Join Ray and Diane Hadley as they retell the history of the
communities that make up Jonesboro and Arkansas's Northeast Corner in
vintage images.
When Union soldiers returned North after the Civil War, they brought
home stories of a sparsely populated area with bountiful timber and
potential for homes and farms. Over the next 50 years, first by wagon
train and then by railroads, settlers came to build not only homes and
farms but also thriving communities in the Clay, Greene, and Craighead
counties of northeastern Arkansas. Today, visitors and residents of the
area see the bustle of Jonesboro and the thriving Arkansas State
University. Readers of Jonesboro and Arkansas' Historic Northeast Corner
will discover Jonesboro as it lived a century ago, a promising town of
7,000 citizens. As the 20th Century opened, modern and attractive towns
such as Corning, Piggott, Rector, and Paragould began to thrive. The
evolution of these historic areas-from slow-paced villages with dirt
roads and horse-drawn wagons to the bustling towns of the late 20th
century-is chronicled in this Images of America edition.