Rich R.
Yelp
This is definitely my Atlas Obscura pick in Walnut Ridge, AR.
Here's the official story from the "Encyclopedia of Arkansas History and Culture":
In 1964, the world's most popular music group, the Beatles, visited the Lawrence County town of Walnut Ridge. Though brief, their visit left a lasting impact on the community. On September 18, 1964, the group finished a concert at Memorial Coliseum in Dallas, Texas, and immediately boarded a plane owned and operated by Reed Pigman. Before traveling to Alton, [Missouri] the Beatles made a brief stop in Walnut Ridge. The Walnut Ridge airport provided the ideal spot for the group to change planes before heading to Missouri. The runway was built as a training facility during World War II and could handle large aircraft. Also, the Beatles could avoid the crush of screaming fans by landing at a secluded airport at the edge of a small town. Though the encounter lasted only moments, the memory of seeing the Fab Four at the height of Beatlemania has endured. The event has become the subject of a documentary featuring some of the people at the airport. On September 18, 2011, Walnut Ridge unveiled a monument, designed to look like the cover of the album Abbey Road, to commemorate the event. Walnut Ridge also renamed a downtown street Abbey Road. In 2011, the first Beatles at the Ridge festival was held, and in 2012, the town built a guitar-shaped plaza downtown modeled after Epiphone guitars played by John Lennon and George Harrison."
This is the claim to fame for Lawrence county, Arkansas. An incidental encounter with the Beatles (even though in the summer of 1955 the "Hoxie School District, believing it did not have the funds to maintain separate schools, moved to abolish its dual educational system by integrating black children into its previously all-white schools, made up of approximately 1000 white children landmark choices were being made that shaped race relations and school desegregation"). No matter, the record will speak for itself, Beatles = tourism.
Not much to see in this town, but if you are passing through, this small installation is certainly worth a photo stop and remember to spend a bit at local businesses.