Harman Patil (Editor)

Cherry Street Historic District (Helena West Helena, Arkansas)

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Boundary increase
  
May 27, 2010

Year built
  
1879

Built by
  
John Isaac Moore

Area
  
7 ha

Added to NRHP
  
17 August 1987

Cherry Street Historic District (Helena-West Helena, Arkansas)

Location
  
Along Cherry St. between Porter and Elm Sts., Helena, Arkansas

Architectural style
  
Classical Revival, Early Commercial, Commercial Vernacular, Other

NRHP Reference #
  
86003546 (original) 10000288 (increase)

The Cherry Street Historic District is a historic neighborhood, commercial, and entertainment district serving as the downtown of Helena, Arkansas. Cherry Street is located between Elm Street and the nearby Phillips County Courthouse to the north, and Porter Street to the south. The history of Cherry Street is tied to the blues heritage of the area beginning in the 1940s.

Contents

History

Around the time of incorporation of West Helena in 1917, the lumber industry was the primary economic force in the region, with five companies producing barrel staves being the primary employers. Prohibition put these companies out of business, followed by two devastating floods in the following decades left Helena and West Helena in bad shape for the approaching Depression. King Biscuit Time, a blues radio show, was produced for the first time in November 1941 by KFFA. This radio show helped spread the growing sensation of blues music and popularized many blues pioneers such as Robert Lockwood, Jr., Robert Lee McCollum, and Sonny Boy Williamson II.

Today

Cherry Street has hosted the King Biscuit Blues Festival annually since 1986, under various names.

References

Cherry Street Historic District (Helena-West Helena, Arkansas) Wikipedia