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| Dellwood Hotel, Dellwood Park |
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| Pavilion at Dellwood Park |
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| Dellwood Park |
Located on a broad hill in the heart of Northeast
Texas, Mount Pleasant has served as the county seat of Titus County
since 1846, just a few months after Texas became a state.
A few remaining members of the Caddo Indian Tribe
were probably in the area as the first pioneers from the United
States began to settle Northeast Texas during the 1830's. The
Caddos were known as builders of large burial mounds. Legend has
it that they spoke of a "Pleasant Mound" in the central
part of what is now Titus County. It is believed that the early
Anglo settlers modified this Caddo name and referred to the broad,
oak and hickory covered hill as Pleasant Mount. When the county
was organized, the small village that would become the seat of
government was given the name Mount Pleasant. In 1850, the little
town on the hill had a population of 227. One thing that contributed
to attracting settlers, and especially merchants, in the early
years was the Clarksville to Jefferson Road, which passed through
Mount Pleasant. Established by Andrew J. Titus, for whom Titus
County is named, this road made possible the movement of goods
to and from Jefferson, which at that time could be reached by
riverboats. Even with the road, it is said that the trip to Jefferson
by ox wagon required at least five days.
Between 1850 and 1860, Titus County's population
grew from 3636 to 9648, although it must be remembered that the
county then included the present-day counties of Franklin and
Morris. Cotton and corn were the main cash crops. Hogs were found
on virtually every farm, along with oxen, mules and milk cows.
In 1861, Titus County voted for secession by a vote of 411 to
285 and sent as many as 1500 men to fight in the Confederate Army.
During the Civil War, Mount Pleasant was the site of a confederate
transportation depot which employed blacksmiths, carpenters, harness
makers and wheelwrights. The depot's mission was to build wagons
and then fit them out with teams of horses and mules and the necessary
harness so that men and supplies could be moved to the front.
During the Reconstruction Era, Mount Pleasant and
Titus County had to cope with officials appointed by the federal
government. It was a difficult time, filled with lawlessness.
As reconstruction drew to a close in the 1870's,
the stage was set for the next step in the growth of Mount Pleasant,
with the arrival of the first railroads. In 1876, the East Line
and Red River Railroad Company laid tracks across the southeast
corner of the county. Following in 1878 was the extension to Mount
Pleasant of the narrow gauge "Tyler Tap". In 1879, this
section of line was acquired by the Texas and St. Louis Railway
and within a few years was extended to connect St. Louis and Waco.
Another branch, completed in 1887, ran from Mount Pleasant to
Sherman. Largely because of this excellent rail system, Mount
Pleasant was being recognized as a hub of transportation and trade
at the close of the nineteenth century, and had a population of
963 in 1890.
At the national level, largely because of the victorious
conclusion, in August 1898, of the brief Spanish American War,
the United States was being recognized as an emerging world power.
Many Americans were looking to the future with great hope and
expectation for peace and prosperity as the twentieth century
began.
Locally, this optimistic outlook may have been a
factor in the success of efforts to incorporate the city. On September
17, 1900, after an earlier attempt failed, the town's citizens
voted for the measure by a vote of 142 for and 18 opposed. T.
C. Hutchings was Mount Pleasant's first mayor and John B. Stephens,
Sr. became city marshal.
The need for a law enforcement officer may have
become more pressing because a small local war was "brewing"
in the town. Saloons had been common and apparently profitable,
since Mount Pleasant's early days. In the late 1890's a new competitor
showed up. A man named Parker started a large licensed distillery
on the south side of a spring fed stream known as Town Branch,
and was also raising a sizable number of hogs. The hogs were feeding
mostly on the spent mash from the distillery. Witnesses reported
the animals sometimes became intoxicated from the residual alcohol
content of the mash. That some opposition to this early recycling
effort soon occurred is not surprising, considering the aroma
which must have surrounded it. After Parker added retail sales
to his original wholesale operation, local saloon owners as well
as prohibitionists made known their displeasure. Then one group
or the other dynamited the distillery in 1900, totally destroying
it. Many of the hogs were killed, and the remainder were set free
to roam the neighborhood for several days before they were returned
to their pens. Responsibility for the early morning explosion
was never determined. The distillery never got back into operation,
and Titus County voted "dry" about 1902.
Even with the demise of the licensed distillery
and Titus County being legally "dry", residents who
enjoyed a "toddy" or "nightcap" could obtain
"moonshine" from numerous "stills" hidden
away in the thickly wooded hills. In fact, grocers in Mount Pleasant
and other smaller towns in the county sold large quantities of
sugar for use in distilling this "white lightning".
A small community in the north end of the county near White Oak
Creek has the official name of Wilkinson, but is much better known
as "Sugar Hill" because of the tons of sugar that went
there for making "that good ole mountain dew".
At about the same time the Parker distillery/hog
operation got under way, Jessie Reed bought 120 acres of land
on Town Branch, just a short distance east of the whiskey making
location. Reed began to develop his holdings as a resort area.
Numerous chalybeate springs had fed their waters into Town Branch
for thousands of years. These colored waters probably caused the
Caddo Indians to establish villages nearby. Although the coloration
of the water by minerals in the soil gave no magical properties
to the liquid, Reed advertised widely that his "Iridescent
Springs" could cure many common ailments. He built a cafe
and several "camp houses" in a style commonly seen in
"tourist courts" in later years. His efforts were only
marginally successful, however, and in 1906 the property was sold
for taxes to H. W. Peterman for a rather small amount. Peterman
apparently was a talented promoter, as he managed to sell the
property to M. C. Wolf and Associates in 1907 for almost ten times
what he paid. Wolf from Wolfe City, Texas formed a consortium
with Mount Pleasant residents Dr. T. M. Fleming and Spill Brown,
and W. H. and Spencer Florey of Overton. This group then formed
the Red Mineral Springs Development Company, and started construction
on a large two-story frame resort hotel with 70 guest rooms. A
wood rail tramcar line was constructed to carry guests back and
forth between the hotel and downtown district. In spite of many
glowing testimonials citing the benefits of the springs, the public's
belief in the curative properties of the waters was already waning
when the hotel operation began.
In the summer of 1910 a Confederate Soldiers Reunion
was held on the hotel grounds and it is said that thousands came
and camped in and around the area. In fact, by the third day of
the event, all available food in town had been consumed, and the
attendees went home hungry. After the 1910 season, the hotel was
no longer operated by the developers, but was rented out for two
years to a Dr. Speers who operated a prep school there. W. H.
Florey then ran a boarding house for another two or three years.
Until 1922 or 1923, the park area continued to be a popular place
for various conventions and political rallies. About 1925, the
hotel burned and the area was vacant and uncared for until 45
acres was purchased by the City of Mount Pleasant in 1951.
Today Dellwood Park is the pride of the city's parks
department, offering walking paths, exercise areas, swimming pool,
baseball fields, tennis courts and a Boy Scout "hut".
Visitors now enjoy the springs by just watching them quietly flow
into Town Branch, as in the days when deer and Caddo Indians roamed
the area.
During the early years of the twentieth century
a new timber-based industry came to Mount Pleasant when the Hoffman
Heading and Stave Co. was established. The company produced heads
and staves for wooden kegs and barrels, from white oak and gum
trees growing in the bottomlands of White Oak Creek, which forms
the northern boundary of Titus County. In1906, Mr. Hoffman bought
right-of-way and constructed a tram railway from the White Oak
Creek area to his facility in Mount Pleasant, so that a steady
supply of logs could be brought in, regardless of weather conditions.
Similarly, the difficulty of getting around during
the wetter times of the year prompted the formation of the Paris
and Mount Pleasant Railroad, which was chartered January 29,1909.
Laying of track from Paris toward Mount Pleasant was soon underway.
In 1912 Mr. Hoffman sold four miles of his track, immediately
north of Mount Pleasant to the fledgling line from Paris and trains
were running in 1913. For the next forty years, the "Pa and
Ma" line, as it was nicknamed, moved people and locally produced
freight of all kinds.
The steady growth in employment opportunities coupled
with the expanding rail system helped to keep the area's population
growing, with the 1910 census showing 16,422 for Titus County
and 3,137 for Mount Pleasant.
But even as the "Pa and Ma" began operations,
the next "new thing" which would cause the eventual
closing of many railroads, was coming on the scene. Henry Ford's
Model T proved popular from the time of its introduction in 1908.
But when assembly line production began in 1914 and prices began
to fall, America's love affair with automobiles was under way.
That year's production at Ford's Highland Park, Michigan plant
hit 300,000 and in 1915 it was up to 500,000, with the price sliding
downward from $850 to $440.
In Mount Pleasant, long time hardware merchant Henry
Willson saw the handwriting on the wall. Henry, who with his brother
Willie, had operated Willson Brothers Hardware store since the
1890's, was a member of the first Mount Pleasant City Council.
He was quite likely the most civic-minded person of his day, in
Titus County.
Realizing that automobiles would soon become "the"
method of transportation in America, Willson knew that providing
better roads for the ever-increasing number of automobiles would
be vital to the area's continued growth and development. Even
though he never married, Henry Willson could rightfully be considered
the "Father" of good roads in Titus County. Largely
due to his efforts, a one million dollar bond issue was passed
in 1916 for road construction. Shortly thereafter, he also was
able to persuade Titus County Commissioners to take on the responsibility
of building and maintaining county roads. Previously, this task
had been accomplished by having all able-bodied men of the county
donate a required number of days of labor each year.
Another visionary was L. C. Libby, who came to Mount
Pleasant in 1902 as school superintendent. Libby saw some potential
in the lignite deposits between Mount Pleasant and Cookville,
and in the clay subsoil of the area. So in 1908 he formed the
Libby Brick and Coal Company. The combined mining and brick making
operations employed 35 to 65 men, giving the area economy another
nice payroll. Capacity of the brick presses was 20,000 per day,
while the three kilns had a combined capacity of 250,000. Production
of the lignite mines varied with demand, sometimes reaching 300
tons per day. The Cotton Belt Railroad established a siding named
Nodena for loading the lignite and bricks onto rail cars for delivery
to customers across the nation. Lignite was also mined in an area
about four miles west of Mount Pleasant from about 1920 to the
mid 1930s. Production in 1932 was said to average about 270 tons
per week.
Certainly we would not want to leave the second
decade of the twentieth century without recognizing those from
Mount Pleasant and Titus County who took part in "the war
to end all wars", World War I. While the exact number of
those who served is uncertain, it is believed that about twenty
lost their lives in the conflict. One of those who returned was
Roger Harbour. Harbour had started working at the Libby Mine at
age thirteen and was there until he entered the army. After his
return, he worked at the mines and the brick kilns until they
closed about 1920.
Demand for lignite dropped rapidly as availability
of natural gas grew more common. This would be just one of the
changes to be experienced during the 1920's. The area economy,
still heavily dependent on agriculture, became more volatile as
local farmers found they could feed their animals more economically
with Midwest corn than with their own production. Thus, more acres
were planted to cotton. When good yields were obtained on more
acres and production outpaced demand, the price of cotton fell.
This spurred some farmers to sell their land before poorer crop
prices caused land prices to drop. Many of them continued the
westward migration that the nation had experienced since its founding,
by moving to the south plains area, where land prices were appreciating,
but still remained lower than in Northeast Texas. Largely because
of this resumption of westward migration, the steady population
increase in Northeast Texas was reversed for a number of years.
Between 1920 and 1930, Titus County's population dropped from
18,128 to 16,003, while Mount Pleasant's fell from 4099 to 3541.
But even as the agricultural economy experienced
wide fluctuations, signs of progress continued in other sectors.
In July 1925 a new post office building was opened to the public.
It is still serving the citizens of the area today as the home
of the Mount Pleasant Public Library. Two years later a new building
on North Riddle Street was completed for Mount Pleasant High School.
This historic structure was renovated in 1995, and currently serves
as the school district's Administrative Services Center.