Jonesboro Masonry & Concrete is a masonry contractor serving Trumann, AR with walkway construction, foundation repair, brick work, and structural masonry on older single-family homes throughout Poinsett County. Trumann sits in the flat Arkansas Delta where heavy clay soil, poor drainage, and aging housing stock create a specific set of masonry challenges - our crew has been working through those challenges across northeast Arkansas since 2016.

Trumann sits on flat Delta land with heavy clay soil, and concrete walkways on these properties are among the first things to show age - the ground underneath shifts enough with every wet season and dry spell to crack a path that was not built with an adequate base. Our walkway construction includes proper excavation, deep compacted gravel base, and sloping designed for the drainage challenges specific to flat Poinsett County lots.
Most homes in Trumann were built between the 1940s and 1980s, and many sit on crawl space or slab foundations that have been through decades of the clay soil expansion and contraction that defines this part of the Delta. Horizontal cracks, bowing walls, and water intrusion into crawl spaces after heavy spring rain are the most common calls we get from Trumann homeowners - all conditions we assess and address during on-site visits.
Older brick homes throughout Trumann have mortar joints that have been softening in the Delta heat and humidity for 40 to 80 years. When those joints fail, moisture from the heavy spring rains that come through northeast Arkansas every year gets into the wall assembly and accelerates damage to the surrounding brick faces. Catching failing joints early - before they open wide enough to let in significant water - keeps repair costs manageable.
Tuckpointing is the right repair for brick homes in Trumann where the mortar joints have deteriorated but the brick faces themselves are still sound. We remove the failed mortar to the proper depth and replace it with a mix matched to the softness of the original brick - using a hard modern mortar on older Delta-era brick is a common mistake that pushes stress into the brick face and causes spalling that did not exist before the repair.
Cracked concrete driveways are one of the most common property issues on Trumann's flat Delta lots because the clay soil underneath does not give slabs a stable platform - it moves with every rain and dry period. Paver driveways handle soil movement better than solid concrete because the individual units can shift slightly without fracturing, and damaged sections can be repaired without replacing the entire surface.
Even on Trumann's flat lots, drainage management often requires a low retaining wall or masonry border to redirect water away from foundations and outbuildings. The saturated clay soil common in Poinsett County after spring rains needs a way to drain, and a properly built masonry retaining structure with adequate drainage behind it is far more effective than grading alone on a flat Delta property.
Trumann sits in the heart of the Arkansas Delta in Poinsett County, and the geography here shapes everything about how masonry holds up over time. The land is flat with very little natural slope, which means water moves slowly after rain - it does not drain away from foundations and flatwork quickly, it sits. The soil underneath is heavy clay, which holds that moisture rather than letting it pass through. The combination of slow surface drainage, clay that stays wet for days, and an average of around 50 inches of rain per year creates conditions where any masonry or concrete surface that was not built with drainage as a primary concern will start failing within a few years. A walkway that drains water toward the house instead of away from it, or a foundation wall without adequate drainage behind it, becomes a problem that compounds with every wet spring and every dry summer that follows.
The housing stock adds its own challenges. Most homes in Trumann were built between the 1940s and 1980s - working-class frame and brick houses on crawl space or slab foundations that have been through decades of the freeze-thaw cycles that hit this part of northeast Arkansas each winter. Trumann does not get hard winters by national standards, but temperatures do swing above and below freezing multiple times from December through February. That repeated cycling is enough to crack concrete flatwork, push moisture deeper into failing mortar joints, and stress older foundation block walls that have already been working hard through many wet springs. Many Trumann homeowners are dealing with deferred maintenance - not because they do not care about their homes, but because the budget for repairs has been tight. We work within those realities and help prioritize what needs attention first versus what can wait.
Our crew works throughout Trumann regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect masonry work here. Trumann is the largest city in Poinsett County, and the properties we see most often are the ranch-style wood-frame and brick houses that were built here from the 1950s through the 1980s. Most sit on crawl space foundations or slabs, and most have been through several significant spring flood seasons - which is the primary event that pushes homeowners to call us about foundation and drainage issues.
Trumann is about 20 miles south of Jonesboro on US-63, and the city functions as the commercial hub for the surrounding rural area of Poinsett County. From the neighborhoods near downtown and Main Street to the homes on the outskirts of town, we cover the full service area. Lake Poinsett State Park is a short drive from Trumann, and several of the clients we serve live in rural Poinsett County properties near the lake.
We also serve homeowners in the Blytheville area, northeast of Trumann in Mississippi County, where the Delta terrain and clay soil conditions are very similar. If you are in the broader northeast Arkansas region and need a masonry contractor who knows the local conditions, we are already working in your area.
Reach us by phone or through the online contact form and describe what you are dealing with. We respond within one business day and set up a time to come look at the property.
A crew member comes to your Trumann property to assess the walkway, foundation, or masonry issue in person. You get a written estimate with scope, materials, and cost before any decision is made - no pressure to commit.
We schedule start dates around the weather and permit requirements when applicable. You are kept informed throughout the job and do not need to be present for most of the work, though you are welcome to check in at any point.
When the job is finished, we walk the completed work with you and answer any questions. All debris and materials are cleared from your property before we leave.
We serve Trumann and Poinsett County with free on-site estimates and honest assessments of what your Delta-area home actually needs.
(870) 393-5650Trumann is a small city of about 6,800 people in Poinsett County in the Arkansas Delta, roughly 20 miles south of Jonesboro along US-63. Agriculture and light manufacturing have shaped the community for generations - rice and soybean farming define the surrounding rural landscape, and local manufacturing employers have kept a working-class population rooted here for decades. Most residents own their homes rather than rent, and many have lived in the same house for years. The commercial center runs along the main corridors near downtown Trumann, with residential streets spreading out across a compact town grid typical of Delta communities this size. You can read more about Trumann, AR on Wikipedia.
The housing stock in Trumann is older than in most central Arkansas suburbs - the bulk of residential construction here dates from the 1940s through the 1980s. These are modest ranch and frame homes, most under 1,800 square feet, sitting on crawl space or slab foundations on flat, slow-draining lots. Lake Poinsett State Park, a short drive from town, draws outdoor recreation for the broader Poinsett County area and brings a sense of place that long-term residents here are proud of. Homeowners across Trumann who have put off masonry or concrete repairs tend to find that the combination of Delta soil movement and aging materials catches up quickly - a hairline crack in a walkway or mortar joint becomes a significant problem after a wet spring and a hard winter. We also work regularly in Blytheville, about 50 miles northeast in Mississippi County, where the Delta conditions and housing stock are similar.
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Learn MoreCall us or submit a request online and we will respond within one business day - no pressure, no obligation, just an honest look at your Trumann property.