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Historical Markers and War Memorials in Washington County

 
Clickable Map of Washington County, Alabama and Immediately Adjacent Jurisdictions image/svg+xml 2019-10-06 U.S. Census Bureau, Abe.suleiman; Lokal_Profil; HMdb.org; J.J.Prats/dc:title> https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Usa_counties_large.svg Washington County, AL (13) Baldwin County, AL (155) Choctaw County, AL (9) Clarke County, AL (53) Mobile County, AL (222) Greene County, MS (4) Wayne County, MS (16)  WashingtonCounty(13) Washington County (13)  BaldwinCounty(155) Baldwin County (155)  ChoctawCounty(9) Choctaw County (9)  ClarkeCounty(53) Clarke County (53)  MobileCounty(222) Mobile County (222)  GreeneCountyMississippi(4) Greene County (4)  WayneCounty(16) Wayne County (16)
Chatom is the county seat for Washington County
Adjacent to Washington County, Alabama
      Baldwin County (155)  
      Choctaw County (9)  
      Clarke County (53)  
      Mobile County (222)  
      Greene County, Mississippi (4)  
      Wayne County, Mississippi (16)  
 
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1 Alabama, Washington County, Calvert — Calvert United Methodist Church & CemeteryWashington County
Calvert Methodist Episcopal Church South first organized in in a community building used for a school. In 1889, Francis A. and Edna Webb donated this property for a church, and the congregation built this building in the same year. The church . . . Map (db m245524) HM
2 Alabama, Washington County, Calvert — 8 — MOWA Band of Choctaw Indians — Mount Vernon History Trail —
Aiokpanchi, "Welcome,” to the Official Tribal Reservation of the MOWA Band of Choctaw Indians. Chata hapia hoke! "We are Choctaw.” We are glad you are able to visit us and hope your visit to our Tribal Reservation is both . . . Map (db m149288) HM
3 Alabama, Washington County, Chatom — Washington CountyFirst County in Alabama
Created in 1800 by proclamation of governor of Mississippi Territory. This was first U.S. civil government in area that was to become Alabama. Its original boundaries: East to west: Chattahoochee to Pearl River; South, 31° lat. . . . Map (db m122343) HM
4 Alabama, Washington County, Chatom — Washington County Confederate Memorial... Lest We Forget 1861 – 1865 — Our Confederate Ancestors —
Dedicated to the memory and honor of all the men who served in the Confederate States Armies from Washington County For these were men Whom power could not corrupt Whom death could not terrify Whom defeat could not dishonor. . . . Map (db m122738) WM
5 Alabama, Washington County, Chatom — Washington County Courthouse
The Washington County Courthouse as it was built in 1908. It was razed in 1963. This memorial cornerstone was placed by the Washington County Historical Society and the Washington County Museum. Map (db m122737) HM
6 Alabama, Washington County, Chatom — Washington County Veterans Memorial
. . . Map (db m122742) WM
7 Alabama, Washington County, Leroy — The Taylor House
Built circa 1841 by Walter Taylor on Commerce Street in Jackson. In 1985, it was removed from its original site to make way for a new City Hall Complex and was brought to this site and restored as the Leroy Branch of the Washington County State . . . Map (db m70598) HM
8 Alabama, Washington County, McIntosh — Andrews Chapel
Andrews Chapel, also known as the McIntosh Log Church, is one of the few remaining log churches in Alabama. In 1860, John C. Rush and his wife donated land for the church to the McIntosh Community. Shortly afterwards, the church was constructed and . . . Map (db m70594) HM
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9 Alabama, Washington County, McIntosh — Town of McIntosh
(side 1) McIntosh has a community population of about 300. The town was incorporated on April 7, 1970, becoming the third incorporated town in Washington County. The following officials were elected to serve four year terms: Mayor Carrol . . . Map (db m70596) HM
10 Alabama, Washington County, Prestwick — Prestwick Post Office / Prestwick High School
Prestwick Post Office The Prestwick Post Office was established on February 24, 1904, with Alice Speadham as postmaster. It was discontinued temporarily on October 31, 1923. After it was reestablished in March 1927, Walter B. Taylor held . . . Map (db m244903) HM
11 Alabama, Washington County, St. Stephens — Old St. Stephens Masonic Lodge No. 9 (1821-1834)/St. Stephens Lodge No. 81
Old St. Stephens Masonic Lodge No. 9 (1821-1834) CHARTER AND EARLY MEMBERS WERE: Gov. Israel Pickens, Col. Silas Dinsmore, Thomas Eastin, R. Chamberlain, Thomas Malone, J.F. Ross, Daniel Coleman, John Womack, W.D. . . . Map (db m70599) HM
12 Alabama, Washington County, Wagarville — Bassetts Creek
Named for Thomas Bassett, a British Loyalist and native of Virginia. Migrated to Tombigbee area from near Augusta, Ga. circa 1772 to escape persecution by American patriots. Received in 1776, from King George III, a grant of 750 acres on the west . . . Map (db m122336) HM
13 Alabama, Washington County, Wagarville — The Sullivan Cabin
The Sullivan Cabin was built on the east side of Bassett Creek, in 1874 by Gibeon Jefferson Sullivan, a Confederate soldier who served in Co. A. 32nd Ala Infantry, an all-volunteer company made up of men from Washington County. The cabin is a . . . Map (db m122341) HM
14 Arkansas, Washington County, Cane Hill — A-22 — Washington County Cane Hill College
Cane Hill College, the first collegiate institution of learning established in Arkansas was founded here by Cumberland Presbyterians on October 28, 1834. The following persons were named by the founders as the board of trustees: Col. John . . . Map (db m66703) HM
15 Arkansas, Washington County, Canehill — Bethlehem Cemetery
First public cemetery for Washington County Arkansas has been placed on the National Register of Historic Places by the United States Department of the Interior c. 1830Map (db m225062) HM
16 Arkansas, Washington County, Canehill — Bethlehem Methodist-Episcopal Church South
This is the site of the first church established in Washington County Arkansas Bethlehem Methodist-Episcopal Church South established April 17th, 1827Map (db m225061) HM
17 Arkansas, Washington County, Canehill — Confederates Fall Back Before Union AssaultShelby Withdraws to Cane Hill
As James Blunt's First Division of the Army of the Frontier massed in front of the Confederate artillery at the Cane Hill Cemetery, General John Marmaduke ordered J.O. Shelby's Rebels to (unreadable) through the hamlet of Boonsboro. As the . . . Map (db m240383) HM
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18 Arkansas, Washington County, Canehill — Dr. William and Laura Welch House - 1855
William Blackwell Welch was born in 1828 in Scottsville, Kentucky and graduated from the University of Tennessee Medical School in 1849. In 1851, he married Alabama native, Laura F. McClellan, and the couple moved to Cane Hill in 1855. Here they . . . Map (db m240271) HM
19 Arkansas, Washington County, Canehill — Fruit Cellar
Stone fruit cellars, like this one, were once popular in the Ozarks. They were designed to keep food cool in the summer months and above freezing in the winter months. Most were constructed in the 1920s and early 1930s as home canning was . . . Map (db m240312) HM
20 Arkansas, Washington County, Canehill — The Battle of Cane Hill
Late in November 1862, Gen. John S. Marmaduke with 2,000 cavalry occupied Cane Hill Ridge. Gen. James G. Blunt with 5,000 cavalry and infantry and 30 pieces of artillery met them at dawn Nov. 28, 1862. Retreating slowly, making stands at Boonsboro . . . Map (db m240269) HM
21 Arkansas, Washington County, Canehill — The Troops Who Fought at Cane HillTroops Clash in the Boston Mountains
The Fourth Division, Trans-Mississippi Army Maj. Gen. Thomas C. Hindman's Trans-Mississippi Army contained four divisions: One of cavalry under John S. Marmaduke, infantry divisions under Francis A. Shoup and Daniel M. Frost, and a reserve . . . Map (db m225070) HM
22 Arkansas, Washington County, Canehill — Zebulon and Eunice Edmiston House – 1872
Zebulon “Zeb” Edmiston was the patriarch of one of Cane Hill's most prosperous Victorian era families. Zeb and Eunice Jane Gray were married in 1852 and had four children: Nina, James, David and John The Edmistons farmed in what is now Clark County, . . . Map (db m225063) HM
23 Arkansas, Washington County, Elm Springs — Elm Springs
A half block west across the street is the big spring that gave the town its name. Tents of the 16th Arkansas Infantry covered the campus of the academy to the east near the head of Brush Creek during the winter of 1861-62. Dr. M.D. Steele's . . . Map (db m167821) HM
24 Arkansas, Washington County, Elm Springs — Elm Springs CemeteryPhase 1
circa 1853 has been placed on the National Register of Historical Places by the United States Department of the Interior 2020Map (db m224803) HM
25 Arkansas, Washington County, Elm Springs — 134 — Elm Springs in the Civil War
Newly recruited Confederate troops gathered at Elm Springs in 1861 for training. After driving Confederate troops from their winter quarters at Cross Hollows, U.S. pickets occupied the area. Confederates camped here on a bitter cold March 5, 1862, . . . Map (db m167935) HM
26 Arkansas, Washington County, Evansville — Almost The End Of The Cherokee's Sad Journey Westward
The Indian Removal Act was signed by President Andrew Jackson on May 28, 1830. This act put in motion the systematic removal of the Choctaws, Muscogee Creeks, Chickasaws, Seminoles, and Cherokees from their ancestral homes in the east to Indian . . . Map (db m240074) HM
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27 Arkansas, Washington County, Farmington — Walnut Grove Presbyterian Church1902
has been placed on the National Register of Historic Places by the United States Department of the InteriorMap (db m225094) HM
28 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — 4H House — 1951-2003 —
In 1932, the Arkansas Council of Home Demonstration Clubs established the first Women's 4H House in America at the University of Arkansas. Nine students lived in the house during its first year, but it proved so popular that the council began . . . Map (db m224754) HM
29 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — 936 Field Artillery Battalion
Dedicated to those who served and those who waited HQ & HQS Battery Austin, Carl D. ∙ Baldwin, Alvin E. ∙ Bartle, Billy J. ∙ Blake, Harold G. ∙ Blood, Rueben S. ∙ Bohannan, Billy W. ∙ Brown, Marion E. . . . Map (db m62976) WM
30 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Advances in Nutrition
Agricultural Chemistry Professors Barnett Sure (1920-51) and Marinus C. Kik (1927-67) made major advances in nutrition science during their long tenures at the University of Arkansas. Sure co-discovered vitamin E and extended knowledge of how . . . Map (db m224345) HM
31 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Archibald YellIn Memory Of
Born near Salisbury, North Carolina, Aug. 1797 Volunteer in Battle of New Orleans, 1815 Member of Tennessee Legislature, 1827 Grand Master of Masons in Tennessee, 1831 District Judge of Arkansas Territory, 1832-1836 Charter Member of . . . Map (db m59891) HM
32 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — 39 — Archibald YellSecond Governor of Arkansas
Archibald Yell was Arkansas’s first congressman and its second governor. Likely born in Tennessee in the late 1790s, Yell received limited formal education but a sound instruction in law, which became his calling. Yell’s close friendship with . . . Map (db m234889) HM
33 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Arkansas College
. . . Map (db m224234) HM
34 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Buchanan Hall1888-1937
One of the first erected after Old Main, Buchanan Hall was among the prettiest buildings on campus while it stood. It was built as a men's residential hall and occupied by early 1888. It was named for John L. Buchanan, the sixth president of . . . Map (db m224278) HM
35 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Butterfield Stage Route
This tablet marks a part of the Butterfield Stage Route from St. Louis to San Francisco 1857 – 1860Map (db m59888) HM
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36 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Campaign for the Twenty-First Century
The Campaign for the Twenty-First Century, considered the most ambitious fund-raising effort undertaken by an organization in Arkansas, spanned 3/1/1998-6/30/2005. The $500-million campaign's objective was to raise funds for scholarship . . . Map (db m237270) HM
37 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Chi Omega
The Chi Omega Greek theater was built in 1930 as a gift from Chi Omega, the national women's fraternity (sorority) that was founded at the University of Arkansas in 1895 when four coeds and a faculty adviser chartered the mother chapter, Psi. . . . Map (db m224250) HM
38 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Chi Omega Chapter House
The Chi Omega was the first Greek organization to build its own chapter house on the University of Arkansas campus. Chi Omega (Psi chapter) purchased this lot in the Oakland Place Addition in 1928. Construction begin that that same year and the new . . . Map (db m224732) HM
39 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Chi Omega Fraternity
Founded April 5, 1895 University of Arkansas by Dr. Charles Richardson Ina May Boles Jobelle Holcombe Alice Cary Simonds Jean Marie Vincenheller Governing Council April 5, 1995 Melanie Maxwell Shain, S.H. Mary Ann Hancock . . . Map (db m224731) HM
40 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Chi Omega Greek Theatre
[Top plaque] Built A.D. 1930 Chi Omega Greek Theatre has been placed on the National Register of Historic Places
by the United States Department of the Interior [Bottom plaque] The Chi Omega fraternity . . . Map (db m224254) HM
41 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Clintons on Law Faculty
The nation's 42nd president, William J. Clinton (1993-2001), and First Lady, Hillary Rodham Clinton, were faculty members of the University of Arkansas School of Law in the mid-1970s. Mr. Clinton started in 1973, teaching trade regulation, . . . Map (db m224737) HM
42 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Cotton Stacking
From 1962-71, UA Agricultural Engineering Professor Xzin McNeal designed, built, tested and developed the nation's first successful pallet trailer system of stacking and storing cotton. His system solved the temporary storage problem created by the . . . Map (db m224263) HM
43 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — 58 — David Walker
David Walker was born Feb. 19, 1806, near Elkton, Ky. He moved to Arkansas in 1830, earning his law license and settling in Fayetteville. Walker was elected circuit prosecutor in 1832, then to the Arkansas territorial legislature in 1835. . . . Map (db m224142) HM
44 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Delta Delta Delta 1913-2013 Centennial
On November 15, 1913, the Delta Iota chapter of Delta Delta Delta sorority became the fourth sorority installed at the University of Arkansas. Founders were Juanita Moore, Vesta Kilgore, Aileen McCoy, Bess Phillips, Anna Bryant, Alma . . . Map (db m224719) HM
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45 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Development of ‘Arksoy’
“Arksoy,” the first Arkansas soybean variety, was developed by agronomy professor Chalmers K. McClelland and released by the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station in 1928. Agronomist Charles E. Caviness and plant pathologists H.J. “Jack” . . . Map (db m224344) HM
46 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Early Integration
The University of Arkansas became the first major Southern public university to admit a Black student without litigation when Silas Hunt, of Texarkana, an African-American veteran of World War II, was admitted to the university's law school in . . . Map (db m224752) HM
47 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — 2 — Evergreen CemeteryFayetteville
Added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1997, Evergreen is the first public cemetery in Fayetteville and final resting place of city, state and national leaders. The first burials began in the 1840s as the private family cemetery of . . . Map (db m206939) HM
48 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Evolution of Fayetteville
The earliest known inhabitants of the hardwood forest of the Ozarks migrated to Arkansas over 12 thousand years ago through the Great Bering Strait. For the next two thousand years Bluff Dwellers hunted the mountain plateaus before the Quapaws, . . . Map (db m59882) HM
49 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Far West Seminary
This was the campus of Far West Seminary, founded by the Rev. Cephas Washburn and chartered by the State of Arkansas in 1840. Its successor school, the Rev. Robert W. Mecklin's Ozark Institute, was located a half mile east of this site. These . . . Map (db m224756) HM
50 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Fayetteville Center Square
The Fayetteville Square served as the location of the Washington County courthouse from 1837 to 1904, when a new courthouse was built facing Center Street on College Avenue. Title to the public square (Block 27) was conveyed to the United States of . . . Map (db m59879) HM
51 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Fayetteville Confederate Cemetery
. . . Map (db m224228) HM
52 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Fayetteville Female Seminary
1839 — 1860 Site of the Fayetteville Female Seminary founded by Miss Sophia Sawyer. Tablet placed by Fayetteville P.T.A. 1928Map (db m224118) HM
53 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Fayetteville National Cemetery
Civil War in Northern Arkansas The first battle in Arkansas occurred on February 16, 1862, at Big Sugar Creek just south of the Missouri border. The next day, Union Gen. Samuel Curtis' Army of the Southwest continued its southward march. . . . Map (db m224112) HM
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54 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Fayetteville's Earliest Methodist Church
Fayetteville's earliest Methodist Church Stood on this site 1840 – 1899 The Methodist Episcopal Church in Fayetteville was organized in 1832. The modest frame building of 1840, destroyed by fire during the Civil War, was . . . Map (db m59875) HM
55 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — First Biological Herbicide
University of Arkansas plant pathologists George Templeton, Roy Smith (USDA), David TeBeest and graduate student Jim Daniels conducted research in the early 1970s that led to Collego™, the first biological herbicide for weed control in a field crop. . . . Map (db m224721) HM
56 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — First Confederate Company Organized in Washington County
Near this spot a flag was presented to the First Confederate Company organized in Washington County Co. E, 2nd Cavalry Reg’t Arkansas Volunteers Capt. T.J. Kelly May 1861Map (db m59902) HM
57 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — First International Agriculture Mission
In 1951, through what is now the Dale Bumpers College of Agricultural, Food and Life Sciences, the University of Arkansas became the first land-grant institution in the nation to assemble an agricultural foreign mission. Developed in concert . . . Map (db m224749) HM
58 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — First Marine Division Memorial
Dedicated to those men of the First Marine Division, FMF who gave their lives in the service of their country World War II Korea Vietnam Southwest AsiaMap (db m224110) WM
59 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Founding Ladies of the Southern Memorial Association
Imagine living in Fayetteville in 1866. The city with a population just under 1000 was still mourning its dead and rebuilding from the destruction of the War Between the States. Mass graves, lonely graves in pastures and roadsides held the remains . . . Map (db m224151) HM
60 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Gray Hall1906 – 1966
Gray Hall was built as a men's residence hall in 1906 at the same time as Carnall Hall. It was named for Oliver C. Gray and stood near what later became the west entrance to Mullins Library. Its basement was used as dressing rooms for the football . . . Map (db m224276) HM
61 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Guisinger Building
This property has been placed on the National Register of Historic Places by the United States Department of the InteriorMap (db m59895) HM
62 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Headquarters House
This house, built by Jonas M. Tebbetts about 1858, was used as headquarters by the Federal troops during the battle of Fayetteville on April 18, 1863. Two doors still bear scars of the battle -- panels splintered by minie balls. Confederate cavalry . . . Map (db m140425) HM WM
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63 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Hill Hall1901-1993
Hill Hall was named for General Daniel Harvey Hill, who served under General Robert E. Lee during the Civil War and was the fourth president of the university. The hall was built in 1901 and opened for use as a men's residence hall in early . . . Map (db m224342) HM
64 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — James William Fulbright
President of University of Arkansas 1939-1941. U.S. Representative 1943-1944. U.S. Senator 1945. Delegate to the United Nations 1954. Author of Fulbright Resolution for International Cooperation 1943. Originator of Fulbright . . . Map (db m59915) HM
65 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — James William FullbrightApril 9, 1905-February 9, 1995
A distinguished scholar, author, statesman, leader President of the University of Arkansas 1939-1941 U.S. Representative 1943-1945 U.S. Senator 1945-1974 Chairman, Senate Foreign Relations Committee, 1959-1974 Author of the Fulbright . . . Map (db m224690) HM
66 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Lewis Brothers Building
. . . Map (db m59904) HM
67 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Lynching in America / Racial Terrorism in Washington CountyIn Memory of Aaron, Anthony, and Randall — Community Remembrance Project —
Lynching in America Before the Civil War, millions of African people were kidnapped, enslaved, and shipped across the Atlantic to the Americas under horrific conditions that frequently resulted in starvation and death. Over two centuries, the . . . Map (db m224104) HM
68 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Medal of Honor
Five alumni of the University of Arkansas have been awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor, the nation's highest distinction for supreme gallantry in military action. World War II: Lt. Maurice Britt ’41, U.S. Army, Italy, Nov. 10, 1943; Lt.(JG) . . . Map (db m224265) HM
69 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — 70 — Mount Comfort in the Civil War
After the Aug. 10, 1861, Battle of Wilson's Creek, Mo., four of Washington County's first Confederate war dead – Capt. S.R. Bell, Sgt. Wm. Brown, Pvt. Henry Fulbright and Pvt. Samuel McCurdy – were buried in Mount Comfort Cemetery. The . . . Map (db m224775) HM
70 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Mrs. Young Block
. . . Map (db m59903) HM
71 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Nuclear Chemistry
In the 1950s, Professor Paul Kuroda of the University of Arkansas' Department of Chemistry predicted that self-sustaining nuclear chain reactions could have occurred naturally in earth's geologic history. In 1972, his prediction was confirmed when . . . Map (db m224271) HM
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72 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Oaks CemeteryHistoric Black Cemetery — Est. 1867 —
has been entered in the Arkansas Register of Historic Places under provisions of the State Register of Historic Places ActMap (db m224107) HM
73 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Old Mt. Comfort
This community was first settled about 1830 when Solomon Tuttle built his log house. A few years later his son-in-law, W. D. Cunningham, built the 2-story brick that is still standing. This home witnessed many historic events, including the . . . Map (db m224757) HM
74 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Pearl Harbor Memorial
In memory of all who served on the island of Oahu, Territory of Hawaii, 7 Dec. 1941 during the attack by JapanMap (db m224117) WM
75 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Phi Alpha Theta
Phi Alpha Theta, the only national honor academic society in history and the largest honor society devoted to a single discipline, was founded at the University of Arkansas. On March 14, 1921, Dr. Andrew Cleven, assistant professor of history, met . . . Map (db m224269) HM
76 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — POW/MIA Memorial
In honor and memory of all Prisoners of War & Missing in Action both returned and unreturned, from all conflicts.Map (db m224352) WM
77 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Purple Heart Memorial
Purple Heart Memorial Combat Wounded Veterans Dedicated May 20, 2005Map (db m78035) HM
78 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Reiff House1834 - 1951
This Ante-Bellum Home was built on land granted to Washington County by an Act of Congress to build a court house, entitled “An Act for the Relief of Fayetteville, in the Territory of Arkansas,” and signed June 26, 1834 by . . . Map (db m59911) HM
79 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Replica of the Statue of Liberty
With the faith and courage of their forefathers who made possible the freedom of these United States The Boy Scouts of America dedicate this copy of the Statue of Liberty as a pledge of everlasting fidelity and and loyalty The . . . Map (db m92306) HM
80 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Revolutionary War Soldier Memorial(1775-1783)
In Memory to those soldiers who fought for American Independence during the Revolutionary War. These Veterans of the American Revolution came to live and died in Northwest Arkansas Names in left column: Benton . . . Map (db m21227) HM
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81 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Rieff's Chapel Cemetery
Rieff's Chapel Cemetery began in the 1840s with the founding of its pioneer community named after John Rieff, an early settler and farmer who arrived in 1838. The first known burial was of John Rieff's daughter-in-law, Mary Alexander Rieff, on . . . Map (db m225098) HM
82 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Scene of Hot Fighting
This corner was the scene of hot fighting by Confederate troops under Brig. General W. L. Cabell and Federal forces commanded by Colonel M. LaRue Harrison on April 18, 1863.Map (db m224236) HM
83 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Schola Cantorum
Founded in 1957 by Professor of Music Richard Brothers, this 32-voice mixed choir of University of Arkansas students quickly gained worldwide critical acclaim. In 1962, Schola Cantorum [Latin for 'school of singers'] became the first American choir . . . Map (db m224280) HM
84 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Senior Walk
Begun by the Class of 1906, Senior Walk contains the names of more than 120,000 graduates, beginning with the first class inscribed at the foot of the Old Main steps. It is a unique, much-loved tradition of the University, covering nearly five miles . . . Map (db m237265) HM
85 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Significant Dates in Fayetteville History
Significant dates in Fayetteville history include: Incorporated town in 1836; Old Wire road from Jefferson City, Mo. to Ft. Smith cut in 1835; Washington County Fair first held on the Square in 1856; first telegraph installed around 1860; . . . Map (db m59877) HM
86 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Silas Herbert Hunt
Silas Herbert Hunt pioneered the integration of higher education in Arkansas and the South, enrolling at the University of Arkansas School of Law in 1948 and becoming the first African-American student to successfully seek admission to a Southern . . . Map (db m224346) HM
87 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Site of Civil War Arsenal
T.B. Van Horne, first pastor of First Baptist Church, founded Fayetteville Female Institute on this site in 1858. Later rechartered in 1861 as Northwest Arkansas Baptist Female Institute, it housed a Federal arsenal which was destroyed by . . . Map (db m224239) HM
88 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Six Pioneers
Six African-American students from Arkansas pioneered the integration of the University of Arkansas through its School of Law between 1948-51. Silas Hunt was the first to enroll, but he died of illness in 1949. The first to graduate, in 1951, was . . . Map (db m224742) HM
89 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Son's Chapel
has been listed in the National Register of Historical Places by the United States Department of the Interior September 25, 2003Map (db m224779) HM
90 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Son's Chapel School
ca. 1880-1949 Sign placed by Rural Builders Association and the Washington County Retired Teachers Association 2018Map (db m224777) HM
91 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Statistical Avian Ecology
In 1970-71, zoology graduate students Frances C. James and Herman Henry Shugart Jr., working in Professor Douglas A. James' laboratory, published papers that introduced a new way to determine aspects of the environment associated with habitat . . . Map (db m224259) HM
92 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Superconductivity
During the 1980s, Professors Allen Hermann and Zhengzhi Sheng of the Department of Physics were in the vanguard of research in superconductivity – the phenomenon whereby direct current (DC) electricity, once started, can flow essentially . . . Map (db m224248) HM
93 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — Teacher Education
The University of Arkansas is distinctive among the nation's land-grant universities in that it incorporated teacher education from its inception. After the Civil War, the growing demand for public school teachers was met mainly by the establishment . . . Map (db m224282) HM
94 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — The $300 Million Gift
On April 11, 2002, the university received the largest gift in the history of U.S. public higher education – a $300 million challenge gift from the Walton Family Charitable Support Foundation. The gift established and endowed an undergraduate . . . Map (db m224693) HM
95 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — The Chosin Few
Dedicated to the brave men who survived their entrapment at the Chosin Reservoir, North Korea, in that bitterly cold winter of 1950 ... who refused to leave behind "their heroes," the dead and wounded. Who proved again . . . Map (db m21102) HM
96 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — The Clinton House
has been placed on the National Register of Historic Places by the United States Department of the Interior ~2010~Map (db m224245) HM
97 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — The Dale Bumpers Legacy
The University of Arkansas in July 1995 added Dale Bumpers to the name of the College of Agricultural, Food and Life Sciences to honor the former governor, 1971-1975, and U.S. senator, 1975-1999. He helped propel Arkansas agricultural and food . . . Map (db m224314) HM
98 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — The Dale Bumpers Legacy
The University of Arkansas in July 1995 added Dale Bumpers to the name of the College of Agricultural, Food and Life Sciences to honor the former governor, 1971-1975, and U.S. Senator, 1975-1999. He helped propel Arkansas agricultural and . . . Map (db m224751) HM
99 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — The Ellis Building1923
has been placed on the National Register of Historic Places by the United States Department of the InteriorMap (db m224229) HM
100 Arkansas, Washington County, Fayetteville — The Jim Lindsey - Jim Williams Entry
Jim Lindsey and Jim Williams were teammates on Arkansas' 1964 National Championship team, leading the Razorbacks to a perfect 11-0 record and the FWAA Grantland Rice Trophy. Williams was a two-time All-SWC performer while Lindsey played six seasons . . . Map (db m236972) HM

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Jun. 15, 2024