With the
establishment of the first US Land Office in Springfield in
1835 came a migration of rugged pioneer families into the
virgin Ozark wilderness of Southwest Missouri.
Malinda Fortner was one of these early pioneers. Little is
known of her past or why she chose the demanding life of a
homesteader. The original 120 acre tract of land on which
she established her claim in 1867 was the beginning for a
crossroads settlement along the West Bank of Turkey Creek in
the early 1880's.
Around the turn of the century, Rueben Kirkham opened a
general store and applied to the Post Office Department for
permission to establish a Post Office suggesting the name
HOLLISTER after the birth place of his daughter in
Hollister, California. Permission was granted and in 1904
the name of the Ozarks settlement was established.
With the coming of the St Louis Iron Mountain & Southern
Railroad the area was opened to new expansion. It became the
headquarters for the Mo-Pac Agricultural Agent of the White
River Division. The area achieved tremendous agricultural
development. Berries, vegetables, grape vineyards, orchards,
cotton and tobacco flourished and the amount, variety of
stock and produce shipped from the station in the early
years was phenomenal.
W.H. Johnson and Professor J.W. Blankenship platted and
started the major development of a beautiful English style
village which attracted visitors from all over the world.
Johnson's dream resulted in the row of quaint Elizabethan
structures which is now Downing Street. His son W.W.
Johnson, built the historic Ye English Inn in 1912 and it
became a stopover for travelers with special trains bringing
visitors to a then remote area.
Hollister was incorporated as a town in 1910 with Professor
J.W. Blankenship becoming the first mayor.
Hollister is noted for bringing to Taney County the first
major influx of tourism. It had the first iron bridge in
Taney County which still spans Turkey Creek, the first paved
street, electric lights, movie house, the first registered
pharmacist and modern steam heated hotel.
The colorful history of this unusual Ozark town is
fascinating and covers and era when stock wars were waged
between merchants and stockmen. Grape carnivals promoted by
the railroad were gala affairs where men and women of an age
gone by helped to build an unique English Village in the
Ozarks. . .Hollister, Missouri
Local Historian, Viola Hartman, is credited with Hollister's
being placed on the National Register of Historical sites In
1978.
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