Crystal Springs Arkensas
History,  Independent travel,  Music,  Travel Blog,  USA

Seeking Small Town America: The Road Trip Begins

When planning this road trip out through the Southern states, we wanted our first stay to be in small town America, some off the beaten track small community kind of place where we could delve into how things work and what makes backwaters tick. Somewhere with a ring to the place name would be a bonus, so when we spotted a B&B named “The Wisteria Inn” in a town called Crystal Springs, temptation hooked us in without any further research.

Heading north away from New Orleans on the I-55 we get a real grasp of the extent of swampland, the first 20 to 30 miles of the highway is on elevated road on pillars above flooded lands, trees half submerged in the silent waters. Such terrain means no towns or villages, there’s nowhere here where the ground is secure enough to be built upon. Miles of bridge over miles of nothing but water. Swamps, lakes and bayous eventually give way to deciduous greenery and grassy meadows and we are on our way out of Louisiana and into Mississippi.

Crystal Springs Mississippi
One of the many tomatoes
Crystal Springs Mississippi
Claim to fame

As we roll into Crystal Springs we are greeted by red painted concrete tomatoes on each street corner and a sign proclaiming this little community as the “Tomatopolis of the World” – in time gone by this was a farming town with a claim to be the first place to distribute tomatoes and lettuces throughout the USA, and they are still very proud of it. “Mississippi grown” was a label of quality and, even though those times are long gone, the pride remains. There’s even a tomato museum in town. No really, there is.

Crystal Springs Mississippi

Inside the tomato museum

If it’s not tomatoes, it’s religion. Crystal Springs seems to have roughly one church for every seven houses and messages of love for God and Jesus appear every few hundred feet around town – there’s absolutely no doubting that we are in the Bible Belt here. We can only ponder how the town manages to fill so many churches at service time, maybe some locals do a church crawl every Sunday.

Church in Crystal Springs Mississippi

Church in Crystal Springs Mississippi
Two of many churches in Crystal Springs

Crystal Springs is Southern state small town America just as you would picture it: timber houses sit on large plots of manicured land with perfect lawns and no discernible boundary. Wives tend gardens while husbands ride grass cutters or tinker with the RV. Out front of every house is a wooden porch with rocking chairs. Rising on tall stanchions above each small community is a water tower with the village or town name emblazoned on the tank at the top; the largest shop in town is the hardware store. The barber’s shop is run by Lee and the first two guys we meet are Stacy and Larry. Could it get any more stereotypical?!

Wisteria Inn, Crystal Springs Mississippi
Wisteria Inn

Everyone in town stops to chat with us and a couple of times we’ve had pretty much the life story before we get chance to move on – but of course we don’t mind this at all, meeting people is how we learn the character of a place. When they pause to ask where we’re from, our response is met with a universal reaction of open mouths and dropped jaws, as if to say, “you’re travellin’ the world and you’ve ended up in our lil’ ol’ town?! Well, I’ll be….”

Crystal Springs Mississippi
Houses in Crystal Springs
Crystal Springs Mississippi
House in Crystal Springs

But it’s funny how absolutely everywhere has a claim to fame and, having literally chosen Crystal Springs for no reason other than its quaint name, it turns out to be a hotbed of blues music history. This little agricultural community was home to renowned exponents of what is known as delta blues – the delta of course being the Mississippi – including a blues legend in one Robert L Johnson. Johnson’s music has been covered by such powerhouses as Eric Clapton, Lynyrd Skynyrd and the Allman Brothers, amongst others.

Robert Johnson museum in Crystal Springs Mississippi
Inside the Robert Johnson museum

So, somewhat bizarrely, Crystal Springs has two small but notable museums, one dedicated to blues legends and the other to tomatoes. The Robert Johnson museum boasts a modest but remarkable collection of 78s, posters, photographs and other memorabilia and is a fascinating tribute to the local hero. There’s also a map of the delta showing the birthplace of each delta blues star who made good – and there are an awful lot condensed into a small area. Johnson is yet another member of the “27 club”, and music fans will know what that means.

Robert Johnson museum in Crystal Springs Mississippi
Inside the Robert Johnson museum

The railroad runs right through the middle of Crystal Springs. There are barriers at the road crossings but no other fences or protection, the line simply cuts a swathe right through the very centre and several times a day a horn-blowing mile-long freight train powers its way noisily through, shattering the peace with a decibel level which shudders the buildings.

Crystal Springs Mississippi
Downtown Crystal Springs
Train passing through Crystal Springs Mississippi
Another trains thunders through

Its central location isn’t a coincidence – in fact the town moved about a mile eastward when the railroad was built, seizing the opportunity to use the new network as its gateway to riches as the “tomato trains” loaded up and distributed fresh produce to the waiting nation. Nowadays there is no station, the trains no longer stop, they just thunder through with a blast of noisy activity so out of keeping with Crystal Springs’ tranquility. And yet it all somehow adds to the town’s character.

Crystal Springs Mississippi
Downtown Crystal Springs
Crystal Springs Mississippi
Crystal Springs

Our amiable host at the inn, a male Stacy, engages us with tales of the townsfolk and the town’s history as we chat over breakfast and out on the porch. This is exactly what we were hoping for in our search for smalltown America, all our boxes are being ticked at our very first stop. We wander around the lake at Chautauqua Park, take a drive to a couple of neighbouring towns, Hazlehurst and Wesson, and laugh in our bed each time the next freight train blasts its ear splitting horn as it barges through, even at the dead of night.

Images of Hazlehurst

Wednesday morning, one last chat with Stacy, one last amble around town, and it’s back into the Chevy and on with the road trip, up through the greenery of Mississippi and into miles and miles of flat farmland and dead straight roads punctuated by tiny farming communities huge distances from the nearest big town. Strange place names pass by, some intriguing, many amusing. Just exactly how does a small village get named Yazoo City? We pass Prague and Moscow, McGehee and even Dancing Rabbit Creek. “You are now entering Grady, population 649”, proudly announces one road sign.

Chautauqua Park, Crystal Springs, Mississippi
Chautauqua Park
Chautauqua Park, Crystal Springs, Mississippi
Chautauqua Park

After 100 miles or more on pretty minor roads with very little traffic, suddenly out of nowhere there’s a giant suspension bridge which takes us over the Mississippi and across the state line into Arkansas, and eventually just a hint of forested hills starts to give shape to the horizon beyond those vast flat fields. 

With five hours of non-freeway smaller roads behind us, we roll into our next destination mid afternoon, past Bob’s Food City and The Armory Gun Shop, and on to Central Avenue. This is the town where a certain Bill Clinton grew up, and is over the next few days to provide some real intrigue.

Welcome to Hot Springs, Arkansas.

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