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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 ...
SH 89 Bridge SH 89: Prowers County: US 385 Bridge US 385: Main Street Bridge US 50 / US 287 (Main Street) : Lamar: Bent Avenue Bridge US 50 (Bent Avenue) : Las Animas: Adams Avenue, Main Street Bridge
The bridge carries Old Highway 109 across the Petit Jean River between Sugar Grove and Magazine. It consists of a single-span steel Pratt through truss and two masonry approach spans, set on concrete piers in the river. The total structure length is 273 feet (83 m), with a roadway width of 19 feet (5.8 m) and a total width of 24 feet (7.3 m ...
Highway 109 is a 44-mile-long (71 km) highway in western Arkansas. It runs from the Ouachita Mountains to the Arkansas River Valley in Logan and Johnson counties. There are no spur routes associated with this highway. Mount Magazine can be seen to the east on the southern portion of the route. It can also be seen south of the Highway 22 portion ...
The Petit Jean River is a 113-mile (182 km) river in west-central Arkansas.The river rises in the Ouachita Mountains in northern Scott County; it flows through Logan County and Yell County, defining the border between Yell County and Conway County before reaching its mouth at the Arkansas River north of Petit Jean State Park.
It comprises the Boxley Valley in northern Arkansas, near the town of Ponca. The valley includes a number of family-operated farms, primarily dating between 1870 and 1930. The farms are situated on either side of the road that parallels the river, Highway 43. Many of these farms are still operated by the descendants of the original homesteaders.
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]
Buffalo River State Park was an Arkansas state park, established in 1938, that was absorbed into Buffalo National River when the Federal park was established in 1972 ...