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ARKANSAS
LEGENDS
Prairie Grove Battlefield
Rich in History |
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As
the sun set on December 7, 1862 at
Prairie
Grove, the rattle of musketry and the boom of cannon came to an end.
The Confederate Army of the Trans-Mississippi and the Union Army of the
Frontier suffered about 2,700 casualties during the one-day battle. While
the armies departed and the Civil War ended in 1865, the wooded ridge
overlooking the Illinois River was changed forever. After the war, people
moved into the area and established the town of
Prairie
Grove in 1888, and old soldiers held reunions near the town for
several years.
In
1908, the
Prairie Grove Chapter of the United Daughters of the Confederacy
purchased about nine acres from Kibble Carr Cummings to establish a park
for the veterans. |

Re-enactment at
Prairie
Grove, photo courtesy
Arkansas
State Parks
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Within a year, the Confederate Veteran magazine reported the new park
would be "...a consummation, an attraction, a hallowed spot like unto
none in our Western Southland."
The annual events at the park featured political speeches, dinners on
the grounds, foot races and carnival games as well as providing a
place for the aging veterans to reunite and reminisce. Following World
War I, the reunions included the veterans of that conflict, too. Four
thousand people attended the 1918 reunion featuring, among other
things, an airplane flight. By 1922, there was a baseball game,
vaudeville and wild west show, and a parade. Even during the Great
Depression, the reunions continued with the last surviving Confederate
veterans in the area attending the 1938 event. Despite the lack of
veterans, the 1940 reunion included politicians, the acrobatic team of
"Riggs and Riggs," and an Old Fiddler's Contest.
The December 7
Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on the already memorable date to the
people of
Prairie
Grove ended the reunions for the duration of the war. It also sent
the park into a period of stagnation with few efforts made to maintain
the grounds.
Local citizens, however, renewed their efforts to improve the park
during the 1950s. The
Prairie
Grove Lions Club made it a priority to care for the hallowed
battle site. Other individuals asked the State of
Arkansas
to provide funds for the park. The effort resulted in the passage of
Senate Bill 278 in 1957, creating a
Prairie
Grove Battlefield Park Commission and appropriating $50,000 for
development. This money and future funding enabled the Commission to
purchase additional acreage and move several historic structures to
the park, including the Morrow and Latta houses.
During the centennial anniversary of the
battle in 1962, many citizens, including the commissioners, urged the
state to make
Prairie
Grove Battlefield Park a state park, but several years passed
before that dream became reality. Meanwhile, the volunteer spirit
continued unabated at the park. A donation of $100,000 was bequeathed
from the estate of Biscoe Hindman, son of Major General Thomas C.
Hindman who commanded the Confederate Army at
Prairie
Grove. Architect Kenneth Cockram designed Hindman Hall and used
the gift for the construction budget. The Commission dedicated the
impressive structure in 1965.
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Finally made a state park
in 1971,
Prairie Grove Battlefield Historic State Park continued to improve
with the 1980 addition of the Borden House property, where some of the
heaviest fighting occurred. This acquisition brought the park's total
acreage to 130, which remained until a new effort to expand the park began
in 1992. The American Battlefield Protection Program worked with
Arkansas State Parks
in preparing a Battlefield Protection Plan for
Prairie
Grove that year. The result was that a mixture of State, Federal and
private funds were used to purchase more of the Civil War site. Today, the
park includes about 750 acres of the battlefield.
As was true in the years immediately following 1862,
Prairie
Grove today draws people for a variety of reasons. Some come to
exercise, picnic, attend family reunions or for special park events such
as the Memorial Day Tribute, the Clothesline Fair or the Battle
Reenactment held in December of even-numbered years. Of course, many come
to learn more about the history of the Civil War and the battle that
occurred here through guided tours or interpretive exhibits in Hindman
Hall or by wayside panels along the walking trail or six-mile driving
tour.
For many, though, it remains a place of reflection. A place where one can
physically connect with the events of America's greatest and most
influential conflict, the Civil War.
Arkansas's 27th state
park,
Prairie Grove Battlefield, commemorates a Civil War battle, where, in
one day, Union and Confederate forces suffered about 2,700 casualties. The
park, located about 10 miles west of Fayetteville on U.S. 62, features a
Battlefield Museum, interpretive exhibits and programs, guided tours, a
walking trail, a driving tour, picnic sites and more.
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Prairie
Grove State Park, courtesy
Arkansas Department of
Parks and Tourism |
Contact Information:
Prairie
Grove Battlefield State Park
P.O. Box 306
Prairie Grove,
Arkansas 72753
479-846-2990
Article by Don Montgomery, park interpreter,
Arkansas Department of
Parks and Tourism
Added May, 2005
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