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The Lincoln Riding Club has hosted an annual rodeo since 1953. The three-day event begins with a parade and typically includes bull riding, calf roping, barrel racing, steer wrestling, a beauty pageant, and a street dance. [17] Lincoln is home to the Arkansas Apple Festival, held annually since 1976 during the first weekend of October.
This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Lincoln County, Arkansas, United States. The locations of National Register properties and districts for which the latitude and longitude coordinates are included below, may be seen in a map.
Perry’s Funeral Chapel, known for many years as Rumph Mortuary, is a historic commercial building at 312 West Oak Street in El Dorado, Arkansas.Built in 1927, it is a two-story red brick building, with a three-bay facade topped by a crenellated Gothic parapet.
Little Rock, Arkansas: ca. 1828–1831 Residence/ Tavern Jacob Wolf House: between Norfolk, Arkansas and Mountain Home, Arkansas: 1829 Residence/ Government Building Oldest public building in Arkansas started as a house before becoming a County seat building; Squared log house. [3] Hudson-Grace-Borreson House: Pine Bluff, Arkansas: 1830 Residence
Old Bob or Old Robin (c. 1849 – unknown) was a driving horse used by Abraham Lincoln during the period prior to his presidency of the United States. He later participated in Lincoln's funeral. Old Bob's exact fate and date of death are unknown; he was sold to drayman John Flynn by Lincoln in 1860.
The Bean Cemetery is a historic African American cemetery in Lincoln, Arkansas.It is located on the east side of the city, on the north side of United States Route 62 just west of Meade Avenue, north of a small roadside picnic area that was once part of the property.
On April 25, 1865, the hearse, carrying Lincoln's body, was drawn through the streets of Manhattan en route to New York City Hall.It was accompanied by an "astounding" escort of 160,000 people, including soldiers, sailors, Marines, and dignitaries, in a lumbering and somber procession observed by half-a-million spectators.
Young Lincoln by Charles Keck, Senn Park, Chicago (1945) [44] The Chicago Lincoln, aka Beardless Lincoln, Avard Fairbanks, Chicago, Illinois (1956) Abraham Lincoln by Gilbert A. Franklin, Roger Williams Park in Providence, Rhode Island (1958). This 12-foot bronze is the only monument to Abraham Lincoln in Rhode Island. [45] [46]