Ingalls, Arkansas

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Ingalls is an unincorporated community in Bradley County, Arkansas, United States, five miles south of Hermitage. Ingalls is situated at 161 feet (49 meters) above mean sea level. Genesee & Wyoming owns railroad that goes through Ingalls. The Fordyce & Princeton Railroad had purchased the railroad after the liquidation of Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad.

Ingalls was originally known as Crowtown but acquired the name Ingalls, (the same as John James Ingalls a U.S. senator from Kansas) at the insistence of the management of the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad.[1][2] Warren and Saline River Railroad has a link to railroad maps of Bradley County.

Jerry Wayne Ross of Mount Olive was killed in action on 1966-09-26 in the Vietnam War. The Vietnam War Memorial in Washington, D.C. has Jerry Wayne Ross named; his (mailing) address was Ingalls, Arkansas.[3]

History, 1800s and 1900's

A post office for Blanchton, Arkansas (Godfrey's Landing near the Saline River) was established in Samuel Godfry's house in 1882 until 1895.[4][5][6][7]

Blanchton, Johnsville, and Sumpter had post offices during 1885; Hermitage mail was delivered to Adamsville (south of Warren); Ingalls, Vick and Board were not listed in the 1885 edition of the Rand McNally Atlas.[8]

Charles Warner Gates, John Wenzel Watzek and Edward Savage Crossett created the Fordyce Lumber Co. in February 1892. Edward Savage Crossett and others created the Crossett Lumber Company in 1899 with a small sawmill. [9] The Rock Island Railroad built a railroad from Fordyce, Arkansas to Crossett, Arkansas, passing thru Tinsman, Banks, Hermitage, Ingalls, Vick, and Board.

The town of Ingalls was first mapped in 1906, about 800 meters north of the current site. In June, 1906, the Rock Island Railroad was built thru Ingalls. In railway company refused to establish a city there because it was only 7.5 km from the Hermitage, and they thought it was too close to one of the others for the two cities to flourish. As a result, Rock Island Townsite Company established Ingalls at its current location in 1907. The Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad (CRI&PR) reached Crossett on March 10, 1907.[10] A Rock Island depot was opened at Ingalls in September, 1907.

During the 1920s and 1930s there was a sawmill west of the railroad and west of a small creek branch and north of the road.[11] There was a cotton gin east of the School House and Methodist Church. There was a telephone office owned and operated by Mr. & Mrs. Brooks until about 1964 when dial telephone service became available. During the early 1920s, there was a J. W. Garrison General Merchandise store, Huitt General Merchandise store, Ingalls Post Office and an Ingalls School House.[12] See the pictures at

Ingalls street (picture),[13]

Ingalls Street (picture),[14]

Ingalls High School 1929-1930 Basketball Team (picture),[15]

Union Hill (Ingalls) School Students, July 20, 1904 (picture),[16]

Vick School about 1930 (picture),[17]

Vick School Class - late 1940s to early 1950s (picture),[18]

Vick School Class (picture),[19]

Sumpter's School Finest Basketball Team (picture)[20]

Coordinates: 33°23′00″N 92°09′03″W / 33.38333°N 92.15083°W / 33.38333; -92.15083

References

  1. ^ The Encyclopedia of Arkansas History & Culture (EOA) is a project of the Butler Center for Arkansas Studies at the Central Arkansas Library System (CALS) in Little Rock, Arkansas | Bradley County
  2. ^ Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway | The Encyclopedia of Arkansas History & Culture
  3. ^ Vietnam War Memorial in Washington, D.C.
  4. ^ [1] Samuel W. Godfrey | Biographical and Historical Memoirs of Bradley County, Arkansas published by Goodspeed Publishing Company in 1890.
  5. ^ [2] POST OFFICES PAST AND PRESENT in Bradley County, Arkansas
  6. ^ [3] Nelson B. York | Biographical and Historical Memoirs of Bradley County, Arkansas published by Goodspeed Publishing Company in 1890.
  7. ^ [4] U.S. Post Offices Register
  8. ^ [5] The Arkansas Historian | 1973
  9. ^ Bernard Reed (2013). "Crossett Lumber Company". Encyclopedia of Arkansas History & Culture.
  10. ^ [6] The Early Mills, Railroads, and Logging Camps of the Crossett Lumber Company, O. H. "Doogie" Darling and Don C. Bragg, The Arkansas Historical Quarterly Vol. 67, No. 2 (Summer, 2008), pp. 107-140 (34 pages)
  11. ^ Eagle Democrat June 12, 1930 | Ingalls Named For Kansas Senator
  12. ^ Bradley County Eagle Democrat | Bradley County Place Names and their Origins
  13. ^ Ingalls street, the early 1920s picture
  14. ^ Ingalls street, the early 1920s picture
  15. ^ Ingalls High School 1929-1930 Basketball Team picture
  16. ^ Union Hill (Ingalls) School Students , July 20, 1904 picture
  17. ^ Vick School about 1930 picture
  18. ^ Vick School Class - late 1940s to early 1950s picture
  19. ^ People at Vick Graded School picture
  20. ^ Sumpter's School Finest Basketball Team picture