Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Queen Wilhelmina State Park

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Phone
  
+1 479-394-2863

Address
  
Ouachita National Forest, 3877 AR-88, Mena, AR 71953, USA

Hours
  
Open today · Open 24 hoursTuesdayOpen 24 hoursWednesdayOpen 24 hoursThursdayOpen 24 hoursFridayOpen 24 hoursSaturdayOpen 24 hoursSundayOpen 24 hoursMondayOpen 24 hoursSuggest an edit

Management
  
Arkansas Department of Parks and Tourism

Similar
  
Mena Mountain Resort, Rich Mountain Cabin Re, Sun Country Inn, Cossatot River State Park ‑ Nat, Wolfpen ATV Campgro

Tour queen wilhelmina state park with p allen smith


Queen Wilhelmina State Park is a unit of Arkansas State Parks Division in the Ouachita Mountains.

Contents

The original "Castle in the Sky" lodge was built in 1898 on 2,681-foot Rich Mountain, in Polk County, Arkansas. The park is on Talimena Scenic Drive — northwest of Mena, Arkansas and east of the Oklahoma state line. It is the only lodge open on the 235 mile Ouachita Trail. It is also the top state park on the Talihena Parkway. It is located on Arkansas second highest peak, Rich Mountain.

Queen Wilhelmina State Park Lodge closed March 5, 2013 for a major renovation. It reopened on July 1, 2015.

The lodge has 38 guest rooms, a restaurant, lobby and meeting room. The campground and trails remained open during the renovation. The park is one of the park system's eight mountain parks.

Arkansas State Parks Division is one of two units of the Arkansas Department of Parks and Tourism.

Queen wilhelmina state park campsites


HistoryEdit

The original lodge was built by the Kansas City, Pittsburg and Gulf Railroad to house passengers. Many of the railroad's investors were Dutch, so the lodge was named to honor Queen Wilhelmina of the Netherlands, who was to be crowned in September 1898. Grand opening of the Victorian lodge was June 22, 1898. Wilhelmina Inn was soon nicknamed the "Castle in the Sky."

The KCPG railroad faced financial problems, and was sold to what later became the Kansas City Southern Railroad. The original inn fell into disrepair, and permanently closed in 1910.

Interest in tourism rose after World War II. State Act 76 of 1957 created Queen Wilhelmina State Park. A new lodge was built and opened June 22, 1963. It used some of the original rock work. It operated 10 years, until a Nov. 10, 1973 kitchen fire spread and destroyed the lodge.

Construction soon began on the site's third lodge. The $3 million lodge, re-opened in 1975. The refurbised lodge reopened in 2015.

References

Queen Wilhelmina State Park Wikipedia