Byler, Edgar

BYLER, EDGAR, Pvt, Draft Headquarter, Nashville, TN Serial number 4445357, was born at Sage, Izard County, Arkansas on 21 September 1888. He was the son of Dr. S. E. BYLER and Lauraetta DOWNING BYLER, natives of Izard Co., Arkansas and Wayne County, Tennessee respectively.

In 1889, he came by train, steamboat and ox cart to Wayne County, Tennessee eventually settling with his parents in Iron City, Lawrence County, Tennessee. He graduated from the Iron City Institute in 1906 and entered the University of Tennessee that fall. In 1907, he began teaching school in Lawrence County, Tennessee, the Wayland Springs District. Later he taught at Thompson’s Station in Franklin County, Tennessee and other areas before entering the surveying business in 1912. He was a member of the surveying team which surveyed the Tennessee Western Railroad from Iron City to present day Collinwood and laid out the town of Collinwood under the supervision of Edward L. LULL.

He was inducted into the US Army in June 1918 and served in the Medical Corps as a Medical Examination Corpsman at the Induction Center in Nashville and later in Savannah, Tennessee. He was honorably discharged on 23 December 1918. and became a surveyor with the L & N Railroad, working in the building of the line from Sheffield, Alabama to Birmingham, Alabama through Russellville.

He married on 12 Nov 1919, in Russellville, Alabama to Mrs. Sarah Jane DUNN WALSH, a widow with two small children: Joseph E. WALSH and Robert E. WALSH. Sarah was the daughter of Joseph D DUNN and Frances Jane TILLEY DUNN, natives of England. Joseph D. DUNN was president of the American Products Company of Boyne City, Michigan and was in Collinwood during the war to supervise the building of the iron furnace which was part of the US Government Chemical Plant being erected by the Tennessee Valley Iron and Railroad Company of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania under a contract from the US Bureau of Aeroplane Manufacture.

Shortly after Mr. DUNN returned to Boyne City, Michigan in December 1919, Edgar BYLER joined them and worked with Mr. DUNN in the iron business. Edgar and Sarah’s first child, Laura Jane BYLER, was born at Manistique, Michigan on 7 July 1920. On 22 Dec 1920, Dr. S. E. BYLER died suddenly. Edgar and family moved back to Collinwood where they lived for a short time in the upstairs rooms of the drugstore. In 1921 Edgar was appointed Postmaster at Collinwood to fill out his father’s term. At the same time, Edgar and his brother-in-law, Allen BROWN formed a partnership to take over operation of the drug store. Thus Brown and Byler Drugs was born and would continue to serve the people of Collinwood until Edgar retired in 1962.

While living over the store Edgar and Sarah’s son, Edgar Donald BYLER was born on 19 September 1921. Shortly thereafter they moved into what was called the “Green” house on Second Avenue. Here their third child, Naomi Ruth BYLER was born 28 Jan 1923. With a growing family and a decline in profits from the store business, Edgar decided to seek work with the Tennessee Highway Department. He worked with the Highway department from 1923 until 1936, working to build Tenn. Highway 15 (later US 64). In 1936, he returned to the farm the family had bought in the McCall Community because of the Depression. Then in 1937 he returned to the Drugstore as Pharmacist.

Sarah Jane DUNN WALSH BYLER died 12 November 1965 at Wayne County General Hospital, Waynesboro, Tennessee and was buried at McGlamery Cemetery. Edgar BYLER died 17 May 1968 in Florence, Alabama. He is also buried at McGlamery.

During World War II, Edgar BYLER served on the Wayne County, Tennessee Draft Board and as a 1LT in the Tennessee State Guard. Three members of the family served in various services during World War II: Robert E. WALSH, U.S. Navy; LT. Laura Jane BYLER, US Army Nurses Corps; and SSG Edgar D.BYLER, Army Air Corps.

Short History of Collinwood

Written by the late Eva BURNS SMITH LUTTRELL


Collinwood, located in the center of Wayne County is included in the 150 acres tract of land that was granted by the State of Tennessee to Mr. A. G. McDOUGAL by Grant No. 28 containing 2500 acres of land on Butler and Shawnattee Creek. This was on April 12, 1847. Then on September 11, 1849, the 150 acres, of which Collinwood is located, was conveyed to James TILLEY by Mr. McDOUGAL for $20.00 in hand.

Five years later, Mr. TILLEY sold the land to Harmon LAKEY and authorized McDOUGAL to make Mr. LAKEY a deed to it. Then Mr. TILLEY moved to Arkansas, Mr. LAKEY fenced in some of the land and farmed it for forty-six years. He died in 1898 leaving a son William LAKEY as his only heir. Nine years later William LAKEY sold the land to Jasper McWILLIAMS for $250.00. Three years later on September 1904, Jasper McWILLIAMS sold to a Mr. G. N. SCOTT for $500.00. Seven years later on December 29, 1911, Mr. G. N. SCOTT sold it to a Mr. W. M. SCOTT for $2,000. One year later, August 17, 1912, Mr. W. M. SCOTT sold it to a Mr. Wes McGEE for $2,500.00 and then seven days later Mr. McGEE sold it to Mr. J. E. WILBURN for $2,500.00. At this time there were just a few scattered houses owned by settlers who did some farming and timber work.

Early in 1913, the Superior Lumber and Tie Company purchased several acres of forest land around the area where Collinwood is now located. W. W. COLLINS was a Superintendent of the operations for the company and it seems was a man of great energy. He hurriedly set up the company’s sawmills, and started a plan toward building a town. He named the town Collinwood – Collin for him and wood because of the great wood industry. At this time the Collinwood Land Company was formed by the businessmen of the town along with the companies. They purchased the land from Mr. J. E. WILBURN for $12,000.00. They hired an engineer, a Mr. Edward LULL, to lay out the town. They sub-divided a portion of the land into town lots and laid off and located a number of streets and alleys.

In December of 1913 the first train pulled into the settlement. Work had begun one year before by the Tennessee Valley Railroad Company who had a contact to build and operate the railroad known as the Tennessee Western Railroad Company, and to furnish telegraph equipment and lines from Collinwood to St. Joseph, Tennessee. There was much excitement ion the town when the first train pulled in for its first shipment of lumber.

As soon as possible buildings were started being built. Some of the first buildings were a Drug Store owned by S. E. BYLER, a Grocery and Dry Goods Store owned by J. L. BURNS, and a Hardware Store owned by Gard WHITTEN, a Feed Store owned by Harman BRYANT and a Boarding House owned by T. A. ADKINSON.

In 1917 the Collinwood Land Company sold out to the Tennessee Valley Iron and Railroad Company for $5.00 cash and other goods and valuable sufficient considerations.

A brick plant was constructed where the Lumber Company is now situated and bricks were made to build the brick buildings, one of the first being the Bank of Collinwood.

The crashing sound of falling timber, the hissing of locomotives and the rush of immigrants gave Collinwood a real boom town air and the population reached two thousand. All this was before World War I. The town was incorporated in 1915, but this lasted only a couple of years. During this time a Mr. HOLMES started publishing a newspaper called the Collinwood Pilot and it had all the splendor of a frontier newspaper. A beautiful depot was built.

When the outbreak of war in Europe came and Uncle Sam began scouting around for something to fight his war with, the still large reserves of hardwoods beckoned and in almost not time two thousand men were at work setting up a chemical plant with which to manufacture alcohol, acetate of lime, car tar, pig iron and charcoal. The furnace for the plant was shipped from Rusk, Texas. In order to keep a supply of wood for the chemical plant and logs for the sawmills, a tram line made if wood and similar to a railroad was constructed to haul the logs from the forest to the mill. These trams were first pulled by a steam engine but they didn’t prove successful. Then mules and horses were used to pull them. This brought on a demand for horses and some car loads of wild western horses were being shipped to the Collinwood area and sold at auction.

The town took on a very lively atmosphere. Three trains came in each day, two of them passengers. Each time the train whistle would sound the town would gather at the depot because each time the train came it meant more new people. They came from all sections of the country but most of them came from the North and East and the Southern people could hardly understand their language. Included with these people from the East were the personnel of the companies. They built fine homes in the area where Hassell & Hughes Lumber Company is now located. These homes had running water and baths which was unheard of until then.

The Collinwood Hotel, called the Highland Inn, was rapidly constructed and the company built a huge commissary and did a thriving business along with the other stores that were built. Even a silent moving picture theater was built and each week it was filled with people to see Hoot Gibson and other great actors of that time. Each week a boxing match was staged as an added attraction. This drew many fans as well as boxers. There were several boxers from this area who were great. One who was champ for quite a while was Earl CARTER.

During these days of wealth and merriment, three horseless carriages were brought into Wayne County. One of these was owned by J. D. DUNN. It was an air cooled Franklin and the many predicaments Mr. DUNN got into with it were quite interesting.

The first doctors in Collinwood were S. E. BYLER, who was Doctor and Druggist; Dr. W. W. RIPPY, Dr. REYNOLDS, and Dr. J. F. TOWNSEND. The first dentist was Dr. BLACK.

Miss Mamie ADKINSON taught the first school, a one room building. Later a larger school was built where the present elementary school now stands.

The Southern Methodist Church was built in 1917 and the First Methodist Church in 1918.

Then came Armistice Day. The war was over. The government closed down the plant and Collinwood suffered a slight depression. But in 1919, workers were sent back and the plant was operated for about a year then the Tennessee Valley Iron and Railroad Company was declared insolvent and the Tennessee Charcoal Company bought most of the property including the vast forests. They cut lumber and shipped it out to other plants and kept the town going for several more years.

Along about 1928 Collinwood’s world quivered and tottered. The stock market broke too. Work on every project stopped. The hotel burned down and Collinwood folded. The charter was revoked by the legislature. The railroad were taken up and most of the Northerners moved out and as one reporter put it, “It took on the look of a ghost town.”

The Tennessee Charcoal Company was declared insolvent and Bon Brother Corp. bought the property in 1929. They employed a few people in lumbering. But the main form of livelihood was farming and many people had to move away in order to live.

Then Hassell and Hughes Lumber Company bought the property and set up a lumber industry that helped almost every family here.

When World War II broke out bomb racks were made here and many people were now being employed in the Muscle Shoals area. There was a growing demand for lumber and the lumber company expanded and hired more men.

At the present time [1985] we have a new manufacturing plant that employs about 350, mostly women and another lumber industry, the By-Far Products operated by Allen FARRIS that employs several.

Our population now is around 1,000 with new people moving in regularly. We have a new high school that everyone is proud of. We also have five churches, two new supermarkets and other stores that help us.

Since Collinwood is the only town on the Natchez Trace, many tourists come through especially in the summer and this helps gas business immensely.

We now have two policemen – only one was needed in the early days. The old depot is now being used for a Senior Citizens Center.

We may never reach the population of 3,000 as in the old time, but as one old timer said, “It’s a good place to live.”