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Cave City
In Sharp County is worth exploring, but not just for its cave
Written by:
Tracy L. Crain
Arkansas Democrat Gazette
Sunday, January 28, 2001
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A little past Batesville, along U.S. 167
North, the community of Cave City rests
peacefully.
There are roughly 1,500 people here, mostly
farmers, known for growing some of the
"sweetest watermelon on the vines."
Seriously. Watermelon farming is so serious
in this community that one of the local
artists painted a mural on one of side
offices in the historic downtown area
dedicated to the community's love and
pride in watermelon farming.
Townsfolk are quick to comment on the mural'
beauty. They are proud of it.
Driving into the area, it's difficult to
see that there is anything besides
watermelon farming of significance here.
But, there is.
The town also has underground cave
dwellings, here where travelers are greeted
with a friendly, rural scene comprised of
wildflower pastures, planted and maintained
alongside the roads. There's not much
traffic, only the appearance of an
occasional convoy of trucks, making their
way from the Batesville area.
Keith Mize, 43, has lived here since 1957.
He says Cave City is a good, small town. "It's
really the people who make this place so
different." he said. "The atmosphere's
different."
According to the local library, Cave City
was founded in the late 1800s and was
originally called Horn's Cave, after Henry
Horn, who settled in the area sometime near
1870.
When J. A. and J.W. Laman moved to Horn's
Cave to start a town, William Stewart,
postmaster at Loyal, moved a post office to
the Laman development and the name changed
to Cave City.
The cave, located off of 167 North, has a
river inside it. Mize describes it as an old
American Indian cave with blind fish in the
river.
"The fish are blind because they swim in the
dark all the time," he said. "There's no
light in there, so they can't see."
In addition to the cave tours and the frisky
blind fish, Cave City is also home to a few
celebrities-- some not so famous and some
almost famous.
"One of our residents was interviewed for an
article in the National Geographic
magazine," Mize said. "Everybody thought
that was a really big deal. There is also
Charles Landers who could tell you anything
about this town."
As for commerce, Cave City is one of the few
areas that can tout the good news of its
expansion.
"We're a small community, but we're
growing," Mize said. "It's certainly a
better place to raise your kids than the
larger ones in terms of drugs and alcohol. It's not fast-placed around here."
The town is home to a grocery store, two
banks, a few restaurants, two florists and
various other small businesses and churches.
One church, that has a billboard sign
located next to the road, reads, "We don't
change the message, the message changes us."
Community functions that serve to keep folks
around here somewhat acquainted, include an
annual Christmas parade and of course a
watermelon festival.
The Cave City Watermelon Festival, held
every August, is an event where residents
participate in a parade, sing, hold talent
contests and participate in various other
games and crafts.
Long-time resident Jean Mize said the
Christmas parade has been offered every year
that she can remember except for this past
one when it was cancelled because of the
weather.
"We got snowed out and froze out," she said.
When it comes to life in her town, Jean is
appreciative of her neighbors and the family
roots she has here.
"Five of my brothers went to school in Cave
City, and now their grandchildren go to
school here," she said.
"Cave City has changed throughout the
years," Jean said. "What once was home to
two theaters and four grocery stores has now
been converted into a historical business
shopping square that offers residents a
choice of everything from appliance stores
to floral shops. I miss the way it used to
be. It was really a hometown atmosphere back
then. This is still a good place to live,
but it's different."
Other residents describe it as "a clean,
friendly place." To some extent, it
certainly appears that way.
A church sign, on display at the south side
of town, reads, "Salvation is a free gift."
Cave City, for all its wonder, definitely
has a distinct feel to it.
(Cave City is an excerpt from Road Trips; a
weekly feature of small towns in Arkansas
written by Tracy Crain and published by the
Arkansas Democrat Gazette.) |
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