Keith, Sounds like you have as much history on Sayre as anyone. Here's a little more information. I have a copy of an assignee's sale of the property of Oscar Rowley to satisfy his creditors. This sale took place April 14, 1896 at Sayre, a station on the Camden and El Dorado branch of the St. Louis, Iron Mountain, and Southern Railway. The sale lists the personal property of Oscar Rowley which included three narrow guage log cars, 350 bushels of corn, one bay mule named Frank, one brown mule named Jim, one two-horse wagon, 4,000 feet of iron pipe, one No. 4 Miller steam pump, one pile-driver hammer, and one boiler, engine, and driver for pile driving. There are handwritten notes on the copy I have which show A. C. Webb bought the two mules for $50.00 and there were no bids on the other personal property. The real estate part of the sale listed a long list of tracts of land in Nevada County and Clark County, with the reservation of the right-of-way of the tram road of Oscar Rowley running from Sayre into Nevada County. Many of these tracts of land have the note "no bid" written beside them and other tracts consisting of 40 acres have $1.00 or 50 cents written by them. That was probably the price per acre for land back then. I have a news item from 1891 that mentions that Oscar Rowley is moving rapidly with his tram road. He was probably building it at that time and I suppose got in debt and they had to sell his property in 1896. I'm sure this is the railroad shown on the 1900 map as the Sayre Lumber Co. Railroad. I have followed parts of that old railroad tram many times. When I was a kid, we would squirrel hunt and used the old tram as a landmark to keep from getting lost.