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The 37th Annual War Eagle Craft Fair by Joshua Heston & Dale Grubaugh It all started with a heavy rain. The clouds rolled over the Ozark hills along with unseasonably cold temperatures. Downpours hit the high country of the Boston Mountains the headwaters of the White River, the Kings River, and the War Eagle. The War Eagle River (Plate 2) crested near the venerable mill on Friday 20 feet beyond its banks. The sprawling pastureland of the celebrated War Eagle Craft Fair was under three feet of water. Arkansas news crews came and reported the ravages of weather. And then they went away. The flood waters did the same. And that Saturday morning, the hardworking folks of War Eagle were back at the mill, getting ready for the fair. If theres one thing folks in the hills have learned, its that it takes a lot to put a stop to the Granddaddy of all Ozarks Crafts Fairs clearly, a lot more than a wayward river or a lot of mud. There are craftsman and get-togethers and crafts fairs. And then theres War Eagle. Having grown since Blanche Hanks Elliott started it in 1954, the event is an Ozark phenomenon. (Continued below...) |
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(Fair continued) The fair started across the river from the site of the burned-down mill across the now-centennial bridge (Plate 4). The mill was rebuilt. The millyard became a second fair; host this year to celebrated craftsman Peter Engler, the Ozark Folk Center of Mountain View, Arkansas, and many others. Bill and Lucy Sharp lived atop the hill overlooking the newly rebuilt mill. Lucy was the last postmistress of War Eagle, Arkansas. The War Eagle Store, now over 100 years old, still stands halfway up the hill. (Plate 7). Early in the 70s, Bill and Lucy began the third fair the Sharp Show. All three fairs combine to make the War Eagle phenomenon. But what makes War Eagle so doggoned different? Theres the sheer size. Tents and crafts and cars and people are stretched for just about as far as you can see. Theres the quality of craftsmen and artists. Cinda Serafin, a truly gifted watercolor painter of Royal, Arkansas, was there; as was Tracy Adams, an exceptional Branson potter with a knack for combining beauty, functionality and a low price. Theres the food. Biscuits, cinnamon rolls, cornbread and cobbler are baked and sliced and served by the kitchen-load up on the third floor of the old mill. And theres a sense of generations past and of our heritage slowly slipping away. Norman Hamby, the 44-year pastor of the Rogers First United Pentecostal Church, was there with wife Judy. Theyve been cooking up batches of peanut brittle for War Eagle since the Mills fair first began (Plate 6). (Continued below...) |
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(Fair continued) John and Anne Lee Hampton (Plate 9), whose shop is still down in Pelsor, Arkansas, on Highway 7, make white oak baskets from scratch. If its not handmade, then we dont sell it is their way of life. And lastly, theres the people People willing to wait in stop-and-go traffic down four miles of winding two-lane road to the mill. People who come by the tens of thousands, generation after generation bringing kids and grandkids and organizing makeshift reunions all under the old river trees while the mill wheel keeps on running. People who are willing to share their heart and soul through their trade from baskets to blown glass to cornbread to candy. No, even the old river has a hard time stopping the War Eagle Fair. Yall be there next year. _____ War Eagle Mill photo plates All photo credits: J. Heston State of the Ozarks © Archive Location: War Eagle Mill, Benton County, Arkansas 10/13-17/09 StateoftheOzarks expresses its gratitude to TJ Young and the entire staff of the War Eagle Mill for their extraordinary hospitality during the 37th War Eagle Crafts Fair. |
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