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This Week in West Virginia History

Mountain Media, LLC by Mountain Media, LLC
September 10, 2024
in Editorial, Local Stories
0

Charleston WV – The following events happened on these dates in West Virginia history.

To read more, go to e-WV: The West Virginia Encyclopedia at www.wvencyclopedia.org.

 

Sept. 12, 1861: The Battle of Cheat Mountain was fought near the Randolph-Pocahontas

County line. Gen. Robert E. Lee came into western Virginia to give support to Gen. William W.

Loring, commander of the Army of Northwestern Virginia, but the battle ended in a defeat for

the Confederacy.

Sept. 12, 1872: The Great Bend Tunnel was completed at Talcott. The tunnel, also

known as Big Bend Tunnel, is the place where John Henry defeated the steam drill, becoming

one of the world’s great folk heroes.

Sept. 12, 1952: A group of local youths were startled at a football game by a fireball

streaking across the sky. The fireball fell to earth just beyond a hillside at Flatwoods. This

sighting led to the legend of the Braxton County, or Flatwoods, Monster.

Sept. 12, 1974: Kanawha County schools closed for four days due to a controversy over

the adoption of new textbooks. Throughout the fall, advocates for opposing sides of the issue

held mass protests, which, along with isolated and sporadic acts of violence (including a failed

bombing attempt at the Board of Education office), drew national media attention.

Sept. 13, 1844: Milton Humphreys was born in Greenbrier County. During the Civil

War, he enlisted in the Confederate service as a sergeant. At the Battle of Fayetteville,

Humphreys fired his cannon at Union artillery from behind an intervening forest, setting a

precedent for modern warfare using indirect fire.

Sept. 13, 1848: Attorney “J. R.” Clifford was born in present Grant County. In 1887,

Clifford became the first African American admitted to practice law before the West Virginia

 

Supreme Court of Appeals. He was one of the first lawyers in the nation to challenge segregated

schools.

Sept. 13, 1862: Confederate and Union forces clashed in Charleston. Southern artillery

gained the high ground on Fort Hill and smashed the federals who were lining the west bank of

the Elk River.

Sept. 13, 1910: Musician Leon “Chu” Berry was born in Wheeling. He was one of the

most highly regarded saxophonists of the Swing Era.

Sept. 14, 1898: Okey L. Patteson was born in Mingo County. Patteson, called the “Great

Persuader,” tackled difficult decisions as West Virginia’s 23rd governor from 1949 to 1953.

Sept. 15, 1861: In the aftermath of the Battle of Carnifex Ferry, Union forces under the

command of Gen. Jacob Cox occupied the area of Spy Rock. Spy Rock is a natural landmark

located on U.S. 60, 18 miles east of Hawks Nest.

Sept. 15, 1862: Confederate Gen. Thomas J. “Stonewall” Jackson forced the surrender

of a Union garrison at Harpers Ferry prior to the Battle of Antietam. The 12,500 prisoners taken

by Jackson was the largest surrender of U.S. Army troops in the war.

Sept. 15, 1875: Henry Hatfield was born near Matewan, Mingo County. As a doctor in

the coal camps, he helped secure funding to establish three miners hospitals for the southern part

of the state. In 1912, he was elected the state’s 14 th governor.

Sept. 15, 1906: Songwriter Jack Rollins was born in Keyser. Rollins wrote the lyrics to

“Here Comes Peter Cottontail” and “Frosty the Snowman,” two of America’s most popular

songs.

Sept. 16, 1876: The town of Milton in Cabell County was incorporated and named in

honor of Milton Rece, a large landowner at the time.

Sept. 16, 1926: Writer John Knowles was born in Fairmont. He attained literary fame in

1959 with his first novel, A Separate Peace.

Sept. 16, 1950: Scholar Henry Louis Gates Jr. was born in Keyser. Gates is one of the

leading Black intellectuals in the United States. His books include Colored People: A Memoir,

about growing up in Mineral County. He hosts the popular PBS program Finding Your Roots.

Sept. 17, 1848: Artist Lily Irene Jackson was born in Parkersburg. Jackson was best

known as a painter of animal portraits and floral arrangements, and as an advocate for the arts.

Sept. 18, 1947: Historian and journalist Minnie Kendall Lowther died. Born in Ritchie

County, she was one of the first West Virginia women to become a newspaper editor.

Sept. 18, 1989: Playwright Maryat Lee died in Lewisburg. She established Eco Theater

in Summers County as an indigenous mountain theater, using Summers County people as actors.

 

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