Showing posts with label Southwest Virginia History. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Southwest Virginia History. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 18, 2014

Day Four: The Appalachian Stereotype

Appalachia's history as a mountainous melting pot dates to before the Revolutionary War, when the region's misty crags were an almost impenetrable Western frontier. Indian nations, including Cherokee and Shawnee, were the first to inhabit the area. A major wave of European settlers — primarily of Irish and Scottish descent — arrived via federal land grants in the early 18th century. African-Americans, both free and enslaved, arrived at this time as well. All these groups played key roles in shaping and molding the cultural traditions of the region. But the region is not comprised of only the descendants of the Scots and Irish that came here in the 1700's.

African-Americans made up more than 10 percent of the region's population by 1860, with Appalachia's ethnic profile shifting dramatically as multiracial families boomed. (Later, those with blended Scots-Irish, Native American and African-American roots would come to be known as Melungeons.)

In the years following the Civil War, former slaves migrated north to the region to escape the persecution of the Deep South. In Eastern Kentucky, Berea College opened its doors in 1867 to students of all races, with the first year's class totaling 187 students: 96 African-American and 91 white.

The coal crescendo during the early part of the 20th century brought in even greater diversity, with tens of thousands of Hungarian, Italian and Eastern European immigrants flocking to the mountains to cash in on booming mining towns. After the Great Depression, many of these immigrants — along with African-American families — moved to urban centers such as Cincinnati and Detroit in pursuit of more stable and less backbreaking work. These pioneers were some of the first to create "urban Appalachian" enclaves, spreading the traditions of an isolated region to metropolitan areas across the Midwest.

However the stereotype (the largely accepted presumption) of Appalachians as backwards, and unintelligent continues.  Mass media, movies and books poke full at Appalachians and unfairly portray them.

Much, though, has been done to counter these stereotypes though books, music, and highlighting the many positive attributes of Appalachians

Appalachian State University Even Uses The "Hillbilly" As It's Mascot


Day Four: Digging Deeper

Coal
As industry in the east grew, cheap and plentiful fuel sources were needed. Coal filled that need. Southwest Virginia's geological make up left large coal deposits in the western most counties, and those same seems run North into the West Virginia coalfields.  Coal is labor intensive to mine, and conditions in mines were dangerous.  Miners using dynamite would blow small tunnels into the walls of the mines, then carve out the walls into a larger tunnel. Other miners would shovel the coal into carts and those carts would be pulled out of the mines first by mules, then by small steam engines that used coal for power.  Coal companies owned everything surrounding the coal mines including the houses the miners lived in.  Miners were payed in script only good for buying over priced goods at the company owned store.  Miners were also payed poor wages, thus the line in the song "I owe my soul to the company store."

Railroads
Small railroads, then the much larger Clinchfield Railroad opened up the isolated mountains.  Used to carry coal, and other natural resources out of Southwest Virginia the railroads were built into the rugged mountains and over the deep valleys. This too was dangerous work, and 200 workers were killed in the process. Railroads also brought culture into the mountains. Rather than building or making everything needed to survive the people of Southwest Virginia could buy essential goods at company stores. This was a costly and lead to the decline of people doing everything in the "old ways"

Other Industries

Other industries besides coal flourished including textiles in Bristol, and chemicals in Saltville. Bristol established itself as a textile hub when several large garment factories located there.  Today Pointer Brand Overalls are made in Bristol. Saltville saw the advent of the American chemical industry when Mathison Chemical Company opened there in the 1890's.  Overtime Saltville would be the home of Mathison's rocket fuel production plant.  As NASA developed the Apollo rockets that would carry man to the moon for the first time, it was Mathison was picked to provide the rocket fuel

The Bristol Sessions
Industrialization also brought the mountain culture many things it did not already have and make the rest of the world aware of its music, people and culture. One of the most noted examples of this is the 1927 Bristol Recording session of The Carter Family (of Maces Spring, Virginia) and Jimmie Rogers by Victor Recording producer Ralph Peer. Those recordings are considered by many to be the "big bang" of country music. For the first time, Appalachian music was mass produced and sold across the country. Prior attempts by students of music like Alan Lomax had recorded mountain music, but for scholarly endeavors.  






Day Four: Fast Facts

As industry in the east grew, cheap and plentiful fuel sources were needed. Coal filled that need.

Small railroads, then the much larger Clinchfield Railroad opened up the isolated mountains

Other industries besides coal flourished including textiles in Bristol, and chemicals in Saltville

Industrialization also brought the mountain culture many things it did not already have and make the rest of the world aware of its music, people and culture





Day Four: Homework

For Tomorrow Think Of The Following

1) 3 Negative effects of the Appalachian stereotype
2) 3 Positive effects of the Appalachian stereotype
3) Ways you have been effected by the Appalachian stereotype



Day Four: The Clinchfield RNR

As You Watch This Video Answer The Following Questions?

1) What is the structure of the coal fields

2) What is the infrastructure of the coal fields?

3) What is the superstructure of the coal fields?


Primary Source: Tennessee Ernie Ford "Owe My Soul To Company Store"

Born in Bristol, Tennessee, to Clarence Thomas Ford and Maud Long, Tennessee ErnieFord began his radio career as an announcer at WOPI-AM in Bristol, Tennessee.

Ford scored an unexpected hit on the pop charts in 1955 with his rendering of "Sixteen Tons", a sparsely arranged coal-miner's lament, that Merle Travis first recorded in 1946 reflecting his own family's experience in the mines of Muhlenberg County, Kentucky. The song's authorship has been claimed by both Travis and George S. Davis. Its fatalistic tone contrasted vividly with the sugary pop ballads and rock & roll just starting to dominate the charts at the time:

You load sixteen tons, what do you get?
Another day older and deeper in debt.
Saint Peter, don't you call me, 'cause I can't go;
I owe my soul to the company store..




1) What do you think Ernie Ford means when he said he "owe my soul to the company store?"
2)Why do you think people would continue to owe their souls to the company store?
3) What, if anything, might save people from owing their soul to the company store?

Tuesday, June 17, 2014

The Civil War in Southwest Virginia

Champ Ferguson

Day Three: Emory & Henry Goes To War

During the presidential campaign of 1860, many Emory and Henry students campaigned on behalf of the Constitutional Union Party, a political refuge for cautious border Whigs and nativists who were intent on preserving slavery but alarmed by the belligerence of fire-eating Democrats and Northern Republicans. One such student was John Bell Brownlow son of William G. Brownlow a noted Unionist from Knoxville, TN.  One night after a heated debate in the Calliopean Society about the issues of Civil War, John Brownlow struck a fellow classmate in the head with a stick of firewood in self defense and killed the other boy. The Republican candidate, Abraham Lincoln, was elected and Virginia seceded from the Union, most students set aside their political differences and withdrew from classes in order to join the war effort. The college's president, Ephraim Emerson Wiley, served as a chaplain, ministering to wounded soldiers who were relocated to the college grounds.

The Emory and Henry board of trustees rejected a request to turn the college into barracks for the Washington Mounted Rifles, or Company D of the 1st Virginia Cavalry.  Instead, the Confederate government established the Emory Confederate States Hospital, reimbursing the school for use of the grounds and buildings. During this period, the college also earned money by selling supplies to the Confederate quartermaster corps.

Emory and Henry's location in the foothills of the Appalachian Mountains kept it isolated from the military campaigns that raged across the Shenandoah Valley and the Piedmont. Still, it was threatened by periodic Union raids targeting the nearby Wytheville lead mines and the salt production facility at Saltville, the latter of which was crucial in provisioning the Confederate army. One such raid in October 1864 resulted in the Battle of Saltville, where outnumbered Confederate cavalry managed to drive back a determined assault led by Union general Stephen G. Burbridge.

John Bell Browlow
More Information on John Bell Brownlow

Day Three: The Legend Of Champ Ferguson

The Facts
The First Battle of Saltville (1 October – 3 October 1864), was fought near the town of Saltville, Virginia, during the American Civil War. The battle was fought by both regular and homeguard Confederate units against regular Union troops, including one of the few black cavalry units, over an important saltworks in the town. The Union troops were led by Brig. Gen. Stephen G. Burbridge.

The battle was a Confederate victory, but it has become better known for a massacre that happened afterward. Irregular guerrilla forces under the notorious Champ Ferguson murdered captured and wounded white and black Union troops.Ferguson was tried after the war in Nashville, Tennessee, for these and other non-military killings, found guilty, and executed.

The Legends
Conflicting stories arise as to where, what and how many Ferguson murdered.

Some say he walked the battlefield murdering soldiers of the 5th United States Colored Cavalry and wounded white soldiers as well

Some say that he rode all the way from Saltville to Emory & Henry College where wounded were being treated and murdered soldiers there

Other still say he rode to the hospital, carried out several murders. Returned to Saltville, only to return the next day to Emory Hospital to murder one more soldier. Legends on the campus of Emory & Henry state that this second killing was his own brother, though no records can confirm this.

Which ever story you believe, it was proven that Ferguson committed murders after the Battle of Saltville and he was executed for his crime making him one of only two Confederates to be executed for war crimes after the Civil War.




More Information on Champ Ferguson

http://home.comcast.net/~5thuscc/massacr.htm
http://www.historynet.com/champ-ferguson-an-american-civil-war-rebel-guerrilla.htm
http://www.nytimes.com/1865/10/29/news/champ-ferguson-confession-culprit-killing-reuben-wood-killing-frogg-saltsville.html?pagewanted=2

Day Three- Digging Deeper

Slavery In Southwest Virginia 
Slavery was not as common in Southwest Virginia as it was other places where large scale farms required massive amounts of labor.  Most the slaveholders in Southwest Virginia held fewer that 100 slaves, and many only under 10.  Slaves were often engaged in small agriculture or rented to larger farmers.  If a slave remained with their master and worked it agriculture, the master often worked besides the slave in the field. More often they were used in non-agriculture (not working in the fields).

Brother Against Brother
The issue of slavery (whether states had the right to allow slavery OR the United States success remaining divided) split states, communities, and families across the country, but this problem was especially pronounced in the border states and where slavery was not as prevalent.  The most notable case of this occurred May 23, 1862, at the Battle of Front Royal, Capt. William Goldsborough of the Confederate 1st Maryland Infantry captured his brother Charles Goldsborough of the Union 1st Maryland Infantry and took him prisoner. The battle is also notable for being the only time in United States military history that two regiments from the same state with the same numerical designation have engaged each other in battle.

The Civil War In Southwest Virginia  
Southwest Virginia did not experience any major engagements during the Civil War, but it provided nessacry support in the way of vital goods. The regions wet limestone caves provided saltpeter which was a major ignition fuel in black power. Lead was mined as well in Southwest Virginia. Maybe most importantly salt was harvested from the Saltville salt marshes. The Confederate States of American felt that Saltville salt was so important that by the end of the war, it was the most heavily fortified installation in the south. Also vital to the South was the only east-west rail line that ran from Lynchburg,VA to Knoxville, TN.  Connection lines brought the saltpeter, lead and salt down from the hills and to the main line where it was sent to the troops in the field.  Emory & Henry College's Wiley Hall and Byars Hall were used as hospital facilities by the Confederate States to house both Union and Confederate soldiers.

















More Information on Slavery In Southwest Virginia
http://filebox.vt.edu/users/wdunaway/publications/virginia.htm
More Information on Brother Against Brother
http://www.civilwar.org/battlefields/secessionville/secessionville-history-articles/brother-against-brother-at.html
More Information on The Civil War In Southwest Virginia
http://www.ehc.edu/academics/resources/kelly-library/library-news/2013/10/library-101-emory-henry-civil-war-history/

Monday, June 16, 2014

Day Two: Homework

1) Think about at least three things in your life at Summer Scholars that would be different if you lived on the Southwest Virginian frontier




Day One Homework

1) Imagine what the reaction of a Pre-historic Indian, a Spanish Conquistador, and a member of the Thomas Walker expedition would be to being dropped on the campus of Emory & Henry College today

2) Imagine your reaction to being dropped into a Pre-historic Indian tribe, the Spanish explorers trip, or the Thomas Walker Expedition




Day Two-The Early History of Appalachia

As you watch this video, think about the following

1) What is the structure of the Cherokee people?

2) What is the infrastructure of the Cherokee people?

3) what is the superstructure of the Cherokee people?



Day Two- The Battle of Kings Mountain

In 1780, the Revolutionary War moved to the Southern states. British authorities believed that many citizens in this region remained loyal to King George III and would rally to fight alongside an invading British force against the Patriot rebels. After Charles Town fell to the British invaders on May 12, General Sir Henry Clinton, commander of the British forces in the American Colonies, ordered his second-in-command, General Lord Charles Cornwallis, to march his army inland through the Carolinas and into Virginia. 

Cornwallis’ army began moving northward across South Carolina toward the small community of Charlotte. Major Patrick Ferguson protected Cornwallis’ left flank during the advance. Ferguson was a soldier’s soldier, determined and disciplined

From Gilbert Town, an aggravated Patrick Ferguson sent a message to the elusive Overmountain Men: “If you do not desist your opposition to the British Arms, I shall march this army over the mountains, hang your leaders, and lay waste your country with fire and sword.”

Leaders called for a mustering of militia units from throughout the overmountain region and beyond. They sent express riders north and east calling upon Arthur Campbell and William Campbell to muster Virginians from the Holston Valley. They called for a muster on September 25 at Sycamore Shoals, adjacent to Fort Watauga in today’s Elizabethton, Tennessee.

Colonel William Campbell arrived with 400 Virginians, half from his cousin’s command. These Virginians came on a two-day ride from their muster along Wolf Creek in today’s Abingdon, Virginia.

Growing day by day to some one thousand strong in number, the militiamen prepared to cross the mountains, committed in their pursuit of the man who had threatened to invade their homeland: Major Patrick Ferguson.

This video will tell the rest of the story




For More Information About The Overmountian Men

http://www.historynet.com/the-overmountain-men-battle-for-the-carolinas.htm

http://www.hswcv.org/history.html

Day Two: Frontier Forts

The actual military defense of Virginia's extreme western frontier did not begin, on a large scale, until the spring prior to the outbreak of Dunmore's War in the fall of 1774, more commonly referred to as the Point Pleasant Campaign.


There were seven of the original forts erected in compliance with Lord Dunmore's order, four on the lower Clinch River under Captain William Russell's militia command, and three on the upper Clinch River under the militia command of Captain Daniel Smith. These forts were erected by the settlers as a means of protection for the locals living in the area. The seven original forts were: Fort Preston in Upper Castlewood, Russell County, Fort Christian, between Dickensonville and Lebanon, Russell County, Moore's Fort in Castlewood, Blackmore's Fort, at the mouth of Stoney Creek in Scott County. Elk Garden Fort in Scott County, Witten's Fort near Tazewell, and Maiden Springs Station, located on the branch of the Clinch River near Tazewell. There were other forts built a few years later in the southwestern part of Virginia. They included: Daniel Smith's Fort in Lebanon, New Garden Station, in Russell County, Tate's Fort, on Moccasin Creek in Russell County, Rye Cove Fort, in Rye Cove. Carter's Fort, also in Rye Cove, Houston's Fort and the Kilgore Fort in Scott County.










http://www.swvamuseum.org/cherokee.html

Primary Source: The Killing of Chief Benge and The Recapture Of White Captives

Life on the frontier was hard. Added to this danger was the near constant threat of Indian attacks. One of the most feared Indians in Southwest Virginia was Chief Robert Benge. Born around 1760 in the Cherokee village of Togue, possibly on the Little Ta ni si river, Bob Benge - also called Captain Benge and The Bench - was the son of a Scottish trader John Benge and a full blood Cherokee named Wurtah. On April 6, 1794 Benge, and his band of frontier marauders entered the quiet little settlement fifteen miles west of the present town of Abingdon and attacked the home of Peter Livingston. At the time Peter and his brother Henry were out on the farm and the women folk, children and a few slaves were in or near the house. Benge and his raiders captured Elizabeth Livingston and the party fled as far as the foot of Stone's Mountain in Lee County. There they were ambushed by a band led by Lieutenant Vincent Hobbs and Benge was killed. The following is Elizabeth Livingston recounting of the ambush.

The Killing of Chief Benge

April 9. After traveling about five miles, which was over Powell's Mountain and near the foot of Stone Mountain, a party of 13 men, under command of Lieutenant Vincent Hobbs, of the militia of Lee County, met the enemy in front, attacked and killed Benge the first fire. I was at that time some distance off in the rear. The Indian who was my guard at first halted on hearing the firing. He, then, ordered me to run, which I performed slowly. He, then, attempted to strike me in the head with the tomahawk, which I defended as well as I could with my arm. By this time two of our people came in view, which encouraged me to struggle all I could. The Indian at this instant pushed me backward; and I fell over a log, at the same time aiming a violent blow at my head, which in part spent its force on me and laid me out for dead. The first thing I afterward remembered was my good friends around me giving me all the assistance in their power for my relief. They told me I was senseless for about an hour.

1) Why do you think Indians in Southwest Virginia would have resented and attacked the settlers?
2) What do you think the settlers could have done to prevented attacks or at least made them less likely?

























For More Information About Chief Benge
http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~vaschs2/chief_benge.htm

http://donchesnut.com/genealogy/pages/bobbenge.htm

Thursday, June 12, 2014

Day Three- Fast Facts

From any angle you wish to look, the issue of slavery caused the Civil War
Southern                                                Northern
States rights to allow slavery                    Country could not continue half free, half slave

This issue divided states, communities, and families especially in places like Southwest Virginia.


Southwest Virginia did not experience any major battles but railroad junctures,salt manufacturing in Saltville, and the large buildings at Emory & Henry College played critical roles in the war.  

Saltville Saltworks
Emory & Henry As It Was Around The Civil War

Primary Source: Brother Against Brother Photographs

Brothers Edward Jonas (Union Soldier) and Charles H. Jonas (Confederate Soldier).  
Thomas Leonidas Crittenden - Brady-Handy.jpg
Brothers George Bibb Crittenden (Confederate Soldier) and Thomas Leonidas Crittenden (Union Soldier)

Questions
1) Why do you think these brothers would have fought against each other during the Civil War?
2) What cause could see yourself fighting a war against a member of your family over? Could you even fight a war over something if your family disagreed with the other side?


Day Two-Assessment

3-2-1

On the note care I give you write the following

3- things you learned today
2- of the most interesting things
1- thing you still want to learn more about