Showing posts with label Fort Smith. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fort Smith. Show all posts
Wednesday, May 15, 2013
After Hours Tourists ...
After a long day of showing jewelry, ceramics, paintings, drawings, and photography at the Old Timer's Day Festival, we still made time to do a little sight seeing across the river in Fort Smith before dark. I just love to study the architecture of days gone by. I am inspired by the beauty, symmetry, craftsmanship, and the enduring legacies that these historic structure represent.
I love the fact that these old homes have managed to endure and hang on in the middle of new growth and construction. They are still holding on, many after nearly a hundred years.
And of course there are always little bits of whimsy like an old commercial sign in thee middle of a residential lawn that catches my eye and makes me smile. Hope that you find something in my journey that makes you smile, too.
Van Buren, Arkansas - a whole lotta history...
The Art of Victoria Morgan is operating a booth on the
historic Main Street at the Old Timer’s Day Festival in Van Buren, AR on May 11
and 12, 2013. The seventy + buildings along Van Buren’s Main Street are all
listed on the National Historic Register. The
Blue and The Grey, the TV mini-series was filmed on this street. I can just
imagine the street that I walked down today a hundred years ago in its heyday.
Van Buren and its sister city, Fort Smith, were wild
frontier, border towns in the late 1800’s on the edge of the Oklahoma
Territory. Separated only by the Arkansas River, these two towns had it all.
Fort
Smith’s Front Street was home to the infamous red light district, The Row. One
of the most famous bordellos in the Southwest, Miss Laura’s, is still standing
and in use today as the Fort Smith Visitor’s Center. Ft. Smith is, also, home to many other examples of beautiful historic architecture like the Immaculate Conception Church pictured below.
Van Buren’s Main Street
has been home to numerous banks, an Anhueser-Busch brewery, and the King Opera House. Wyatt Earp even spent time in the Van Buren
city jail on charges of horse theft before he became famous at the OK Corral.
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