An Osprey (Pandion haliaetus) watching for fish to catch at Monte Ne on October 16, 2025

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An Osprey (Pandion haliaetus) watching for fish to catch at Monte Ne on October 16, 2025
Cat that was stalking through several yards at Monte Ne, Arkansas on September 1, 2025.
Monte Ne Ruins, Benton County, Arkansas December 2014
30 Days of Abandoned Places
Day 15: Oklahoma Row tower, Monte Ne, Arkansas. From 2010.
This was part of large resort hotel dating back to the 1920s. The town of Monte Ne was swallowed up by the creation of Beaver Lake in the 1960s.
The Corps of Engineers placed a chain-link fence around the building sometime after this because some dumbass climbed up an old chimney and got stuck.
Monte Ne
Monte Ne is a former health resort and planned community in the U.S. state of Arkansas, open from 1901 to the mid-1930s. It was owned and operated by William Hope Harvey, a financial theorist and writer, in the Ozark hills of the White River valley east of Rogers on the edge of Beaver Lake. Two […] from Monte Ne
Wikipedia article of the day for July 24, 2017 -- Monte Ne
The Wikipedia article of the day for July 24, 2017 is Monte Ne. Monte Ne is a former health resort and planned community in the U.S. state of Arkansas, open from 1901 to the mid-1930s. It was owned and operated by William Hope Harvey, a financial theorist and writer, in the Ozark hills of the White River valley east of Rogers on the edge of Beaver Lake. Two of its hotels, Missouri Row and Oklahoma Row, were the largest log buildings in the world at the time, and Oklahoma Row's tower is one of the earliest examples of a multi-story concrete structure. The resort was not a financial success, due in part to Harvey's management style, and shortly after his death the property was sold off. The remainder of the resort and town was almost completely submerged after Beaver Lake was created in 1964. The severely vandalized Oklahoma Row tower is the only remaining structure that can be seen at normal lake levels. The area on the edge of Beaver Lake still referred to as Monte Ne, owned and managed by the United States Army Corps of Engineers, serves mainly as a boat ramp.
Monte Ne
Monte Ne is a former health resort and planned community in the U.S. state of Arkansas, open from 1901 to the mid-1930s. It was owned and operated by William Hope Harvey, a financial theorist and writer, in the Ozark hills of the White River valley east of Rogers on the edge of Beaver Lake. Two of its hotels, Missouri Row and Oklahoma Row, were the largest log buildings in the world at the time,…
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