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Ozarks (Rural)

Roaring River's history includes mills, guerrillas, and CCC-era park work

Missouri State Parks' Roaring River history page ties the park landscape to early mills, Civil War guerrilla hideouts, troop movements, and later park development.

Roaring River’s clear water first drew settlers for more than scenery. In the early 1800s, streams in that rugged Barry County valley powered mills. The same hills later gave cover to Civil War guerrillas and outlaws, while larger troop movements crossed the countryside.

The park story then turns from rough ground to public work. Dr. Thomas Sayman bought 2,400 acres around Roaring River Spring after the state could not buy it, then turned the land over to Missouri. In the 1930s, CCC and WPA workers shaped much of the park people still recognize: picnic shelters, trails, cabins, Camp Smokey, the fish hatchery, and the CCC Lodge.

So Roaring River is not just a trout stop near Cassville. It is water power, Civil War terrain, donated land, and 1930s park work in one valley.

References

Where this fits: this note belongs to Barry County. See every local note for the county on its page.

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