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Pyatt |
 | | Pyatt soon became a prosperous little community after moving to the present location with a cotton gin (the foundation is still standing, across from the Assembly of God Church), a gristmill owned by Ed Smart and a general store owned by Briggs and Smart, a post office and several family dwellings. |
 | | Pyatt sticks to its policies, its features, its students, its friends, and its task of making better citizens for a better community, a better county, a better state, and a better country in which to live; it appeals to the public on its merits alone, which stand in no need of noisy advertisements. |
 | | When this writer, with her family, moved to Pyatt in 1964, it was a "village of the elderly." We were one of four couples under the age of 35. |
| www.ozarkhistory.com /pyatthist.htm (2801 words) |
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