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The following are tallies of current listings in Arkansas on the National Register of Historic Places. These counts are based on entries in the National Register Information Database as of April 24, 2008 [2] and new weekly listings posted since then on the National Register of Historic Places web site. [3]
Lake Chicot State Park is a 211.6 acres (85.6 ha) Arkansas state park in Chicot County, Arkansas within the Arkansas delta. The park is located along Lake Chicot, a 22 miles (35 km) oxbow lake that was formerly the main channel of the Mississippi River. The lake, formerly a polluted eyesore for the area, has been restored to its current ...
Beaver Lake: Large park in the Boston Mountains along Beaver Lake featuring trails, camping, and a shooting range. Jacksonport: Jackson: 164.7 acres (66.7 ha) 1965: Black River and White River: Park containing the 1872 Jacksonport courthouse, preserving the culture and history of a former steamboat river town Jenkins' Ferry Battleground: Grant ...
The Arkansas Timberlands (sometimes also called Southern Arkansas or Southwest Arkansas) is a region of the U.S. state of Arkansas generally encompassing the area south of the Ouachita Mountains, south of Central Arkansas and west of the Arkansas Delta.
Lake/reservoir Region Acreage Hectares Lake Ouachita: Southwest 66,324 [4]: 26,840 Bull Shoals Lake: Northwest 45,440 18,390 Lake Dardanelle: Northwest 34,300
Submerged in Lake Maumelle: Town and Cemetery under water. Located Hwy 10/Hwy 113. Daleville [2] Clark: 1880s: Currently the site of The Daily Lumber Company: Davidsonville: Randolph: Now a historic state park. [12] Denver: Carroll [13] Dodd City: Marion [14] [15] Dubuque: 1814 Submerged Submerged beneath Bull Shoals Lake: East Calico Rock: Izard
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The facilities are organized around a small artificial lake created in 1938 by a crew of the Civilian Conservation Corps by damming the creek. The stone Charlton Dam and Spillway , about 100 feet (30 m) in length, [ 2 ] was listed on the National Register of Historic Places 1993, as was the stone Charlton Bathhouse , also built by the CCC in 1938.