The Gold Rush:
Mr. Potts was a pioneer, entrepreneur, and an adventurer. He, like so many, rushed to California in the 1840's seeking his fortune in gold.
The Trail of Tears:
The Trail of Tears proceeded through the River Valley, and Mr. Potts speaks of an encampment near his home (the earlier log home at the foot of Crow Mtn.). We know that some of the Potts sons served in the Civil War on the side of the Confederacy. We also know the Potts were a slave-holding family.
The coming of the railroad:
Following the closure of the stage coach route, the railroad came through Arkansas, and the Potts Inn housed railroad workers, still serving in the capacity as an inn.
Revolutionary War:
Go back further, the Revolutionary War. General Washington's encampment at Valley Forge in Pennsylvania was on Potts land. It was here, that Isaac Potts, a Quaker, a Whig, and a Tory witnessed General Washington kneeling in prayer in the snowy woods. This encounter changed Mr. Potts views on the American "rebels" and on the war.
Click here to read about Mr. Potts' encounter with General Washington as quoted to Rev. Nathaniel Randolph Snowden.
Challenge your students to find more connections to the Potts Family. What were members of the Potts family doing during the War of 1812? World War I? World War II?
What artifacts are housed at the Potts Inn from these wars?
Hint: check out the painting over the mantel in the ladies' parlor for a WWII connection!!!
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