1917 by the Missouri-Pacific Railroad to house passenger and freight service facilities. It is built in the Mediterranean Renaissance style which was ...
The Concatenated order of Hoo-Hoo was founded on January 21, 1892, at Gurdon, Arkansas. Its six founders were: B. Arthur Johnson, editor of the Timberman of Chicago, Illinois; William Eddy Barns, editor of the St. Louis Lumberman; George Washington Schwartz of Vandalia Railroad, St. Louis, Missouri; A. Strauss of Malvern Lumber Company, Malvern ...