On Green Street just south of Main Street (State Highway 72/21), on the right when traveling south.
Reynolds County owes its beginning to two fur trappers, Henry Fry and Andrew Henry. Henry Fry, the first white inhabitant of the county, settled here in 1812, Andrew Henry came in 1816, other pioneers soon followed and slowly the narrow valleys . . . — — Map (db m241068) HM WM
Near State Highway 21, 3 miles north of East Walnut Street (State Highway 106), on the right when traveling north.
[side 1] In an area of rugged beauty near the geologic center of the Ozark Highland, Reynolds County was organized 1845, and named for Missouri's 7th governor, Thomas Reynolds. Drained by the Black River, called L'eau Noire by . . . — — Map (db m179937) HM
Fort Barnesville is believed to have been built by the union army in early 1863 to observe troop movement along the Belleview Trail. The fort was discovered by Dan Massie while hunting in the 1950s. In 1995, Gerald Angel, assisted by John Bradbury, . . . — — Map (db m230081) HM