Gaines Landing (also Gaines' Landing and Gaines's Landing) is an extinct settlement in Chicot County, Arkansas, United States that once hosted a boat landing along the Mississippi River. The location played a role in the story of fugitive slave Margaret Garner (whose life was the basis of Toni Morrison's Beloved), and was used for troop movements during the American Civil War.
History
editGaines Landing was named for the Gaines family of Kentucky, specifically brothers William H. Gaines, Richard M. Gaines, and Benjamin P. Gaines. Benjamin Gaines, and his wife Matilda Fox first settled there in August 1824, the same year they got married.[1] The first Episcopal Mission service west of the Mississippi was reportedly held at Gaines Landing.[1] Chicot County's major product was cotton.[2] The landing ultimately became one of the major Mississippi River ports between Helena, Arkansas and Vicksburg, Mississippi, where local planters could debark new slaves and supplies for their farms, and send cotton bales out for export to mills in New England and Great Britain.[3]
In the 1850s Gaines Landing received regular mail from the packet boats and was the starting point of a mail route to inland Arkansas.[4] Circa 1852 there was a plank road from Gaines Landing to Bradley County, Arkansas.[5] The first toll gate was four miles west of Gaines Landing.[6] There were plans for a Gaines Landing Railroad in 1853; Lloyd Tilghman was hired to be the chief engineer for the survey.[7] The steamboat E. Howard sank near Gaines Landing in 1858.[8]
During the 1850s, according to a planter named Charles McDermott, "Chicot County...had quite a number of Murrellites—men who lived by plunder, murder, gambling, and theft. About eight of them lived near old man Fulton's house above Gaines' Landing. They would steal a horse or a Negro. Once they got into a quarrel with one of their own members, a man named McReynolds. Seven of them came to his place and killed him with a gun. The name of this band were Fulton, Cooper, Johns, and James Forsythe."[9]: 261 The next settlement after Gaines Landing was at Dermott, "named for members of the McDermott family who settled here in 1832. Charles McDermott's house was an overnight stopping point for westward travelers who crossed the Mississippi at Gaines' Landing. Slaves brought water in cedar tubs for the guests."[10]
In 1856, some 30 years after the first Gaines settled at Gaines Landing, recaptured fugitive slave Margaret Garner was being shipped from Kentucky to Gaines' Landing by her legal owner Archibald K. Gaines (brother to the brothers above) when a boat collision killed her baby.[11] She was later returned to Kentucky and then shipped south a second time, where she was kept for a time at Benjamin Gaines' plantation and then shipped further south to still another brother, Abner LeGrand Gaines, a cotton broker and planter who had property in Issaquena County and near Natchez, Mississippi.[12]
According to the Encyclopedia of Arkansas, "During the American Civil War, Gaines' Landing was one of many points along the river used by Confederate troops to harass Federal steamboats. Long bends of the river were ideal for the Confederates' hit-and-run tactics: they could attack a boat as it entered the bend and then race across the narrow neck of land to attack it again as it came out of the bend; this was particularly effective when boats were moving slowly upstream."[13] Samuel Curtis wrote to Henry Halleck in July 1862 that Gaines Landing was used for shipping arms and artillery to Confederate guerrillas harassing Union boats in the Greenville Bends and beyond.[3] There were skirmishes at Gaines Landing in June 1862;[14] on July 20, 1862; on December 23, 1862; on June 15–16, 1863; on June 27–28, 1863;[13] and in May 1864.[15] William T. Sherman landed a division at Gaines Landing on December 24, 1862, and burned and pillaged the surrounding area in retaliation.[16] When Tennessee's Confederate Governor Isham G. Harris fled west at the end of the war, he crossed the Mississippi near Gaines Landing.[17]: 155
There was still a post office at Gaines Landing in 1923.[18] The post office was discontinued in 1932, and services moved to the post office of Lake Village, Arkansas.[19] The settlement lost river access with the creation of the Ashbrook Cutoff of Rowdy Bend in 1935 and nothing remains of it today.[20]
Geography
editThe elevation of Gaines Landing was 130 ft (40 m) above sea level.[21]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b "Gaines Family" (1976), p. 79.
- ^ Doyle (2011), p. 131.
- ^ a b Doyle (2011), p. 140.
- ^ "Mail Route from Gaines' Landing via Camden to Washington Ark". True Democrat. Little Rock, Arkansas. February 19, 1856. p. 2.
- ^ "To Planters and Speculators". Vicksburg Daily Whig. Vicksburg, Mississippi. April 22, 1852. p. 3.
- ^ "Negro Murdered". Vicksburg Daily Whig. Vicksburg, Mississippi. May 15, 1856. p. 4.
- ^ "The Camden Herald". The Times-Picayune. New Orleans, Louisiana. November 11, 1853. p. 6.
- ^ "Loss of the Steamer E. Howard". New York Daily Herald. December 9, 1858. p. 4.
- ^ Atkinson, J. H.; McDermott, Charles (1953). "A Memoir of Charles McDermott, A Pioneer of Southeastern Arkansas". The Arkansas Historical Quarterly. 12 (3). Fayetteville, Arkansas: University of Arkansas: 253. doi:10.2307/40007647. ISSN 0004-1823. JSTOR 40007647.
- ^ Federal Writers' Project (1941). "Arkansas: A Guide to the State". American Guide Series. New York: Hastings House. p. 379. hdl:2027/mdp.39015002678947 – via HathiTrust.
- ^ "Archibald K. Gaines". Clinton Republican. Wilmington, Ohio. March 14, 1856. p. 2.
- ^ Weisenburger (1999), p. 243–244.
- ^ a b Simons, Don R. (2024). "Skirmish at Gaines' Landing (June 28, 1863)". The Encyclopedia of Arkansas. Little Rock, Arkansas: Central Arkansas Library System.
- ^ Doyle (2011), p. 137.
- ^ "The War on the Mississippi: Engagement at Gaines' Landing—The Rebels Driven Off—The Steamer Lebanon Burned—Bold Rebel Movements in Arkansas, Etc". The New York Times. June 4, 1864. ISSN 0362-4331.
- ^ Doyle (2011), p. 143.
- ^ Moran, Nathan K. (2010). "A Refugee from Justice: The End of the Isham Harris Administration and His Exile, December 1864—July 1865". Tennessee Historical Quarterly. 69 (2): 146–163. ISSN 0040-3261. JSTOR 42628172.
- ^ "Reports of Site Locations, Arkansas: Chicot–Cleburne Counties". Microform Publication M1126 - Post Office Department Reports of Site Locations, 1837–1950. Roll 25. U.S. National Archives Digital. pp. 93–98. NAID 68199386.
- ^ "Fourth Series, Monthly Supplement". United States Official Postal Guide. 12 (7): 20. January 1933. hdl:2027/osu.32435066725979 – via HathiTrust.
- ^ Bragg, Marion (1977). Historic names and places on the lower Mississippi River. Mississippi River Commission. p. 127. hdl:2027/uiug.30112105160110 – via HathiTrust.
- ^ Branner, George C., ed. (1936). Elevations in Arkansas. Little Rock, Arkansas: Arkansas Office of the State Geologist. p. 55. hdl:2027/uiug.30112026873601 – via HathiTrust.
Sources
edit- n.a. (April 1976). "Gaines Family" (PDF). The Arkansas Family Historian. 14 (2). Hot Springs, Arkansas: Arkansas Genealogical Society: 74–91. ISSN 0571-0472. OCLC 3734312.
- Doyle, Daniel R. (2011). "The Civil War in the Greenville Bends". The Arkansas Historical Quarterly. 70 (2). Fayetteville, Arkansas: University of Arkansas: 131–161. ISSN 0004-1823. JSTOR 23046161.
- Weisenburger, Steven (1999). Modern Medea: A Family Story of Slavery and Child-Murder from the Old South. Hill and Wang. ISBN 9780809069538. LCCN 98015565. OCLC 38842093.