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Name Image Built Listed Location County Type Amboy Overpass: 1941 1995-05-18 North Little Rock: Pulaski: AR 7/AR 51 Bridge: 1933 2006-02-01 Arkadelphia
St. Francis River Bridge: Extant Swing span: 1933 1988 US 70: St. Francis River: Forrest City: St. Francis: AR-21: White River Bridge: Demolished Vertical-lift bridge: 1924 1988 US 70: White River: De Valls Bluff: Prairie
This is a list of bridges and other crossings of the Arkansas River starting from the mouth at the Mississippi River upstream to its source in Colorado. This transport-related list is incomplete ; you can help by adding missing items .
St. Francis River Bridge (Lake City, Arkansas) St. Francis River Bridge (Madison, Arkansas) Sanitarium Lake Bridges Historic District; Sebastian County Road 4G Bridge; Self Creek Bridge; Short Mountain Creek Bridge; South Fork Bridge; South Fourche LaFave River Bridge; Spring Lake Bridge; Spring River Bridge; Springfield Bridge; St. Louis-San ...
There are four of these in Arkansas. The National Park Service lists these four together with the NHLs in the state, [6] The Arkansas Post National Memorial, the Fort Smith National Historic Site (shared with Oklahoma) and the Little Rock Central High School National Historic Site are also NHLs and are listed above. The remaining one is:
Marr's Creek Bridge NRHP 07001433 Randolph County, AR. The Marr's Creek Bridge is a historic bridge spanning Marr's Creek in Pocahontas, Arkansas.The concrete open spandrel deck arch bridge formerly carried U.S. Route 67 (US 67), which now passes over the creek on an adjacent modern steel and concrete structure.
The Coon Creek Bridge is a historic bridge in rural western Benton County, Arkansas. The bridge carries County Road 24 (Coon Hollow Road) across Coon Creek between Decatur and the Oklahoma state line. It is a single-span Warren pony truss bridge, with a span of 57 feet (17 m), that rests on concrete abutments.
The Newport Bridge is a historic cantilevered Warren truss bridge over the White River in Newport, Arkansas. Built in 1930 to carry U.S. Route 67 (US 67), the road it carries is now designated Arkansas Highway 367 (AR 367) after the former highway was relocated. The main bridge is 400 feet (120 m) long, with approaches from the west of 1,278 ...