Fort Smith Museum of History

Fort Smith Museum of History The mission of the Fort Smith Museum of History is to collect, preserve and share the history and culture of Fort Smith and the surrounding region. Parker.
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Adm: $10 for Adults (16 and up); $8 for Seniors (65+); $8 for Vets/M/1st R; $8 for UAFS/CAJC/ACHE Students w/ ID; $6 for Children (6-15); Free for children 5 and under; Free for current FSMH Museum Members Visitors may view a time line of Fort Smith history including artifacts belonging to John Rogers, Benjamin Bonneville, Judge Isaac C Parker and William O. Darby, founder of the Darby's Rangers i

n World War II. A 1920's soda fountain offers old fashioned ice cream sodas, floats and sundaes. Learn about jazz musician Alphonso Trent and African American history in Fort Smith. View a saddle that belonged to outlaw Belle Starr and the courtroom of Judge Isaac C. A new exhibition, "On the Air" chronicles the history of radio and television broadcast in the region.

 -- June 2, 1966-The last commencement ceremony for Lincoln High School is held, with forty-four graduates. Lincoln High...
06/02/2026

-- June 2, 1966-The last commencement ceremony for Lincoln High School is held, with forty-four graduates. Lincoln High opened prior to the turn of the 20th century and educated Black students until integration.

Images: “Lincoln High School-Fort Smith, Arkansas: A Significant Past-A Solid Present-A Sacred Future" by Sherry Toliver and Barbara Webster-Meadows in collaboration with Evelyn E. Tonia Holleman, page 198; FSMH collection

  —“Barling Darling” Harold Raymond "Hal" Smith, born June 1, 1931 in Barling, Arkansas. Smith attended Fort Smith Publi...
06/01/2026

—“Barling Darling” Harold Raymond "Hal" Smith, born June 1, 1931 in Barling, Arkansas. Smith attended Fort Smith Public Schools, graduating from Fort Smith High School (Northside High School) in 1949. He also attended Westark College (University of Arkansas Fort Smith).

In 1949, Hal signed a professional contract with the St. Louis Cardinals and was immediately assigned to their Albany, Georgia minor league team. Smith’s march to the Major Leagues was briefly interrupted in January of 1951, when he joined the Air Force during the Korean Conflict. In 1955, Hal was the top fielding catcher in the AA Texas League. From 1956-61, Hal was the catcher for the St. Louis Cardinals.

Following his playing days, he served the Redbirds as coach and scout - spending over 40 years with the Cardinals organization. In 1959, he caught in 141 games, an iron man feat never equaled by such Hall of Fame catchers as Bill Dickey and Mickey Cochrane. His career fielding average of .989 is the same as catching great Yogi Berra.

In 1957-58, Hal was selected to the National League All-Star Team. In the 1959 All-Star game played at the Los Angeles Coliseum, Hal played on the same team with Hank Aaron, Willie Mays, Frank Robinson, Ernie Banks, and Cardinals teammate Stan Musial. Hal's big-league career also included coaching for the Pittsburgh Pirates, Cincinnati Reds, and the Milwaukee Brewers before returning to the Cardinals and finishing out his final working years scouting.
Hal's career began with the Fort Smith Boys Club where he played his first organized baseball. That early baseball foundation led all the way to the Major Leagues. Hal Smith died in 2014.

Info from UAFS Hall of Fame, "The Barling Darling" a book by Billy D. Higgins, available in the FSMH Gift Shop, his obit, and the UAFS Pebley Center. Card from Steinersports.

From our friends at UA Little Rock Center for Arkansas History and Culture.
06/01/2026

From our friends at UA Little Rock Center for Arkansas History and Culture.

On June 1, 1961, the workers of Furniture Workers Local 270 went on strike against the Fort Smith Chair Company. The company fired 202 of the strikers; the National Labor Relations Board later ruled those firings illegal and ordered that the workers be rehired and given back pay.

TODAY (1:30p) RODEO $5 Off Special 🤠 Experience Live History (May 30) 🎭 The Western District One Act Play at Fort Smith ...
05/30/2026

TODAY (1:30p) RODEO $5 Off Special 🤠 Experience Live History (May 30) 🎭 The Western District One Act Play at Fort Smith Museum of History

Use Promo Code 5OFF2026WD

Showtimes & Tickets 🎟️ https://www.ozarkstix.com/organizations/fsiff

👻 The Haunt FSM June 6 (7:30p) 💅 Miss Laura's (1:30pm) June 12 & 13 👩‍🌾 Chaffee Crossing Historic District Farmers Market June 20 🪖 U.S. Marshals Museum June 26 & 27

Discover Fort Smith Go Downtown Fort Smith

Artifacts, Exhibits, and Images oh my!These artifacts from the FSMH collection are very different from each other but ye...
05/29/2026

Artifacts, Exhibits, and Images oh my!

These artifacts from the FSMH collection are very different from each other but yet are very similar. The Arkansas Traveler is the common theme here. These items are part of a fascinating new temporary exhibit now showing through July 6th at the FSMH!

But the big question here is, who is this Arkansas Traveler? The legendary character has quite a story that spans many years.

A tune, a dialogue, and a painting from the mid-nineteenth century, the Arkansas Traveler became a catch-all phrase for almost anything or anyone from Arkansas: it has been the name of a kind of canoe, various newspapers, a racehorse, a baseball team, and more. The term is familiar to the present-day general public, especially as the name of a baseball team and a certificate presented to distinguished visitors to the state.

Origins
The Arkansas-based version of the Traveler is said to have begun in 1840. Colonel Sandford Faulkner got lost in rural Arkansas and asked for directions at a humble log home. Faulkner, a natural performer, turned the experience into an entertaining presentation for friends and acquaintances in which the Traveler was greeted by the Squatter at the log cabin with humorously evasive responses to his questions. Finally, the Traveler offered to play the second half, or “turn,” of the tune the Squatter was playing on his fiddle. The tune was the “Arkansas Traveler.” In his happiness at hearing the turn of the tune, the Squatter mustered all of the hospitality of his household for the benefit of the Traveler. When the Traveler again asked directions, the Squatter offered them but suggested that the Traveler would be lucky to make it back to the cottage “whar you kin cm and play on thara’r tune as long as you please.”

At approximately the same time Faulkner began performing the “Traveler,” a similar performance of the “Arkansas Traveler” tune and a related dialogue emerged outside the state. One cannot tell with certainty which version came first. According to Thomas Wilson, writing in Ohio History in 1900, customers were attracted to the Golden Fleece Tavern in Salem, Ohio, by performances of the “Traveller” before 1852. While the Arkansas-based version of the dialogue portrayed tensions based upon differences among people from Arkansas—such as urban versus rural or wealthy versus poor—most versions told the story from the Traveler-as-outsider perspective, taking an uncomplimentary view of the state. Mose Case, an albino African American entertainer from Buffalo, New York, performed the Traveler and his version ended by declaring that the Traveler “has never had the courage to visit Arkansas since!” The Case version was published in 1863 and distributed widely.

The Tune
The sheet music to the tune was first published in Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1847 as “The Arkansas Traveller and Rackinsac Waltz,” arranged by William Cu***ng. No one was credited with the composition. If not from the folk tradition, the tune was most likely written by Jose Tosso, a classical violinist and composer who lived in Cincinnati and was locally famous for his version of the “Arkansaw Traveler.” Several others, including Faulkner and Case, have also been credited with its composition. Over the years, the “Arkansas Traveler” has become one of the most recorded tunes in American history. The 1922 version by native-Arkansan “Eck” Robertson was among the first fifty recordings named to the National Recording Registry of the Library of Congress, and the tune has appeared in jazz and symphonic arrangement, including a recording by the Boston Pops Orchestra.

The Painting
By 1856, Arkansas artist Edward Payson Washbourne had painted a picture illustrating the meeting between the Traveler and the Squatter, and in 1859, J. H. Bufford of Boston, Massachusetts, published the image for Washbourne as rendered by lithographer Leopold Grozelier. On the print, the “Arkansas Traveler” melody line appeared below “Designed by one of the natives and Dedicated to Col. S. C. Faulkner.” The text made it clear that Washbourne the artist, Faulkner the Traveler, and the Squatter were all from Arkansas. On Washbourne’s easel at the time of his death was a complementary picture, “The Turn of the Tune.”

In 1870, New York printmakers Currier & Ives brought out popular prints of the “Arkansas Traveller” and “The Turn of the Tune” with abbreviated dialogue, crediting neither Faulkner nor Washbourne. Thus, the prints supported the “outsider” version of the Traveler dialogue, leaving the Squatter and his household as the only sure representatives of Arkansas.

Traveler Stereotypes
In humorous performance and in popular print, the Traveler came to perpetuate a negative rural or “hillbilly” reputation for Arkansas. In 1877, a commentator in the Arkansas Gazette claimed that the Traveler evoked an image of “shiftlessness, indolence and improvidence.” Stereotypical jokes about the state appeared in the Arkansaw Traveler, a nationally distributed humor journal founded by Opie Read and published from 1882 to 1916. Arkansas’s association with its frontier past continued in Kit, The Arkansas Traveller, one of the most performed plays in nineteenth-century America. Well-known Broadway veteran Frank Chanfrau began acting in the title role in 1869, and after his death in 1884, son Henry Chanfrau kept Kit in regular performance around the United States until 1899. In 1896, William H. Edmunds, in a pamphlet titled “The Truth about Arkansas,” calculated that the Traveler image had cost the state “millions of dollars.” This cost took into consideration the presumed economic progress that would have taken place in Arkansas without the burden of a negative reputation. First published in 1903, the bestselling joke book in American history exploited this hillbilly image by using the state’s name in the title—Thomas Jackson’s On a Slow Train Through Arkansaw.

The Traveler in the Twentieth Century
Meanwhile, the term found itself as simply a name on riverboat, racehorse, multiple newspapers (including one affiliated with the Ku Klux Klan), and newspaper column, as well as a nickname for any number of people from Arkansas. In 1901, the Little Rock Travelers minor league baseball team was established. The team became the Arkansas Travelers in 1961, the first professional league sports team in the country named for an entire state. Hazel Walker had named her all-star women’s professional basketball team the Arkansas Travelers in 1949. In another sports connection, Dutch Harrison, one of the greats of professional golf, carried the nickname Arkansas Traveler. In 1903, the Arkansaw Travelers Association was founded for white men in Arkansas of any occupation involving traveling, especially sales. A social and business organization offering death benefits to members, the Travelers passed from the scene by 1920. At mid-century, Arkansas Traveler boats, made in Little Rock (Pulaski County), gained popularity nationwide. In 1992 and 1996, Arkansas-based campaigners for Bill Clinton carried the name Arkansas Travelers all over the country, contributing significantly to Clinton’s election and re-election as president of the United States.

With people becoming less concerned about its effect on the state’s reputation, the Traveler in some of its old trappings lingered in Arkansas throughout the twentieth century. For example, well-dressed visitors to Hot Springs (Garland County) were photographed for Happy Hollow postcards, in front of rustic “Arkansaw Traveler” backdrops. “Arkansas Traveler” Bob Burns and the team of Lum and Abner (Chet Lauck and Norris Goff) achieved great success as radio and movie entertainers, basing their humor on the backwoods image of Arkansas. (Burns even starred in a 1938 movie titled The Arkansas Traveler, though it was neither filmed nor set in the state.) Beginning in 1968, the Arkansaw Traveller Folk Theater in Hardy (Sharp County) revived the music, story, and image of the Traveler.

In 1941, the Arkansas General Assembly created the Arkansas Traveler Certificate to honor out-of-state visitors, the first presentation going to President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. These certificates continued the Traveler-as-outsider theme, placing visitors in the role of the Traveler, but by this time, the image had lost its power as a regional stereotype, and the certificate has become a regular attraction at gatherings where visitors are honored.

Source: https://encyclopediaofarkansas.net/entries/arkansas-traveler-505/

Artifacts, Exhibits, & Images oh my! It’s Rodeo Week and what better way to start out the rodeo with a parade!  Check ou...
05/27/2026

Artifacts, Exhibits, & Images oh my!

It’s Rodeo Week and what better way to start out the rodeo with a parade! Check out these incredible series of photos taken from the Arkansas-Oklahoma parade down on Garrison Avenue during the 1950s-1960s. Can you imagine the excitement and energy of the crowd as the cowboys and cowgirls rode by on their horses, waving to the spectators? 🎠 What do you think about these amazing snapshots of the past? What stands out the most to you - the vintage cars, the stylish outfits, or the joyful atmosphere? 🤔 What’s your favorite thing about the Rodeo?

Donor: Mrs. Patricia Crump
Photographer: n/a taken 1950-1960

From our friends at The Western District. Showtime! 🎬
05/26/2026

From our friends at The Western District. Showtime! 🎬

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  --May 26, 2012-A statue of United States Marshal Bass Reeves is unveiled at Ross Pendergraft Park at 200 Garrison Aven...
05/26/2026

--May 26, 2012-A statue of United States Marshal Bass Reeves is unveiled at Ross Pendergraft Park at 200 Garrison Avenue after a decade of planning and fundraising.

With the recent passing of Judge Jim Spears, a reminder that his legacy and contributions to Fort Smith remain an important part of Fort Smith's downtown--and today, on the anniversary of the unveiling of the Bass Reeves statue--his contributions are remembered.

https://talkbusiness.net/2026/05/fort-smith-community-promoter-judge-jim-spears-has-died/

The Fort Smith Museum of History extends our condolences to the family and friends of Judge Jim Spears. He was an avid supporter of the Fort Smith Museum of History — a friend to our mission, a voice of support, and a man who worked tirelessly to bring the history of Fort Smith to the people of Fort Smith. His legacy is still working throughout our community today.

Fort Smith lost one of its great champions. Judge Spears dedicated his life to justice, public service, historic preservation, and the community he loved so deeply. A respected circuit judge, civic leader, historian, and advocate, Judge Spears helped shape the way Fort Smith honors and remembers its past.

He played an instrumental role in the effort to bring the United States Marshals Museum to Fort Smith and was the driving force behind many of the historic sculptures and heritage projects that now define downtown Fort Smith, including the Bass Reeves Legacy Initiative that brought the towering Bass Reeves statue to life in 2012. Judge Spears helped lead the effort to raise $300,000 for the 25-foot monument honoring Reeves — the legendary U.S. Deputy Marshal who served under Federal Judge Isaac C. Parker and whose story remains deeply tied to Fort Smith’s frontier history.

Even in recent months, Judge Spears continued working to preserve local history. His final vision was a monument commemorating the historic Butterfield Trail Stagecoach line stop in Fort Smith — the vital connection point for the Butterfield Overland Mail routes leading to Memphis and St. Louis along the 3,553-mile trail stretching across the American frontier.

“Judge Spears was a great man who loved his community and its history,” said CBID Commissioner Phil White. “He was the driving force behind several of the historic sculptures that are placed downtown… The Judge will be looking down with admiration of our community spirit. Thank you, Judge, for all you have done.”

https://www.5newsonline.com/article/news/local/outreach/back-to-school/bass-reeves-legacy-monument-revealed/527-3bfa649d-9c31-4fd1-80f0-85dddfbe9797?fbclid=IwY2xjawSCufZleHRuA2FlbQIxMABicmlkETFPS0I0TjR3NnJUMjJFS3Fkc3J0YwZhcHBfaWQQMjIyMDM5MTc4ODIwMDg5MgABHu6mW7NGuKhWSLupwNeodm7EYy4nJQHcESR8x_LXfGp3QJ_ACvZ4tIKWdR-F_aem_xMR-PIlhCB1AwAL4YHgRgg


Photograph courtesy of Stan Kujawa collection. See less

More than 1,000 spectators gathered together Saturday for the reveal of a larger than life monument of US Marshal Bass Reeves.

From our friends at the Colorado Snowsports Museum. 🇺🇸
05/25/2026

From our friends at the Colorado Snowsports Museum. 🇺🇸

Address

320 Rogers Avenue
Fort Smith, AR
72901

Opening Hours

Tuesday 10am - 4pm
Wednesday 10am - 4pm
Thursday 10am - 4pm
Friday 10am - 4pm
Saturday 10am - 4pm

Telephone

+14797837841

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