Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The district formerly included the Arkansas Building, a structure built in St. Louis Missouri for the 1904 World's Fair. Fayetteville businessman Artemus Wolf purchased the structure, had it disassembled, marked, shipped and rebuilt on his property in the Mont Nord Addition in 1905. [ 5 ]
Headquarters House, located at 118 East Dickson Street, is a historic house within the Washington–Willow Historic District in Fayetteville, Arkansas.The most historically significant structure in the city, it was built in 1853 and used as a base of operations for both the Union and Confederate States of America at different periods during the American Civil War.
Location of Washington County in Arkansas. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Washington County, Arkansas.. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Washington County, Arkansas, United States.
The Wilson Park Historic District (sometimes Rock House Historic District) is a historic district in Fayetteville, Arkansas, USA, located just northeast of the University of Arkansas. The district consists of several residential buildings that developed during the late 19th and early 20th Century near Wilson Park just north of Dickson Street ...
The Fayetteville Historic Square (usually shortened to Fayetteville Square or just The Square), in Fayetteville, Arkansas, includes the original Fayetteville post office, the Old Bank of Fayetteville Building, the Lewis Brothers Building, the Mrs. Young Building, and the Guisinger Building.
The West Dickson Street Commercial Historic District, known as Dickson Street (historically spelled incorrectly as Dixon Street), is an area in downtown Fayetteville, Arkansas just off the University of Arkansas campus. It is lined with multiple bars, restaurants, and shops unique to the area.
The Meadow Spring Historic District encompasses a predominantly residential area north and west of the traditional center of Fayetteville, Arkansas.It covers an area of 22.5 acres (9.1 ha), and about 11 city blocks, roughly bounded by NW, School, Locust & Church Avenues. between W Dickson and W Mountain Streets.
Fayetteville Washington c.1867-1963 12/3/2014 Oark General Store East of Highway 215 Oark Johnson 1890 3/3/1995 Old Kia Kima 26 Kolo Drive Cherokee Village Sharp 1916 4/1/2015 Palace Theatre 224 West South Street Benton Saline 1919 8/6/2014 Pea Ridge School Complex Historic District 1507 N. Curtis St. Pea Ridge Benton 1929, 1948 4/7/2004