This museum is about four miles up the road from Plum Bayou. It’s a collection of buildings that were connected to local cotton farming. Displays and equipment explain the process of producing cotton, from planting the seeds to the finished product.
The visitor center and museum is in an old brick store built in 1912. Another section was added in 1929 as the Scott post office. It now houses special exhibits (currently one on Chinese immigrants in Arkansas).
The museum does a good job of explaining the process of farming cotton and makes it interesting.
Some random displays from the musuem:
The spread of the boll weevil.
Another building, a reconstruction, houses an original, fully restored cotton gin, where seed was separated from the cotton, and the cotton was baled.
Seed Warehouse No. 5 explains the process of storing, drying, and bagging cotton seeds. The doors to the building are through two Cotton Belt railroad cars.
An aerial view from … ? The store (visitor center) is on the right. Several of the buildings on the left are still there, but not part of the park.
We were hungry, so we walked through some of the buildings quickly and skipped the old tractor collection entirely. But it’s worth the time to visit — certainly a far cry better than the Lower White River Museum.


































