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Location of Jackson County in Arkansas. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Jackson County, Arkansas. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Jackson County, Arkansas, United States. The locations of National Register properties and ...
Pages in category "Event venues on the National Register of Historic Places in Arkansas" The following 6 pages are in this category, out of 6 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
The Arkansas Bank & Trust Company is a historic commercial building at 103 Walnut Street in Newport, Arkansas.It is a two-story masonry structure, finished in terra cotta on its two street-facing facades, and brick on the others.
Although the lighthouse building is not open to the public, the shoreline and cliff face where the lighthouse sits are accessible by several footpaths from the Castle Hill Inn and the Castle Hill Cove Marina. The lighthouse is a popular site for tourist photos and wedding shoots, and widely recognizable as a symbol of Newport. [5]
The Newport American Legion Community Hut is a historic log meeting hall in Remmel Park, north of Remmel Avenue, in Newport, Arkansas. It is a single-story structure, with a gable roof, and a front porch with a shed roof supported by log columns. The interior has retained all of its exposed log framing.
Newport is a city in and the county seat of Jackson County, Arkansas, United States located on the White River, 84 miles (135 km) northeast of Little Rock. The population was 7,879 at the 2010 census .
Mildred B. Cooper Memorial Chapel is a chapel in Bella Vista, Arkansas, designed by E. Fay Jones and Maurice Jennings and constructed in 1988. [1] The chapel was commissioned by John A. Cooper, Sr. to honor Mildred Borum Cooper, his late wife. [2] The chapel was designed to celebrate both God and his creations. [3]
John Throckmorton was almost certainly baptised in Norwich, county Norfolk, England on 9 May 1601, the son of grocer and Alderman Bassingburn Throckmorton. [2] On 20 March 1621, he was apprenticed to a scrivener, but his whereabouts by 1638 had become unknown to his father, and the executors of his father's estate in 1640 could not find him. [2]