West Virginia Vacation Guide System
West Virginia History
West Virginia is one of two American states formed during the
American Civil War (1861–1865), along with Nevada, and is the only
state to form by seceding from a Confederate state. It was originally
part of the British Virginia Colony (1607–1776) and the western part of
the state of Virginia (1776–1863), whose population became sharply
divided over the issue of secession from the Union and in the
separation from Virginia, formalized by admittance to the Union as a
new state in 1863. West Virginia was one of the Civil War Border states.
West
Virginia's history was profoundly affected by its mountainous terrain,
spectacular river valleys, and rich natural resources. These were all
factors driving its economy and the lifestyles of residents, as well as
drawing visitors to the "Mountain State" in the early 21st century.
Prehistory
The
area now known as West Virginia was a favorite hunting ground of
numerous Native American peoples before the arrival of European
settlers. Many ancient man-made earthen mounds from various mound
builder cultures survive, especially in the areas of Moundsville, South
Charleston, and Romney. The artifacts uncovered in these give evidence
of a village society having a tribal trade system culture that
practiced limited cold worked copper. As of 2009, over 12,500
archaeological sites have been documented in West Virginia (Bryan Ward
2009:10).
Paleo-Indian culture appears by 10,500 BC in West
Virginia passing along the major river valleys and ridge-line gap
watersheds. Following are the traditional Archaic sub-periods; Early
(8000-6000 BC), Middle (6000-4000 BC), and Late (4000-1000 BC), (Kerr,
2010). Within the greater region of and neighboring the Mountain State,
the Riverton Tradition includes: Maple Creek Phase. Also are the
Buffalo Phase, Transitional Archaic Phase, Transitional Period Culture
and Central Ohio Valley Archaic Phase. Also within the region, the
Laurention Archaic Tradition which includes: Brewerton Phase, Feheeley
Phase, Dunlop Phase, McKibben Phase, Genesee Phase, Stringtown/Satchel
Phase, Satchel Phase and Lamoka/Dustin Phase.
The Adena provided
the greatest cultural influence in the state. For practical purposes,
the Adena is Early Woodland period according to West Virginia
University's Dr. Edward V. McMichael (1968:16), also among the 1963
Geological Survey. Middle and Late Woodland people include: Middle
Woodland Watson pottery people, Late Woodland Wood Phase, Late Hopewell
at Romney, Montaine (late Woodland AD 500-1000), Wilhelm culture (Late
Middle Woodland, c. AD 1~500), Armstrong (Late Middle Woodland, c. AD
1~500), Buck Garden (Late Woodland AD500-1200), Childers Phase (Late
Middle Woodland c. 400 AD) followed by Parkline phase (Late Woodland AD
750~1000). Adena villages can be characterized as rather large compared
to Late Prehistoric tribes.
The Adena Indians used ceremonial
pipes that were exceptional works of art. They lived in round shaped
(double post method) wicker sided and bark sheet roofed houses
(McMichael 1968:21). Little is known about the housing of Paleo-Indian
and Archaic periods, but Woodland Indians lived in wigwams. They grew
sunflowers, tubers, gourds, squash and several seeds such as
lambsquarter, may grass, sumpweed, smartweed and little barley cereals.
In the Fort Ancient period, Indians lived in much larger poled
rectanglar shaped houses with walls hide covered (McMichael 1968:38).
They were farmers who cultivated large fields around their villages,
concentrating on corn, beans, tubers, sunflowers, gourds and many types
of squash including the pumpkin. They also raised domestic turkeys and
kept dogs as pets. Their neighbors in the northerly of the state, the
Monongahelan houses were generally circular in shape often with nook or
storage appendage. Their living charactoristics were more of a heritage
from the Woodland Indians (McMichael 1968:49).
The Late
Prehistoric (ADE 950~1650) phases of the Fort Ancient Tradition
include: Feurt Phase, Blennerhassett Phase, Bluestone Phase, Clover
Complex followed by the Orchard Phase (ADE 1550~1650) with a Late
Proto-historic arrival of a Lizard Cult from the Southeastern
Ceremonial Complex. Contemporaneously to Fort Ancient Tradition
southerly of the state, the sister culture called Monongahela is found
on the northerly of the Mountain State stemming from the Drew
Tradition. Early historic tribes living within or routinely hunting and
trading within the state include: Calicuas later mixed in colonial
north-western Virginia-Pennsylvania at the time as popular termed
Cherokee, Mohetans, Rickohockans from ancient Nation du Chat area,
Monetons and Monecaga or Monacan, Tomahitans or Yuchi-Occaneechi,
Tuscarora or mixed broad termed Mingoe & Canawagh or Kanawhas
(Chiroenhaka, Mooney 1894:7-8), Oniasantkeronons or Tramontane of the
proto-historic southerly Neutral Nation trade empire (element Nation du
Chat), Shattera or Tutelo, Ouabano or Mohican-Delaware, Chaouanon or
Shawnee, Cheskepe or Shawnee-Yuchi, Loupe (Captina Island historic mix,
Lanape & Powhatan), Tionontatacaga and Little Mingoe (Guyandottes),
Massawomeck and later mixed as Mohawk, Susquesahanock or White Minqua
later mixed Mingoes and Arrigahaga or Black Minqua of the Nation du
Chat and proto-historic Neutral Nation trade empire.
Within the
Mountain State, these tribal villages can be characterized as rather
small and scattered as they moved about the old fields every couple of
generations. Many would join other tribes and remove to the midwest
regions as settlers arrived in the state. Although, there were those
who would acculturate within the historic as sometimes called Fireside
Cabin culture. Some are early historic documented seeking protection
closer, moving to the easterly Colonial trade towns. And later, other
small splintered clans were attracted to, among others, James Le Tort,
Charles Poke and John Van Metre trading houses within the state. This
historic period changed way of living extends from a little before the
18th century Virginia and Pennsylvania region North American fur trade
beginning on the Eastern Panhandle of the state.
European exploration and settlement
Thomas Lee, the first manager of the Ohio Company of Virginia
In
1671, General Abraham Wood, at the direction of Royal Governor William
Berkeley of the Virginia Colony, sent the party of Thomas Batts and
Robert Fallum into the West Virginia area. During this expedition the
pair followed the New River and discovered Kanawha Falls.
On
July 13, 1709, Louis Michel, George Ritter, and Baron Christoph von
Graffenried petitioned the King of England for a land grant in the
Harpers Ferry, Shepherdstown area, Jefferson County, in order to
establish a Swiss colony. Neither the land grant or the Swiss colony
ever materialized.
Lt. Governor Alexander Spotswood is sometimes
credited with taking his 1716 "Knights of the Golden Horseshoe
Expedition" into what is now Pendleton County, although according to
contemporary accounts, Spotwood's trail went no farther west than
Harrisonburg, Virginia. The Treaty of Albany, 1722, designated the Blue
Ridge Mountains as the western boundary of white settlement, and
recognized Iroquois rights on the west side of the ridge, including all
of West Virginia. The Iroquois made little effort to settle these
parts, but nonetheless claimed them as their hunting ground, as did
other tribes, notably the Shawnee and Cherokee. Soon after this, white
settlers began moving into the Greater Shenandoah-Potomac Valley making
up the entire eastern portion of the State. They found it largely
unoccupied, apart from Tuscaroras who had lately moved into the area
around Martinsburg, WV, some Shawnee villages in the region around
Moorefield, WV and Winchester, VA, and frequent passing bands of
"Northern Indians" (Lenape from New Jersey) and "Southern Indians"
(Catawba from South Carolina) who were engaged in a bitter
long-distance war, using the Valley as a battleground.
John Van
Metre, an Indian trader, penetrated into the northern portion of West
Virginia in 1725. Also in 1725, Pearsall's Flats in the South Branch
Potomac River valley, present-day Romney, was settled, and later became
the site of the French and Indian War stockade, Fort Pearsall. Morgan
ap Morgan, a Welshman, built a cabin near present-day Bunker Hill in
Berkeley County in 1727. The same year German settlers from
Pennsylvania founded New Mecklenburg, the present Shepherdstown, on the
Potomac River, and others soon followed.
Orange County, Virginia
was formed in 1734. It included all areas west of the Blue Ridge
Mountains, constituting all of present West Virginia. However, in 1736
the Iroquois Six Nations protested Virginia's colonization beyond the
demarcated Blue Ridge, and a skirmish was fought in 1743. The Iroquois
were on the point of threatening all-out war against the Virginia
Colony over the "Cohongoruton lands", which would have been destructive
and devastating, when Governor Gooch bought out their claim for 400
pounds at the Treaty of Lancaster (1744).
In 1661, King Charles
II of England had granted a company of gentlemen the land between the
Potomac and Rappahannock rivers, known as the Northern Neck. The grant
eventually came into the possession of Thomas Fairfax, 6th Lord Fairfax
of Cameron and in 1746 a stone was erected at the source of the North
Branch Potomac River to mark the western limit of the grant. A
considerable part of this land was surveyed by George Washington,
especially the South Branch Potomac River valley between 1748 and 1751.
The diary kept by Washington indicates that there were already many
squatters, largely of German origin, along the South Branch.
Christopher Gist, a surveyor for the first Ohio Company, which was
composed chiefly of Virginians, explored the country along the Ohio
River north of the mouth of the Kanawha River in 1751 and 1752. The
company sought to have a fourteenth colony established with the name
Vandalia.
Many settlers crossed the mountains after 1750, though
they were hindered by Native American resistance. The 1744 Treaty of
Lancaster had left ambiguous whether the Iroquois had sold only as far
as the Alleghenies, or all their claim south of the Ohio, including the
rest of modern West Virginia. In 1752 at the Treaty of Logstown, they
acknowledged the right of English settlements south of the Ohio, but
the Cherokee and Shawnee claims still remained. During the French and
Indian War (1754–1763), the scattered settlements were almost
destroyed. The Proclamation of 1763 again confirmed all land beyond the
Alleghenies as Indian Territory, but the Iroqouis finally relinquished
their claims south of the Ohio to Britain at the Treaty of Fort Stanwix
in 1768.
Most of the Cherokee claim within West Virginia, the
southwestern part of the state, was sold to Virginia in 1770 by the
Treaty of Lochaber. In 1774, the Crown Governor of Virginia, John
Murray, 4th Earl of Dunmore, led a force over the mountains, and a body
of militia under Colonel Andrew Lewis dealt the Shawnee Indians under
Cornstalk a crushing blow at the junction of the Kanawha and Ohio
rivers, in the Battle of Point Pleasant. Following this conflict, known
as Dunmore's War, the Shawnee and Mingo ceded their rights south of the
Ohio, that is, to West Virginia and Kentucky. But renegade Cherokee
chief Dragging Canoe continued to dispute the settlers' advance,
fighting the Chickamauga Wars (1776-1794) until after the American
Revolutionary War. During the war, the settlers in Western Virginia
were generally active Whigs and many served in the Continental Army.
Early River traffic
By
1739, Thomas Shepherd had constructed a flour mill powered by water
from the Town Run or the Falling Springs Branch of the Potomac River.
October,
1748, the Virginia General Assembly passed an act establishing a ferry
across the Potomac River from the landing of Evan Watkin near the mouth
of Conococheague Creek in present-day Berkeley County to the property
of Edmund Wade in Maryland. Robert Harper obtained a permit to operate
a ferry across the Shenandoah River at present-day Harpers Ferry,
Jefferson County on March of 1761. Thus, these two ferry crossings
became the earliest locations of government authorized civilian
commercial crafts on what would become a part of the West Virginia
Waterways.
Satisfying eastern tanneries' growing demand for
beaver more often came to the 'Point' by canoe and raft from the
Kanawha region's tributary creeks. Isaac Vanbibber and Daniel Boone
trading post was established about 1790 at the mouth of Crooked Creek
at Point Pleasant, West Virginia. Hudson's Trade Post and early landing
appears on the 1807 Madison map opposite St Albans. By this decade, the
steel trap increases efficiency as beaver becomes scarce within two
decades. A shift to the state's other natural resources begins in ever
increasing export quantity. Kanawha Harbor had a great amount of
freight and passenger lay-over after the Old War of the 1790s. Kanawha
salt production followed by coal and timber floats were moved from West
Virginia streams to the populace of other regions. A number of river
side locations were used for early Industrial Revolution keelboat
building in the Kanawha region. Among others are at Leon, Ravenswood
Murraysville and Little Kanawha River. Earlier 19th century steamboat
building and machine repair were located at Wheeling and Parkersburg
followed by Point Pleasant and Mason City. Wooden coal barges were
built on the Monongahela River near Morgantown, Coal River and some at
Elk River near Charleston before metal barge became the trend. To
example as how local water works progressed, Kanawha Harbor's boat
building increased after a horse drawn logging "tram" with special
block & tackle for the hill-side harvesting was brought into use
and some expansion of Crooked Creek such as the wooden Barrel Works
plant at the creek's mouth. Later, this tram and other steam machinery
were used for collecting timber to be used as railroad ties in the
railway construction along the Kanawha river. It was finished about
1880. This brought the small steamboat landings of the farmers along
the rivers to use the railway. Many railroading spurs were built
throughout West Virginia connecting mines to the river boat's barge and
coal-tipples.
Trans-Allegheny Virginia, 1776-1861
Social
conditions in western Virginia were entirely unlike those existing in
the eastern portion of the state. The population was not homogeneous,
as a considerable part of the immigration came by way of Pennsylvania
and included Germans, Protestant Ulster-Scots, and settlers from the
states farther north. During the American Revolution, the movement to
create a state beyond the Alleghanies was revived and, in 1776, a
petition for the establishment of "Westsylvania" was presented to
Congress, on the grounds that the mountains made an almost impassable
barrier on the east. The rugged nature of the country made slavery
unprofitable, and time only increased the social, political and
economic differences between the two sections of Virginia.
The
convention which met in 1829 to form a new constitution for Virginia,
against the protest of the counties beyond the mountains, required a
property qualification for suffrage, and gave the slave-holding
counties the benefit of three-fifths of their slave population in
apportioning the state's representation in the lower Federal house. As
a result, every county beyond the Alleghanies except one voted to
reject the constitution, which was nevertheless carried by eastern
votes. Though the Virginia constitution of 1850 provided for white
manhood suffrage, the distribution of representation among the counties
was such as to give control to the section east of the Blue Ridge
Mountains. Another grievance of the West was the large expenditure for
internal improvements at state expense by the Virginia Board of Public
Works in the East compared with the scanty proportion allotted to the
West.
For the western areas, problems included the distance from
the state seat of government in Richmond and the difference of common
economic interests resultant from the tobacco and food crops farming,
fishing, and coastal shipping to the east of the Eastern Continental
Divide (waters which drain to the Atlantic Ocean) along the Allegheny
Mountains, and the interests of the western portion which drained to
the Ohio and Mississippi rivers and the Gulf of Mexico.
The
western area focused its commerce on neighbors to the west, and many
citizens felt that the more populous eastern areas were too dominant in
the Virginia General Assembly and insensitive to their needs. Major
crisis in the Virginia state government over these differences was
averted on more than one occasion during the period before the American
Civil War, but the underlying problems were fundamental and never well
resolved.
John Brown at Harpers Ferry, 1859
John Brown
(1800–1859), an abolitionist who considered slavery to be a sin, led an
anti-slavery movement in Kansas and hoped to arm slaves and lead a
violent revolt against slavery. With 18 armed men on Oct 16-17, 1859,
he took hostages and freed slaves in Harpers Ferry, but no slaves
answered his call and instead local militia surrounded Brown and his
men in a firehouse. The President sent in a unit of U.S. Marines led by
Robert E. Lee; they stormed the firehouse and took Brown prisoner. The
entire nation watched as Brown was convicted of treason against the
state of Virginia and hanged. Southern outrage at what appeared to be a
Yankee attempt to start a race war was a factor in causing the American
Civil War.
Civil War and split
In 1861, as the United States
itself became massively divided over regional issues, leading to the
American Civil War (1861–1865), the western regions of Virginia split
with the eastern portion politically, and the two were never reconciled
as a single state again. In 1863, the western region was admitted to
the Union as a new separate state, initially planned to be called the
State of Kanawha, but ultimately named West Virginia.
Separation
John S. Carlile, a leader during the First Wheeling Convention
In
Richmond on April 17, 1861, the 49 delegates from the future state of
West Virginia voted 17 in favor of the Ordinance of Secession which
provided for Virginia's secession from the Union, 30 voted against, and
two of those delegates abstained. Almost immediately after the adoption
of the ordinance a mass meeting at Clarksburg recommended that each
county in north-western Virginia send delegates to a convention to meet
in Wheeling on May 13, 1861.
When the First Wheeling Convention
met, four hundred and twenty-five delegates from twenty-five counties
were present, but soon there was a division of sentiment. Some
delegates favored the immediate formation of a new state, while others
argued that, as Virginia's secession had not yet been ratified or
become effective, such action would constitute revolution against the
United States. It was decided that if the ordinance were adopted (of
which there was little doubt) another convention including the
members-elect of the legislature should meet at Wheeling in June.
At
the election (May 23, 1861), secession was ratified by a large majority
in the state as a whole, in the western counties that would form the
state of West Virginia the vote was approximately 34,677 against and
19,121 for ratification of the Ordinance of Secession.
Counties Approving Virginia's Secession from the U.S.
The
Second Wheeling Convention met as agreed on June 11 and declared that,
since the Secession Convention had been called without the consent of
the people, all its acts were void, and that all who adhered to it had
vacated their offices. An act for the reorganization of the government
was passed on June 19. The next day Francis H. Pierpont was chosen
governor of Virginia, other officers were elected and the convention
adjourned. The legislature, composed of the members from the western
counties who had been elected on May 23 and some of the holdover
senators who had been elected in 1859, met at Wheeling on July 1,
filled the remainder of the state offices, organized a state government
and elected two United States senators who were recognized at
Washington, D.C. There were, therefore, two governments claiming to
represent all of Virginia, one owing allegiance to the United States
and one to the Confederacy. The pro-northern government authorized the
creation of the state of Kanawha, consisting of most of the counties
that now comprise West Virginia. A little over one month later, Kanawha
was renamed West Virginia. The Wheeling Convention, which had taken a
recess until August 6, reassembled on August 20 and called for a
popular vote on the formation of a new state and for a convention to
frame a constitution if the vote should be favorable.
West Virginia Independence Hall, site of the Wheeling Convention.
At
the election (October 24, 1861), 18,408 votes were cast for the new
state and only 781 against. At this time West Virginia had nearly
70,000 qualified voters, and the May 23 vote on secession had drawn
nearly 54,000 voters. Votes from the secessionist counties in the
October 24 vote on statehood were mostly cast by refugees in the area
around Wheeling, not in the counties themselves. In secessionist
counties where a poll was conducted it was by military intervention.
Even in some counties that had voted against secession, such as Wayne
and Cabell, it was necessary to send in Union soldiers.
Statehood referendum Oct. 24, 1861
Returns
from some counties were as low as 5%, e.g. Raleigh County 32-0 in favor
of statehood, Clay 76-0, Braxton 22-0, and some gave no returns at all.
The Constitutional Convention began on November 26, 1861 and finished
its work on February 18, 1862, and the instrument was ratified (18,162
for and 514 against) on April 11, 1862.
The composition of the
members of all three Wheeling Conventions, the May (First) Convention,
the June (Second) Convention, and the Constitutional Convention, was of
an irregular nature. The members of the May Convention were chosen by
groups of Unionists, mostly in the far Northwestern counties. Over
one-third came from the counties around the northern panhandle. The May
Convention resolved to meet again in June should the Ordinance of
Secession be ratified by public poll on May 23, 1861, which it was. The
June Convention consisted of 104 members, 35 of which were members of
the General Assembly in Richmond, some elected in the May 23rd vote,
and some hold-over State Senators. Arthur Laidley, elected to the
General Assembly from Cabell County, attended the June Convention but
refused to take part. The other delegates to the June Convention were
"chosen even more irregularly-some in mass meetings, others by county
committee, and still others were seemingly self-appointed". It was this
June Convention which drafted the Statehood resolution. The
Constitutional Convention met in November 1861, and consisted of 61
members. Its composition was just as irregular. A delegate representing
Logan County was accepted as a member of this body, though he did not
live in Logan County, and his "credentials consisted of a petition
signed by fifteen persons representing six families". The large number
of Northerners at this convention caused great distrust over the new
Constitution during Reconstruction years. In 1872, under the leadership
of Samuel Price, former Lt. Governor of Virginia, the Wheeling
constitution was discarded, and an entirely new one was written along
ante-bellum principles. A Constitution of Our Own
The Wheeling
politicians controlled only a small part of West Virginia. On September
20, 1862, Arthur Boreman wrote to Francis Pierpoint from Parkersburg:
"The whole country South and East of us is abandoned to the Southern
Confederacy—Men are here from the counties above named--[Wirt, Jackson,
Roane] and indeed from Clay, Nicholas, &c &c,--who have been
run off from their homes—Indeed the Ohio border is lined with refugees
from Western Virginia. We are in worse condition than we were a year
ago—These people come to me every day and say they can't stay at
home...They must either have protection or abandon the country
entirely... If they attempt to stay at home—they must keep their horses
hid—and they dare not sleep at home but in the woods—and when at home
in the day time they are in constant fear of their lives... The
secessionists remain at home & are safe & now claim they are in
the Southern Confederacy—which is practically the fact..."
Harpers Ferry (as it appears today) changed hands a dozen times during the American Civil War.
On
May 13, the state legislature of the reorganized government approved
the formation of the new state. An application for admission to the
Union was made to Congress, and on December 31, 1862 an enabling act
was approved by President Lincoln admitting West Virginia on the
condition that a provision for the gradual abolition of slavery be
inserted in the Constitution. The Convention was reconvened on February
12, 1863, and the demand was met. The revised constitution was adopted
on March 26, 1863, and on April 20, 1863 President Lincoln issued a
proclamation admitting the state at the end of sixty days (June 20,
1863). Meanwhile officers for the new state were chosen, and Governor
Pierpont moved his capital to Alexandria from which he asserted
jurisdiction over the counties of Virginia within the Federal lines.
Legality
The
question of the constitutionality of the formation of the new state was
eventually brought before the Supreme Court of the United States, in
the case of Virginia v. West Virginia, 78 U.S. 39 (1871). Berkeley and
Jefferson counties lying on the Potomac east of the mountains, in 1863,
with the consent of the Reorganized government of Virginia voted in
favor of annexation to West Virginia. Many voters absent in the
Confederate army when the vote was taken refused to acknowledge the
transfer upon their return. The Virginia General Assembly repealed the
act of cession and in 1866 brought suit against West Virginia asking
the court to declare the counties a part of Virginia which would have
in essence made West Virginia's admission as a state unconstitutional.
Meanwhile Congress on March 10, 1866 passed a joint resolution
recognizing the transfer. The Supreme Court decided in favor of West
Virginia, and there has been no further question.
Civil War
During
the American Civil War, West Virginia suffered comparatively little.
Union General George B. McClellan's forces gained possession of the
greater part of the territory in the summer of 1861. Following
Confederate General Robert E. Lee's defeat at Cheat Mountain in the
same year, Union supremacy in western Virginia was never again
seriously challenged. In 1863, General John D. Imboden, with 5,000
Confederates, overran a considerable portion of the state. Bands of
guerrillas burned and plundered in some sections, and were not entirely
suppressed until after the war was ended. Estimates of the numbers of
soldiers from the state, Union and Confederate, have varied widely, but
recent studies have placed the numbers about equal, from 22,000-25,000
each. The low vote turnout for the statehood referendum was due to many
factors. On June 19, 1861 the Wheeling convention enacted a bill
entitled "Ordinance to Authorize the Apprehending of Suspicious Persons
in Time of War" which stated that anyone who supported Richmond or the
Confederacy "shall be deemed...subjects or citizens of a foreign State
or power at war with the United States.". Many private citizens were
arrested by Federal authorities at the request of Wheeling and interred
in prison camps, most notably Camp Chase in Columbus, Ohio. Camp Chase
Civil Prisoners. Soldiers were also stationed at the polls to
discourage secessionists and their supporters. In addition, a large
portion of the state was secessionist, and any polls there had to be
conducted under military intervention. The vote was further compromised
by the presence of an undetermined number of non-resident soldier votes.
At
the Constitutional Convention on December 14, 1861 the issue of slavery
was raised by Rev. Gordon Battelle, an Ohio native, who wished to
introduce a resolution for gradual emancipation. Granville Parker,
originally from Massachusetts and a member of the convention, described
the scene-"I discovered on that occasion as I never had before, the
mysterious and over-powering influence 'the peculiar institution' had
on men otherwise sane and reliable. Why, when Mr. Battelle submitted
his resolutions, a kind of tremor-a holy horror, was visible throughout
the house!" Instead of Rev. Battelle's resolution a policy of "Negro
exclusion" for the new state was adopted to keep any new slaves, or
freemen, from taking up residence, in the hope that this would satisfy
abolitionist sentiment in Congress. When the statehood bill reached
Congress, however, the lack of an emancipation clause prompted
opposition from Senator Charles Sumner and Senator Benjamin Wade of
Ohio. A compromise was reached known as the Willey Amendment, which was
approved by Unionist voters in the state on March 26, 1863. It called
for the gradual emancipation of slaves based on age after July 4, 1863.
Slavery was officially abolished by West Virginia on February 3, 1865.
(It took the ratification of the Thirteenth Amendment to the U.S.
Constitution accomplished on December 6, 1865 to abolish slavery
nationwide).
During the war and for years afterwards, partisan
feeling ran high. The property of Confederates might be confiscated,
and, in 1866, a constitutional amendment disfranchising all who had
given aid and comfort to the Confederacy was adopted. The addition of
the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments to the United States
Constitution caused a reaction, the Democratic Party secured control in
1870, and in 1871 the constitutional amendment of 1866 was abrogated.
The first steps toward this change had been taken, however, by the
Republicans in 1870. In 1872, an entirely new constitution was adopted
(August 22).
Following the war, Virginia unsuccessfully brought
a case to the Supreme Court challenging the secession of Berkeley
County and Jefferson County to West Virginia. (Five more counties were
formed later, to result in the current 55).
President Lincoln
was in a close campaign when he won reelection in 1864. However, the
act that allowed the state to be created was signed in 1862, two years
before Lincoln's re-election would have been an issue in any real way.
Enduring disputes
Beginning
in Reconstruction, and for several decades thereafter, the two states
disputed the new state's share of the pre-war Virginia government's
debt, which had mostly been incurred to finance public infrastructure
improvements, such as canals, roads, and railroads under the Virginia
Board of Public Works. Virginians led by former Confederate General
William Mahone formed a political coalition based upon this theory, the
Readjuster Party. Although West Virginia's first constitution provided
for the assumption of a part of the Virginia debt, negotiations opened
by Virginia in 1870 were fruitless, and in 1871 that state funded
two-thirds of the debt and arbitrarily assigned the remainder to West
Virginia. The issue was finally settled in 1915, when the United States
Supreme Court ruled that West Virginia owed Virginia $12,393,929.50.
The final installment of this sum was paid off in 1939.
Disputes
about the exact location of the border in some of the northern mountain
reaches between Loudoun County, Virginia and Jefferson County, West
Virginia continued well into the 20th century. In 1991, both state
legislatures appropriated money for a boundary commission to look into
15 miles (24 km) of the border area.
Hidden resources
Salt
The
new state benefited from development of its mineral resources more than
any other single economic activity after Reconstruction. Much of the
northern panhandle and north-central portion of the State are underlain
by bedded salt deposits over 50 feet (15 m) thick. Salt mining had been
underway since the 18th century, though that which could be easily
obtained had largely played out by the time of the American Civil War,
when the red salt of Kanawha County was a valued commodity of first
Confederate, and later Union forces. Newer technology has since proved
that West Virginia has enough salt resources to supply the nation's
needs for an estimated 2,000 years. During recent years, production has
been about 600,000 to 1,000,000 tons per year.
Coal
In the
1850s, geologists such as British expert Dr. David T. Ansted
(1814–1880), surveyed potential coal fields and invested in land and
early mining projects. After the War, with the new railroads came a
practical method to transport large quantities of coal to expanding
U.S. and export markets. Among the numerous investors were Charles
Pratt and New York City mayor Abram S. Hewitt, whose father-in law,
Peter Cooper, had been a key man in earlier development of the
anthracite coal regions centered in eastern Pennsylvania and
northwestern New Jersey. As those mines were playing out by the end of
the 19th century, these men were among investors and industrialists who
focused new interest on the largely untapped coal resources of West
Virginia.
Accidents in Coal Mines
Rakes (2008) examines coal
mine fatalities in the state in the first half of the 20th century
before safety regulations were strictly enforced in the 1960s. Besides
the well-publicized mine disasters that killed a number of miners at a
time, there were many smaller episodes in which one or two miners lost
their lives. Mine accidents were considered inevitable, and mine safety
did not appreciably improve the situation because of lax enforcement.
West Virginia's mines were considered so unsafe that immigration
officials would not recommend them as a source of employment for
immigrants, and those unskilled immigrants who did work in the coal
mines were more susceptible to death or injury. When the United States
Bureau of Mines was given more authority to regulate mine safety in the
1960s, safety awareness improved, and West Virginia coal mines became
less dangerous.
Early railroads, shipping to East Coast and Great Lakes
The
completion of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway (C&O) westerly across
the state from Richmond, Virginia to the new city of Huntington on the
Ohio River in 1872 opened access to the New River Coalfield. Within 10
years, the C&O was building tracks east from Richmond down the
Virginia Peninsula to reach its huge coal pier at the new city of
Newport News, Virginia on the large harbor of Hampton Roads. There,
city founder Collis P. Huntington also developed what would become the
largest shipbuilder in the world, Newport News Shipbuilding and Drydock
Company. Among its many products, the shipyard began building
ocean-going ships, known as colliers, to transport coal to other
eastern ports (notably in New England) and overseas.
In 1881,
the new Philadelphia-based owners of William Mahone's former Atlantic,
Mississippi and Ohio Railroad (AM&O) which stretched across
Virginia's southern tier from Norfolk, had sights clearly set on the
Mountain State, where the owners had large land holdings. Their
railroad was renamed Norfolk and Western (N&W), and a new railroad
city was developed at Roanoke to handle planned expansion. After its
new President Frederick J. Kimball and a small party journeyed by
horseback and saw firsthand the rich bituminous coal seam (which
Kimball's wife named "Pocahontas," the N&W redirected its planned
westward expansion to reach it. Soon, the N&W was also shipping
from its own new coal piers on Hampton Roads at Lamberts Point outside
Norfolk. In 1889, in the southern part of the state, along the Norfolk
and Western rail lines, the important coal center of Bluefield, West
Virginia was founded. The "capital" of the Pocahontas coalfield, this
city would remain the largest city in the southern portion of the state
for several decades. It shares a sister city with the same name,
Bluefield, in Virginia.
In the northern portion of the state and
elsewhere, the older Baltimore and Ohio Railroad (B&O) and other
lines also expanded to take advantage of coal opportunities as well.
The B&O developed coal piers in Baltimore and at several points on
the Great Lakes. Other significant rail carriers of coal were the
Western Maryland Railway (WM), particularly notable was a latecomer,
the Virginian Railway (VGN), built in an extraordinary manner to the
latest and highest standards and completed in 1909.
New competitor helps open "Billion Dollar Coalfield"
By
1900, only a large area of the most rugged terrain of southern West
Virginia was any distance from the existing railroads and mining
activity. Within this area west of the New River Coalfield in Raleigh
and Wyoming counties lay the Winding Gulf Coalfield, later promoted as
the "Billion Dollar Coalfield."
A protégé of Dr. Ansted was
William Nelson Page (1854–1932), a civil engineer and mining manager
based at Ansted in Fayette County. Former West Virginia Governor
William A. MacCorkle described him as a man who knew the land "as a
farmer knows a field." Beginning in 1898, Page teamed with northern and
European-based investors to take advantage of the undeveloped area.
They acquired large tracts of land in the area, and Page began the
Deepwater Railway, a short-line railroad which was chartered to stretch
between the C&O at its line along the Kanawha River and the N&W
at Matoaka, a distance of about 80 miles (130 km).
Although the
Deepwater plan should have provided a competitive shipping market via
either railroad, leaders of the two large railroads did not appreciate
the scheme and sought to discourage competition in an area they
considered theirs for expansion plans. In secret, but lawful collusion
(in an era before U.S. anti-trust laws were enacted), each declined to
negotiate favorable rates with Page, nor did they offer to purchase his
railroad, as they had many other short-lines. However, if the C&O
and N&W presidents thought they could thus kill the Page project,
they were to be proved mistaken. One of the silent partner investors
Page had enlisted was millionaire industrialist Henry Huttleston
Rogers, a principal in John D. Rockefeller's Standard Oil Trust and an
old hand at developing natural resources, transportation. A master at
competitive "warfare", Henry Rogers did not like to lose in his
endeavors, and also had "deep pockets".
Instead of giving up,
Page (and Rogers) secretly planned and had surveyed a route to provide
a new, third major railroad, all the way to new coal pier facilities at
Sewell's Point on the harbor of Hampton Roads, fully 440 miles (710 km)
away from the railhead on the Kanawha River. In early 1904, the
Tidewater Railway, a new railroad, was quietly formed in Virginia by a
Rogers attorney. The necessary sections of right-of way and land were
acquired before the large railroads realized what was happening.
Efforts to block Page and Rogers through many legal tactics and even
several violent confrontations ultimately failed.
With Page as
its first president, and largely financed from Rogers' personal
fortune, and the two railroads were merged in 1907 to form the
Virginian Railway (VGN). Building the Virginian Railway cost $40
million by the time it was completed in 1909. Well-engineered and
highly efficient with all new infrastructure, it operated very
profitably. The Class 1 railroad came to be known as the "Richest
Little Railroad in the World."
Nothwithstanding the competitive
fears of the C&O and N&W, soon, all three railroads were
shipping ever-increasing volumes of coal to export from Hampton Roads.
(The VGN and the N&W) ultimately became parts of the modern Norfolk
Southern system, and the VGN's well-engineered 20th century tracks
continue to offer a favorable gradient to Hampton Roads). In the early
20th century, West Virginia coal was also under high demand at Great
Lakes ports on Lake Erie. Coal transloading facilities were developed
at several points, notably Toledo, Ohio.
Labor, ecology issues
As
coal mining and related work became a major employment activities in
the state, there was considerable labor strife as working conditions
and safety issues, as well as economic ones arose. Even in the 21st
century, mining safety and ecological concerns are challenging to the
state whose coal continues to power electrical generating plants in
many other states.
20th century
State hatcheries and tourism industry
Wildlife
biologist Robert Silvester of the State Wildlife Center wrote a history
of conservation in West Virginia. He explains as industry developed in
the region, the people of West Virginia saw a need for wildlife
conservation. The Wildlife and Fish Commission was created in 1921. The
Commission established the French Creek Game Farm 1923. Various game
animals and now protected birds were raised for conservation
repopulating or control reasons throughout the state. Coincidentally,
it was similar to an indigenous species open zoo of today and became a
place of 'family outings' visitation. The following years saw a
significant growth of visitors. Buffalo were included in 1954 and
attracted additional visitors. Today, the zoological facility is of
338-acre (1.37 km2) modern Wildlife Center under the direction of the
Division of Natural Resources.
Mike Shingleton of the Division
of Natural Resources explained the Centennial Golden Trout evolution.
At the small rainbow trout hatchery in 1955, a yellow-mottled
fingerling was noticed by Petersburg manager Vincent Evans. From that
small batch of hatchlings he named it ‘‘Little Camouflage.’’ Months
later upon his arrival, the new Petersburg manager, Chester Mace, was
shown the curious novelty. In limited facilities of late 1956, "Goldy"
had spawn with a few Rainbow trout. A few months later in 1957, the
Petersburg hatchery moved these yellow-mottles to the larger Spring Run
hatchery. By the spring stocking of 1963, the West Virginia Centennial
year, Evans and Mace had supervised the spawning of good color and
quality brood stock of the Mountain State's Centennial Golden Trout.
World War II
West
Virginia enthusiastically supported World War II, with 67,000 men and
about 1000 women donning uniforms. Unemployment ended as the mines,
railroads. mills and factories worked overtime to create the "Arsenal
of Democracy" that supplied the munitions to win the war. However,
repeatedly John L. Lewis called his United Mine Workers union out on
strike, defying the government, outraging public opinion, and
strengthening the hand of anti-union Congressmen. In the postwar years
he continued his militancy; his miners went on strikes or "work
stoppages" annually. Edwards (2008) explores the roles of women
volunteers in West Virginia during World War II. Women volunteered for
farm and home economics training programs, United Service Organizations
(USO) clubs that provided entertainment and assistance to servicemen,
salvage campaigns to produce steel scrap, and civil defense training
that taught first aid and emergency response techniques. Middle-class
women made up the majority of volunteers; many programs were not open
to African American and lower-class white women. Some West Virginia
women also volunteered for military service, which was available to
African American women. In spite of sexism, racism, and class
distinctions that women faced in volunteering, thousands responded to
the national war effort.
School integration
The response in
West Virginia to the 1954 "Brown v. Board of Education Supreme Court
decision outlawing segregated schools was generally positive, as
Governor William C. Marland pledged to integrate the state's schools.
The state's integration experiences, was generally peaceful, swift and
cooperative.


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