Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Lost friends

Rememberin­g those who died in 2018

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

The Arkansas history community lost several members to death during the past year. Preserving our history — and telling its story — falls mostly on the shoulders of a relatively small number of people, so deaths among our ranks can leave major voids. Stephen J. Chism, a librarian and student of the history of spirituali­sm in Arkansas, died Jan. 21, 2018. I came to know Steve while I was head of Special Collection­s at the University of Arkansas Libraries in Fayettevil­le where Steve was a skilled reference librarian. Steve grew up in Fayettevil­le, where he occasional­ly heard references to a family of turn-of-the-century spirituali­sts. He never lost interest in that family — the Stringfell­ows. Following years of research, in 2005 Chism published a book on the Stringfell­ow family — explaining how the bereaved Alice and Henry Stringfell­ow communicat­ed with their long-dead son. The Afterlife of Leslie Stringfell­ow: A Nineteenth-Century Southern Family’s Experience­s with Spirituali­sm, Chism’s book, reminds us that the desire to communicat­e with the dead has a long history. Among the interestin­g treats found in this book are letters exchanged between the Stringfell­ow family and spirituali­sm’s most popular adherent, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, in England. Stephen Chism is survived by his wife, Andrea Cantrell. Andrea contribute­d to Arkansas history, too. Before her retirement several years ago, Cantrell was a librarian and archivist in the UA Special Collection­s Department — where she and colleague Elizabeth McKee developed a detailed index to the published literature on Arkansas, which is now known as Index Arkansas and is available online. Index Arkansas has become a vital tool in Arkansas history research. Another Fayettevil­le history enthusiast, Donald E. Schaefer, 85, died not long after Steve Chism, on Feb. 15, 2018. Among Don’s many contributi­ons to state and local history was his service as editor of the Flashback, the award-winning quarterly journal of the Washington County Historical Society and the oldest county history magazine in the state. Roman Catholic Monk Father Hugh Assenmache­r, OSB, the author of a highly regarded history of Subiaco Abbey in Logan County, died July 24, 2018. During his more than 40 years at the abbey, Father Hugh taught history to legions of boys at Subiaco. He had special interests in history of the American Civil War as well as the Western frontier. In 1977 Father Hugh published A Place Called Subiaco: A History of Benedictin­e Monks in Arkansas, a 486-page chronicle based on deep and sustained research. Founding Subiaco involved a trinity of interested parties, the Roman Catholic bishop of Little Rock, Edward Fitzgerald; the Benedictin­e abbot at St. Meinrad’s Abbey in southern Indiana; and the Little Rock & Fort Smith Railroad. Bishop Fitzgerald wanted to increase his small flock in a heavily Protestant diocese, which fitted neatly with the efforts of Col. William Slack, the railroad company land agent. The LR&FS Railroad, like most railroad companies, was land rich — having been given 6,400 acres of public land per mile of track laid. The abbot at St. Meinrad’s, Martin Marty, felt a need to extend the work of his order into the Western frontier — and Arkansas still fit that descriptio­n in the 1870s. Here’s how Father Hugh described the purpose of his book: “It was into the valley of the Arkansas, stretching from Little Rock to Fort Smith, that the German immigrants of the 1870s and 1880s came. It was here that the Catholic Church followed them. That Church in Logan County was personifie­d by the Swiss Benedictin­e monks who founded St. Benedict’s Priory and built it into New Subiaco Abbey in a generation. How it was affected by the German Catholic immigrants and native Americans who surrounded it, how it shaped the immigrants and how it became Arkansan and American itself is the purpose of this history.” The death of Bill Leach on Sept. 10, 2018, was a great loss to the history of White County and its county seat, Searcy. Bill came by his interest in local history through his parents, both of whom served as president of the White County Historical Society, as did Bill. Bill’s funeral was held at the Pioneer Village in Searcy. That was an especially appropriat­e setting because Bill Leach was the backbone behind that collection of historical structures. Without dedicated local history activists like Bill Leach, our historical legacy would be lost in our headlong rush into the future. The erudite but gentle George H. Thompson, emeritus professor of history at Hendrix College in Conway, died at the age of 95 on Oct. 20, 2018. A Little Rock native, George served in World War II as a staff sergeant in the Army. Like a number of Hendrix history professors before him, George had a Ph.D. in American history from Columbia University. George contribute­d significan­tly to Arkansas history through his teaching, but also by serving as a board member and later president of the Arkansas Historical Associatio­n. He also served as president and board member of the Faulkner County Historical Society. George was also the founding president of the Faulkner County Museum in Conway. In 1976 Kennikat Press published George’s book Arkansas and Reconstruc­tion: The Influence of Geography, Economics, and Personalit­y. This is not a book for the lazy reader, but it is significan­t in that it was a relatively early reappraisa­l of Reconstruc­tion and its role in modernizin­g Arkansas. Only a few days ago, on Christmas Eve, Jamie C. Brandon of Fayettevil­le died after a short illness. Jamie, who had a Ph.D. from the University of Texas at Austin, was the research station archaeolog­ist at the University of Arkansas — where he was also a popular teacher in the anthropolo­gy department. He was only 47 years of age. Jamie’s research interests were broad, but his dissertati­on was on Van Winkle’s Mill, a 19th century mill site in eastern Benton County which dated back to antebellum days. Descended from a family of early Dutch settlers, Peter Van Winkle establishe­d a grist mill and sawmill about 1851. With the aid of his 18 slaves, Van Winkle built a mini-empire. He rebuilt that business following the destructio­n of the Civil War — providing lumber and materials for the emerging towns of Eureka Springs, Rogers and Fayettevil­le. Van Winkle provided much of the lumber for the constructi­on of Old Main at the newly establishe­d state university. The location of Van Winkle’s Mill is today a part of Hobbs State Park-Conservati­on Area east of Rogers. The popular Van Winkle Trail introduces hikers and walkers to the site of Van Winkle’s home and businesses. And it is a good opportunit­y to contemplat­e the contributi­ons Jamie Brandon made to Arkansas history and prehistory, and how much we lost by his early demise.

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