Bienville Parish
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About this ebook
Benjamin Brad Dison
Local historian Benjamin Brad Dison is a lifelong resident of Bienville Parish. Brad received a bachelor�s degree in history from Northwestern State University in neighboring Natchitoches Parish and a master�s degree in history from Louisiana Tech University in Lincoln Parish in 2012. His research interests include early transportation and the railroad industry of the South. Contributors of the images are longtime residents of Bienville Parish, as well as local museums and libraries.
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Bienville Parish - Benjamin Brad Dison
book.
INTRODUCTION
On March 14, 1848, the Louisiana State Legislature divided Claiborne Parish in half and named the lower portion Bienville Parish, in honor of French Canadian explorer Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne, Sieur de Bienville. He had served as the governor of French Louisiana for four separate terms, a total of 30 years, and is credited as the founder of New Orleans. Although the parish bears his name, Bienville explored the Gulf of Mexico coastline and the mouth of the Mississippi River, and never traversed what is now Bienville Parish.
In the 1830s, Reuben Drake left his home in South Carolina and scouted for land in Louisiana to which to move his family. They established the first permanent settlement in what became Bienville Parish and named it Mount Lebanon. As they were devout Baptists, the early pioneers quickly built a church and school, which became the focus of the community. By 1853, the school had grown into Mount Lebanon University. At first, the university was a men’s college, but it soon converted to a coed college. During the Civil War, classes were suspended as the Confederacy commandeered the college and used the campus as a hospital for sick and wounded soldiers. After the war, Mount Lebanon University resumed its classes. In 1906, following years of financial troubles, the school was consolidated into Louisiana College in Pineville, Louisiana.
Over time, small communities developed throughout the region, but Bienville Parish was sparsely populated during the 19th century. Until the last decade of the century, the small town of Sparta was the cultural and political center of the parish. Sparta had no immediate access to a navigable waterway, and all goods and supplies were transported overland by horse-drawn wagons. Visitors to the region wrote to their families about the vast acreage of virgin pine timber. Entrepreneurs quickly realized the potential profits that pine lumber could bring, but they lacked the infrastructure to move the harvested lumber to market.
In the late 1880s, workers completed the Vicksburg, Shreveport & Texas Railroad, an east-west railway that passed through the northern portion of Bienville Parish and bypassed Sparta. The community of Arcadia was originally located about a mile south of the railroad, and its citizens moved the town to its present location to be along the rail line. Towns along the railroad, such as Arcadia and Gibsland, became boomtowns, and communities that were bypassed, such as Sparta and Sailes, began to decline. Citizens of Arcadia, Bienville, and Gibsland rallied for a more suitable parish seat and held an election to decide the matter. Shortly after the election results were in, several wagons pulled up beside the courthouse in Sparta, and the wagon drivers haphazardly loaded the parish records destined for Arcadia. Controversy still surrounds the midnight raid,
as many citizens of Bienville continue to argue that the parish seat was stolen.
In the latter part of the 19th century, the population in Bienville Parish grew rapidly due to the booming timber industry. Railroad companies built more miles of track throughout the parish to reach the remote pine trees. Teams of woodcutters built temporary wooden-railed railroads, called trams, to transport the fresh-cut timber to the main railroad line. Once loggers exhausted the timber supply along the tram, they moved to another location. Mill companies built sawmills along the route of the railroad to process the rough timber into finished lumber. The timber industry required a large number of workers, and multitudes of people arrived with their families seeking new opportunities. Many sawmills in the parish paid their employees with tokens or company notes that could only be spent at the sawmill’s company stores, called commissaries.
Towns grew around the sawmills. As the infrastructure grew, other support businesses came in and provided opportunities besides those immediately involved with the timber industry. Each town had different enterprises that supported the workers in the region, providing a number of goods and services, including general stores, millineries, hotels, restaurants, and cotton gins. These businesses also played an important role in the developing communities. They served as gathering places for people to form community bonds and aided in the creation of settlements that would outlast the timber industry.
Farmers in the region were putting the newly cleared land to good use. They planted a variety of crops, including corn, beans, and tomatoes, but perhaps the most well-known was watermelons. The sandy soil around villages like Saline provided the ideal conditions for a bumper crop. Workers at the packing mill in Saline loaded crops onto train cars destined for distant locations. Saline became synonymous with watermelons, and Saline Watermelons were shipped worldwide.
Churches and schools were the foundations of the early communities. Most towns had a single one-room building that functioned as a school during the week and as a church on weekends. For many farmers in the parish, churches provided the only source of activity away from their farms. In the 1920s, motorized buses transported students over longer distances in a shorter period of time, and the several small schools consolidated into newly built multiroom schools. Although churches and schools no longer used the same