Pea Ridge Times

Is it important to preserve historical sites?

- Annette beArd Editor’s note: Annette Beard is the managing editor of The Times of Northeast Benton County. The opinions expressed are those of the author. She can be reached at abeard@nwaonline.com.

As farms have given way to subdivisio­ns and commercial developmen­t, it was inevitable that the growth should affect the Pea Ridge National Military Park.

The 4,300-acre park, establishe­d in 1956, encompasse­s about 90% of the land on which the two-day conflict known as the Battle of Pea Ridge took place in March 1862.

After the battle, after the war, the local residents resumed their lives, farming their land and raising their children. For the next nearly 100 years, people told stories about the conflict, what they or their relatives had endured or seen.

To establish the park, people gave up their farms that had been in their families for generation­s. Some moved elsewhere in the country. Some moved to Pea Ridge. Some of the houses were moved to Pea Ridge and are still there.

Even in 1980, there were people who remembered hearing their grandparen­ts’ stories about the battle and the difficulti­es that followed.

We alive now have not endured a war, a battle on our homeland. We have no true concept of the destructio­n and devastatio­n wrought by that.

A former superinten­dent at PRNMP, John Scott, used to say it was essential that we study history to learn from it and to not make the same mistakes.

Several military exercises were held on the battlegrou­nd park training modern soldiers as they evaluated the strategies of the historical soldiers.

Pea Ridge is growing. Some like that. Some don’t. Community leaders need to step up and put their heads together to consider what they want to see here in five, 10, 15 years. What do they want the atmosphere of the city, the larger community to be? And, how do they plan to fund it?

City officials heard a presentati­on from the manager of the Bentonvill­e Advertisin­g and Promotion Commission. One point she made was to determine what we have to offer — what is the drawing card to elicit tourists and new residents?

Many years ago, Fran Mainella, former director of the National Park Service, praised the leadership and foresight of the Pea Ridge National Military Park saying it was the most pristine historical park in the nation. (No golden arches could be seen from the park property.)

What does the future hold for PRNMP, for Pea Ridge, for northeaste­rn Benton County? What will you do to help?

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States