John lacy bean cottage 1920s

12. John Lacey Bean House

Dr. John Lacy Bean attended Cane Hill College and the University of Arkansas and Washington University of Medicine. In 1897, he married Martha Ann McCollach (Annie). After an internship, he returned home to Cane Hill, where he practiced for many years. Dr. John Lacy Bean purchased Lot 6 of Kirby’s addition in 1906 from D. N. Edmiston. In 1921, Lacy moved to Lincoln to open a hospital, now the Arkansas Country Doctor Museum. Dr. Bean died in 1953 and is buried in the Cane Hill Cemetery.

In 2016 Historic Cane Hill purchased the house built by Dr. Bean and, through research and historic photographs, determined it’s historic appearance circa 1906. The house was restored in 2017, which included removal of a later addition and rebuilding the front porch. The inside of the home has been updated.

The Dr. John Lacy Bean house is now used as staff housing. Please respect the occupants’ privacy when walking around the grounds.

Please continue to stop 13. Take a left on the rode right next to this stop then take a right when you get to the 4 way, then take another left on the next house.

Historic Cane Hill
  1. 1. Methodist Manse
  2. 2. Dr. Welch House
  3. 3. Zeb & Eunice Edmiston House
  4. 4. Bank of Cane Hill/Jenkins Store
  5. 5. Museum/Shaker Yates Grocery Store
  6. 6. A.R. Carroll Drug Store
  7. 7. Bur Oak Tree
  8. 8. Cane Hill Presbyterian Church
  9. 9. Blackburn House
  10. 10. Cane Hill College
  11. 11. David Noah And Annie Edmiston House
  12. 12. John Lacey Bean House
  13. 13. John and Alice Edmiston House
  14. 14. Cane Hill Cemetery and Cane Hill Civil War Battlefield
  15. R.L. Leach Store
  16. McCarty House