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Home/Central Louisiana/Louisiana No Man’s Land
log cabin under blue sky in Louisiana No Man's Land

Louisiana No Man’s Land

The far western portion of Louisiana was once known as “No Man’s Land”, and it attracted outlaws who took advantage of the disputed territory to avoid justice. Charles “Leather Britches” Smith was one of those gunslingers.

Antique rifles on display at Merryville Museum

The town of Merryville, Louisiana, population 967, is located on the western edge of the state, only two miles from the Sabine River and the Texas state line. The area became a Louisiana No Man’s Land, a neutral strip respected by both the Spanish and U.S. governments. The hands-off agreement opened the door for outlaws to move into the area. The Neutral Strip was void of laws and enforcement from 1806-1821. The United States took control of the region in a treaty with Spain in 1821.

log cabin and museum building with trees and blue sky in Louisiana no man's land
1883 Burks log cabin at Merryville Museum

justice in louisiana no man’s land

Joe Williamson, a Merryville real estate agent and history buff, says his family arrived in the area in 1836. “A lot of the inhabitants of the area came from Alabama going to Texas,” Williamson said. But unrest in Texas kept them from crossing the Sabine River. “That was the year Santa Anna decimated the Alamo,” Williamson explains, “so they stopped on this side of the Louisiana border”. One of Williamson’s ancestors acted as the local magistrate. “If someone got out of line, he would find ’em guilty or innocent,” Williamson said. “He had a giant live oak tree in his front yard, it’s called the hanging tree.”

charles leather britches smith notorious gun fighter in louisiana no man's land
Drawing and photo of Charles “Leather Britches” Smith in the Merryville Museum

leather britches and the shootout

The Merryville area was part of the booming timber business. But sawmill owners and employees were at odds when organized labor moved in. The dispute resulted in a gun battle in the nearby community of Grabow in 1912.

old photograph of men and logging train
Merryville Museum photo of logging train
man in hat standing under framed building sawmill
Merryville Museum photo of an early sawmill

According to Williamson, “quite a few people were shot, with over 50 people injured and 58 people arrested”. The labor union enlisted a man called Charles “Leather Britches” Smith. He was a notorious gun fighter who roamed the Louisiana no man’s land. Leather Britches escaped the Grabow shootout. A local posse ambushed and killed Leather Britches in Merryville. They put his body on display at Merryville’s two-room jail house. The old concrete jail still stands in a wooded area off the main highway through town.

small abandoned concrete jail house near trees
The old Merryville jail

The citizens of Merryville eventually buried Charles “Leather Britches” Smith along the edge of the town cemetery. “I’ve always heard that they buried him upside down,” Williamson tells me. “So that if he was still alive in the grave and would try to dig himself out, he would dig himself to Hell.”

wooden grave marker for leather britches smith slain 1912
A recent wooden marker near the edge of the Merryville town cemetery
red historic marker for Leather Britches
Historic marker to Leather Britches at the Merryville Museum

Merryville and leather britches featured on tv

Watch this Heart of Louisiana TV story on Merryville

explore the history of the louisiana no man’s land

The Merryville Museum takes you back in time. Home furnishings, tools from farming and the timber business, and local businesses are on display. One exhibit features relics from a century-old movie theater. And another recreates an old classroom, complete with desks with a holder for an ink well and a paddle on the teacher’s desk. You also learn that former Louisiana Governor Sam Jones grew up in the area. And you can see pictures of Red Cagle, a football player from Merryville High who played in the NFL in the 1930’s. Cagle’s photo appeared on the cover of Time magazine and a carton of Wheaties.

old rusted cash register
Cash register from the old hardware store
wood theater seats from old movie house
Wood seats from the old Merryville Theater
pictures and photo book with black and white images of a man sam jones
Photos of former Louisiana Governor Sam Jones in Merryville Museum
pictures in museum display of football player Red Cagle
Museum features All American and NFL star Red Cagle

1883 log cabin at merryville museum

The two-room log cabin in front of the Merryville Museum was built by Andrew Jackson Burks in 1883. The structure was donated to the Merryville Museum by Burks’ descendants and moved from its original location four miles away. The cabin is furnished with period furniture and is open for tours.

mud fireplace and black iron kettle and rocking chair inside log cabin
Rocking chair and iron kettle in front of mud fireplace inside Burks Log Cabin
log cabin at Merryville Museum Louisiana
Burks Log Cabin in front of Merryville Museum

getting there

The Merryville Museum and Historic Burks Log Cabin are located in downtown Merryville, LA at 628 North Railroad Avenue. Phone: (979) 864-0219, (337) 340-1228.

Merryville Museum, 628 N Railroad Ave, Merryville, LA 70653

More to do in western LA

Trail and bridge over water with trees

Sam Houston Jones State Park

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    La Sawmill Town

      world war 2 tank in front of Fort Polk Museum Louisiana

      Fort Polk Military Museum

        Written by:
        Dave McNamara
        Published on:
        November 29, 2022
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        Categories: Central Louisiana, Featured

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