From The Encyclopedia of
Arkansas
The
small, unincorporated farming community of Tomato in Mississippi
County, located near the Mississippi
River in eastern Arkansas, was once touted as being
home to the nation’s smallest post office and has been called Arkansas’s only
“portable town.”
The
small but busy river community was established in the late 1800s on high ground
inside an 1836 river levee. Cotton farmers were
attracted to the area due to the rich soil created by regular flooding. Little
information exists regarding the founding of the town; however, a post office
was established in 1898. At the town’s peak in the early 1900s, it consisted of
three stores, three churches, a schoolhouse, and residential homes.
In
the early days the town was called Canadian Reach and Cedar Landing. How it
became known as Tomato is documented in two varying local traditions. When the
town was being considered for a post office, a postal representative was sent
to inquire into the name. In the midst of the discussion, the owner of the
local store, a Mr. Coleman, asked for his daughter Letty’s opinion. While
holding a can of tomatoes in her hand, she is reported to have said, “Oh, why
not just name it Tomato.” A second tradition states that a crate was attached
to a post or tree near the river bank for the delivery of items by riverboat
captains. The crate reportedly was decorated with a colorful picture of a
tomato. Riverboat captains began to refer to the stop as Tomato.
The
post office was once touted as the smallest in the United States. The original
building was swept into the Mississippi River during the Flood of 1937. Postmaster Joe
Jones rebuilt the post office. When he later moved his house to avoid flooding,
he moved into the post office building and relocated the postal operations into
a small smoke house. By 1990, the Tomato facility was the second-smallest post
office in the nation, with only twenty-three rented boxes.
The
community was prone to major flooding due to its
location so near the Mississippi River and inside the levee. Out of necessity,
the town buildings were put on log rollers and moved away from the flood waters
on several occasions. As a result of the Flood of 1937 and the crumbling
riverbank, the town was relocated approximately one and a half miles from its
original site. After several such moves, many people began to call Tomato a
“portable town.”
In
1952, the town consisted of a church, a schoolhouse, a post office, two stores,
and several houses. One of the last stores, owned by A. J. Mitchusson, had to
be moved away from the banks of the river. Though river bank stabilization work
by the U.S. Army Corps
of Engineers in the 1960s made the area safer and more
secure, the town slowly declined. The post office closed in 2002. By 2010, the
town, which once claimed 350 citizens, had all but disappeared into the river.
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