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Bootheel

Dexter grew from a railroad town as the Bootheel swamps were drained

Dexter grew as a railroad and trade town after the surrounding Bootheel swamps were cleared and drained for farming — a window into Stoddard County's land history.

Dexter is the biggest town in Stoddard County, and its story is tied to the land around it. The town was laid out in 1873 along a new railroad line, and it grew as a railroad and trade center. In those early years much of the surrounding country was swamp and wetland. Crews first made money clearing and selling timber, and then the wet ground was drained and turned into farmland. The Bootheel is the southeast corner of Missouri, and this drainage work reshaped the whole region. For a newcomer, it is a helpful reminder that a lot of today’s cropland was once wetland, and that the straight drainage ditches and field roads were built on purpose. You may hear the town called by an old swamp-era nickname, but treat any nickname’s exact origin and dating as something to confirm with a local history source rather than trusting local repetition.

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