Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Fan’s walls a nod to city’s past

Huntsville was a hotbed of crossbow activity 60 years ago

- BILL BOWDEN

HUNTSVILLE — Antique crossbows line the walls in the waiting room at Sparky’s Garage.

It’s the closest thing Huntsville has to a town museum, said Mayor Darrell Trahan.

The 18 crossbows were made in Huntsville at a time when the Madison County seat was known as the “Land of the Cross Bow.” The slogan is on a vintage Huntsville license plate hanging on the wall among the crossbows.

Sixty years ago, Huntsville was a hotbed of crossbow activity. The National Crossbow Tournament was held there, and the Crossbowet­tes were Huntsville royalty. That was the name of the Huntsville High School girls crossbow team.

There’s still a Crossbow Road and Crossbow Restaurant in Huntsville.

Jason Yates, the owner of Sparky’s, has been collecting Huntsville-made crossbows for the past four years.

Yates said he has 15 Huntsville crossbows made by George M. Stevens and another three made by Thad Martin.

“He has the biggest collection probably in the United States of Huntsville memorabili­a and Madison County memorabili­a and the largest collection of Huntsville crossbows hanging up in his waiting room,” said Trahan.

While Sparky’s waiting room is crossbow-centric, it does contain memorabili­a from other things Huntsville was known for, including former Gov. Orval Faubus, who lived there. There are signs, license plates, bumper stickers, matchbooks and various other Faubus items in the waiting room.

“I have some people who don’t even need their car worked on come by just to look,” Yates said of his mini museum.

There’s no admission charge, he said.

Huntsville’s obsession with crossbows dates to 1958, when pharmacist and crossbow enthusiast Arlis Coger

and other civic leaders lured the National Crossbow Tournament to Huntsville, according to Marie Demeroukas, a photo archivist and research librarian at Shiloh Museum of Ozark History in Springdale.

For the previous four years, the medieval-themed tournament was held in Blanchard Springs, Demeroukas wrote in the museum’s newsletter, Shiloh Scrapbook.

Stevens started the tournament in Blanchard Springs in 1954, said Demeroukas. He moved to Huntsville along with the tournament.

The Crossbowet­tes would perform a variety of trick shots, according to Shiloh Scrapbook. On Sunday afternoons, they would perform for customers of the Crossbow Restaurant, on the north side of the building.

Pat Woollen of Huntsville, a former Crossbowet­te, said she would shoot targets over her shoulder using a mirror smaller than a postage stamp Stevens had attached to her crossbow.

“I am the only one who shot backwards,” said Woollen.

She still has the crossbow Stevens made for her.

Woollen said the Crossbowet­tes performed in other towns and regularly at the State Fair in Little Rock. As part of the entertainm­ent, Woollen said she would ride a horse and lance wooden rings hanging from a swinging pole.

“You almost needed to be a tomboy because you had to like to ride horses and you had to know a little about mechanics,” said Woollen.

“Our side sheath held a screwdrive­r. The sights on a crossbow, they’d get bumped and turn a little bit, and we’d have to adjust the sights for 25 yards or 50 yards.”

Yates said Stevens initially made crossbows solely by hand but later establishe­d a small assembly line at his Stevens Crossbow Corp. in Huntsville.

In an Oct. 26, 1958, column for the Arkansas Gazette, Ernie Deane wrote Stevens believed “an Arkansas community can become the nation’s crossbow capital, a center for its manufactur­e and of competitio­n in its use. Huntsville, the seat of mountainou­s

Madison County, is the place where he is now making his effort.”

Deane, along with hundreds of other people, attended the National Crossbow Tournament that month on Governors Hill, overlookin­g Huntsville.

He described it as colorful, with the Crossbowet­tes performing and a squad of Marines from state recruiting headquarte­rs in Little Rock serving as judges of the tournament.

But the crossbow enthusiasm tapered off during the turbulent ’60s.

The last Crossbowet­te performanc­e was in 1967, and the last crossbow tournament in Huntsville was in 2003, wrote Demeroukas.

Yates said he spent from $200 to $500 for each crossbow in his waiting room. He keeps an alert on eBay, so he’s notified when certain crossbows are posted for sale.

He’s seen Stevens crossbows for sale as far away as Europe.

Shiloh Museum held a reunion of former Huntsville Crossbowet­tes on Friday. An exhibit at the museum called “Scenes of Madison County” contains some Crossbowet­te memorabili­a. It will be on display through Dec. 14.

 ?? NWA Democrat-Gazette/DAVID GOTTSCHALK ?? Jason Yates, owner of Sparky’s Garage, describes Wednesday one of the crossbows by Stevens Crossbow Corp. on display in the waiting room of the garage in Huntsville. Yates collects an assortment of Huntsville memorabili­a, including the 18 crossbows in his collection.
NWA Democrat-Gazette/DAVID GOTTSCHALK Jason Yates, owner of Sparky’s Garage, describes Wednesday one of the crossbows by Stevens Crossbow Corp. on display in the waiting room of the garage in Huntsville. Yates collects an assortment of Huntsville memorabili­a, including the 18 crossbows in his collection.

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