Depot and Museum Internet Home Page Nevada County 
Depot and Museum 
403 West First Street South 
P O Box 592 
Prescott AR 71857 
Phone (870) 887-5821 
E-mail online@depotmuseum.org 
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The Nevada County Depot and Museum is located in the restored and renovated 1912 MoPac Railroad Depot in Prescott, Arkansas. It houses thousands of artifacts, documents and photographs. Hours are Tuesday-Saturday from 9:00 a.m. until 5:00 p.m. From time-to-time, the Depot and Museum is closed during the noon hour. Your membership and support are appreciated.
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The El Spotro Extravaganza

Come celebrate the works of "Outsider Artist", Spot Daniel at the Nevada County Depot Museum. The El Spotro Extravaganza begins with a Chamber of Commerce Coffee at the Museum on Friday, October 10, 2008 from 9:30am until 11:00am. Celebrations continue Saturday, October 11, 2008 with a reception honoring Spot Daniel from 2:00 pm until 4:00 pm. The Exhibition will be on display from October 10 through November 28, 2008.



Hours of operation

We will be open Monday thru Friday 10 am until 4 pm. On Saturdays and Sundays, we will be open if arrangements have been made during the preceeding week. If you need to visit the Museum after hours, please call us at 870-887-5821 and we will be glad to set up a time for you.

It is always best to call and make sure we will be open.



Join or Renew Your Membership

Print a membership form. Contributions go toward operations, maintenance of the building, preservation of artifacts, expansion and cataloging of the exhibits, and work on the history of the County.



List of Biographies in Old Section of the De Ann Cemetery

As part of the application to place the old section of the De Ann Cemetery on the National Register of Historical Places, Peggy Lloyd, curator of the Nevada County Depot and Museum prepared biographies on over 200 persons. Those biographies are searchable through the musem's web site at http://www.depotmuseum.org ("List and Resources" then "Biographies"). The entire document is available online in PDF format (153,949 bytes).


Facilities - Exhibit Hall

The "Exhibit Hall" is on the north end of the building -- where the railroad waiting rooms and ticket areas were located.

Exhibits include a presentation on the Louisiana Purchase of April 1803, Indian pottery, information about early settlements and settlers of Nevada County, and various collections pertaining to the Civil War, agriculture and railroads, electric meters, and fire fighting equipment. Visitors will find the displays and exhibits clean, uncluttered, documented, and easy to view. While some exhibits are permanent, others rotate for a period of months.

The "Exhibit Hall" is open from 9:00 a.m. until 5:00 p.m. on Monday-Saturday. Appointments for groups or special circumstances are possible by contacting the curator.


Facilities - Research and Meeting Room

The "Research and Meeting Room" made possible by the renovation and a previous contribution almost doubles our space. This room is the former freight storage room on the south end of the building. It currently has exhibits on Governor Thomas McRae and the McRae Schools. Eventually, with the help of volunteers and alot of time, effort, and money, this room will make public the "John Teeter Special Collections" of documents, photographs, and newspapers. Much of our collection requires extensive work and several thousand dollars of funding to properly preserve, so please let us know if you would like to help.

This room may have sporadic or upon-request hours. We want a research assistant to on hand when this room is open (volunteers needed).


Facilities - Entrances

The front entrance to the "Exhibit Hall" is now on the street side of the north end of the building (the doors on the railroad side of the building are locked). The brick sidewalk at the front door is sloped upward to provide accessibility. Our old "Nevada County Museum" sign is near this door (when it doesn't get blow down).

The entrance to the "Research/Meeting Room" is on the south end of the building. On the street side, come from the building's brick sidewalk up the steps and into the doors. The accessibility ramp entrance is on the railroad side of the building just a few feet from the parking lot.


Facilities - Parking

Our south parking lot next the railroad crossing on Olive Street is concrete with several accessibility spaces and room for bus parking. Most visitors park on this lot and walk along the street-side brick sidewalk to the entrance. The accessible path is along the fence on the railroad side of the building - about half way down pass through the breezeway to the street side.

The north parking lot is more convenient to the "Exhibit Hall", but is not accessible and many persons find it difficult to get from the parking space to the brick sidewalks surrounding the building. If you park here, the easiest access is probably walking next to the highway until you get to the steps at the front door.


Our People

David Sesser is our new curator. Mr. Sesser holds an undergraduate degree in history and anthropology from Henderson State University and is currently working on a graduate degree in history at Henderson. He is the past president of the Phi Alpha Theta History Honor Society at Henderson and is also a member of the Women's History Organization. Mr. Sesser has also worked with state and National historic sites in Arkansas, Louisiana, and Mississippi. Before taking the position at the Nevada County Depot Museum, Mr. Sesser worked as a museum technician for the National Park Service in Mississippi. He has been published in the South Arkansas Historical Journal and the Encyclopedia of Arkansas History and Culture and currently serves as the editor of the Henderson Historical Journal.

Our first curator and co-founder, John Teeter, served from the first day we were open in 1976 until the last day we were open in 2001 when we had to close the museum for the renovation and restoration project.Before the project was finished, health problems necessitated that John retire.

John dedicated much of his life's work to documenting the history of Nevada County. He took dozens of rolls of film, showing the construction and destruction of buildings, crowds at events, and the other parts of our local culture and heritage. All of this to assure the information is passed on to future generations. The Museum's photo books are the legacy of his work and the basis for much of the content on this web site.


History of the Depot Museum

Our sources show the building is dated July 1911. On June 10, 1912, the Iron Mountain #6 was the first train to arrive at the new Depot. The first Prescott and Northwestern (P&NW) passenger train departed the station on June 11, 1912. P&NW continued passenger service from this depot until November 1945. The Missouri Pacific, successor to the Iron Mountain Railroad, maintained the ticket office until 1965 (or 1967?). Railroad passenger service shutdown in 1965 (or 1967?).

In 1969, the building was threatened with demolition. On November 19, 1969, the Missouri Pacific Railroad Company and the City of Prescott, Arkansas entered into a lease for the 441x60 plot of land on which the depot building sits and the adjacent parking lots, with the lease effective March 18, 1970. On March 18, 1970, the Missouri Pacific Railroad Company issued a "Bill of Sale" to the City of Prescott, Arkansas for the 24'x188' one story brick depot building for the amount of one dollar.

The original plans were to convert the building to city offices and a courtroom. The noise of passing trains soon ended this plan. Briefly, there was an adult education class held in the south waiting room. The noise soon ended this project as well. From 1969 until 1972 part of the building was rented to local businesses as a warehouse.

The city and county Centennial Celebration during the summer of 1972 changed the future of the depot. Headquarters for the celebration were established at the depot. The train ride furnished by Potlatch and the P&NW Railroad that disembarked from the depot and featured the "great train robbery". Maxine Covington installed the "Short Branch Saloon" in the center hallway of the building. George Ivey built a complete replica of a pioneer cabin in the north waiting room. This exhibit was complete with a cooking fireplace, trestle table and string bed. It was this display that proved to a number of people what could be done with the Depot.

A group worked to establish a state park designation for the Prairie DeAnn Battlefield. The depot would be part of this project, serving as headquarters for the park development. Led by Charles Yarbrough, others who worked so hard to get the museum going include Pam Yarbrough, Nancy Russell, Nancy Worthington, Norman Whitaker, Dorothy Whitaker, Margaret Pemberton, Bernice Berryman, Mary Joe Hamilton, Frances Thrasher, Wanda Stevens, Jan Stroud, John Teeter, Kay Wren and many contributors.

In 1976, the group arranged for the Chamber of Commerce office to be moved to the depot, which provided personnel to keep the building open to the public. That marked the beginning of the museum, with John Teeter volunteering as the curator. Initially, there was only a small exhibit in the north waiting room. However, dozens of people took an interest in preserving the history of the area and hundreds of items of interest poured in, including material from persons across the country.

Through the efforts of the Nevada County Historical Society, application was made to the National Register of Historic Sites in 1977, and the depot was awarded historic site designation in November of 1978. Prescott was one of the first abandoned train stations in Arkansas to be so designated.

On March 10, 1978, Articles of Incorporation of the Nevada Country State Park Association were filed in Nevada County Circuit Court. The association was to operate the Depot Museum and was formed by R.C. McBrayer in his capacity as the Mayor of the City of Prescott, Bobby Taylor in his capacity as the Nevada County Judge-elect, Johnny Brannan in his capacity of President of the Prescott-Nevada County Chamber of Commerce, Charles Yarbrough, A. Glenn Vasser, Nancy Russel, John Teeter, Lawrence McKenzie, and Dan Pittman.

On Sunday afternoon, May 25, 1979, the official National Register designation was held. Jack Doss of the Arkansas Cultural and Historical Commission made the presentation speech. Lieutenant Governor Joe Purcell was the principle speaker. Over 200 people attended this ceremony held under the north portico of the Depot.

On May 14, 1982, the Internal Revenue Service issued its Advance Ruling declaring the Nevada County State Park Association a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit organization.

On April 20, 1992, the Arkansas Historic Preservation Program provided a Grant-in-Aid for $10,000 for repairs and renovation of the building, with the funding coming from the National Parks Service.


In July 1996, marking "this month's" 85th anniversary of the depot building and the 20th anniversary of the Depot Museum, John Teeter stated that the office, north waiting room and south waiting rooms were crowded with over 2,000 items, 2,400 old photographs, family histories, church and school histories, cemetery records, railroad memorabilia, and artifacts from the Battle of Prairie De Ann.

Teeter also proclaimed the future of the Depot Museum. His statement included comments of "preparing for the 21st century" by computerizing the museum's records, inventory and information and that information being placed on the Internet. Teeter also stated, "Much has been accomplished toward preserving local history during the 20 years the museum has been here. We will do much more during the next twenty years."


In February 2000, the City of Prescott received a large grant made possible by 1998's Transportation Efficiency Act for the 21st Century (TEA-21) and is administered by the Arkansas State Highway Commission as part of its Arkansas Transportation Enhancement Program. The grant provided for a large-scale renovation and restoration of the entire building. The museum was closed in late January 2002, while the work was done Total cost of the renovation and restoration was $233,771, with $164,888 from the grant and $66,883 from the City of Prescott. [More on the Renovation]

In late 2002, employees of the City of Prescott are begining the move back of fixtures and some large exhibit items. Exhibits and displays should be moved back and placed into nice displays in the coming months. It is hoped the museum will be ready to reopen in early 2003.


At the meeting of the membership and board of directors on Sunday, November 17, 2002, it was recognized that the original purpose of the Nevada County State Park Association -- to pursue the establishment of the Prairie DeAnn Battlefield as a state park -- is never going to be possible. With the goals shifted to the operation of a museum, the membership and board voted to change the its name to the Nevada County Depot & Museum .


Once again, quoting John Teeter from July 1996:

Anything we write or say about the museum concludes with the statement that we could not operate 30 days without the complete support we receive from the City of Prescott. If anything breaks that we can't fix, someone from the city always helps. They keep the grass cut and the grounds clean. The City keeps the lights burning and the water running.

Visit your museum.


Member: American Association For State and Local History, Arkansas Museums Association
Copyright Notice and Limitations on Use:
All informative and photographic material on the Depot and Museum web site and compact discs are copyright ©1996-2008 Nevada County Depot and Museum. Routines that generate the pages were written by and copyright ©2002 Danny Stewart. The site is hosted by the Prescott Community Freenet Association. All rights are reserved. Individuals who access the web site or purchase a compact disk are limited to private viewing of the material or quotation in an individual's historical research project. Use of material must be attributed to "Nevada County Depot and Museum, Prescott, Arkansas". Prior written consent is required before any material is quoted or used in a work that is sold for any price or distributed by any means, either for profit or not for profit. This page has been accessed 795,669 times since 01-21-2001.