TOM DILLARD: Arkansas Postings

Tom Dillard: Fact of the matter is, Arkansas strawberries just taste better

One of my rites of spring is to make a pilgrimage to Bald Knob in White County to have strawberries and shortcake at the Bulldog Diner.

After a year of making do with California and Florida strawberries, the Bulldog dessert presents that rare opportunity to savor recently picked berries grown for their taste rather than size and shipping considerations. No treat can surpass a locally grown strawberry, and Arkansans have long recognized that fact.

According to landscape historian C. Allan Brown, strawberries were first documented in Little Rock in 1854. Mrs. Clara Dickson of Ouachita County frequently wrote about growing strawberries in letters to her family back in Alabama, the first being on April 24, 1857, when she bemoaned a late frost "which killed everything, wheat included."

It was her young daughter Mollie who "was more sorry about the strawberries than anything else ..."

While strawberries seem to have been grown in family gardens for generations, the arrival of railroads after the Civil War made it possible to grow them commercially.

Ray Muncy, in his history of the White County seat of Searcy, identified George P. Murrell of the small village of Austin in Lonoke County as marketing 30 cases of strawberries in St. Louis in 1873. The center of production quickly moved north, with the first commercial strawberries being grown in White County in 1874.

Area farmers adopted strawberry production, and before long White County was home to dozens of strawberry farms. A whole infrastructure developed to support the berry industry.

Jacob C. Bauer of Judsonia began a large strawberry nursery in 1878. A.W. Hoofman of Searcy also established a strawberry nursery, where farmers could choose from a host of varieties with names such as Klondyke, Excelsior and Lady Thompson. Muncy wrote that Hoofman's nursery employed 15 families "even in the depths of the Great Depression ..."

J.M. Cathcart, a Union Army veteran from Indiana, recognized that strawberry farmers needed containers to ship their fruit, and about 1885 Cathcart and his brother opened the Enterprise box factory. Cathcart later invented the Cathcart Ventilated Berry Crate. In 1910, the factory produced 40,000 strawberry crates and boxes. By 1941, production grew to 850,000 containers.

Strawberry farmers organized cooperatives to provide warehouses, marketing and sometimes canneries, with the Judsonia Fruit and Vegetable Growers Association being organized in 1898. The cooperative warehouses were usually situated for easy railroad access.

Nurseryman Louis Hubach of Judsonia proved valuable to the strawberry industry in Arkansas and elsewhere with his efforts to hybridize new varieties, including Excelsior, an early-producing variety which found a national market.

Successfully growing strawberries has always been a challenge in warm and humid Arkansas, where fungal diseases flourish. Then there's the unpredictable weather. Another challenge has always been the intensive labor needed to grow and harvest the soft-skinned berries.

Whole families, including small children, joined the frantic effort every spring to harvest the berries at just the right time. Payment was never very much -- a few cents per quart -- but it provided much needed supplemental income. Local schools assisted by scheduling breaks during "berry pickin'."

In 1929, strawberry growers in White County began issuing their own monetary unit -- a coupon known as a "quart." Pickers were paid with coupons having a face value of three cents each, the amount paid for each quart picked that year.

The quarts could be redeemed for goods and services at local businesses: three quarts for a hamburger, two quarts for a cup of coffee, or a month's subscription to the Arkansas Gazette newspaper for 30 quarts.

For many years the epicenter of strawberry production in Arkansas was in an area stretching northeasterly from modern Jacksonville to Newport. Judsonia, one of the major centers of strawberry production in the area, shipped 345 rail cars of berries in 1916 alone.

While the White County area produced more strawberries than any other county, strawberry farms could be found all around the state. The Alma area in Crawford County was a major center of strawberry production, as were areas in Searcy County.

Searcy County Agricultural Extension agent C.W. Bedell organized the Flintrock Strawberry Growers Association in 1938 at Marshall to promote inspection and certification, assist in marketing and provide an auction house. In 1948, the Flintrock Strawberry Growers Association in Searcy County reported sales of 19,500 crates.

In the early years, the Flintrock growers took advantage of the cool interior of Zack Cave as a holding area before shipping the fruit on the Missouri & North Arkansas railroad.

Flintrock Association membership peaked at 457 growers in 1956 with total of 1,800 acres producing 172,868 24-quart cases and gross sales of $978,365. Most of the berries were shipped to Kansas City. Growers in Washington and Benton counties also shipped strawberries to Kansas City, with Harvey Jones' new trucking company providing the transportation.

A number of factors contributed to the decline of the strawberry industry in Arkansas. A shortage of labor played a major role, although the Bracero program temporarily allowed Mexican laborers to work on some larger Arkansas strawberry farms, including the highly diversified Lee Wilson & Co. of Mississippi County.

But the main threat to strawberry farming in Arkansas was the development of large scale production in Florida and especially California after World War II. Perhaps we will see a revival of strawberry farming in Arkansas given the drought situation out west.

Also, a growing number of consumers distrust modern strawberries due to the numerous chemicals employed in their cultivation, perhaps opening up a niche for organic growers.

And Arkansas strawberries simply taste better.

Tom Dillard is a historian and retired archivist living near Glen Rose in rural Hot Spring County. Email him at [email protected].

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