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- 1. Wharton Carnall
- 2. 13 North 7th Street, Fort
Smith, Arkansas
- 3. Real Estate Business
- 4. Spent a few years in helping my father in
the newspaper business, a home paper known as “The Fort Smith
Elevator.” When I was about thirty years old, father sold the paper
business out to other parties, and we have given our entire time to
this, our real estate business.
- 5. I was born on April the 10th,
1862.
- 6. My place of birth was in a country home
about six miles from Fort Smith on a little prairie, which we all know
as, “Massard Prairie”, in Sebastian County, Arkansas.
- 7. I have never been married, and it is too
late now.
- 9. My entire life has been spent in and about
Fort Smith Arkansas; I have never had a home outside of this Fort
Smith District.
- 12. Most homes were built of pine lumber, the
boards were cut one inch thick by twelve inches wide for the walls of
the house and nailed to the crude frame work which consisted of a two
by eight and sixteen or eighteen feet in length which the boards are
nailed to at the bottom end and another piece of lumber two inches
thick by four inches in width of the same length of this bottom reach
or tie, to which the top end of these boards are nailed to, thus
forming the walls of the house. Most houses were covered or roofed
with boards which were riven or split out of timber, the men would go
to the woods, with saw, ax, frow, and mallet, after finding a tree
that would split straight and was of a tough fiber, they proceeded to
make the boards for the roof of the house. They fell the tree, then
cut the log into the desired lengths, which was usually about eighteen
inches long. Then they split these cuts, removed the bark from the
timber to be used and then it is split into pieces about 3 or 4
inches thick and 4 to 6 inches wide called bolts. Then they are ready
to rive. The board maker takes his frow and mallet and proceeds to
make the boards. A good board maker, made about fifteen hundred boards
per day. Some were built of logs, some of stone, some of brick. The
stone and brick were obtained in our own community. Most chimneys were
built of stone, quite a few were made of brick and a few of
strips and clay.
- 13. Most people used coal oil, (kerosene),
for lights; though some used tallow candles.
- 14. Electric lighting was first used about
1892.
- 15. In my early days wood was used for fuel
by every family. Coal came into use after some 20 years by just
a few, in the early nineties natural gas was brought to Fort
Smith and most people are now using it for fuel.
- 16. Corn and wheat for bread, meats were
pork, beef, and mutton. Of the wild meats we had the deer, turkey,
rabbit, quail, coon, and squirrel, fish were very plentiful, and no
one depended on wild meats for food, though they served the wild meats
often.
- 17. Most of our early clothes were
manufactured at home; cotton and wool were both used in the making of
clothes for the entire families. The fiber was first carded into
rolls, took to the spinning wheel, where these rolls were spun into
thread, then it was put into the loom which was a home made
construction, and there it was woven into cloth, of which the family
garments were made. Some of this thread that was turned out of the
spinning wheel was used for knitting the stockings and sox for the
family. This knitting was done with the use of four slender steel
needles. Most of this cloth manufacturing was performed by the mothers
with the help of the girls in the home as soon as they became old
enough to do the work.
- 18. The courtship in my early days was about
the same as they are today. When young folks get married, and some
times they were not so young, the people of the community came
together with old tin pans, tin buckets, cow bells, shot guns, or
anything we could make a big noise with, and we went to the place
where the newly weds were staying. There we kept up a great noise till
late hours and sometime all night; we had a real old time Arkansas shivaree, and quite often we demanded the treats from the bridegroom.
- 19. For some years after the Civil War any
articles of food we had to buy, was very expensive. The people
in our community did not buy them. We substituted those things
when we could and otherwise we did without.
- 20. It was the general custom for those who
were more fortunate to share their eatables with those who were in
need. Some man in the community would take his team and wagon and go
to those who had something they could give in the way of food or
clothing, and it was delivered to the needy one, or ones, as the case
may be.
- 21. Cotton, corn, wheat, oats, sorghum,
Irish and sweet potatoes were some of the plants grown by the
early settlers of this part of Arkansas. During the Civil War, a
regiment of soldiers who were stationed at Fort Smith taught the
people here in this part of Arkansas to eat tomatoes. Soon after this,
tomatoes were grown and used as a food. The horse, mule, cow, hog,
sheep, cat and dog were some of the domestic animals raised by the
early settlers.
- 22. The farming tools or implements were very
few, being homemade, were also very crude. The plow, which was made of
wood and the farmer, cut his own pattern with an ax, that too was
homemade, and fastened a strip of steel, which was made by the
community blacksmith, or sometime the farmer was handy enough to shape
the piece of steel himself, to the wooden plow stock to cut, turn, and
cultivate his land. The hoe also was homemade, and the harrow it was
made at home by the owner or sometime by his neighbor who was more
skilled than he was. After my father came home from the war between
the states, and learning that several army guns had been plugged and
thrown into an old well, and as iron of any kind was so very scarce
here, at that time, and no money to buy anything with, as every one
knows, our money was of little value, and most of us had no hard
money (gold or silver), he went to work and drew those old guns from
this well, took the steel and made a set of harrow teeth, for the
frame he had hewn from some pieces of oak timber and that was his
farming implements. Others got scrap iron anywhere they could to make
their crude tools.
- 23. In 1875 Limberg Bro. started the business
of making wagons here in Fort Smith giving employment to 4 or 5 men.
The making of hard wood furniture was first made here by Sparks and
McCloud on First and “I” street in the year 1888, employing 6 or 7
men, and E. B. Bright and Co. built and for some time, operated a mill
for grinding corn and wheat, in the year 1868 on 10th and
Garrison Avenue, giving work to about seven men.
- 24. Some of the wild plants used as food or
for flowers were, the blackberry, strawberry and the dewberry, the
onion, poke for greens, we chewed the sweet gum resin as that was all
the chewing gum we had, and sassafras roots and the chips from the
spice wood tree, were used to make a tea; which we substituted for
coffee. We used sorghum molasses for sugar.
- 26. When a fire alarm was proclaimed, and
that was not by phone as to day, but by the screams of a woman, by
firing of guns, ringing of bells or tooting the horn; and everyone who
was large enough to help grabbed a bucket and joined the crowd some
went to the well of wells, nearest the fire and drew up the water, the
rest formed a line from the well to the fire and the water was thus
conveyed to the fire. Every home in the town was equipped with a
ladder to be used in case of fire.
- 27. There is a hill about six miles south of
Fort Smith called Bald Knob because of its almost barren top. There is
a hill called Spring Hill; which is about nine miles east of Fort
Smith, so called because of its springs of water on and around it. We
too have the Wild Cat Mountain, so called because the mountain was the
home of many wild cats. My mother in 1857 came into possession of a
large track of land on this Wild Cat Mountain and it was kept as a
family possession until 1898. My mother was Miss Franses H. Carr,
before her marriage to my father. The sanatorium, for the tubercular
patients, a branch of the State Sanatorium, at Booneville, Arkansas,
is built on this Wild Cat Mountain. This mountain is four and one half
miles North East of Fort Smith.
- 28. The first hotel in Fort Smith was built
on First Street and Garrison Avenue. The stagecoach station was built
before my time at North Third and “A” Streets, and covered three lots,
with a 150 ft. front by 140 ft. back to an alley, and was later
transferred into a wagon yard about 1878. There was a boat landing at
the foot of Garrison Avenue; I do not know when boats first
landed hers.
- 29. My early schooling was about the same as
the rest of the country boys and girls. The school house was a one
room house built of logs cut out here and there to let in the light,
and no way to close these openings; therefore we only had short terms
of school about 2 or 3 months in the year while weather was warm, the
house being to open to have school when the weather was cold, and too,
the children had to help make and gather the crops; hence our schools
were taught in July, August and sometimes the first-half of September.
The seats were logs split in halves and two large holes bored near
each and of this half log and sticks of timber are trimmed and driven
into these holes to form the legs for the seats, and that was the kind
of seats we used in those days.
- 30. My first school was three miles south
from my home in this (Sebastian) county. 31. My
teacher, that is my first teacher, was Mr. Bugg. In my early life, I
was not a healthy child and did not get to go to school as other
children in those early days of my life.
- I only attended three or four days, of
this my first school to this Mr. Bugg. My father was a well educated
man, having been raised in the state of Virginia and had finished in
some of the best schools in Virginia: Therefore he taught me. I came
to town, Fort Smith, to school when I was yet a young lad, about
thirteen years old, and received about twelve months schooling. The
school I attended was the Belle Grove School. It is still used as a
school building and is made of brick, and located on the 600 block
between North Sixth and North Seventh Streets here in Fort Smith. My
teacher here was a Miss Wheatly. I had six miles to go each morning
and night while attending this Belle Grove School. In the years 1881
and 1882 I attended school at Salem, Arkansas, and the name of the
school was Buckner College built on what is now known as 71, a State
Highway, and 24 miles south of Fort Smith; though the little
settlement is no longer called Salem but Wicherville (Witcherville).
- 32. Funds were provided partly by taxation,
and sometimes it was run on a tuition plan. The tuition being
one dollar per twenty days.
- 33. The school books used in the early days
were Readers, McGuffey’s; Speller, Webster’s (Blue-back);
Arithmetic, Ray’s. Writing was also taught in the schools.
Webster’s dictionary was the general reference book.
- 34. The reading matter of my early days
consisted of very few books, magazines, and newspapers. When I was a
young fellow I read very few books or papers of any kind, but I do
remember the names, or titles of a few of the magazines i.e., Goddy’s
(Godey's)
Magazine, Youth’s Companion, Ladies Book and Liltrall’s (Littell's) Living Age.
- My father at one time had many of the
early books, but they some how got away from the family during the
Civil War period. I have one book of my father’s, the title of
which is, Works of Alexander Pope, written by Mr. Pope in 1766.
Containing both prose and poetry. Authors and dates were always hard
for me to remember.
- 35. At the stagecoach station on what is now
North Third and “A” Street.
- 36. Early Horse Cars were first used in our
town in 1888. Trolley cars were substituted ten years later in
1898. In the year of 1933 the buses took the place of the trolley
car.
- 38. I saw my first train at Altus, Arkansas,
in 1877. The railroad had only been built as far up as Altus at that
time. I went with some people, who were going down to the end of the
line to take the train, purposely to see a train.
- 41. The first public building for our
theatrical performances was built of brick by subscriptions or
donations from the public, on the corner of North Eighth and “A”
Street in 1883. The building is occupied by the Fort Smith Gas Company
and the Eagle Lodge at the present time and is in fairly good
repair.
- 42. Christmas, in memory of the birth of
Christ on December the twenty fifth of December. It was a great day
for every one young and old. Many people went to church on that
day as they do now; every family had their best dinner of the year
on that day. It to was a day when gifts were exchanged between
friends and loved ones.
- The 4th of July was always
celebrated each year in memory of our nation’s birth day, or our
freedom from under English rule. This was celebrated with bands
playing, flags flying, public speaking, dancing, eating and drinking,
and doing any and everything that every body might have a good nice
time.
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- Questions 8,10 and 11 were passed up
because Mr. Carnall is a native of this state and 25, 37, 39, 40, 43,
44, 45, 46, 47, 48, 49, 50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, 56, 57, 58,
and 59 because he could not answer those questions.
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