Amity was founded in 1847 by several pioneer families from the Mount Bethel area of Clark County under the leadership of William F. Browning, who served as the Clark County surveyor from 1846 until his death in 1854. The group settled along the
Caddo River, drawn to the area by an abundance of rich
bottomland and fresh water. Browning constructed a two-story log house just west of Caney Creek, which soon became the center of the expanding community. It was Browning who gave Amity its name. Together with other citizens, Browning formed the Caddo Valley Baptist Church of Christ, which before several other names would later develop into the Bethel Missionary Baptist Church in Glenwood and First Baptist Church in Amity. It is thought to be the first religious organization in the area, though A.B. Clingman, a physician and minister associated with the Church of Christ was in the area before Browning's group arrived. Browning's group built a large log house that would serve as both the church and the school house. The first school teacher was Captain Robert S. Burke, a former military officer and Browning's brother-in-law. A few months later, the first Amity
Post Office was established nearby. . With the outbreak of the
Civil War, the community saw dark times. Initially in support of the
Confederacy, soon the community became divided, with the men of Amity leaving to fight in both the
Confederate Army and the
Union Army. In several cases, families were split by their loyalties, causing turmoil within the small community. Midway through the war, Union soldiers burned the Burke schoolhouse and the Browning
cotton press. Following the war's end, the center of the community shifted to a location south of the Caddo River, first settled by John Hays Allen and Amariah Biggs. Biggs was widely known as a
physician and
Methodist minister, and first settled in the area around 1850. The Amity Post Office was soon after relocated to this area. In 1870, retired army Colonel Philander Curtis, a
Connecticut native, settled in the area. Curtis built the first house where the town of Amity now stands, and served for several years as the town's
postmaster. In 1871, Col. Curtis and businessmen Riley Thompson and Jacob H. Lightsey purchased property from John Hays Allen, and on that property they laid out plans for the town, centering on a public square. By 1874 Amity had become a thriving village, with several new businesses and churches. In 1877 an adjacent area became "Amity Township", and in 1880 the town made a move to become
incorporated, but it did not come to pass until 1907. In the late 1870s a new schoolhouse was built. Its first teacher was Richard Melancthon Burke, son of Captain Robert Burke. The residents also formed the Amity Male and Female Academy, which eventually became Amity High School. Richard Burke died in 1883, and the school struggled until 1888, when Samual M. Samson arrived in Amity. Samson spent the next twenty years as the head of the high school, which at that time was a private school. After his departure, it was absorbed into the Amity Public School System. In 1887, a false rumor that
gold had been discovered in an area then known as the Trap Mountains resulted in a brief
gold rush, which ended when the rumor proved false. Shortly after 1900, the Gurdon and Fort Smith Railroad was constructed through Amity, greatly improving the economy of the town. Soon, the logging industry began to thrive, with large
sawmills opening in
Rosboro and
Glenwood. Amity became a main shipping and trade center for the area, and in 1905 the Bank of Amity opened, which now is on the
National Register of Historic Places. In 1899 the town's first newspaper, the
Amity Enterprise, went into circulation, followed by the
Four-County Courier in 1915 and the
Amity Owl in 1922. Just before
World War II, the shortage of
cinnabar caused a brief but productive mining industry in the nearby mountains south of the town, a phenomenon which became known as the
Quicksilver Rush. However, any significant mining had ended by 1940, and following the war and an increased worldwide supply, the mines closed.
Recent history With the Bean Lumber Company opening in 1940, followed by the Barksdale Lumber Company,
logging soon became the main source of employment for the town. At its peak, the Bean Lumber Company was producing more than 150 million board feet of pine lumber and 120 million board feet of treated lumber annually, making it one of the largest distributors of southern pine in the United States. The Bean Lumber Company would later open mills in Glenwood and in
Buckner, Missouri. A.J. Hunter, who had originally come to town in 1905 to manage the city's first telephone exchange and who would later, upon the closure of the city's newspaper, begin
The Owl, sold the paper in the 1940s to Marvin C. Bass of
Little Rock. The paper then operated until the mid-1950s and closed, though no one remembers when or why it closed. By 2007 Bean Lumber was struggling financially and was under investigation for financial matters. The Amity mill closed, though the planer and treatment plants remained open. The Glenwood mill, which employed many Amity residents, closed and did not reopen until 2008. All of these events thoroughly affected the local economy, diminishing employment opportunities in the community, as well as briefly diminishing the population of the town, with many people being forced to search for work elsewhere. In 1995, Amity School District merged with Glenwood School District to create Centerpoint High School, located midway between the two towns, in
Rosboro,
Pike County. The private Ouachita Hills Academy and
Ouachita Hills College, associated with the
Seventh-day Adventist Church, are located southwest of Amity on the Clark-Pike county line. Word of Faith Christian Academy is located east of town between Amity and Alpine. In 1996,
Arkadelphia native Joe May founded the city's fourth newspaper,
The Standard. The paper is a weekly publication and covers Clark and Pike counties as well as the
Bismarck, Arkansas, area. In addition to publishing the newspaper, May Publishing Company puts out the Trade Days Gazette, a free-circulation paper at the monthly Amity Trade Days event. They also publish the Old Time Chronicle, a quarterly folk history magazine covering South Arkansas. In 2007, the city observed its 100th anniversary of incorporation with a two-day festival on the square. In 2008, the city's businesspeople formed the Amity Area Chamber of Commerce. In 2015, Russell and Kim Jones of Rosboro started Amity Trade Days in the former Bean Lumber Company's sawmill facility. Trade Days is a monthly flea market modeled after those in
Canton, Texas. It attracts more than 6,000 people per month and has nearly 200 venders. It is held the first weekend (Thursday-Sunday) after the first Monday of each month. ==Geography==