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Swamp
Makes History Personal At
Louisiana Purchase State Park
Photo available: (501) 682-7609
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By
Jim Taylor, travel writer
Arkansas Department of Parks and Tourism
Arkansas's
16th state park, Louisiana Purchase, is a National Historic
Landmark and home to a monument marking the initial
point for surveys of the 1803 Louisiana Purchase. The
monument lies within a fascinating headwater swamp and
can be viewed via an elevated boardwalk that has wayside
exhibits. The park lies at the end of Ark. 362 two miles
east from U.S. 49 about 19 miles southeast of Brinkley.
It has no camping facilities, restrooms or on-site staff.
Since
its creation some 25 years ago, Arkansas's Louisiana
Purchase Historic State Park has remained little known,
despite the fact it is a National Historic Landmark
and its main feature, a 950-foot boardwalk into a swamp,
has been designated a National Recreation Trail.
The
park will seemingly get its due, however, in 2003 as
Arkansas celebrates the bicentennial of the mammoth
land deal that brought the state's territory under U.S.
ownership. The park is scheduled to be featured on the
cover of the state's official highway map for the year,
and U.S. 49, the major highway leading to the park,
will become known as the Louisiana Purchase Byway.
While
many Arkansas state parks are both historically and
environmentally significant, the Louisiana Purchase
site combines those elements to give visitors a uniquely
personal sense of an important era in American history.
Its historical significance derives not so much from
the purchase itself, but rather from its connection
to pioneer settling of the acquired lands.
On
April 30, 1803, the United States committed to pay France
$15 million for land that would become all of Arkansas
and all or part of 12 other states: Louisiana, Missouri,
Iowa, North and South Dakota, Nebraska, Montana, Wyoming,
Colorado, Kansas, Oklahoma and Minnesota. (The U.S.
also held that the purchase included the panhandles
of Mississippi and Alabama, a claim that was disputed
by Spain for nearly two decades.)
The
purchase doubled the size of U.S. territory and removed
a potent barrier to America's continued westward expansion
by ending European control of the continental heartland.
American
settlement of the new territory began in earnest following
the War of 1812. Land had been promised to the soldiers
of the war. In 1815, President James Madison ordered
an official survey of the area to establish a system
for distributing land to the veterans.
On
October 27, 1815, a survey party led by Prospect K.
Robbins headed north from the confluence of the Arkansas
and Mississippi Rivers to establish a north-south line
to be known as the Fifth Principal Meridian. The same
day, a party led by Joseph C. Brown departed westward
from the junction of the St. Francis River and the Mississippi
to establish an east-west line, known as a baseline.
The
crossing of the two lines would be the initial point
from which future surveys would originate. Robbins's
party had traveled north almost 56 miles when they crossed
the baseline that had been surveyed by Brown's party.
Two gums about 18 inches in diameter were marked as
witness trees to delineate the initial point, some 26
miles west of the Mississippi.
Both
the meridian and the baseline would later be extended,
and land surveys for all or parts of the Louisiana Purchase
states west of the Mississippi would subsequently be
measured from the point in eastern Arkansas.
The site went unheralded for more than a century. In
1921, two surveyors discovered the witness trees that
had been marked by Robbins' party in 1815. Realizing
the significance of the find, the L'Anguille Chapter
of the National Society of the Daughters of the American
Revolution in nearby Marianna placed a monument on the
site in 1926.
The
granite marker, at the end of the park boardwalk, reads
in part: "This stone marks the base established
Nov. 10, 1815, from which the lands of the Louisiana
Purchase were surveyed by United States engineers."
Although the Arkansas legislature designated the site
for a state park in 1961, it wasn't until 1977 that
acquisition of the roughly 37-acre tract was funded
by the state Natural Heritage Commission because of
its status as one of the state's last remaining headwater
swamps. Few were left because such land was easily converted
to agricultural use.
Over
the years, alternating periods of flooding and drying
- though rarely flooding deeply or drying completely
- have produced an unusually complex plant community
in the park. Plants normally associated with swamps,
such as swamp tupelo, bald cypress, black willow and
button bush, occur in proximity with upland species,
such as sweet gum, mulberry, Nuttall's oak and sassafras.
Walking
along the boardwalk, park visitors find the woods filled
with dark water, its surface rippled by water spiders,
feeding minnows and an occasional snake. The drumming
of woodpeckers is common. In warm months, skinks can
be seen playing on the walkway and mosquitoes are abundant,
making insect repellant a necessity for those who want
to linger.
Along
the route, informational panels relate the story of
the Louisiana Purchase, the survey and the swamp.
Shortly,
the boardwalk enters an area dominated by buttressed
trunks of closely spaced tupelos and cypresses ascending
to an almost solid canopy of summer foliage. From late
spring to early autumn, one is likely to see a darting
Acadian flycatcher or the yellow flash of a prothonotary
warbler. Binoculars are helpful for enjoying the area's
birds, which are of interest year-round.
The
swamp's interior is an eerily beautiful place, but without
the boardwalk few would dare to venture there. The 1815
survey parties had no such luxury.
"By
standing quietly at this site," one of the panels
informs visitors, "one can imagine the vastness
and solitude of this land and the strengths of those
people who negotiated for its purchase and explored,
surveyed and settled it."
For visitors willing to spend time exploring the park's
boardwalk into a swamp awaits a profound pay-off: a
personal understanding of the depth of human spirit
required to confront the territorial wilderness of the
Louisiana Purchase.
A
major renovation of the boardwalk and the installation
of new informational panels are planned for this summer.
Special park programs are being scheduled for next year.
On first and third Saturdays from March through November,
state park interpreters and other presenters will offer
programs on the Louisiana Purchase, the park's environment
and aspects of Arkansas's colonial and territorial history.
Brochures,
which are not available at the park, may be obtained
by calling toll-free 1-888-AT-PARKS or by visiting one
of the state's 14 Tourist Information Centers. The nearest
center is located on U.S. 49 just west of the Mississippi
River Bridge.
An
informative park web site compiled by Brinkley elementary
students can be found at www.lapurchase.org.
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