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Edith, Missouri

Coordinates: 37°56′47.7″N 92°52′29.6″W / 37.946583°N 92.874889°W / 37.946583; -92.874889
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Edith is an unincorporated community in Russell Township in southern Camden County, Missouri, United States, and is also known as Green Gables.[1][2][3][4]

Edith
Edith is located in Missouri
Edith
Edith
Location of Edith in Missouri
Coordinates: 37°56′47.7″N 92°52′29.6″W / 37.946583°N 92.874889°W / 37.946583; -92.874889
CountryUnited States
StateMissouri
CountyCamden
Named forEdyth King Roach family

There was a post office by the name of Edith from 1894 to 1918.[5] It was a summer resort area in 1943.[3] The Pleasant Grove School was located here prior to, and between, 1938 and 1946, and was rebuilt in 2006.

Edith, Missouri, site of the Pleasant Grove Church and Green Gables Lodge

The Pleasant Grove Cemetery and the Pleasant Grove Missionary Baptist Church, founded in 1868, remain here.[6]

History

Pleasant Grove School at Edith, Missouri

Edith was likely named for Edyth King Roach (1878-1955), the wife of U.S. Representative and Lawyer Sidney Crane Roach (1876-1934) for whose father nearby Roach, Missouri, was named.[7]

Edith was known also as Green Gables, "a village in southeastern Russell Township, Camden County," on the Big Niangua River. "The summer resort there, however, has recently assumed the more glamorous name of Green Gables, probably inspired by Lucy Maud Montgomery's popular romance, Anne of Green Gables, first published in 1908. The summer homes there are said all to have painted their gables green."[1]

The Wiley Gott Cemetery, established 1868, and the Mills Cemetery, established 1888, are south of Edith, 1.8 linear miles and 3.2 miles, respectively, the southernmost burial sites in Camden County.

Green Gables Lodge

In 1926, the year an illustrated edition of the novel Anne of Green Gables was released,[8] the Green Gables Lodge was erected at Edith, "with a 3,192-square-foot dormitory building that can house 12 people, a 2,500-square-foot lodge building, a 4-acre lake, basketball courts, a climbing wall and 375 feet of frontage on the Niangua River."[9]

Between about 1988 and 2016, Green Gables Lodge was a residential treatment facility, oftentimes with an adventure-based counseling model. It consisted of "160 acres of woods, pasture, and a spring fed lake situated along the Niangua River. The campus itself is centered on the property and is made up of the Lodge which houses the classroom, library, 3 separate restrooms and administrative offices; the Dorm which houses the sleeping area, dining room, kitchen, pantries, dayroom, 2 separate restrooms, showers and laundry; the Maintenance Building; and 5 storage buildings containing surplus supplies, camping equipment and yard tools."

In 2015, treatment here included "individualized, group, educational, medical, and psychosocial, and other needs and topics specialized and individualized to meet the needs of each resident in the care of the facility. Green Gables Lodge tailors treatment and educational approaches to the use of Adventure Based Counseling events such as fishing, running, canoeing, backpacking, basecamping, and Ropes Courses."[10]

Geography

Edith is near the western banks of the winding Niangua River, about four linear miles southwest of Roach and five miles east of Macks Creek, the largest settlement in Russell Township.

It is one-half mile north of the Whistle Bridge, a concrete causeway at the end of Tunnel Dam Road that crosses the Big Niangua River downstream from the dam.

Edith is nearly two miles northwest of White City, a former community built on the rocky ridge to house the workers who erected the Tunnel Dam on the Niangua River beginning in about 1922.[11]

Edith is about a mile and a half (linearly) north of Chapel Bluff, the site of notable limestone rock formations located along the Niangua River, south of the confluence of Jacks Creek with Mire Hollow Creek.[12] It is the site of the former Chapel Bluff School, where, in the 1926-27 school year, Roy Tipton was the teacher, W. A. Vance was president and the clerk was John Varner.[13]

Chapel Bluff is about 3 1/2 linear miles north of the village of Celt, an unincorporated community in northeastern Dallas County, Missouri.

Chapel Bluff is about 3 1/2 linear miles east of Only, Missouri,[14] which was the name of a populated place, with a post office between 1907 and 1919, also in Russell Township. Only is on State Road O, off of Chapel Bluff Road as it emerges from the Niangua Hills. [1] Only is to the immediate south of the historical village known as Dry Ridge where a school remained into the late 1920s. Another now extinct village by the same name was on the eastern side of the Niangua.

References

  1. ^ a b c Overlay, Fauna R. "Place Names Of Five South Central Counties Of Missouri." M.A. thesis., University of Missouri-Columbia, 1943. https://mospace.umsystem.edu/xmlui/handle/10355/74341
  2. ^ "Camden County | The State Historical Society of Missouri". collections.shsmo.org. Retrieved 2024-11-03.
  3. ^ a b USGS National Map, Green Gables, Missouri.
  4. ^ "Geographic Names Information System". edits.nationalmap.gov. Retrieved 2024-11-03.
  5. ^ Post Offices. Jim Forte Postal History. Retrieved 8 September 2016.
  6. ^ "Pleasant Grove Cemetery in Camden County, Missouri". genealogytrails.com. Retrieved 2024-11-03.
  7. ^ "Roach History". The Roach Rattler. 2011-06-15. Retrieved 2024-11-05.
  8. ^ "BIBLIO | Anne of Green Gables by Montgomery, L.M. (Lucy Maud) | Illustrated by Elizabeth R. Withington | 1926 | L.C. Page, and Company". www.biblio.com. Retrieved 2024-11-04.
  9. ^ Erickson, Kurt (2021-10-05). "With river frontage, pond and dormitory, Missouri looks to lease old state youth facility". STLtoday.com. Retrieved 2024-11-04.
  10. ^ Missouri Department of Social Services. Compliance Report, National PREA Resource Center, Bureau of Justice Assistance, U.S. Department of Justice. https://dss.mo.gov/reports/prison-rape-elimination-act-reports/prea-audit-full-compliance-reports/2015/CY-2015-PREA-Audit-Green-Gables-Lodge.pdf
  11. ^ McCarty, Jim (2023-08-21). "Tunnel Dam". Rural Missouri. Retrieved 2024-11-03.
  12. ^ "Geographic Names Information System". edits.nationalmap.gov. Retrieved 2024-11-03.
  13. ^ "Camden County MO Schools". www.looktothepast.com. Retrieved 2024-11-03.
  14. ^ "Geographic Names Information System". edits.nationalmap.gov. Retrieved 2024-11-03.