A Brief History of Byhalia
Adapted from “A History of Byhalia” by D. Barton
Williams (1987)
The history of Byhalia, Mississippi must begin with the land. Historically
fertile, the land has rolling hills and abundant water sources.
The first inhabitants of this region, the Chickasaw Indians,
established their largest settlement in the Pontotoc Ridge
area. Smaller villages scattered over North Mississippi
with one small village founded at the current location of Byhalia
cemetery.
The town of Byhalia was founded in 1838 when C.W. Rains and
Wash Poe purchased Sections 35 and 36 of Township 2, Range
5 West and sold the property to the Chickasaw Land Company. This
land was located at the intersection of Pigeon Roost Road (now
Church Street) and the Collierville-Chulahoma Road (now Highway
309). Pigeon Roost Road was originally the Chickasaw
Trail, the route followed by Hernando Desoto in 1541. Pigeon
Roost Road had been improved in 1835 to accommodate the removal
of the Chickasaw Nation to Oklahoma.
Byhalia was named for a creek spelled Bihalee. The Chickasaw
word was Dai-yi-il-ah meaning “White Oak.” The
U.S. Postal Service accepted the name Byhalia in 1846.
Marshall County, Mississippi, named for Chief Justice John
Marshall, was established February 9, 1836, with a land surface
of 707 square miles. Byhalia was an ideal location for an early
settlement, lying near the crossroad site where the Pigeon
Roost Road ran from Memphis to Oxford and Pontotoc. The
land in Georgia, Virginia, and North and South Carolina was
depleted from continuous cotton planting and lack of crop rotation,
making the newly opened territory in North Mississippi an optimal
opportunity. Many early pioneers brought families and friends
to the new frontier. Tombstones in the Byhalia Cemetery
and surrounding area tell of many founding families.
The town of Byhalia grew slowly due to the proximity of Holly
Springs and lack of a railroad. However in 1885, completion
of the railroad from Memphis joined the existing railroad at
Holly Springs and spurred new growth. Most existing downtown
buildings date from the period 1884 to 1920. Time, fire
and the Civil War destroyed many of the early homes in Byhalia.
A major fire around 1970 destroyed much of the northern section
of downtown near Highway 178. New buildings have been
built in that area since the fire.
Entering the 1850’s, Byhalia seemed well on the way to
becoming a key trade center in North Mississippi. Even
though Byhalia was small and lacked the advantage of being
the county seat, growth potential appeared unlimited. Stagecoach
service from Memphis to Oxford came through Byhalia in the
late 1840s. Mail, light freight, and passengers traveled
to and through Byhalia with this fast and reasonably comfortable
means of transportation. Schools were established. As
more settlers arrived, local commerce flourished.
However, two major events occurred within a four-year span
that minimized Byhalia’s progress for some thirty years. First,
Holly Springs obtained a railroad in 1852 making the stage
line obsolete. Since Byhalia was only a stop on the stage
route, and the stage line could not effectively compete against
the railroad from Memphis to Holly Springs or Oxford, service
was suspended in 1856.
Second and most devastating to
Byhalia’s growth was the outbreak of the Civil War. In
the early stages, young men from the North and South alike
rushed to join. Byhalia’s men were no exception
with more than 250 from this immediate area serving in the
Confederate Army. After the war, the period from 1865
to 1874 proved frustrating and traumatic for both white and
black Mississippians. The harsh Reconstruction period
left scars that would not heal for the next one hundred years.
A national depression hit in 1873 which lasted for several
years. A severe freeze in the winter of 1873 blocked traffic
on the Mississippi River. Having survived the war and
the Reconstruction, Byhalians coped with these two additional
hardships.
In the early 1870’s, yellow fever occurred several times
in the area. Even in 1873, 25,000 people fled Memphis but an
early autumn kept the dread disease from becoming a major epidemic. The
first yellow fever death in Holly Springs occurred on August
25, 1878 from a resident who left Grenada, already infected. Three
hundred and four people died of yellow fever in Holly Springs;
many stories were told of personal sacrifice and bravery. However,
Byhalia appears to have escaped the wrath of the fever, as
few tombstones in the immediate area reflect deaths in the
summer of 1878.
The early doctors practicing in Byhalia deserve credit for
promoting a healthy environment in the town. They handled major
tragedies including the yellow fever outbreak as well as a
major train wreck in Victoria, MS in 1925. Listed in
the Secretary of State’s Mississippi Official and Statistical
Register (1968-1972) are the names of the medical facilities
located in the state. Included is the Leonard Wright
Sanatorium in Byhalia. Dr. Wright established the sanatorium
around 1949 in the former home of T.D. Burrow. Some
local concern surfaced over having a facility in Byhalia that
cared for patients with drug or alcohol addiction and minor
nervous disorders. However, financially well-to-do patients
from Louisiana, Texas, Arkansas, Tennessee, and Mississippi
frequented the successful sanatorium. The most famous
patient was William Faulkner, noted Mississippi author from
Oxford.
While the Civil War ended the traditional way of life for large
planters, the vast majority of Mississippians never lived the
grand lifestyle of wealthy plantation owners depicted in books
or movies. For the most part, local residents were simple
living, hard working people who respected their neighbors and
held realistic expectations from life. Byhalia
gradually recovered from the effects of the Civil War and Reconstruction;
by the mid-1880s prosperity was once again evident. The most
important economic factor was the railroad coming through Byhalia. Irish
laborers and convicts built the railroad.
When the depot was completed, Byhalia was indeed on the map. In
1880, the population of Byhalia grew from 346 to 474. No
doubt establishing the railroad expanded commerce. The security
of weekly wages attracted some workers from the surrounding
farms.
Byhalia continued as an area trade center for many years. In
1887, W.C. McCrary established W.C. McCrary and Company. In
1903 this mercantile business incorporated with John Talbot
Myers becoming Vice President. At one time this store
sold everything from cradles to caskets. In the early
1900s, McCrary’s provided funeral services including
a horse drawn hearse. Soon after Henry Ford began mass-producing
the automobile, one of the first Ford dealerships in Mississippi
was offered to the W.C. McCrary Company but was courteously
declined, unconvinced there would be a market here for automobiles. A
chapter of Byhalia’s history ended when the W.C. McCrary
Company closed in 1970.
Each church in Byhalia has its own history. The most prominent
church membership in Mississippi prior to the Civil War was
the Methodist, with the Baptist a close second. The Farmington
Methodist Church was the first known church in Byhalia established
on the site of the present cemetery around 1845. The Byhalia
Baptist Church was organized in 1865. The Presbyterians built
their church about three miles northwest of Byhalia around
1853 but in 1872-73 decided to tear down the church board by
board and relocate in the town of Byhalia. The carefully
reconstructed building was bricked in 1948.
In March 1925, electricity came to Byhalia. M.A. Pool bought the
electrical franchise and modernized the power distribution system. Byhalia
entered the Twentieth Century in a cautious and conservative manner. However,
the rapid national changes in education, farming, and business dictated adjustments
throughout the country.
In 1992, a large portion of Byhalia was proclaimed a National
Historic District. Historic preservation and rich history
are some of Byhalia’s most marketable assets with buildings,
houses, and churches dating from 1860 to 1920. Though economical
by today’s standards, building a house in the late 1890s
to 1920s was not a simple matter. In 1890, only about
1/3 of Americans owned their homes. Usually homes were
inherited from parents and were shared by more than one generation.
This “History of Byhalia” is presented in memory
of the early settlers of the town to preserve the heritage
provided for today’s residents. The full publication, “A
History of Byhalia” by D. Barton Williams (1987), is
available for purchase at the Byhalia Chamber of Commerce. |