Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

1829 Jacob Wolf House now a state historic site

- STORY BY JACK SCHNEDLER PHOTOS BY MARCIA SCHNEDLER

NORFORK — The Jacob Wolf House, Arkansas’ oldest public building still standing, is now its newest designated state historic site. Renovation is proceeding to take visitors back almost two centuries to Arkansas’ fledgling days as a territory.

The two-story log structure along Arkansas 5 overlookin­g the confluence of the White and North Fork rivers was constructe­d in 1829, seven years before Congress admitted Arkansas to statehood.

It is the namesake of Jacob Wolf, who set up a homestead around 1824 at the mouth of the North Fork, partly to trade with nearby Shawnee and Delaware settlement­s. The new community he later named Liberty is now Norfork.

“The Jacob Wolf House was initially built as Izard County’s first permanent territoria­l courthouse,” explains Marlon Mowdy, site manager since the property’s acquisitio­n in 2017 by the Department of Arkansas Heritage (part of the Arkansas Department of Parks, Heritage and Tourism). “It also served as district court for three other counties. Traveling judges and lawyers held court during a seasonal rotation.”

Wolf evidently was an entreprene­ur of prodigious energy, as Mowdy describes him: “He was a territoria­l legislator, a master log builder, a master blacksmith, owner of two ferry crossings, two keelboats. He farmed 400 acres of land in the river valley, owned a mercantile business, was the postmaster, and last but not least was a Southern Baptist preacher.”

Mowdy lauds the Wolf House as “a true testament to the early-19th-century vernacular architectu­re that existed, highlighti­ng a 1,500-square-foot timber building known as a dog-trot. It provides a great deal of insight to the artisanshi­p that then existed. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973.”

Visits to the Wolf House are sometimes guided by Mowdy. They begin in the two groundfloo­r rooms, which originally were the county clerk’s office and the jury room. An outside staircase leads to the second floor, whose single space extending over the dog-trot breezeway served as the early courtroom.

After the county seat was shifted elsewhere in 1835, Wolf moved his family into the building. It was occupied at various times by his three wives, 16 children and five

stepchildr­en. After Wolf’s death in 1863, the property was sold, then used off and on as a residence until the 1930s.

It eventually came under public ownership and was restored in the 1960s by the Elna M. Smith Foundation. A 1999 grant from the Arkansas Historic Preservati­on Program allowed for further restoratio­n. Late in 2016, the Baxter County Quorum Court transferre­d the site to the state.

The Wolf House is the fifth property administer­ed by the Department of Arkansas Heritage. It joins three Little Rock sites — Historic Arkansas Museum, Old State House Museum, Mosaic Templars Cultural Center — as well as Delta Cultural Center in Helena-West Helena.

Along with the Wolf House itself, the two-acre property contains the Jacob Wolf Cabin, originally built in 1832 a mile south of Calico Rock on the White River. It was moved to the Norfork location in the early 1990s. A third structure, dating to the mid-1970s, is being converted into the historic site’s visitor center.

Planned to begin this summer is a second phase of developmen­t that will include a historical­ly correct roof for the Wolf House. The split-rail fence, a replica of the 1840s original, will be extended. Eight outdoor interpreti­ve panels are being designed to recount the area’s history in what is now Baxter County. Funding the work is a state-sponsored grant via the Arkansas Natural Cultural Resource Council.

Eventual public programmin­g at the site will include frontier demonstrat­ions, living-history programs, summer camps for youngsters and special events related to the years from 1829 to 1863.

A sustaining topic will be historic preservati­on, which according to Mowdy, “will speak to the paramount importance of preserving, protecting and promoting our cultural and historical properties.”

The Jacob Wolf House, 13775 Arkansas 5 South, Norfork, is open 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Tuesday-Saturday. Admission is free. For more informatio­n, visit JacobWolfH­ouse.com or call (870) 499-0556.

 ??  ?? Entry to the Jacob Wolf House is via an outside stairway in the back.
Entry to the Jacob Wolf House is via an outside stairway in the back.
 ??  ?? Jurors did their deliberati­ons on the Jacob Wolf House’s ground floor.
Jurors did their deliberati­ons on the Jacob Wolf House’s ground floor.

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