Early Arkansas Hunters: Arkansas Territory 1818.

The French hunter Fogle came to colonial Arkansas in 1769 and settled on the Saline River.  His descendent, Jacque Fogle, was born on an island in the Ouachita River in 1818.  The Fogles harvested deer, bear, and fish on the Saline and Ouachita Rivers, which he then carried to market at Monroe, Louisiana, via canoe. Continue reading “Early Arkansas Hunters: Arkansas Territory 1818.”

Early Arkansas Hunters: White River 1818

In describing the lifestyle of families living along the White River near the Missouri border at Sugar-Loaf Prairie in December 1818, Schoolcraft noted that “these people subsist partly by agriculture, and partly by hunting.  They raise corn for bread, and for feeding their horses…but none for exportation.  No cabbages, beets, onions, potatoes, turnips, or otherContinue reading “Early Arkansas Hunters: White River 1818”

Arkansas Hunters from the Past: Frank Leslie from Gillett in 1895

Frank Leslie (b. 1873) was a longtime cook and camp manager for Jacobs Lake Hunting Club On Jacobs Lake NW of Gillett. Today it is known as the Tuff Nutt Hunting Club. Leslie was killed in a train accident in 1896. This picture is from about 1895. Image from Ancestry.com

Early Arkansas Hunters: 1820s Benjamin F. Laynes and Lanesport

Around the same time Benjamin Crowley was living and working on the high ground that soon bore his name, another Benjamin moved into Arkansas Territory, but much farther to the southeast, nearly into the province of Tejas, Mexico.   Benjamin F. Layne moved into the territory near present-day Rocky Comfort in the extreme southwest corner ofContinue reading “Early Arkansas Hunters: 1820s Benjamin F. Laynes and Lanesport”

Arkansas Hunters From The Past: 1910s-1920s

Joseph A. “Joe” Green in Faulkner County is seated on the bottom left of the first picture of an Arkansas hunting camp that dates sometime between 1910 and 1920. (A car enthusiast could probably better date the photo with a look at the car in the background, left) These men have hunting horns, pump andContinue reading “Arkansas Hunters From The Past: 1910s-1920s”

Early Red and White Hunters in the Arkansas Territory: Part II

Early Red and White Hunters in the Arkansas Territory: Part II. They fought each other over hunting supremacy in the Arkansas River Valley and beyond.

Early Red and White Hunters in the Arkansas Territory: Part I

Unfortunately for newly arrived American hunters, they fell into an ongoing power struggle when they arrived in the Arkansas River Valley in the early 1800s. According to historian Kathleen Duval, nations like the Osage and the Quapaw had long sought the best trading avenues for their people to obtain manufactured goods.  However, trading networks andContinue reading “Early Red and White Hunters in the Arkansas Territory: Part I”

Early Arkansas People and Transportation: Ecore A Fabre, 1820s

  Brothers Andrew and Richard (Dick) Tate and George Anderson arrived at Ecore a Fabre in keelboats soon after and plied their trade along the river, carrying goods and pelts.  By the mid-1820s, steamboats made their way up the Ouachita River and brought a faster route from Ecore a Fabre to the New Orleans markets. Continue reading “Early Arkansas People and Transportation: Ecore A Fabre, 1820s”