Historic Mountain Home, Arkansas

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 26 окт 2024

Комментарии • 23

  • @lacylong9721
    @lacylong9721 2 года назад +1

    This is so amazing to watch ill have to watch it later I gotta go back to work but wow all the thought and work people put into this town and all the work they did

  • @nancyhainline2517
    @nancyhainline2517 Год назад

    Thank you. My dad, Hugh Hardcastle, owned the dry goods store on the S. side of the square from 1947 to his death in 1958. Mother took over and ran the business until 1971, when she sold the store out. I have many fond memories of the town and it's people. I enjoyed your video

  • @karengebhard1759
    @karengebhard1759 4 года назад +3

    Love this video!!! Was fun to watch, thank you!!

  • @slotman7284
    @slotman7284 3 года назад +3

    It sure has changed..nice pics thanks for sharing..

  • @nancyhainline2517
    @nancyhainline2517 Год назад

    Thank you. My parents moved to Mtn. Home in 1941. My dad, J. H. Hardcastle,which built the stone store bldg at hwy 62 and Morris St. I was born in the house that sat just north it on Morris St in 1942. He sold the store building and managed Dooley's grocery and dry goods on the east side of the square for the 2 years that Mr. Dooley was in the service in WW II. There was a feed store on the alley south that was also owned by Mr. Dooley. I'm not sure if Dad also managed that.
    After the war he rented the second store from the east end of the south side of the square. It was Hardcastle's Dry Goods until 1971 when my mother, Anna, sold it out. Dad had died in 1958. I have many good memories of Mtn. Home.

  • @marbleman52
    @marbleman52 Год назад

    I am a little late here, but back in the early 1950's, my Grandfather on my mother's side built one of the first weekend homes on the recently opened Lake Norfork. It is on Mallard Point road and is still there and in excellent shape with a nice family living there ( at least back about 12 years ago now ). 'Papa' had California Redwood logs trucked in to build the home and that is why it is still there. He made a lot of money raising soybeans and named the place the Soya Lodge. I was born in 1952 and when I was a kid, Mother would bring the family there during the Summer for a few weeks while Dad stayed behind to farm. To me, it was like Tom Sawyer every day. I would spend hours exploring the lake and swimming off the boat dock and catching perch between the dock boards.
    I remember Mother loading us kids up and sometimes taking the laundry into Mountain Home to a coin laundry-mat. She would do grocery shopping while in town, which back then was still a sleepy little town.
    Papa's favorite place to eat was across the town square in a cafe called, I think, the Angler Cafe..?? There was a big picture of a Trout on the sign hanging outside.
    Today...Wow....looks like a big suburb along Main Street..!! I have been to the VA. Hospital there a few times for certain procedures. I will always cherish my child-hood fun times at Lake Norfork.

  • @AdventuresBeginHere409
    @AdventuresBeginHere409 Год назад

    Love this, Adventures Begin Here!

  • @judithgraham7218
    @judithgraham7218 2 года назад

    My Grandpa Tanner was born there in the late 1800 hundreds

  • @ozarkaerialvideo9274
    @ozarkaerialvideo9274 5 лет назад +2

    Nice video.

  • @Oliver74rc
    @Oliver74rc 5 лет назад

    Hi, I would like to know exactly the place where the people get the marriage license there in Mountain Home Arkansas, Baxter County. I would like to see how is that place.

    • @woodlandsperson
      @woodlandsperson  5 лет назад +1

      The county courthouse is in Mountain Home and, if I recall, you would go to the County Clerk's office.

    • @Oliver74rc
      @Oliver74rc 5 лет назад

      @@woodlandsperson my friend has to go to the Baxter County to get my marriage license with a copy of my passport and my social security number. I'm in Dominican Republic, but my friend is there in Branson and he needs to know how to get my marriage license.

    • @woodlandsperson
      @woodlandsperson  5 лет назад +1

      @@Oliver74rc I wish I could help you but I really don't know. I'm under the impression that you would have to apply in person ... but I could be wrong. Sorry.

    • @Oliver74rc
      @Oliver74rc 5 лет назад

      @@woodlandsperson it's okay, I just need to see a picture about the place where I can get the marriage license to send it to my friend.

    • @lacylong9721
      @lacylong9721 2 года назад

      @@woodlandsperson No he needs to come do it in person or he is up to no good and sketchy

  • @tammiebroggins
    @tammiebroggins 2 года назад +1

    To bad people forget the people they murdered to steal this land! Caddo Nation still lives!

    • @anonymoususer1952
      @anonymoususer1952 Год назад

      Whom did the Caddo indians take it from?

    • @tammiebroggins
      @tammiebroggins Год назад

      @@anonymoususer1952 well dear according to scientists The Caddo Nation has been here since prehistoric days so your guess is as good as mine

    • @nancyhainline2517
      @nancyhainline2517 Год назад

      We're the Caddos the ones who built all the teepee mounds? There used to be hundreds of them, but sadly, they are being destroyed as Mtn. Home grows. The old fair grounds on Morris Street had 5 or 6 of them.

    • @tammiebroggins
      @tammiebroggins Год назад

      @@nancyhainline2517 the mounds are destroyed but the people are still here. Our tribal complex is in Oklahoma.