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Dickson first lived on the Fayetteville square before buying a 20-acre (8.1 ha) parcel on the north edge of town, moving himself and his wife to present day Dickson Street. The American Civil War forced the Dicksons to flee to Texas, and their home was used as a field hospital during the Battle of Fayetteville.
Roughly bounded by Garland Ave., Maple St., Arkansas Ave., and Dickson St. 36°04′06″N 94°10′19″W / 36.0682°N 94.1720°W / 36.0682; -94.1720 ( University of Arkansas Campus Historic
Dickson_Street_(Fayetteville,_Arkansas_-_2006).jpg (800 × 600 pixels, file size: 141 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
Fayetteville Confederate Cemetery; Fayetteville Fire Department Fire Station 1; Fayetteville Fire Department Fire Station 3; Fayetteville Historic Square; Fayetteville National Cemetery; Fayetteville station (St. Louis–San Francisco Railway) Fayetteville Veterans Administration Hospital; Vernon Fitzhugh House; Adrian Fletcher Residence
Dickson Street, Commercial Historic District a few blocks from the Fayetteville Square; Washington County Courthouse, built in 1905 very close to the Fayetteville Square; Old Washington County Jail, built in 1896 one block from the Fayetteville Square; Maxine's Tap Room, located north of the square on Block Avenue
After Sears, once considered an anchor store at Cross Creek Mall, shut its doors in Fayetteville in 2019 and the building was razed a year later, the newly opened space allowed for the development ...