Page 2 - Rainsville History

     

1956: Rainsville incorporated

It was a big year. Elvis Presley's first, second and third number one hits ­ Heartbreak Hotel, Hound Dog, and Love Me Tender ­ came in 1956. The last Packard rolled off the assembly line in Detroit. President Eisenhower was re-elected in a landslide. His pet project, the Highway Revenue Act ­ which would change America, went into effect in that year.

That year that saw the bus boycott in Montgomery make a young, African-American preacher famous, and Don Larsen pitch the only perfect game in World Series history, a group of men back in Rainsville took action in order to make their community a better place to work and raise a family. The town's founding fathers and citizens decided to make the town official during the second half of 1956. A petition of incorporation was filed with the probate judge on August 6, 1956. Subsequently, on August 27, 1956 the citizens confirmed the measure, by voting 41 in favor and 11 in opposition. The mayor and town councilmen were sworn in on October 13, 1956. The first town council meeting was held on October 22, 1956 and the Rainsville municipal government was created.

Roland Daniels was the first mayor, while Bill Kelly, Edmond Burke, Leo Grimes, U.H. McDonald and Elmer Bailey were the original councilmen. They appointed Joe Thompson as the first town clerk.

Rainsville: fastest growing town in the state during the 1960s

In the 1960s, there was a trend of rapid growth throughout northeast Alabama. Several towns grew at a pace that was well above the national average. But Rainsville's 269.5 percent growth between 1960 and 1970 not only outpaced all of northeast Alabama, but also all incorporated towns and cities in the state.

The original 1960 census reported Rainsville's population at a little over 300 people. In March 1963, business and community leaders suspected that the Census Bureau's official population estimate for Rainsville was dramatically low. As a result, Rainsville citizens were being short-changed in regard to federal government support. Under the supervision of the Federal Housing Authority (FHA), four members of the Rainsville Home Demonstration Club ­ Mrs. Marvin Barron, Mrs. Harvey Clifton, Mrs. Elmer Bailey and Mrs. Milton Turner ­ conducted a recount. The four women counted 1,020 people and the Census Bureau raised the official population of Rainsville for 1960 to 568. The gain convinced the FHA to grant an increase in the number of housing units in a new federal housing project to be built in the town from 10 to 18. Proof of a larger population also helped secure a new Post Office building.

By the 1970 census the population had grown to 2,099, according to the Census Bureau.

Milestones: Some leading events in the city's history (1956-2006)

Since becoming an incorporated town, Rainsville and its residents have enjoyed many achievements, triumphs and other milestones as 50 years have passed. Here's a partial list of some major milestones, listed in chronological order from the incorporation to the present time. Most of the events on this list are city government related milestones.

August 27 1956; citizens vote 41 to 11 in favor of incorporating town of Rainsville.

Oct. 13, 1956; first mayor & council sworn in.

Oct. 22, 1956; Founding fathers make town official - hold first town council meeting at the gin.

May 1959; First graduating class at Plainview High School; varsity sports also began.

Jan. 19, 1960; city council voted to purchase a four-way stop light

1962; City supports a public Housing Authority

Nov. 1962; Dr Marvin Barron attends Sand Mountain Electric Coop board of trustees meeting; states that the Co-op should relocate to Sand Mountain.

June 25, 1962; the Rainsville Town Council approved the formation of the Industrial Development Board of the Town of Rainsville. Following the council meeting, the board met to elect permanent officers. The board members were Dr. Marvin Barron, Roy Winkles, Leo Grimes, Luther Hendrix, Harvey Clifton, Fletcher Deerman, Cecil Shirey and H.G. Johnson. The board elected Dr. Barron as chairman, Leo Grimes as vice chairman, and Luther Hendrix as secretary.

March 1963; leaders fight for a census recount. Under the supervision of the Federal Housing Authority (FHA) a recount was conducted.

Feb 1964; Rainsville purchased its first fire truck for $3622.39

June 1964; (resolution 2-22-65 to purchase land) Rainsville acquires six acres for first city park. The Rainsville Business and Professionals Men's Club sponsored efforts to acquire the land.

June 20, 1964; Presidential candidate George C. Wallace is guest speaker at 2nd annual meeting of Sand Mountain Boosters Club held at Plainview cafeteria

Aug. 10, 1964; Voted to start paying the mayor. The rate was $25/month

Aug. 29-30, 1964; Triple Dedication Ceremony. City Hall, Post Office, Bank openings commemorated over weekend.

Dec. 1964; Hired Adell Land as first full-time town clerk.

1965; Rainsville citizens work along side neighbors in support of Northeast Alabama State Junior College

May 10, 1965; City supports organizing little league ball Bunk Willingham, VT Goggans, Jerrol Johnson and Glenn Harrison to organize it.

February 1966; the Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service announced move to Rainsville.

March 1966; Efforts were started to open a Rainsville Public library.

Aug. 8, 1966; hired Sue Bowman as town clerk, she was a city employee until 2004

December 27, 1974; Republic Buildings Corporation startup date announced. Officials announced the start of production in January 1975 of pre-engineered steel buildings at the new Republic plant in Rainsville. The announcement came at the Alabama Capitol from Governor George Wallace.

1977; Rainsville's sewer treatment system begins initial operation with a daily capacity of 500,000 gallons.

1981; The Rainsville Civic Center opened.

Oct 11, 1981; hired Judy Lewis who is still city clerk today.

Sept 20, 1982; adopted zoning ordinance for first time.

March 1983; first Northeast Alabama Home & Garden Show held.

July 1984; Roy Sanderson was elected Mayor, he was re-elected three times, no other mayor served longer.

August 1988; Donnie Chandler was elected to the city council- he was re-elected three times and served as mayor pro-tem for three terms before becoming mayor in 2004.

Feb 20, 1986; Voted to build pavilion / shelter in park.

Oct 1987; named Ronnie Helton fire chief; he was chief until his retirement on April 26, 2011.

Feb 3, 1988; Voted to build walking track in park.

Aug 19, 1988; purchased building for current city hall.

1988; discussion of new library building project started.

April 1991; Alabama Public Library Service granted Rainsville a federal grant in order to build a new library from the ground up; the new library opened May 1992.

December 1993; new community center, the Tom Bevill Enrichment Center, opens.

April 1997; tornado changed the face of park, pool, police station, and downtown.

May 1997; the new fire hall, named in honor of V.T. Goggans opens.

May 1999 -City named Roger Byrd police chief, where he remained until his retirement from the position in 2010.

June 2000; RTI announced

July 2000; Field of Dreams opened.

Aug 9, 2001; Agricenter board formed.

Rainsville was Santileon City in 1913-1914

By Tim Eberhart, 2006

Due to the large Joe and Tol Parker families, the settlement was referred to as Parker Town from about 1897 to 1908. By 1908, the Rains store, a cotton gin, saw mill, shingle mill, grist mill, two churches, and new school were present. There must have been talk about giving the growing village an "official" name. According to Joe Parker's granddaughter, Mary Jo Grant, Parker urged locals to refer to the settlement as Rainsville rather than Parker Town in honor of Will Rains who built the first store.

The name "Rainsville" would stand through the decades despite a development venture in 1911 -1915 that resulted in a temporary new name for the town - "Santileon City."

Before 1913, word of a new rail route on Sand Mountain started a great deal of speculation. An enterprise known as Birmingham and Chattanooga Railroad Company surveyed the mountain for a new track. The railroad was more than a rumor. Headquartered in Boaz, the venture was incorporated on November 29, 1911. The survey on the new railroad "was progressing rapidly notwithstanding the very bad weather we have been experiencing of late and that the engineers were now about 35 miles north-east of Boaz in the neighborhood of Chavies" (Sand Mountain Record, Boaz, February 22, 1912). According to an article in the April 16, 1913 edition of the Fort Payne Journal, the rail company had acquired some "valuable right of way." Advertisements promoting a new real estate development where downtown Rainsville now sits claimed the railroad was under construction. A rail bridge at Chattanooga was proposed, and welcomed by the Hamilton County (TN) government. The article said the Hamilton County Court of Commissioners had entered into a contract with the new railroad to pay $15,000 per year to allow wagons and foot passengers access to the future bridge across the Tennessee River.

With rail service for the growing commercial center at Rainsville, an economic boom seemed imminent. Perhaps that's why a real estate company and some local residents resolved that the town needed a catchy new name. They apparently chose one in 1913 and started using it. The Fort Payne Journal featured community columns for Santileon City between July 1913 and July 1914. During that year "Santileon City" was used instead of "Rainsville" by the writer of that column on several occasions. The baptist church was called Santileon City Church, and games between a Santileon City baseball team and nearby squads were mentioned a couple of times.

Any future railroad station and new maps would feature the new name "Santileon City" rather than Parker Town or Rainsville. It is not known where the name came from, but Santileon City was plotted, and real estate auctions to sell lots were planned.

The Dixie Lookout Realty Company starting promoting the proposed development as the ready-to-boom commercial center of a fertile agricultural district by April 1913. The first "grand auction sale" of lots at Santileon City was advertised heavily leading up to the event slated for Wednesday, February 25, 1914. The real estate firm offered valuable door prizes including a free bag of gold and silver, and a free lot. (See the advertisement from February 1914)

Although "about 500 persons awaited the Auction Sale... it was thought advisable to postpone the sale because of the heavy snow which covered the land making it impossible for the lots to be seen" (Fort Payne Journal, March 4, 1914). The auction was rescheduled for Saturday, March 21, 1914. (See the advertisement from March 1914)

The results of that March 21 auction were not reported in detail in the newspaper. But a related article in May of 1914 stated the Dixie Lookout Realty Company had "just closed a big deal in mountain lands" and "at the same time interested eastern capitalists from the oil, gas and coal fields of West Virginia" (Fort Payne Journal, May 6, 1914). The capitalists were West Virginia politicians Stuart H. Bowman and Tom B. Bowman of Huntington, West Virginia. The Bowmans were interested in the prospects surrounding the proposed railroad, and they apparently considered buying into the Santileon City development. According to the article, the Bowmans had learned about the proposed Sand Mountain railroad in a Baltimore, Maryland publication, and Tom Bowman traveled to Chattanooga to meet with railroad officials.

In that same issue, the Tom Bowman Lot Sale Company advertised another "auction lot sale" planned for Friday, May 15, 1914. It seems the West Virginians helped spread the word about Santileon City on a larger scale, and had struck a deal that would allow them to capitalize on the development efforts. The advertisement described Santileon City's potential, and listed auction terms. The auction festivities would feature a balloon display, a brass band playing hourly, and over 50 door prizes including a gallon of money, and a free lot. A cash prize of $15 would be awarded to the farmer who brought the most people to the auction on one wagon. (See the advertisement for the May 1914 auction)

Zedikiah Arthur Land won the contest. His good fortune was reported in the newspaper a few weeks later. Land transported 95 men to the auction on a 12 by 20 feet wagon he prepared especially for the occasion. "He hauled the load with four of his best mules, and beat his nearest opponent by 14 men" (Fort Payne Journal, July 6, 1914).

It is not clear how the auction turned out. But, if 500 people braved the snow to make it to the first auction on a Wednesday in February, surely several hundred more came on that Friday in May. After all, we know 95 men came on one wagon, and 81 came on another. It is believed very few lots were sold and ownership of most of the property remained with the previous owners.
According to courthouse records that accompanied the Santileon City map - the property belonged to N.A. Robertson, J.C. Dawson and Joe F. Parker. The lots given away as door prizes may have been bought back later, or won by a member of one of those families. (Santileon City map )

The May 20, 1914 edition of the Fort Payne Journal featured an advertisement by the Worthy Development Company for a sale of lots on 40 acres on the new railroad in Sylvania (which was about four miles north of Santileon City). Similar advertisements for a lot sale in Crossville, which was about 13 miles to the south, appeared that spring, as well.

But the ads must not have attracted much outside interest, and the Sand Mountain residents - who were almost entirely hard working farmers - must have had little need for small lots in a new development by a railroad track that may, or may not, be built.