Madison County, AR
Est. 1836
Huntsville · Kingston · Combs · Wesley · Hindsville · St. Paul
Community Business Directory
January 2026 · Local Heritage

War Eagle Mill and the Fall Craft Fair: A Madison County Tradition

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If you only do one Madison County trip a year, make it the War Eagle Craft Fair. Every October, the rolling hills near Hindsville fill with hundreds of artisan booths, craft vendors, and food trucks for what has become one of the largest and oldest craft fairs in the central United States. The fair draws tens of thousands of visitors from across Arkansas, Missouri, Oklahoma, and beyond, and for many, it's an annual ritual that goes back decades.

The Mill Itself

War Eagle Mill is the four-story red mill that sits along War Eagle Creek about ten miles northwest of Huntsville. The current mill is the fourth one to stand on this site since 1832; the others were lost to fire and flood over the generations. The current building was reconstructed in 1973 based on the architecture of the original mid-1800s mills, and today it's a working water-powered grist mill — one of the very few left operating in the United States.

What that means in practice is that you can watch the millstones grinding wheat, corn, and other grains, and then walk into the on-site store and buy that same flour, cornmeal, and grits in branded paper sacks. The mill produces a wide range of stone-ground products — pancake mixes, biscuit mixes, soup mixes, jellies, and seasonings — and ships them across the country. For local residents, the store is also a good source of bulk flour and gift-quality items that out-of-state visitors love.

The Bean Palace

On the second floor of the mill is the Bean Palace restaurant. It's named for the bean soups and traditional Ozark fare it has served for decades, but the menu has broadened over the years to include sandwiches, salads, and full breakfast and lunch service. The big draw is the view: tables sit by the windows that overlook the creek and the giant millwheel, and on a good morning the water is loud enough to be its own atmosphere. Locals know to arrive early on weekends; the place fills up fast, and during the craft fair the wait can be substantial.

The Craft Fair

The War Eagle Craft Fair, formally known as the Original War Eagle Fair, has been running since 1954 — making it one of the oldest craft fairs in the country. It is held the third weekend of October every year, and it runs alongside several sister fairs in the broader Northwest Arkansas region, creating what is effectively a multi-venue craft weekend with traffic patterns to match.

The fair itself is held in the fields surrounding the mill. Hundreds of vendors set up booths selling handmade pottery, woodwork, leather, textiles, soaps, jewelry, fine art, food, plants, and a thousand other categories of craft. There is no admission fee. Parking is in nearby fields with shuttle access to the main grounds, and the foot traffic on a Saturday in good weather is genuinely impressive.

For first-time fair-goers, a few tips: dress in layers (October in the Ozarks can be 40° in the morning and 70° by noon); wear comfortable shoes (you'll walk miles); bring cash (many vendors take cards but cash speeds things up); and plan your eating around the food vendors, which are part of the experience. The fair is family-friendly, and dogs on leashes are generally welcome at the outdoor portions.

Visiting the Mill the Rest of the Year

Outside of fair weekend, War Eagle Mill is a much quieter destination. Spring is beautiful — dogwoods on the bluffs, water high in the creek, fresh air. Summer is hot but the mill stays cool inside. Winter is contemplative; the mill closes for a brief stretch around the holidays but otherwise stays open, and a quiet Tuesday in February is a good day to actually see the milling process up close and ask questions.

The drive in from Huntsville winds through some of the prettier countryside in the county. There are several pull-offs along War Eagle Creek where you can stretch your legs, photograph the bridge, or just listen to the water for a few minutes. The whole trip from Huntsville is under thirty minutes.

What the Mill Means to Madison County

War Eagle Mill is one of those rare cultural anchors that does real economic work for the surrounding region. The mill brings visitors who buy gas and lunch in Huntsville, who book cabins in the surrounding country, and who often come back. The craft fair has incubated generations of local artisans — many of the vendors who appear each October have been doing the fair for thirty or forty years, and several got their start here.

For new residents of Madison County, the mill is a good landmark to know — both literally and culturally. It's a piece of the county's identity, and it's one of the places residents tend to take visiting friends and family on their first weekend in town.

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