Arkansas Post Memorial National Park: the first non-indigenous persons included DeSoto in 1541,
“... In 1686, Henri de Tonti established a trading post known as "Poste de Arkansea" at the Quapaw village of Osotouy. It was the first semi-permanent French settlement in the lower Mississippi River Valley. The establishment of the Post was the first step in a long struggle between France, Spain, and England for dominance of the Mississippi River Valley.
Over the years, the Post relocated as necessary due to flooding from the Arkansas River, but its position always served of strategic importance for the French, Spanish, American, and Confederate military.
Spanish soldiers and British partisans clashed here in the 1783 Colbert Raid, the only Revolutionary War action in Arkansas.
Arkansas Post became part of the United States following the Louisiana Purchase of 1803. By 1819, the post was a thriving river port and the largest city in the region and selected as the first capital of the Arkansas Territory.
During the Civil War, Confederate troops tried to maintain tactical control of the confluence of the Arkansas and White Rivers, and in 1862 they constructed a massive earthen fortification known as Fort Hindman at the Post. In January 1863 Union troops destroyed the fort, ensuring control of the Arkansas River.”
Then on to the Toltec Mounds (mistakenly identified as connected to indigenous people from now-Mexico) a sacred site inhabited by unknown people from 540 AD TO 1050 AD. On this, the summer solstice, the original inhabitants established the mounds to observe the sunset of the summer and winter solstices, the equinox of of both winter and spring. A special place to be on this the powerful summer solstice of 2020.
Also, what’s a road trip without an abandoned storefront?