Unit 8's Americana 2007 decorations
West Virginia was the only state formed as a direct result of the Civil War. In 1860, with the election of President Lincoln, many southern states began to secede from the Union, setting the stage for the Civil War. On November 15, 1860, a convention was held in Richmond to decide whether Virginia would also secede from the Union or stay. For the first two months of the convention, the general consensus among the delegates was that Virginia would stay in the Union. However, on April 12, 1861, Ft Sumter surrendered to the Confederate forces and three days later, President Abraham Lincoln issued a call for 75,000 troops to put down the rebellion. It was these events that convinced the majority of the delegates that it was time for Virginia to secede from the Union. On April 17, 1861, the Ordinance of Secession was passed by a vote of 88 to 55. The Western delegates withdrew from the convention and began to plan an opposition to the ordinance.
John Carlile
Map of the proposed new state of Kanawha
Arthur I. Boreman
Map of the new state of West Virginia
Click HERE to see what happened today in West Virginia History.
The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad (B&O) is the nation's oldest railroad and more than half of its line it located within West Virginia's borders. The B&O was created in order to speed up shipping of goods from the Ohio Valley, a process that before the creation of the B&O took weeks to do. This railroad was considered very valuable. It was so valuable that both the Confederacy and the Union sides fought desperately to keep the B&O from falling into enemy hands.
Here is a partial list of special events held by the various railroads in West Virginia:
"The Battle of Carnifex Ferry took place on September 10, 1861 in Nicholas County, Virginia (now West Virginia), as part of the Operations in Western Virginia Campaign during the American Civil War.
Summersville Lake, the largest lake in West Virginia, is a man-made reservoir near Summersville. It was constructed between 1960 and 1966 by the US Army Corps of Engineers in order to control flooding along the Gauley and Kanawha Rivers, as well as to provide recreation and enable fish and wildlife management. The Summersville Dam, a 390 ft x 2280 ft structure and the second largest rock fill dam in the Eastern United States, was built to hold back the water. Usually dams are named after the nearest town with a post office. The nearest town to the dam was the town of Gad. However, instead of calling it the Gad Dam (insert joke here), they named it the Summersville Dam. This broke a long-standing tradtion in the naming of dams.
Cass, West Virginia was founded in 1901 by the West Virginia Pulp and Paper Company (now known as Westvaco). It was built as a company town to meet the neds of the men who worked in the nearby mountains cutting hemlock and spruce trees for the West Virginia Spruce Lumber Company.
In 1960, due to the decline of the timber industry in the region, the town of Cass was abandoned. The rail line at Cass and the Shay locomotives (the only locomotives capable of making it up the steep grade) were planned to be scrapped, but Russell Baum, a railroad fan, purchased the line and convinced the legislature to make Cass Railroad into a state park. in 1963, the first train filled with tourists instead of timber made its way from the Cass Depot, headed four miles up the line to the Whittaker Station.
Hawk's Nest Overlook
In the early 1800's, oil and gas were of no importance to West Virginians. As a matter of fact, oil and gas were frequently hit by drillers when drilling for salt and were considered a nuisance. So much oil was diverted to the Kanawha River that it became known as "Old Greasy" to the boatmen. In 1815, while drilling for salt, gas was first struck in Charleston. By 1826, oil was used for lamps in factories and workshops.
"On the Little Kanawha River, near the Hughes River, was a stream called Burning Springs Run, named because there were two springs at its mouth from which natural gas escaped. As early as 1781, Thomas Jefferson described the brilliant flame which could be produced by thrusting a lighted candle into the escaping gas at this site. Because gas and salt brine were often associated, the Rathbone brothers bored a salt well near these springs. However, rather than salt, at a depth of 200 feet they hit petroleum and by boring deeper, they were able to produce 200 barrels per day in 1859. Although petroleum was not the treasure that the Rathbones sought, they were encouraged by their find and drilled a second well which yielded 1,200 barrels of petroleum daily. News of the Rathbone brothers' discovery spread rapidly and created tremendous excitement. By 1861, a town with several thousand inhabitants had sprung up. All of the light in the newly-formed town, including that for a brilliantly lit hotel, was provided by natural gas. The widespread use of gas in this town marked the beginning of the era of gas development in West Virginia. Meanwhile, hundreds of thousands of barrels of oil were being floated down the river to Parkersburg where they were then sent to other cities by rail or river. The Burning Springs oil field was one of only two oil fields in America prior to the Civil War. But by 1876, there were 292 wells in the State, producing a total of 900 barrels daily. Parkersburg was the chief oil market. "
(from http://www.wvgs.wvnet.edu/www/geology/geoldvog.htm)
West Virginia's oil industry reached its peak in 1900, producing 16 million barrels. The oil industry began to decline after that, although the gas industry was growing. From 1906 to 1917, West Virginia was the leading producer of gas in the United States. After that, the state's gas production declined, until 1970 when it gained momentum again.
The exhibition coal mine in Beckley, West Virginia was once an actual working coal mine that now is a popular tourist attraction. In 1910, the mine closed and it repoened in 1960 as a tourist attraction. The city of Beckley was built around the mine's entrance and the area around it became a city park.
At the mine, you can take a tour thru the actual mine conducted by a real miner. You can also visit the gift shop, tour the coal museum, visit a coal miner's house, visit a coal town church, and tour the kid's learning center.
The coal miner's house and coal town church are furnished on the inside with antiques from the 1940's and 1950's to give you an idea of what life was like back then.
Miners in Raleigh County
It wasn't until the mid 1800's that coal mining began to be a major industy in West Virginia. Until that time, although coal was known to exist in West Virginia, there wasn't a real need to mine it because of the abundance of wood and lack of coal manufacturing industries. In 1810, people of Wheeling began to use coal from a nearby mine to heat their homes. In 1811, the first steamboat on the Ohio burned coal from the Ohio banks. By 1817, coal began to replace charcoal as fuel for many Kanawha River salt furnaces. in 1836, due to the enormous amount of attention given to the western Virginia coal fields, Professor William B Rogers, Virginia's foremost geologist, was sent to the mines to analyze the coal in eight counties. By 1840, the total coal production was up to 300,000 tons. Between 1840 and 1860, many coal companies were organized and corporations were established under the laws of Virginia to encourage financial investments from foreign countries.
When the Civil War broke out, the Kanawha Valley mines were closed. Many of the dams along the river were destroyed and confederate troops set up camps in the valley, preventing shipping. The Elkins and Fairmont coal fields in the north remained active, providing coal for the Union.
Fayette County, West Virginia miners
After the Civil War, renewed interest in the state's mineral resources brought new growth and development of the coal industry. By 1880 there were extensive operations in Mineral, Monongalia, Marion, Fayette, Harrison, Ohio, Putnam, and Mason counties. In 1901, the Fairmont Coal Company was formed, which later became the Consolidation Coal Company. Many of the coal mines owed their success to the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway. As the railroad grew, the coal became more available for marketing, making the coal fields prosper.
As the coal industry grew, mining methods and laws changed rapidly. In the earliest days, local farmers and slaves surface mined the coal, using picks and shovels to remove the overburden. The coal was then dug out, shoveled into baskets and sacks, and carried away. Later, sleds, wheelbarrows, and carts came into use in deep mining, hauled by oxen, mules, goats, dogs, and sometimes men. Progress in mechanization was slow, as operators did not want to pay for expensive new equipment, and miners feared being replaced by it. Also, many felt that the old bank mule was more reliable. By 1890, however, electric coal cutting, loading, and hauling machines came into use, and mules were used less frequently. After 1936, mechanization went forward very rapidly, with shuttle cars, long trains, conveyor belts, and all kinds of large mining machinery coming into common use. Large-scale surface mining did not start until 1914, but with the development of huge shovels and draglines, the overburden can now be removed more easily and in recent years this method has become a major method of mining coal in West Virginia. Two peaks occurred in West Virginia's coal production: in 1927 production reached 146,088,121 tons and in 1947 it peaked at 173,653,816 tons. (from http://www.wvgs.wvnet.edu/www/geology/geoldvco.htm)
Because the coal mines were often located far from towns, the coal companies often built their own coal company towns, complete with company stores, affordable housing, churches, and sometimes even recreational facilities for the miners and their families. A method of bookkeeping using coal scrip (tokens) was even established, due to the miners' daily needs. Miners could get an advance credit on their salary in scrip to buy necessities from the company store. Each mine had its own scrip symbol on the tokens, which could only be used at the local company store.
As the coal industry continued to grow, many of the coal companies began to be run by out of state superintendents and being supported by out of state capital. Immigrants from Wales, Scotland and England were brought over to work in the coal mines. The superintendents brought over cheap foreign labor and often abused them with poor medical care, long working hours and inferior living conditions in general. The poor working conditions in the mines brought about the first West Virginia coal mining legislation in 1883. This legislation appointed a state mine inspector who was to inspect all mines for adequate safety conditions. The state union of United Mine Workers of America was established in 1890 in Wheeling to push for better working conditions. The West Virginia Department of Mines was created in 1905 to enforce inspection laws. However, it wasn't until the Franklin D Roosevelt era that the federal goverment stepped in to help the miners. The National Industrial Recovery Act established an 8-hour work day and a minimum wage provision. The act was later declared unconstitutional, but by then most of the mining companies had unionized. Since the 1930's, the union has been a force in providing for the welfare, retirement and other benefits for miners.