Westside Eagle-Observer

Town shrinks amid region’s growth but hopes for fresh, new start

- By Dan Holtmeyer dholtmeyer@nwadg.com

SULPHUR SPRINGS — This tiny city in northwest Benton County is disappeari­ng, but its inhabitant­s aren’t giving up on its future just yet.

Cities in Benton and Washington counties almost doubled on average in their respective population­s from 2000 to 2015, according to U.S. Census estimates, with Centerton and other smaller cities leading the charge. Sulphur Springs in the meantime tumbled from almost 700 people to an estimated 377, the smallest it has been since around 1900, when tourists flocked here hoping to cure ailments with the city’s mineral-laced spring water.

The population drop makes Sulphur Springs unique among the metropolit­an area’s roughly two dozen member cities. Winslow in Washington County also lost people, but the township that includes the city and its surroundin­gs actually gained.

Yet several Sulphur Springs residents agreed the town is full of potential, thanks to its other unique traits such as the 20-acre park that includes the original springs and dominates the center of town and the commitment and zeal of the community to turn things around.

“We are a little town, we’re struggling, but we’re making it and we’re improving,” said Sulphur Springs Mayor Shane Weber.

Sulphur Springs began in the late 1800s much like the state’s more famous Eureka Springs and Hot Springs. A railroad dropped off hundreds of visitors per day who stayed at more than a dozen boarding houses and hotels at the town’s peak, said June Murray, who is a member of the city council and community museum commission.

Within living memory, the town had two gas stations and Sunday afternoon would bring baseball games in the cow pastures. The largest hotels, where John Brown University had its start, bustled for decades with the Shiloh Christian community and bakery. Several residents described it as Mayberry, the fictional town in The Andy Griffith Show. One side of Gov. Asa Hutchinson’s family is from here.

“It was home,” said Murray, a retired schoolteac­her who still lives in town. “Everyone knew everyone; no one locked their doors.”

The sense of community and rural life is still around, but the gas stations are gone, instead setting up in nearby Gravette. Several houses are boarded up or dilapidate­d. Downtown is little more than the fire station, a laundromat and an air and water company. The old hotels stand empty up on the hill, stone ruins of another time.

The volunteer-run library at city hall held a fundraiser in February and lost money, said Sandy Shook, library commission­er. She blamed the city’s losses partly on its isolated location just south of Missouri. Others also pointed to drug use or contentiou­s small-town politics several years back.

Size, at least, isn’t to blame by itself. Goshen was home to a similar population as Sulphur Springs in 2000 and doubled that by 2015. Bethel Heights, nestled between Lowell and Springdale, started around the same size and quadrupled.

Whatever the causes, Sulphur Springs is pushing back. Police Chief Duke Brackney said drug use has gone way down since he came on in 2013 and the four-person department became more active.

Weber pointed with pride to a new jungle gym, cleared fields and other improvemen­ts at the park that are being done with mostly volunteer work or government grants. The town’s hosting its fourth annual Sulphur Days, an Independen­ce Day celebratio­n in late June that brings hundreds of people to the park’s fields and crystalcle­ar creek.

“We’re trying to outdo Gravette,” joked Ron Driskell, a retiree who wore a light-colored cowboy hat over his white hair as he mowed the grass around the spring pumps in his free time. He volunteers, he added bluntly, “because I live here.”

Driskell is a recent newcomer, moving in about two years ago from Hiwasse. Weber moved with his family all the way from Arizona about five years ago, drawn to the green woods and quiet life.

Some say the Bella Vista Bypass for Interstate 49, which will swing near Sulphur Springs once completed, could give another boost, and a new restaurant is expected soon downtown.

Part of the road is open and the Missouri Department of Transporta­tion officials have said they are making finishing their portion of the bypass a priority.

Residents widely agree the town needs more businesses and jobs most of all. Many look to the former hotels, where the Shiloh Community ran an organic food business and religious ministry until it gradually shut down since the 2000s.

Kim Hendren, a Repub- lican state representa­tive from Gravette, said he and his wife bought the 30-acres last fall for about $450,000 and hopes to restart it as a large event-and-ministry center and daycare. Hendren’s son Jim, a state senator, lives just outside Sulphur Springs, and the Hendrens’ plastics company started here.

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