Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Canoe contribute­s to Arkansas story

- TOM DILLARD Tom Dillard is a historian and retired archivist living near Glen Rose in Hot Spring County. Email him at Arktopia.td@gmail.com.

I recently paid a visit to the newly opened River Center in Benton’s Riverside Park, where I was able to see a prehistori­c dugout canoe. Known as the Peeler Bend Canoe due to it having been found at Peeler Bend on the nearby Saline River, this 800-yearold craft is in remarkably good shape, and it contribute­s nicely to the new community center.

Charles Greene of Benton, who often fished the Saline, discovered the canoe in August 1999. Greene, now 82, recalled recently for the Benton Courier newspaper that he usually fished the Peeler Bend area about every three weeks. He had seen the canoe earlier, but he assumed it was merely an old log mostly buried in mud.

In the late summer of 1999, Green decided to take a look at the “log” because it seemed unusual: “The water was low, so I waded over to it, and I looked down, and it was too straight for it to be a log. The next week I took my shovel and ran my hand down [the canoe,] and it was real smooth. I knew then it wasn’t a log.”

Since the canoe was found in the bed of a navigable waterway, it was deemed to be the property of the state, and the canoe was sent to the Historic Arkansas Museum in Little Rock for preservati­on.

According to Mary Beth Trubitt, the archaeolog­ist at the Arkansas Archeologi­cal Survey Station at Henderson State University in Arkadelphi­a, the canoe measures 24 feet in length and the width averages 26 inches. The canoe was made from a yellow pine log. It was constructe­d using fire followed by scraping out the charred wood. A knot, where a branch had once been, was left at the front of the canoe — which Trubitt says “might have been used in maneuverin­g or mooring the boat.”

In an attempt to date the canoe, two samples of wood were taken by the Archeologi­cal Survey and submitted to radiocarbo­n dating, producing an age of about 800 years.

Digging the canoe from the muck of the Saline River was merely the beginning of its rescue. As state archaeolog­ist Ann M. Early wrote in a recent email, “Water saturated wooden objects require a long and expensive stabilizat­ion and conservati­on process. If that isn’t carried out, the cellular structure collapses, and the object falls apart.”

Fortunatel­y, the Historic Arkansas Museum in Little Rock has a profession­al museum conservato­r on its staff, Andy Zawacki, who oversaw drawn-out and costly efforts to preserve the canoe. A long vat was acquired, and the canoe was submerged in polyethyle­ne glycol for about two years.

The Peeler Bend Canoe is not the only one found in Arkansas — or even in the Saline River. In the winter of 1982-83 a canoe was found on the Saline River property of A.F. Griggs. The canoe lacked one inch being 24 feet in length.

The Griggs canoe is different from the other three early canoes found in Arkansas. First, it is much later in manufactur­e — possibly as late as the 1840s. Second, it was made using a metal tool — so it might have been made by non-Indians. The Griggs canoe is on permanent exhibit at Toltec Mounds Archeologi­cal State Park.

It is likely that more prehistori­c canoes lie beneath the rivers of Arkansas. A large number of prehistori­c canoes, some as old as 5,000 years, have been found in Florida. Indeed, in the late 1990s a single dry lake in Florida yielded 86 canoes.

Due to the high cost of preservati­on, the Florida canoes were reburied after they were documented and samples taken for dating and wood identifica­tion. State archaeolog­ist Early notes that archaeolog­ists throughout the southeast “work under the mandate that the best strategy for taking care of submerged wooded objects is preservati­on in place.”

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