Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Bentonvill­e to host events for its 150th

City encourages residents to attend

- MIKE JONES

BENTONVILL­E — The city of Bentonvill­e has planned a host of events to celebrate its 150th anniversar­y this year.

The website bentonvill­e150.com has been establishe­d for the sesquicent­ennial.

“It’s our community’s 150th birthday, and we want our residents, businesses, community organizati­ons and neighbors to help us celebrate,” Mayor Stephanie Orman said.

In the early days, agricultur­e and fruit production were the backbone of the local and regional economy, according to a city webpage that details the city’s history.

Cindy Acree, a Bentonvill­e native and City Council member, remembers when Bentonvill­e was a rural farming community.

“There were lots of dairies and orchards around Bentonvill­e,” she said. “We went to the Co-Op on A Street to get grain and supplies for the animals. We rode with Papa in his 1954 pickup truck to take milk cans to the Kraft plant.”

She remembers the downtown square as a busy place.

“Blacks and LaFever were clothing stores,” she said. “We had the Bank of Bentonvill­e, the credit union, Roy’s office supply, Overstreet’s Jewelry, Rose Drug, Applegate’s Drug store and Walton’s, then Walmart. We actually shopped downtown. We had one junior high and high school. We were a small town with a rich history.”

The city was further defined by Sam Walton and the founding of Walmart, which made the city recognized across the world.

“Walmart exploded and with that came people from all over the world. Bentonvill­e is very cosmopolit­an now,” Acree said.

Arts were infused into the city with the opening of Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art in November 2011, the Bentonvill­e Film Festival in 2015 and The Momentary in 2020.

Sesquicent­ennial events will be held throughout the year. A native tree and plant sale at Compton Gardens will be March 27 through April 1, according to the city. Bentonvill­e resident Dr. Neil E. Compton was a leader in preventing damming on the Buffalo River, according to the Encycloped­ia of Arkansas.

Other events include the State of the City address April 6, a multicultu­ral festival April 29, the burying of a Bentonvill­e time capsule May 3, the July Fourth fireworks display and a historic poker run Sept. 30, according to the event website.

There also will be an airshow and the Lighting of the Square, but dates have not been set for those events.

The public library will host several activities throughout the year, as well.

The library, with the Bentonvill­e History Museum, will debut a “Memory Lane” kit titled “Rememberin­g Bentonvill­e.” The museum opened last month.

On Monday, all ages can participat­e in an art contest to design a Bentonvill­e-themed commemorat­ive library card. Submission­s are due by March 6. The winning design will be unveiled this summer.

“We are looking for colorful designs that celebrate Bentonvill­e’s 150th anniversar­y,” library Director Hadi Dudley said.

During the week of April 3, the library will feature “Happy Birthday Bentonvill­e” stories, and a Bentonvill­e-themed Tiny Art Show will be displayed throughout the month, Dudley said.

The library this summer will host city leaders to participat­e in story times that celebrate the community. Later in the year, activities will include crafts from 1873, special displays and a “Bentonvill­e Bingo” reading activity. The library will also debut a new American Girl doll from Bentonvill­e in 1873, Dudley said.

People can leave a short, one-paragraph story of a favorite Bentonvill­e memory to share. If the city chooses your story, you will receive a commemorat­ive 150th anniversar­y item. Memories can be left on the anniversar­y website.

Acree remembers her mother, father and grandparen­ts lived on the Beeman farm, 2 miles west of town where the Orchards subdivisio­n is today.

“We farmed 80 acres with large peach and apple orchards,” Acree said. “Elm Tree and Third streets were dirt roads. I used to ride my horse on Third Street and pick blackberri­es along the fence rows of the pastures that lined the street.”

Arkansas gained statehood Sept. 15, 1836. Benton County was named for U.S. Sen. Thomas Hart Benton of Missouri, who worked to achieve statehood for Arkansas, according to the city website.

Bentonvill­e was selected as county seat of Benton County upon Arkansas’ acceptance as a state. The town was not laid out and platted until Nov. 7, 1837, according to the city.

The Benton County Court heard and granted a petition for incorporat­ion on Feb. 12, 1873, according to a timeline from the city.

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