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Kefauver House

Benton County, Arkansas Registered Historic Place stubsHouses completed in 1920Houses in Rogers, ArkansasHouses on the National Register of Historic Places in ArkansasNational Register of Historic Places in Benton County, Arkansas
Kefauver House
Kefauver House

The Kefauver House is a historic house at 224 West Cherry Street in Rogers, Arkansas. Built around 1920 by local businessman W. E. Kefauver, this 1½ story wood-frame structure exemplifies the Bungalow style, with a broad porch supported by tapered square columns, and an arched architrave highlighting the opening where the stairs lead upward. It has hip roof with wide overhangs, and a broad shallow-pitch gabled dormer on the front facade.The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1988.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Kefauver House (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Kefauver House
West Cypress Street, Rogers

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 36.329722222222 ° E -94.118888888889 °
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Address

West Cypress Street 204
72756 Rogers
Arkansas, United States
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Kefauver House
Kefauver House
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Rogers Commercial Historic District
Rogers Commercial Historic District

The Rogers Commercial Historic District, known informally as Historic Downtown Rogers, is a historic district in the central business district of Rogers, Arkansas. When it was first listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1988, it was known as the Walnut Street Historic District; this was changed when the district was enlarged in 1993. The district encompasses a portion of the city's central business district, whose historical significance extends from about 1885 to the end of World War II.The original 1988 boundary of the district included buildings on two blocks of Walnut Street, between Second and Arkansas Streets, and encompasses a cluster of predominantly commercial buildings built between 1885 and 1912. These buildings were predominantly Italianate commercial masonry buildings. In 1993 the district was enlarged to include two blocks of First and Second Streets, between Walnut and Poplar Streets, which also included historically significant commercial buildings constructed up to 1943. This enlargement included the previously-listed Old Post Office, Lane Hotel, Applegate Drugstore, and Bank of Rogers Building. This enlargement included a wider variety of architectural styles, notably the Colonial Revival architecture of the old post office, and Spanish Colonial Revival architecture of the Lane Hotel. The district was further enlarged in 1998 to include 120 South Second Street, and in 2002 to include the Victory Theater. In 2012 it was enlarged yet again, adding the 200 block of West Elm Street.