Arkansas Post, historic village site, Arkansas county, southeastern Arkansas, U.S., on the Arkansas River, near its confluence with the Mississippi River. A fort, the first permanent European settlement in the lower Mississippi valley, was built there in 1686 by Henri de Tonty, a lieutenant of French explorer René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle. It became the residence of the French and Spanish governors and was an important trading post. The Mississippi Bubble, a French financial scheme and development plan that became mired in political intrigue, attracted settlers to the area (1717), but most of them left after the speculative bubble “burst” in 1720.
Following the Louisiana Purchase (1803), Arkansas Post served as the first capital of the Arkansas Territory (1819–21). Confederate troops fortified the area during the American Civil War, but it fell to Union troops. The town subsequently declined when bypassed by the railroads and was abandoned by the 1890s.
Arkansas Post National Memorial, created in 1960, preserves the site of the town. Situated on a peninsula, the park covers 389 acres (157 hectares) and includes a museum. The old town was largely inundated by a change in the Arkansas River’s course, but portions are still visible, including a segment of the Confederate fortifications. White River National Wildlife Refuge is to the east.