Hickory County Rentals: Pomme de Terre Lake, Missouri’s Only Muskie Fishery, and a Courthouse That’s Been Rebuilt Twice
Hickory County is the kind of small Missouri market that doesn’t show up on most investor lists because its scale is simply too small for institutional operators. At 8,279 residents spread across 399 square miles, and with a county seat (Hermitage) of just 621 people, Hickory is a genuinely rural place. But what makes Hickory interesting for a certain kind of rental investor is the lake: Pomme de Terre Lake, a 7,800-acre Corps of Engineers reservoir built in 1961 for Osage River flood control, which has become one of Missouri’s most distinctive recreational destinations and a meaningful driver of local economic activity. If you know what you’re doing in lake-adjacent rental markets and you’re comfortable operating at very small scale, Hickory offers a kind of rental market you simply can’t build anywhere else in Missouri.
Pomme de Terre Lake and What Makes It Unique
Pomme de Terre Lake — locals call it “Pommey” — is named for the French word for potato (literally “earth apple”), a reference to the root vegetable that Indigenous peoples harvested along the pre-lake Pomme de Terre River. The Corps of Engineers built the dam from 1957 to 1961 at a cost of $14.9 million, creating a 7,800-acre flood-control reservoir that straddles the Hickory-Polk county line about 50 miles north of Springfield.
The lake’s distinguishing feature among Missouri lakes is muskellunge fishing. Missouri is not native muskie territory — the species is endemic to the northern Great Lakes region — but muskies were stocked at Pomme de Terre decades ago and the population has thrived. The Missouri Department of Conservation now nets Pomme de Terre muskies each spring, milks them for eggs, fertilizes them lake-side, ships the eggs to the Lost Valley Fish Hatchery near Warsaw for hatching, and by October releases the fingerlings back into Pomme de Terre and a handful of other Missouri lakes. Pomme de Terre is the only Missouri lake offering true muskie fishing, and serious muskie anglers travel to Hickory County specifically to fish these waters. That’s not a tourism claim you can make about any other Missouri lake.
Pomme de Terre State Park wraps around the lake with units on both the Hermitage and Pittsburg shores. The park offers more campsites than any other Missouri state park — more than 240 sites across both units, including electric and electric-water sites, yurts on the Pittsburg side, a marina with full-service cabin rentals, two public swimming beaches, hiking trails, and a range of water-recreation facilities. The park’s campground scale reflects Pomme de Terre’s outsized draw as a water-recreation destination for southwestern Missouri.
The Retiree-Migration Effect
Like many Corps of Engineers lakes across rural Missouri, Pomme de Terre attracts retirees. The county’s population has stayed relatively stable over decades despite the broader rural Missouri population decline, and much of that stability comes from retiree in-migration offsetting out-migration of younger workers. For rental operators, retirees are often strong tenants — stable retirement incomes, long-term tenure, low turnover — but many are renting only temporarily while they scout lake-adjacent property to purchase, which can create turnover patterns that look different from urban rental markets. Understanding whether a specific tenant is a long-term renter or a retiree-in-scouting-mode affects how you structure leases and forecast vacancy.
The Tourism and Service Economy
Tourism supports a meaningful slice of the local economy: marinas, bait shops, campgrounds, restaurants, fishing guide services, boat rental and repair, vacation rental operations, and seasonal retail. Service-sector workers at these operations form a reliable but seasonally-inflected tenant segment. April through October is the revenue season; November through March is quiet. For rental operators targeting this workforce, income verification should document year-round earnings rather than rely solely on peak-season pay stubs.
The Hermitage Courthouse’s Repeat History
The current Hickory County Courthouse is the third structure on the site. The first, a frame building constructed in 1847, burned in 1852. The county used rented premises until 1860, when a two-story brick courthouse was built — and that one burned on January 8, 1881. The current courthouse was built soon after using the original plans from the second courthouse, with local trades and labor. For a rental investor, this is a small detail but a telling one: the county has been rebuilding its civic infrastructure, literally, for 175 years. The courthouse’s wood belfry and red-brick construction on the public square are on the National Register.
Hermitage and the Rental Market
Single-family rents in Hermitage and the smaller Hickory communities typically run $500 to $800 depending on condition and location, with higher rents achievable for lake-adjacent properties during fishing season. Acquisition prices for rental-grade single-family inventory commonly range from $45,000 to $110,000 — very low-end even for rural Missouri. Lake-adjacent properties with water views or short walks to lake access command premium prices and premium rents; these are a different sub-market from the general county inventory. Wheatland anchors a secondary commercial zone and hosts the Pomme de Terre Chamber of Commerce. Pittsburg on the lake’s south side has a smaller rental market tied largely to the state park’s south-unit traffic.
Eviction Procedure in the 30th Circuit
Missouri state law governs every eviction in Hickory County. The 30th Judicial Circuit covers Dallas, Hickory, Polk, and Webster counties (Benton County was in the 30th Circuit until January 1, 2022, when it was realigned to the 27th Circuit under Section 478.073 RSMo; note this if you’re reading older sources). Hickory cases are heard at the Hickory County Courthouse at 23645 Polk Street, Suite 201, in Hermitage. Circuit Clerk Cee Cee Smith handles filings; the main clerk line is (417) 745-6421. The clerk’s office runs 8:00am to 4:30pm Monday through Friday.
A standard nonpayment case begins with a demand for rent. Missouri imposes no minimum notice period for nonpayment beyond the demand itself; once rent is past due and a written demand has been delivered, the landlord may file a rent-and-possession action under RSMo Chapter 535. Hickory County hearings are typically scheduled within two to four weeks of filing given the small-county docket. For a lease-violation eviction (unlawful detainer under RSMo Chapter 534), a 10-day notice to quit is required before filing. Uncontested nonpayment in Hickory typically closes in 28 to 35 days when documentation is clean; contested matters can extend to 50 days or more.
Security Deposits and Routine Compliance
Missouri imposes no cap on security deposits. Hickory County adds no local layer. Landlords typically collect one month’s rent as deposit. The compliance trap remains the 30-day return window with itemized deductions under RSMo §535.300. Document move-in and move-out condition with dated photos, produce a written itemization for any deductions, and mail the deposit balance within 30 days.
The Investment Frame
Hickory County is a tourism-and-retirement small market shaped almost entirely by a 7,800-acre federal reservoir and a nationally recognized muskie fishery. The operator profile that works here is someone willing to work at very small scale, who understands lake-adjacent rental dynamics including seasonal demand patterns and Corps of Engineers federal land issues, and who values the low acquisition-cost entry point more than growth-market upside. Against that: the population is small and slowly aging, tenant pool is shallow, and seasonal variation in tourism-sector income creates underwriting complications that urban-market habits don’t prepare an operator for. For the right investor, Hickory offers a genuinely differentiated rural-Missouri rental opportunity; for most, it’s too small to matter.
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