Poplar Bluff - Poplar Bluff, MO
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member YoSam.
N 36° 45.378 W 090° 23.565
15S E 732744 N 4071008
Yellow Poplars, lumber mills, Civil War, and Railroads, the history of this town and Butler County.
Waymark Code: WM3FDV
Location: Missouri, United States
Date Posted: 03/29/2008
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member muddawber
Views: 35

Marker Erected by: State Historical Society of Missouri and State Highway Commission.
Date Marker Erected: 1958.
County of Marker: Butler.
Location of Marker: S. Main St. & Vine St., courthouse lawn, Poplar Bluff.

Marker Text:

Poplar Bluff


In the Ozark perimeter, above Missouri's Southeast Lowland Region, Poplar Bluff was laid out in 1849 as seat of newly organized Butler County. The town was named for its location in a forest of yellow poplars on the bluffs above the Black River. Called L'eau Noire by French trappers, Black River flows clear and swift above Poplar Bluff, murky and slow below. The county is named for Mexican War General W.O. Butler.

Almost destroyed by guerrilla and troop foragers during the Civil War, Poplar Bluff's present development began with the arrival of the St. Louis, Iron Mt. & So. R.R.(Mo.Pac.) in 1872. The lumbering era of the 1870's to early 1900's brought a second railroad (the Frisco), 2 banks, and Black River Seminary (1869-75) to Poplar Bluff. A part of Butler County is now Clark National Forest.

Poplar Bluff's growth continued with the agriculture economy that developed after the lumbering boom. Reclamation of Butler County's swamp between the St. Francis and Black rivers began with the 1913 Inter-River Drainage District. The county produces rice, cotton, grain, livestock, and lumber.

Poplar Bluff, seat of Butler County, with its trade, banks, and industries, is in territory ceded by Osage Indians in 1808 and utilized by other tribes into the 1830's. Southward is Gillis Bluff, said to be named for an Indian trader who had a post there around 1825. Above Poplar Bluff ran the Natchitoches Trail, an Indian pathway to the Southwest. Geologists H.R. Schoolcraft, in 1819, and G.W. Featherstonhaugh, in 1834, traveled along a part of this path. Some 1800 Indian mounds remain in the county area.

Butler County's first settler is said to be Solomon Kittrell in 1819. The early pioneers, largely from Kentucky and Tennessee, were attracted by the plentiful water, wood, and game. Taxes were often paid in furs. About 1881, a number of German families formed a short-lived communal colony in the vicinity of Gillis Bluff where they laid out Carola.

In 1927, a tornado struck in Poplar Bluff killing 87 and doing over 2 million dollars damage. The courthouse, rebuilt after the disaster, is the county's fourth. Poplar Bluff was the home of Dwight H. Brown, Missouri's Secretary of State, 1932-44.

History of Mark:

Update this 1958 marker:
1. Clark National Forest was combined with the mark Twain National Forest in 1976.
2. The correct spelling if G. W. Featherstonhaugh.
3. Dwight H. Brown served as secretary of state from 1933 to 1944.



Web link: Not listed

Additional point: Not Listed

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