Bootheel
Rail and highways made Poplar Bluff a crossroads
Poplar Bluff grew as a rail town, and that transportation history helps explain why it became the regional center it is today.
Poplar Bluff grew up as a railroad town. Several rail lines once ran through Butler County, in the southeast corner of Missouri. The St. Louis-San Francisco line, known as the Frisco, and the St. Louis, Iron Mountain and Southern line both built depots here. Both depots are now on the National Register of Historic Places. There was even a local Butler County Railroad, started around 1900, that ran south toward Piggott, Arkansas. The Frisco took it over in the late 1920s.
These rail lines carried timber from the woods and, later, crops from the drained farmland nearby. That trade helped Poplar Bluff become the main service town for the area. Later highways added to that role. If you want the full story, with exact dates and line names, check the State Historical Society of Missouri.
References
Where this fits: this note belongs to Butler County. See every local note for the county on its page.