Home Tours Of Fayetteville, Arkansas

Home Tours of Fayetteville, Arkansas. There are many homes to tour while in Fayetteville, Arkansas. The Clinton's first home is open for view. They purchased it while they were law professors at the University....

The Clinton's first home is open for view. They purchased it while they were law professors at the University. The Clintons were married in the living room of this home in 1975.


The Gregg House is built in 1871 by Arkansas Supreme Court Justice Lafayette Gregg. Judge Gregg wrote the legislative bill that located the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville. It is not open to the public, but can be viewed from the street.




The Headquarters House was built by Judge Jonas Tebbets in 1853. This home was one of the finest in Fayetteville at the time of the Civil War. It served as a headquarters for both the Union and Confederate armies at various times during the war. It is now headquarters for the Washington County Historical Society.

Gunter House is one of the Fayetteville's turn of the century showplaces. It was originally the home of Thomas Gunter, a colonel in the Confederate Army, and a successful attorney and congressman.

The Old Washington County Courthouse and Jail was built in 1904 of native stone hand-cut and hauled to the site by ox wagons. The main floor lobby contains one of Fayetteville's largest and most important murals, created in memory of World War I soldiers. South of the courthouse is the old Washington County Jail.

J. William Fulbright's boyhood home is here. Fulbright was a U.S. Senator, statesman and namesake of the Fulbright College of Arts and Sciences at the University of Arkansas.

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