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Mira
 

          The first settlers in the area arrived in about 1872 and called their community “Loma.” 1

The Texarkana, Shreveport, and Natchez Railroad ran a line through Mira in 1897 and built a depot there some time after the completion of the line. The post office opened at Mira in July of 1899 with Richard Yarbrough serving as the postmaster. It was either when the depot was built or when the post office was established that the town was renamed Mira after Mira Williams, the daughter of an early settler.2

There were three stores in Mira at the time. Hawthorn’s Store later became the post office when he became postmaster. The Lawton and Dominick families operated the other two stores. The Dominicks’ store, built in 1918, was a commissary for the workers on their family plantation. Dominick paid the workers with bozines, which were metal coins about the size of a quarter with a hexagon cut out of the center. These coins could only be spent at the commissary.3

Two schools were established in the river bottoms of Mira. The first one, Scott Slough School, was located on the levee near Scott Slough. The other was Plainview School, built by the school board in the 1920s, along Scott Slough Road. When students reached tenth and eleventh grades, they were transported to Hosston for school.4

 


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Images provided by LSUS Archive and website content written by Monica Pels