Thursday, September 10, 2015

The Louisiana town that moved to Arizona

Excerpted from "Forest Hill, Louisiana: A Bloom Town History" by Cheré Coen

            William M. Cady and his Cady Lumber Company established two mills at McNary, Louisiana, a town 25 miles southwest of Alexandria that was chartered in 1913. In the mills’ heyday, McNary had a population of nearly 3,000 residents with a church, school, post office, fully-staffed hospital, swimming pool, depot and a large theater.
           In 1923, however, Cady decided to move his operation to Cooley, Arizona, a small Native American village about 150 miles from Flagstaff named for Colonel Corridon Cooley, head of the Apache scouts. The Cady Lumber Company — comprised of William M. Cady, Alfred Smith and James McNary — purchased the Apache Lumber Company, its Ponderosa Pine timber leases, the accompanying Apache Railway and sawmill.
            But Cady didn’t just take the business to Arizona, he took the whole town of McNary with him. In January 1924, Cady loaded up trains with Cady employees and all their possessions, plus the logging and sawmill machinery, and moved the entire operation to Cooley, Arizona.
            “The tragedy of the timberland was symbolized Monday when the last of McNary, Louisiana, moved away in a twenty-one coach train bound for the new village of McNary, Arizona,” wrote Clare D’Artois Leper in “Louisiana Place Names: Popular, Unusual, and Forgotten Stories of Towns, Cities, Plantations, Bayous and Even Some Cemeteries,” quoting a story from the October 1924 American Forests and Forest Life magazine. “As the forests became denuded of pines, the employers of the village began looking about for a new site. They found it in Arizona.”
            Because Cady had built a name for himself at McNary, Louisiana, the town of Cooley was later changed to McNary, Arizona.
            “Most of the Central Louisianans who went to Arizona with the Cady Lumber Company stayed in their newfound McNary for at least seven years,” said Mrs. N.H. Goff of Alexandria who was raised in McNary and traveled to Arizona with most of her family. She was quoted in Jim Hammock’s Alexandria Town Talk newspaper column of July 16, 1967.  “They then began drifting to other points in the West, and many returned to Central Louisiana.” Goff added that the cold weather may have contributed to their return.
            Local Native Americans were hired as well, Goff said, but preferred their native housing and moved out.
            The abandonment of its industry and people failed to make McNary, Louisiana, a ghost town but it struggled to survive. In 1929, its charter became inactive. The community of several hundred residents petitioned the state to have its charter revived and the town was reestablished in 1965. Today, several of the original mill town houses remain and remnants of the drying kilns used at both mills can be spotted in the countryside on the outskirts of town.
            Not too long after McNary moved to Arizona, John D. Clark and Charles Linze McNary — no relation to the town — authored the Clarke-McNary Act of 1924 to authorize the government to buy “cut-over” timber land, or land stripped of its trees. Since an enabling act in Louisiana prevented such acquisitions within the state, Alexandria naturalist Caroline Dorman wrote legislation that was passed in Baton Rouge with lumberman Henry Hardtner’s assistance to preserve forests in central Louisiana. In 1928 the Kisatchie, Catahoula and Vernon units of the Kisatchie National Forest were established with more acreage bought at later dates.

23 comments:

  1. My great-grandfather Dok Barnes and his son JK Barnes, my grandfather, were part of this move. Thank you for posting this.

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    1. Would jk Barnes be jewel Barnes, a boyhood friend of my dad. Both from mcnary.

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    2. Is there a list of these people anywhere? I too am looking for family members who came from Camp Lisso, MacNary, Louisiana. A young man, William Bonds,who became a Brakeman for the lubber company.

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  2. I've lived in Arizona for fifty of my fifty-nine years, and often wondered, in passing, who began, and how McNary Arizona came to be. Thank you for solving this mystery for me! The next time I cook up my Louisiana Crawdad Pie for my son in law, I'll rename it MCNARY Louisiana Crawdad Pie!

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  3. My family moved there with McNary.

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    1. You should write down that story. It's such a unique tale.

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  4. I must say that this article was really interesting to read! I like Arizona, and last year I even had a chance to move there, however, I decided to stay in my own city, as I couldn't think about my living there without my dear friends!

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  5. Great Story! I was researching the Black historic presence in Arizona and the town of McNary came up. Apparently, several of the employees from LA were Black and relocated to Arizona to populate the town of McNary. Very interesting story. Great post, thank you.

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  6. That's very cool to know. I updated this blog to WeirdSouth.com and will move this story over there soon and add this information. Thanks! And please follow us on the new site.

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  7. My grate grandfather William Henry Franklin Jordan 1878-1942 came from Louisiana with my grandmother Bessi Jordan on that train. She was 8 years old at the time. She told me stories about it. I'm on a train in Texas as I write this. Heading to Louisiana to connect with some roots. Was glad to find this cool story.

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    1. I have a lot of genealogy of the family if you ever want any information.

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  8. My grandfather was Julian Singley and was also responsible for logging in the town of Glenmore in early 1900's.
    Does anyone know anything of this

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  9. I am a Cady descendent. William Cady (uncle Will) was my great great great uncle. My brother Bruce (from Westlake, La) recently passed. I have tons of pictures. (Most unmarked). They moved everyone by train. (The forest here suffered). My great great grandfather (Ralph Ross Cady) went to McNary for awhile as the conductor of a train.

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    1. It would be great to see your pictures!

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    2. The Show Low Historical Museum has a McNary room exhibit honoring all that lived and worked in McNary Arizona. Please do share your pictures

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  10. My mother Bessie May Jordan was born in Mcnary Louisiana and moved to Arizona when this happened. She graduated from McNary high school and met my father Marion Maxwell shortly thereafter and moved to be with my father who lived in Springerville . I was born and raised in Springerville just about 25 miles from McNary, but I had never heard this story either until just a couple of years ago. It all made sense to me finally.

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  11. This is a great special interest story! Louisiana history got lost except to those that lived it or had folks to tell the story! My family centered around Glenmora La. A nice little town.

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  12. My Brother John,
    Was born in Manary, Arizona 1938

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  13. We lived in Snowflake, Holbrook and Winslow, Ariz. my stepdad was one of the 500 or so loggers that made the trip.

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  14. McNary Louisiana is home of the Southern Forest Heritage Musem. It is on the grounds of another abandoned sawmill, the equipment and locomotives are still there. A must visit if you're in the area.

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  15. I bought the property where the William M Caty plantation home was built. The home is not visible from the road so no one knew of its existence except for the older generation. After doing an inspection of the home I found a plank board that had W M Cady lbr co. Glenmora La embossed on it which made me dig into the history. This has prompted me to restore this magnificent piece of history if any one has any photos or information on this home please contact me Rusty. 318-542-3333. Thanks

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  16. My Grandparents James and Velma Davis were part of the organized migration to Mcnary. My mom Earlean and uncles Walter Lee, Henry and James Jr were born in Mcnary and attended school there. My siblings and I spent many summers with our grandparents in Mcnary along with other cousins. It would be an understatement to say that Mcnary was a great experience. Mcnary and it’s topography, then diversity and natural activities has molded how I navigate my life. In 2013 I visited McNary and was able to see remnants of my grandparents home, the old cemetery. I had a wonderful conversation with a gentleman named Soldier Boy and two brothers who explained they were allowed to remain in Mcnary due to their family’s history there. The aroma of Pine cones was the first sensory that brought back memories when I arrived there. Thanks for this platform. Felecia

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