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Photograph
by Jesse Jones For
a directory of Lodging, Bed and Breakfast Inns, Hotels, Cabins,
Cottages and Campgrounds, Ellington, Missouri,
please click
here. All
of our fine hosts are ready to help plan your Missouri history
tour of Ellington, MO. |
When
the Civil War began, Confederate soldiers moved into southeast
Missouri from Arkansas, through the wilderness on the Bellevue
Trail, and formed permanent camps at Van Buren, Barnesville,
and Lesterville. With the trail and the area villages in its
possession, their next move would be Fort Davidson. The Union
wanted to protect Pilot Knob as well as St. Louis and sent
the Union Calvary on missions throughout the area settlements.
They made many raids, wounding, killing and taking Confederate
soldiers captive. Determined to completely rid this area of
the Confederates and their sympathizers, they continued raiding
and burning villages to the ground. During this time, the
Union constructed Fort
Barnesville nearby. No doubt this was to ensure the Confederates
did not again regain control of the important trail through
the wilderness. In
1868 (after the war) William Copeland, started rebuilding
this town on 80 acres that were owned by Sina Ellington. He
opened a crude store and encouraged settlers to come back
to the area. Soon Barnesville was renamed Ellington, and in
1893, Copeland’s sons decided to make a new town site
where the town sits today. This village grew slowly until
the timber industry brought many new families and businesses.
The Missouri Southern Railroad arrived in 1896. Soon,
several one and two-room schoolhouses were scattered throughout
the small communities in the area, each employing a teacher
that taught the basics to children grades one through eight.
High schools came to the Ozarks slowly. Higher education required
a handsome price and many miles of travel. The region’s
first high schools were “academies” with tuitions.
It would be 1913, before free rural high schools began to
open, due in large part to the efforts of Senator Carter M.
Buford, an Ellington citizen. The Missouri Legislature passed
a school bill introduced by Senator Buford. Ellington area
schools were the first to be consolidated in Missouri. With
consolidation, “bussing” was needed to transport
area students to school. A wagon with a cab overhead, pulled
by a couple of horses, was the areas first “bus”.
In 1939, the Bull Moose (a single motorized train car) was
used throughout the area to provide student transportation.
(The tracks have since been removed). Today,
several businesses that came to the area during the early
1900s are still in operation. Be sure to stop and visit the
Reynolds County Museum located on Main Street when visiting
historic Ellington. Tour Fort Barnesville nearby. Click
here for more information.
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