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Arlington, Missouri

Coordinates:37°55′13″N91°58′16″W / 37.92028°N 91.97111°W /37.92028; -91.97111
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Unincorporated community in the US state of Missouri

Arlington is anunincorporated community[1] in westernPhelps County,Missouri, United States. The community is located just northeast of the confluence ofLittle Piney Creek and theGasconade River.I-44 passes just to the east and theBurlington Northern Railroad passes the south edge of the community. The community ofJerome lies approximately three-quarters of a mile to the northwest across the Gasconade.[2]

History

[edit]

Arlington was originally called Little Piney.[3] At times troops from the 5thMissouri State Militia Cavalry garrisoned there.[4] Originally settled by Thomas Harrison and James Harrison and later established as a township byGeneral Fremontcirca 1867, the town was renamed for the formerRobert E. Lee plantation (later acemetery) atArlington, Virginia,[5] Folk etymology maintains the name honors Arlie, the wife of a local merchant.[6] Arlington was once a popular resort served by thePacific Railroad. Located on the last section ofU.S. Route 66 in Missouri to be paved, in 1931, the tiny community servedfishermen on theGasconade andLittle Piney Rivers.[7]

Stony Dell Resort capitalised on Route 66 and the nearbyFort Leonard Wood military base to grow in the 1930s and early 1940s from a small group of tourist cabins to a popular oasis which included a stream-fed swimming pool, a restaurant, service station and bus stop, offering tennis, dancing, boating and fishing.[8]

By 1946, the town was in decline due to re-routing of a widened US 66; the town site was purchased that year by R. E. Carney. The original 1923 US 66 road bridge, bypassed when the road was widened to four lanes in 1952, was demolished whenInterstate 44 bypassed the town in 1966-1967, leaving the original two-lane US 66 a dead end. Most of the Stony Dell Resort was lost to demolition during freeway construction; the restaurant, archway, the fish pond, the gas, food, and gift store, some of the classic stone work, and a handful of cabins remain, now abandoned.[9] Even the 1952 four lane bridge was demolished and replaced as part of a 2005 alignment of I-44.[10]

There are no remaining businesses in Arlington; thecaravan park (Arlington River Resort, 13003 Arlington Road) closed permanently in 2008. The only road access to the townsite is I-44 toNewburg then back on what remains of the original two-lane US 66 roadway (Arlington Outer Road, a dead-end). No longer easily accessed by rail and road, Arlington is now merely a small group of private residences. Arlington is currently composed of more than 20 people; albeit, it is no longer its own township and is now a part of Newburg.[11]

References

[edit]
  1. ^U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Arlington, Missouri
  2. ^Newburg, MO, 7.5 Minute Topographic Quadrangle, USGS, 1950
  3. ^"OzarksWatch".thelibrary.org. RetrievedFebruary 20, 2016.[title missing]
  4. ^Hewett, J. (1994). Supplement to the Official records of the Union and Confederate Armies. Wilmington, NC: Broadfoot Pub. Co. , Volume 35, p. 136
  5. ^Bill Earngey (December 1, 1995).Missouri Roadsides: The Traveler's Companion. p. 221.ISBN 9780826210210. RetrievedApril 28, 2012.
  6. ^"Phelps County Place Names, 1928–1945". The State Historical Society of Missouri.Archived from the original on June 24, 2016. RetrievedDecember 5, 2016.
  7. ^Walter A. Schroeder; Howard W. Marshall w (June 15, 1998).Missouri: The WPA Guide to the "Show Me" State. p. 415.ISBN 9781883982232. RetrievedApril 28, 2012.
  8. ^"Stony Dell Resort, Arlington, Missouri". Waymarking.com. RetrievedApril 28, 2012.
  9. ^"John's Modern Cabins and Stony Dell Resort (video)".YouTube.[dead YouTube link]
  10. ^Joe Sonderman (May 20, 2009).Route 66 In The Missouri Ozarks. p. 31.ISBN 9780738560304. RetrievedApril 28, 2012.
  11. ^"Arlington, Missouri". Route 66 University. RetrievedApril 28, 2012.
Municipalities and communities ofPhelps County, Missouri,United States
Cities
Map of Missouri highlighting Phelps County
Townships
Unincorporated
communities
Ghost towns

37°55′13″N91°58′16″W / 37.92028°N 91.97111°W /37.92028; -91.97111

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