"History of Leachville"

 

      Rev. James Wiseman Honnoll named the city of Leachville, Arkansas, after his good friend and business partner Joshua Giles Leach.  These two men along with Sam McNamee started the Leach, McNamee Land and Development Company, in Leachville, Arkansas.  All three of these men were members of the First Methodist Church of Holly Springs, Mississippi.  Rev. Honnoll was the minister of the church.  The parsonage that he and his family lived in is located behind this church in the center of Holly Springs, MS.  This company purchased several sections of land around the present area of Leachville.

    Sunday before Thanksgiving, 1897, the two Honnoll families traveled from Garland County to Jonesboro and met J. W. Honnoll.  The two families was Tuggle and Peter Honnoll's.  Peter "Uncle Bud" Honnoll was injured during this trip.  He badly broke his lower leg and as a result he walked with a limp the rest of his life. Honnoll accompanied the families to their new home -- a high spot in a slough thirty miles east of Jonesboro.  Preacher Honnoll gave  his sons forty acres of land a piece to settle.

      When Honnoll met his sons, he had the name Leachville, already painted on a board and nailed to a sapling outside a make-shift cabin at the new home site.  These make-shift houses were shed-like shelters, sometimes having only two sides.

     Leachville soon became a town known as a tent city.  The town was laid out and the first streets were named for Honnoll and McNamee.    This land is located in the middle of Buffalo Island and was covered with all types of hardwood, ripe for harvesting by the newly formed company in Leachville.  The first church service was held Thanksgiving Day under big cypress trees.  The first church was named Honnoll's Chapel for J.W. Honnoll.

      In 1898, parts for the sawmill were hauled by wagon.  The Cannon family was next move to Leachville.  Mr. Cannon helped build the mill.  At first mill products had to be hauled to Cardwell and Ardyrd, Missouri to be shipped to market.  Mill hands numbered forty.  It was hauled 200 yards northwest of where the Frisco Depot now stands.  The first boards cut were used to erect the Methodist Church.  Rev. James W. Honnoll built the oldest church in Leachville, the building still stands today.  It is located at the South end of  Church Street on the left side of the road.

     Tuggle, Muncey and Peter Honnoll and their families were pretty well  settled when their brother John "K" Honnoll moved to Leachville in 1901, with three of his children, Mary Etta Honnoll remained at Ben Lomand, Arkansas to take care of her grandmother and grandfather, Edward Virgil Bryan and Eliza Ann (Horan) Maxcy.

      K. Honnoll was a good with grafting trees.  He learned the trade and Mississippi and perfected it in Sevier County around the Ben Lomand area.  Most of the Honnoll's that have moved away from the Ben Lomand community had good memories of the area.  They talked about the rolling hills and friendly folks that lived in the hills.

 Information from Arkansas Division of the Sons of Confederate Veterans

 

 

Leachville was named for Joshua Gilbert Leach of Holly Springs, Mississippi, who acquired the present site and much surrounding land in the 1890's.

Information from The Mississippi County web page

 

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