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Lastly, the Hackmatack theater season will conclude with the timeless tale of sisterhood, resilience, and love in "Little Women." Running from Aug. 15-31, "Little Women"is based on the classic ...
This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Little Rock, 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 an online map.
The Robinson Center is a performance, convention, and exhibition space at Statehouse Plaza in downtown Little Rock, Arkansas. The most notable architectural feature of the complex is the south façade of the Robinson Center Music Hall, a building constructed in 1939 to a design by architects Eugene J. Stern and Wittenberg & Delony. [2]
Its northern terminus is an intersection with US 70/Highway 365 (Roosevelt Road) in Little Rock. Traveling generally south to north, it is a former alignment of US 167. Traveling generally south to north, it is a former alignment of US 167.
The first white settler in the area, Thomas Elliott Rutledge, filed a claim for 160 acres (65 ha) in 1854 and named his settlement "Black River". The community was later renamed "Little Rock" or "Littlerock" for a mounting stone on the Rutledge property; [2] [3] a post office called Littlerock has been in operation since 1879. [4] [5]
The 462-seat Flat Rock Playhouse, with roots that precede World War II, might be described as a “craft” theater or a “boutique” theater, says Marketing Director Christy Souther.
St. Joseph's Home is a historic Roman Catholic orphanage on Camp Robinson Road in North Little Rock, Arkansas. It is a large three-story brick building, with a tile hip roof and a stone foundation. The roof is topped by a cupola with a cross as a spire. The building is roughly H-shaped, with projecting wings on either side of central section.
A sizable and more recently-developed section of the city, Chenal Valley is in the west-central section of Little Rock, known as West Little Rock. Its name is derived from the area's Shinall Mountain, but Deltic Timber Corporation, a major early developer of the area, opted to alter the name to mimic French language as part of a strategy (known as foreign branding) to orient the residential ...