Lawrence County Historical Society
Spring 1983
Volume 6 Number
2
Smithville Played Great
Part In Early Development Of
The County
By W.E. McI.eod 1935
In thinking of the
towns in I.awrence County that played
an important part in its development in an earlier day, we are reminded
of Smithville, which came into existence during the days when Arkansas
was a territory.
The history of Arkansas is silent as
to date of the birth of Smithville, but from tradition of history it is
certain to have been in existence in 1832.*
In writing something of the early history
of this historic town, we can not well refrain from saying something of
the great old County of Lawrence, of which Smithville was for a time the
capital. Lawrence County was organized on January 15,1815 at
the home of a friend, Solomon Hewit, and the first court was held
at his residence a few miles down Spring River
from the town of Imboden. Then Davidson
was made the county seat in 1815, and remained there until 1829 when it
was removed to Old Jackson where it remained for only
three years, when again it was
removed, this time to Smithville, remaining at
this old historic island village until 1868 from which place it was moved
to Clover Bend where it remained for less than a year.
In 1869 Powhatan was made the county
seat, which distinction it holds to this day. It was erected in 1888. John
S. Fichlin originally owned the land where Powhatan now stands. (The court
house was moved to Walnut Ridge in 1963).
In the archives at this bastile are
kept records of great value and interest. * According to Freeman's
History Of Lawrence C'ounty, Smithville became a town in 1837.
OLDSETTLERS
The Fortenberry family reached Arkansas
from Virginia in 1816 and invaded the wilds and settled in Strawberry River
valley in 1816. Eli Thornburg was another old settler of the Smithville
section of the
country. He served as postmaster at Smithville
for 20 years and was mayor of the town for 10 years. Then there were the
Millers, the Raneys, the Sloans and many other families now prominent in
the annals of Arkansas who became infatuated with the emerald clad hills
that surround Smithville and made early settlements there.
The commissioners who were designated
to locate a new site for the courthouse were David Orr, Alexander Smith
and William Thompson. James H. Benson donated 50 acres of land for the
new site.
EXECUTIONS
Three men were legally executed at Smithville,
one Negro about one mile west of town (place still known). Two white men
on what was then known as Smithville-Batesville road. The exact place not
known now. The court house stood on the same block, but east
of where the bank is now.
COUNTY OFFICIALS
The following are some of the names
of the county officials who served as county officers during the time the
court house was at Smithville.
County Judge: John HARDIN, J.C. FLOYD,
J. FICKLIN, A.H. NUNN, John MILLIGAN, G.M. McGHEHEY, C.S. WAINWRIGHT, Solomon
YEAGER, great grandfather of the editor and Josiah DENT.
County Clerk: D.W.
LOWE, L.S. BROWN, J.B. WILMUTH, A. HAMMOND,
J.B. TONY, N.C. Steadman, J. N. Hillhouse,
Z.P. ALEXANDER, A. LOWE and J.H. SNIDER.
NOTE: J. N. HILLHOUSE, who was
born February 22, 1832 (just one hundred years after
Washington), was elected clerk of Lawrence
County just before he was 20 years old but was 21 before he was sworn
in. He succeeded N.C. STEADMAN deceased
under whom he served as deputy.
County Treasurers: C.T.
STEWART, J.B. WILMUTH, Henry KING, Edward HOLT,
James McCARROLL, L.W. ROBERTSON, E. TAYLOR, Edward SHARP and Samuel
HARP.
Representatives in constitutional convention:
Robert SMITH, Thomas S. DREW, David W. LOWE, M.D. BARBER, S. ROBERTSON
and Bouldin DUVALL.
SOLDIERS ORGANIZED
In the spring of 186l the first company
of soldiers was organized at Smithville by Captain Z.P. ALEXANDER, who
had been county clerk from 1858-60.
Some of them enlisting under him were:
Robert JONES, T.J. WARNER, Dr. Andrew BALFOUR, William G. SLOAN, W.G. MATHENEY,
James H. HENDERSON, Dr. John R. WELLS, Wiley JONES, James C. HOLMS, James
M. PHELPS, Mr. WANN, Charles A. STEWART, and John LINDSAY and others.
In 1862 while Federals under General
Curtis had possession of part of Arkansas there was a post maintained
at Smithville about three months. During this time one skirmish was
fought about 9 miles northwest of Smithville on Osburns Creek. Rebels were
defeated and captured. Wiley C. JONES was
in the bunch, but he swam the Mississippi
River near Memphis, and escaped his captors.
In about 1831 or 32 Congress made an
appropriation to open a road from Old Jackson (then in Lawrence County)
to Arkansas Post, first post office in the state. The road was to cross
White River near Batesville and the mail at Smithville was carried over
this route horse back twice a week. One among the first carriers was Frank
BIGGERS.
The First Jail Within The Present
Boundaries Of Lawrence County
On a hill southeast of the court house, across the street and present highway 117, an almost escape proof jail was erected. Like the court house, it was never repaired and the secure building was almost impossible to tear down. It stood until it rotted down and after almost 90 years the remaining chunks were burned in preparation for another building.
Following is a partial copy written
by Rev. Joseph G. TAYLOR in 1925.
"This writer remembers the jail from
early childhood. It was a 14 x 16 foot structure and floored with hewed
logs 12 by 12 inches square, laid side by side crossway of the jail. The
outside corners were dove-tailed and laid on a low stone foundation. On
the ground logs or sills the walls were built of 2 by 10 inch slabs laid
one on another and nailed down with thousands of square nails. Counting
the 2 inch slabs from bottom to top, there were 42, which would make the
structure seven feet high inside and eight feet high outside.
The old jail never had the distinction
of lodging any notorious criminal. Probably its greatest
and most frequent service was furnishing sleeping
quarters for over indulgent patrons of the saloons and occasionally lodging
the community "Best Man." At that time, not only Smithville, but all such
trade centers had its "Best Man" more commonlv known as "The
Bully of the Town." His territory was not confined to the corporate limits
of town. He was the man who could "whip" any man in a fair fist fight within
the surrounding area. The place of meeting to decide this honor was just
outside the town limit about 400 yards southeast of the jail. The time
for the contest was wet days and Saturdays. Saturday afternoons were especially
good timing when a number of contestants had become sufficiently "spirit
filled" to try for the belt. Someone stood by to referee to see that it
was a fair fight and to call for the next contestant if any. It was told
that one bully said he had held the title a dozen times and had never had
the satisfaction of being mad.
Old stories from the early times related
that fist fighting and duel pistol fights were the common styles of settling
disputes. When soldiers returned from the Civil War and young men returning
from the West
and Southwest which, was being settled, knives,
brass knuckles and pistol fighting was introduced. This took much of the
sport out of finding the "Best Man" in the area. Knives, brass knuckles
and hidden pistols were looked on as cowardly and underhanded.
The Civil War by no means ended the
fist fighting. This writer, when a boy, saw one near where the old jail
stood. The two men, cousins to each other, were big double fisted men.
They met on a stone porch and no referee was required. Both seemed to have
the satisfaction of being mad. Not a word was spoken but soon black eyes
and bloody noses were visibie. Before the two minute fight was over, 30
to 40 men had gathered in groups to watch and discuss the fight. One old
timer remarked -- "It was the purtiest I ever seed--no weapons used."
These old buildings were sacred landmarks
and should never have been removed."
JAIL HOUSE JOKE
According to the written record of Rev.
Joseph G. Taylor he had a cousin by the name of Rad RANEY who was pretty
wild in his young manhood. He would drink occasionally, play jokes and
have fights. One day when about half drunk he stuck his head inside the
courthouse door when court was in session and shouted, "Rad's a
horse". The judge turned to the sheriff and
said, "Take that horse across the street and put him in the stable. We've
got a stable for such horses as he." (meaning the jail). It took all Rad's
relatives and friends to keep him out of jail.
COURT HOUSE TALE
Another joke concerned this same person
and a Tom McCARROLL who had a fight in front of the old court house. Rad
knocked Tom down and got on top of him. Tom reached up and pulled Rad down
and bit out a piece on one side of his nose. Tom afraid that he would be
indicted and sent to prison for maiming, ran away to Texas and
homesteaded one half section of land on which
Dallas now stands. Tom got homesick and through mutual friends, it was
arranged that Rad wouldn't testify against him. When the case was brought
up in court Rad was asked, "Is this man the one who bit out the side of
your nose?" Rad replied, "I don't know. I might have done it myself."
Joseph G. Taylor 1948
The Old Red Court House
Two of the most widely known landmarks
in Northeast Arkansas in in 1837, when Lawrence County's second county
seat was moved from Old Jackson to its third location in Smithville. According
to Freeman's History of Lawrence County, the courthouse at Davidsonville
was a two story building 30' x 35' which was about the description of the
court house at Smithville. The difference being that the Davidson court
house was brick 8" x 8" square and 2" thick. The court house at Smithville
was a frame building throughout and was located back of
what is now Lawrence County Branch Bank.
Fred RUDY informed us that his father, Dr. D.B. RUDY, bought the old caurt
house about 1904, and used the usable lumber in building a drug store.
The material was used later in the Smithville gin building which was razed
in 1952. The material was then used in building barn now owned by Homer
MIZE. It is a known fact that the court house stood for 67 years and its
material is still in use 148 years later.
Following is a partial copy of an article
written by Rev.Joseph G. TAYLOR in 1925 after retiring as a Presbyterian
minister.
"When the old court house was built
at Smithville, my grandfather, William G. TAYLOR, had a contract of furnishing
the boards or two footshingles. The two foot bolts were of heart cypress
from Black Riverbottoms, hauled to the old Taylor mill place on Strawberry
River. There the bark and sap were removed, the clear cypress boards riven
with froe and mallet, shaved with a drawing knife on a drawing horse and
then hauled to Smithville's Old Red Court House in an ox wagon. The boards
being 24 inches long were put on three ply or three double `showing 8"
to the weather', as they said. I was born and raised 3 miles
south of Smithville and lived in and near the place until I was 40. When
I left the county it looked about the same. I made many inquiries of those
living there and no one can remember the house being remodeled or repainted.
It looked as red the
last time I saw it as it did the first.
By Joseph G. Taylor
Second Murder in Lawrence
County (1841)
When Jeanne HAYES of Prairie Grove came Io
my home in early 1983 she informed me of some long lost Smithville history.
She inquired if I knew anything about her great great grandfather, Myrick
D. NEWTON,
and family living here from 1837-18 41. I
hadn't heard of the Newtons and contacted Cleo TURNBOW, the local historian.
He had heard that some Newton had lived here but did not know the given
name or where they lived. Neither of us thought there were any Newton graves
in Smithville Cemetery. She then gave me the following article.
Batesville NEWS
Nov 11, 1841
page 2 column 2
no heading
We have just received the painful intelligence
of the assassination of MYRICK D. NEWTON, Attorney at law, residing at
Smithville. He was shot by some cowardly assassin, secreted on the road
side, as he was returning home from this place, (within a half a mile of
his home), and instantly killed. Suspicion rests on several individuals,
one of whom is apprehended. Mr. Newton has left a helpless and distressed
family.The frequency of such dastardly deeds of
blood, is well calculated to fill the mind with horror, and to ruin
the country in
which we live. No man's life is secure
- there is no shield against the assassin. We deprecate
mob law, and look only for security in the firmness and vigilance of
the people, who should leave no lawful means untried to bring the perpetrators
to justice.
The same article appeared in the Arkansas Times and Advocate in Little Rock on November, 22, 1841.