List of United States federal courthouses in Arkansas

This is a list of current and former courthouses of the United States federal court system located in Arkansas. Each courthouse entry of the United States federal court system indicates the name of the building, placed in a table alongside its depiction (a photo, if available), its location, and the jurisdiction it serves.[1] The dates during which a courthouse was used within a jurisdiction and, if applicable, the person for whom it was named, as well as the date of any renaming constitute the remaining tabular column entries. Dates of use will not necessarily correspond with the dates of construction or demolition of a building, as pre-existing structures have been on occasion adapted for court use, and former court buildings have been relegated to other uses. Also, the official name of the building may have changed at some point after its use as a federal court building.

Courthouses

CourthouseCityImageStreet addressJurisdiction[1]Dates of useNamed for
U.S. Post Office and CourthouseBatesville368 East Main StreetE.D. Ark.1907–?
Now the Independence County Library
n/a
U.S. Post Office & CourthouseEl Dorado101 South Jackson AvenueW.D. Ark.1931–presentn/a
John Paul Hammerschmidt Federal BuildingFayetteville35 East Mountain StreetW.D. Ark.?–presentU.S. Rep. John Paul Hammerschmidt
U.S. Post Office & Court HouseFort SmithRogers Avenue and Sixth StreetW.D. Ark.1897–1936
Building completed in 1889; razed in 1936.
n/a
Judge Isaac C. Parker Federal BuildingFort Smith30 South 6th StreetW.D. Ark.1937–presentDistrict Court judge Isaac C. Parker
U.S. Post Office & CourthouseHarrison201 North Main StreetW.D. Ark.1906–?
Now in use by Boone County.
n/a
J. Smith Henley Federal BuildingHarrison402 North Walnut StreetW.D. Ark.?–presentDistrict Court and Court of Appeals judge Jesse Smith Henley (2001)[2]
U.S. Post Office & Court HouseHelena?E.D. Ark.1893–1961
Fate of building unknown.
n/a
Jacob Trieber Federal Building, U.S. Post Office, and U.S. Court HouseHelena–West Helena617 Walnut StreetE.D. Ark.1961–presentJacob Trieber
U.S. Courthouse†Hot Springs100 Reserve StreetW.D. Ark.?–presentn/a
Old U.S. Post Office & CourthouseLittle Rock300 West 2nd StreetE.D. Ark.
W.D. Ark.
1881–presentn/a
Richard Sheppard Arnold U.S. CourthouseLittle Rock600 West Capitol AvenueE.D. Ark.1932–presentCourt of Appeals judge Richard S. Arnold (2003)
George Howard, Jr. Federal Building & U.S. CourthousePine Bluff100 East 8th AvenueE.D. Ark.1966–presentDistrict Court judge George Howard, Jr.
U.S. Courthouse and Post OfficeTexarkana?E.D. Ark.
W.D. Ark.
1892–1930
Razed in 1930.
n/a
U.S. Post Office & CourthouseTexarkana500 North State Line AvenueW.D. Ark.[3]1933–presentn/a

Key

Listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP)
†† NRHP-listed and also designated as a National Historic Landmark

References

  1. For the usage of court abbreviations, see List of United States district and territorial courts.
  2. Adams, Samuel (August 9, 2001). "Federal building named for Judge Henley". Bolivar Herald-Free Press. Retrieved January 31, 2018.
  3. This building straddles the state line between Arkansas and Texas; it is the only U.S. federal building to occupy two states.
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