Pea Ridge Times

GLADE: Post Office to hold open house

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building to move it. It looked awful … I remember it rolling in and wondering, ‘Oh, my goodness, what have we done?’” Hanner said.

Williams and Heck both attended Coal Gap School and remember frequentin­g the post office and mercantile.

Larry Hanner, though not a native, moved to the area in the late 1940s and attended school at Coal Gap School for the seventh and eighth grades. He said the family moved from Iowa because his grandfathe­r, a railroad engineer, began having heart problems and needed the more southern climate.

“I was the only one in my class,” he said.

Bob and Ruth Billingsle­y, moved to northwest Arkansas 12 years ago from Norman, Okla. The old school building and teacher’s cottage are both on their land.

“My family said to tear it down,” Ruth said, recalling her determinat­ion to save the old cottage. “We jokingly refer to it as the money pit.”

The cottage is now restored and a lovely guest cottage with an additional room on the back. Billingsle­y said visiting missionari­es have used it as a peaceful place for respite.

Judi Walter is from Maine. She moved to northwest Arkansas about 10 years ago and said she had been a member of historical societies in northern Maine. Contrastin­g the age of buildings on the east coast with historical structures in northwest Arkansas, Walter said the house in which she lived in Maine was 250 years old.

“We’re glad she likes U.S. history,” Pat Heck said of Walter, expressing gratitude for her involvemen­t in the society.

“According to history, we’re not exactly sure, but there were supposedly three post offices here,” Heck said, explaining that the post office moved back and forth across the White River from Glade to LaRue. “So, the actual history is uncertain from 1858 to 1866 … There were several name changes and location changes until 1903, then it settled near where I grew up.”

She said that historical accounts indicate that the first post office was operated by Able Jennings who also had property in the area. There was a ferry there, too, called Jennings Ferry, which transporte­d people across the White River. That road led into Rogers.

About a half mile from the Glade Post Office sat Coal Gap School providing first through eighth grades.

“No one had enough money to move to town and go to high school,” Heck recalled.

One of those students, Cleva Douglas, who was born in the Glade Community in 1907, remembered attending Coal Gap School where she said she acquired the love of reading. Mrs. Douglas contribute­d much to the history of the school. In 2013, Cleva Williams Douglas celebrated her 106th birthday. She died Aug. 29, 2014, 13 weeks before her 107th birthday.

All board members agreed, they have been and will continue to collect the oral history and welcome anyone from the area to tell them their stories.

“We believe in history and the preservati­on of it and want to save it for future generation­s so they will have some idea of what life was like before Beaver Lake so young people can know everything wasn’t air conditione­d and it was a real treat to get a piece of candy,” Heck said.

“I’d like to see it look as near as it can to when it was functionin­g — add feed bags, put letters in there and label those of some of the people who lived around here,” Reynolds said. “I don’t think young people have any idea. This building didn’t ever have electricit­y.”

“I remember candy being there in a glass counter,” Heck said, reminiscin­g about the mercantile in the 1940s. “Life before screens did exist.”

“Yes, the Star Route came through in ’47 or ’48,” Hanner said of rural mail delivery.

A Coal Gap School reunion is still held, but at Garfield now.

“We had 150 the first year,” Heck said. “Many of them are now deceased.”

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