Showing posts with label Hamilton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hamilton. Show all posts

Mar 4, 2020

Early Little River County Arkansas Physicians

Name, Age, Birth State, Occupation, Township

1860
L.B. Dowd 40  Ct physician -Franklin Tp
John D. Rowland 31  Tn physician -Red River Tp
W.F. Simmons 40 Ga physician -Red River Tp
John D. Bellah 42 Tn physician -Red River Tp
Edwin L. Hamilton 24 Al physician -Red River Tp
P.R. Bowman 35 Ny physician -Red River Tp
Alexander Lovett 37 Tn physician -Red River Tp
William Hawkins 27 Nc physician-Little River Tp
Honesta Bizzell 24 Nc physician-Jackson Tp
J.W. Harmon 34 Tn- physician-Jackson Tp
M.W.C. Frazier 29 Ky -Jefferson Tp

1870
J.M. Parker 46 Ga doctor -Franklin Tp
Soloman Wyatt 71 Va doctor-Lick Creek Tp
John M. Simms  37 Va physician -Red River Tp
Henry J. Hunter 36 Va physician -Red River Tp
John T. Butler 28 physician  Tn-Red River Tp
William H. Hawkins 37 Nc physician -Red River Tp
James C. Wright 45 Nc physician -Jackson Tp
Orville Alexander 32 Mo physician-Jackson Tp
Joshua Gray 28 La physician -Jackson Tp
Ulisses U. Ware 34 Tn physician -Jackson Tp

1880
W.H. Hawkins 47 Nc  physician-Rocky Comfort
W.W. Roberts   1846  Ar physician -Little River Tp
Samuel H. Pruett 1836 Tn  physician- Little River Tp
W.S. Waits 1848 Ms physician Jackson Tp
J.H. Gray 1840 Al physician Jackson Tp
J.P. Lawley 1845 Al physician Jackson Tp
Joseph Poole 1844 Mo physician Little River & Burke
John Crum 1852 In physician Little River Tp
John Parker 1826 GA physician Franklin Tp
Richard Smith 1853 England physician Lick Creek Tp
J.M. Dunn 1834 VA physician Richmond Tp
E.L. Hamilton 1836 AL physician Red River Tp

information from US census

Jan 13, 2018

Ashdown's Early Days

ASHDOWN’S EARLY DAYS RECALLED BY SETTLERS

published:
Little River News
January 31, 1934

When S.A. Maddox, Henry Westbrook, John Coggins and a few others who are still citizens of Ashdown came to make their home, they found two log houses surrounded by fields of cotton and corn, owned by William and Maloy Waddell, uncles of George and Charley Waddell of Ashdown..  The Waddells owned eighty acres of what is now Ashdown.
William Waddell’s log house stood on the site now occupied by the R.A. Phillip’s home.  A field of corn waved its yellow tassels from about where the news office stands to the other side of the KCS railroad and from there to beyond the site of the courthouse, the land was planted in cotton.
Mr. Maddox came here from Saratoga in 1889 to take charge of the commissary, which was built at the time of the survey of the Texarkana and Ft. Smith Railroad His store was a small frame building which stood almost in the middle of what is now the street in front of Phillip’s Drug Store.  A Mr. Fricks ran the store for a short time until Mr. Maddox’s brother came to take charge.
Henry Westbrook enlarged the building and clerked in the store.
Capt. W.D. Dupree built the first frame dwelling here.  It stood on the site next door to the Albert Hamilton home.  The Baptist Church, which was the first to be organized here, held its first services in the Dupree home.
The first preacher, a man named Rogers, preached there.
The first industry was a large sawmill, which stood near the old Frisco Pond.  Mr. and Mrs. Dupree furnished rooms and board to a large number of the men who worked there.
John Coggins, who later married into the Dupree family, tells of a joke he played on Capt. Dupree.  He made a sign which he tacked up in front of the boarding house which read: “Maddox town, Westbrook Street, Dupree Hotel, and nothing to eat.” Needless to say, he had to take it down.
The railroad built at that time was owned by Bill Whitaker and was called the Texarkana and Ft. Smith railroad.  While Whitaker owned it, it only extended between Texarkana and Wilton and after five years, the Kansas City Southern bought it and extended it on to Ft. Smith.
After a short time, Mrs. Girlie, mother of Mrs. H.M. Westbrook, also from Saratoga, came and built a two-story frame hotel.  The remains of this hotel still stand next to M.S. Johnson store.
The first schoolhouse was a small one-story room built about where the Ashdown Hardware warehouse now stands.  The first teacher of this school was a man named Payne.

When the town was laid off into lots, about 1891, Judge Burns gave the lots where the grade school building now stands and a one room frame house was built.  Later another room was added.  This served until the two-story frame building that is now used as an apartment house was built in about 1900.