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Provided
courtesy of Phil Simpson
and Rhyne Simpson Jr. (Mike)
Simpson
Lake is located three miles west of Avinger in Cass County,
Texas. It is the central element of the Eagle Landing
development. This is a short history of Simpson Lake.
Dam
and Lake Construction
The
present lake was built in the early 1950's by Rhyne Simpson,
Sr., (shown at right) near the time of construction of
Texas Highway 155. He built several other lakes in those
years. Lake Rhyne is across the highway from the entrance
to Eagle Landing and four other small lakes are on the
southwestern side of Avinger. A Caterpillar D-8 tractor
and dozer was used to build the dams. It was driven by
Gordon "Peanut" Holley of Jefferson. Peanut
worked for Rhyne Simpson, Sr., for many years. Throughout
his life Rhyne Simpson maintained a strong interest in
water projects. The lakes in the Avinger area are manifestations
of him and his interest. He died in Halifax, Nova Scotia
in 1971 while pursuing his idea of producing electricity
from the high tides in the Bay of Fundy. A project to
do that was subsequently developed by the provincial and
federal governments in 1984 at Annapolis Royal, Nova Scotia.
Simpson
Family History
The
site of the lake is a large tract of contiguous properties
accumulated primarily by Arthur Melton Rhyne (1855-1940)
in the early years of the 20th Century. A.M. Rhyne (shown
right) was an owner of farms, timberlands, sawmills and
a general merchandise store in Avinger. The present site
of Simpson Lake was then known in the family and in Avinger
as the Big Farm. Back in the 1920's a much smaller lake
was built on the property using mule-drawn slips.
A.M. Rhyne came to Avinger from North Carolina in 1859
as a four-year-old boy with his father, Jacob Rhyne (1825-1881)
and mother, Susan Cloninger (1829-1879). A.M. Rhyne married
Margaret Edwards (1854-1883) in 1881. There was only one
child to that marriage - Birdie
Rhyne (1883-1957). Birdie married Alvin Von Simpson (1874-1957)
in 1903 in Avinger. Alvin had been working as a civil
engineer on the conversion of the Louisiana & Arkansas
R.R. from narrow-to standard-gauge. This is the railroad
which still runs through Avinger from Shreveport and Jefferson
to Greenville and Dallas. Rhyne Simpson (1903-1971) was
the first child of the marriage of Birdie Rhyne and Alvin
Simpson. Only his brother, Rolan Simpson of Tulsa, Oklahoma
(b. 1920) survives today. His sister Maud Marie Simpson
Salmon (1915-2001) died in January 2001. In her later
years Maud Marie lived in the two-story house on Texas
Highway 49 in Avinger built in 1926 by her grandfather,
A.M. Rhyne, and her parents, Birdie and Alvin Simpson.
Maud Marie married William Jack Salmon (1914-1989) of
Linden, Texas. Rhyne Simpson married Avis Miller (1905-1985),
who was a school teacher in Avinger, of Bullard, Texas
in 1927. Phil Simpson (b. 1935) and Rhyne "Mike"
Simpson, Jr (b. 1937) are their two sons. Phil Simpson
lives in Dallas and Avinger, Texas and Mike Simpson lives
in California and New Jersey. Five generations of the
Rhyne, Simpson and Salmon families are buried in the Avinger
cemetery.
Land
Accumulation
As previously stated, most of the land on which Simpson
Lake is located was accumulated by A.M. Rhyne before World
War I. However, several outlying tracts were added by
Rhyne Simpson and Rhyne Simpson, Jr. in the fifties, sixties
and seventies.
The
Big Farm
The land around Simpson Lake was originally part of a
large forest of pines and hardwoods extending through
East Texas. Much of the land was cleared and put into
cotton and vegetable farms in the second half of the nineteenth
century. This is why the site of the lake was known as
the Big Farm. The last cotton was harvested in the late
1940s or early 1950s. After that time the
farmland was allowed to convert back to timber production.
The principal crop was timber primarily native,
short-leaf yellow pine and mixed hardwoods. The timber
was managed by selective thinning and where necessary,
pine seedlings were planted. The planted seedlings were
the Loblolly variety. The Loblolly pine has a little longer
needle than the native species.
A
Story
Back in 1926 Maud Marie Simpson Salmon - then eleven years
old - drove her grandfather A.M. Rhyne out to the Big
Farm in his Model T. While going down a farm road he commanded
her to turn right across the plowed cotton furrows. Seeing
no road she initially resisted, but then did as she was
told and the two of them bumped across the rows. A.M.
Rhyne thought that a car that could not go where a horse
could go was not worth owning. This incident probably
took place in the area of the present landing strip.
Subsequent
Lake Development
The lake filled for the first time in the 1950's, but
before timber in the lake bed had been cleared. There
were a large number of stumps protruding above the surface
of the lake and there were many floating logs. This dead
timber was unsightly and a hazard to boat navigation.
Originally, Rhyne Simpson thought that the timber would
die or rot. After a few years it became evident that this
would not happen and so in the late-1960's the lake was
drained to facilitate clearing and burning of the remaining
timber and underbrush. This took about a year. The drain
under the dam was then closed and the lake rose to its
former and present elevation. A year or so after the death
of Rhyne Simpson in 1971 and after the refilling of the
lake there was a dispute concerning title of a small tract
on the north side of the lake. Suit was entered between
the Estate of Rhyne Simpson and the claimant and the matter
was resolved in favor of the Estate after a trial in a
District Court in Linden, Texas in the mid-1970's.
Eagle
Landing Airstrip (Simpson Field)
Clearing for a proposed airplane landing strip was commenced
in the late-1960's and continued into the early-1970's.
It was completed in 1980 and FAA approval was received.
It was named Simpson Field. If you are a pilot, it might
interest you to know the landing field is located 28 nautical
miles on the 8-degree radial from the Gregg County VOR.
Eagle
Landing
The property upon which Simpson Lake is situated was left
to Rhyne "Mike" Simpson, Jr. in the mid-1970's
as part of an overall division of the properties of the
Estate of Rhyne Simpson, Sr., after his death in 1971.
Mike built a house on the lake in the mid-70s and
lived there until the mid-80s. In the late 70s,
Mike retained a land planner from Dallas to present alternatives
for development of the property. Mike decided on a plan,
which several years later, became the basic development
plan for Eagle Landing. Mike chose to develop the property
with a partner and founded a corporation, Eagle Landing,
Inc., with Buck Florence each owned 50 percent.
Eagle Landing, Inc., then acquired the property from Mike.
The
lake had been home to many bald eagles over the years,
so it was natural to name the project Eagle Landing. The
name was suggested by Pat Florence, Bucks wife.
After Bucks death, Mike sold his interest in Eagle
Landing, Inc. to the Florence estate.
Real
Estate
Sales
In the late 70's the lake was surveyed and lots were partitioned
within the development. Real estate sales within Eagle
Landing began in the early 80's and have continued throughout
the last 20+ years. Most of the remaining unsold Eagle
Landing lots were auctioned off by the Florence Estate
in 2001, and today nearly all Eagle Landing properties
are owned by individuals.

Surviving
Simpson Men, 1997
(except for Zachary Simpson)
(Left to Right, Phil Simpson, Phil's Son David, Michael
(Son of Rhyne Simpson Jr.),
Rhyne Simpson Jr. (Mike), and Uncle Rolan (Brother of
Rhyne Simpson Sr.)
The only surviving Simpson male at this time not shown
in the photo above
is Zachary Simpson. Zachary is the son of Rhyne Simpson,
Jr. and the brother of Michael.
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