History
Historical Documents
Links
Images
Mining History
The
West Virginia ALHN
American Local
History Network
|
History
of Ohio County
Ohio County was created by an act of the Virginia General
Assembly in October 1776. Constructed from from parts of the District
of West Augusta (Virginia), it was named in honor of the Ohio River
that forms the county's western border.
The river's name was derived from the Indian word Ohionhiio,
meaning great or beautiful river.
French explorer Robert Cavelier de La Salle was likely
the first European to travel through present Ohio County, sailing down
the Ohio River in 1669.
In 1749, Louis Bienville de Celeron sailed down the Ohio
River and buried a lead plate in present day Ohio County claiming all of
the lands drained by the Ohio River for King Louis XV of France.
He met several English fur traders on his journey and
ordered them off of French soil and wrote strong letters of reprimand to
the colonial governors protesting the English's presence on French soil.
The first county court meeting was held on January 16,
1777 at Black's cabin near where West Liberty currently stands. West Liberty
served as the county seat from 1776 to 1797, and was legally established
on the lands of Reuben Foreman and Providence Mounce on November 29, 1787.
In 1790, Ohio County had the fifth largest population
(5,212) of the nine counties that were then in existence and fell within
the current boundaries of West Virginia. Berkeley County had the largest
population (19,713), Randolph County had the smallest population (951),
and there were a total of 55,873 people living within the present state's
boundaries at that time.
WHEELING HISTORY
Wheeling, the county seat since 1797, was originally settled
by Colonel Ebenezer Zane and his brothers, Jonathan and Silas, in 1769.
Fort Fincastle was built in 1774 to protect the settlers from Indians.
The fort was later renamed Fort Henry, in honor of Patrick Henry, and was
the site of a famous battle in September 27, 1777 between approximately
400 to 500 Indians, armed and supplied by the British, and the Fort's 42
men under the command of a Colonel Shepherd.
Early in the morning of the 27th, 23 men were killed in
a series of ambushes in a corn field. The remainder of Shepherd's command
remained in the Fort, where the women and children living in the town had
taken refuge. The Indians then attacked the Fort, firing on it throughout
the day. During a lull in the battle, and with their ammunition nearly
gone, Elizabeth Zane made a successful mad, heroic dash to her brother
Ebenezer's house to retrieve a load of gunpowder. She returned to the Fort
with her prize in her hands and bullets flying over her head. The gunpowder
came in handy as the Indians soon renewed their attack. Later that evening,
a group of 14 men from Cross Creek fought their way through the Indian's
lines of attack and entered the Fort. At daybreak, another force of 40
men from Short Creek arrived and fought their way through the Indian lines
to the Fort. Their commander, Major Samuel McColloch, became separated
from his men and was pursued by the Indians. Surrounded on three sides
by Indians and facing a 150 foot precipice, he urged his horse over the
side. Miraculously, both he and his horse survived the leap and made their
escape. Frustrated at losing McColloch and recognizing that the Fort was
now reinforced, the Indians set fire to the town, killed about 300 cattle
belonging to the settlers, and then left the area.
Colonel Ebenezer Zane platted the town in 1793, and a
year later it received its first post office which named the community
in honor of the Zane family, calling it Zanesburg. The town was officially
established on December 25, 1795 by an act of the Virginia General Assembly.
The town was later incorporated, on January 16, 1806, and called Wheeling.
According to John Brittle, who was held captive by Delaware Indians from
1791 to 1796, the town's name originated from the Indian word "Weeling"
which means "place of the skull." It was said that when the first white
settlers came down the Ohio River and entered Wheeling Creek, they were
attacked and killed by Delaware Indians. The Indians beheaded one of the
men, placed his head on the end of a pole, and pointed the face pointed
toward the river to scare off any other whites that might make their way
into the Delaware's territory.
Wheeling was transformed into one the nation's most important
trading centers and rest stops for the pioneers heading west following
the extension of the National Road to its borders in 1818.
Wheeling was the site of several firsts, both for the
state and for the nation. The first bank in present day West Virginia,
The Northwestern Bank of Virginia, opened in Wheeling in 1817. The first
telegraph line to West Virginia reached Wheeling in 1847. The first suspension
bridge in the world was completed in Wheeling in 1849. Wheeling was West
Virginia's first state capitol until 1870 and again in 1875 and 1880. The
first telephone in West Virginia was installed in Wheeling in 1880. The
Bloch Brothers Tobacco Company in Wheeling originated outdoor advertising
in 1890 when they began painting Mail Pouch Tobacco signs on bridges and
barns across the nation.
Because of a lack of swift communications like we have
today, the last battle of the American Revolution was fought at Wheeling
in September of 1782. Word that the war was over hadn't reached the hinterland
and a band of 300 British and Indians attacked the town. They were defeated
in two days of fighting.
Today Wheeling is the seat of government for Ohio County,
and is the center for industry and commerce in the Northern Panhandle.
It sprawls in a T-shape over the Ohio River and Wheeling Creek, between
and over sharp-rising hills and across Wheeling Island.
The city's industry manufactures steel, iron products,
china, glassware, textiles, and paper products. Its downtown business district
is so busy at times, that it is said to resemble a busy city in Ohio or
Pennsylvania rather than a leisurely southern city.
John Brittle, who was captured by the Delaware Indians
in 1791 and who lived with them for five years tells the story of how Wheeling
got its name. Chief Hainguypooshies, which means "Big Cat," told him that
the first white explorers were beheaded and their skulls placed on stakes
at the mouth of the Wheeling Creek to warn off others. The spot became
known as "Weeling," which means, "place of the skull." Later the white
man added the letter "h."
By an act of Congress in 1831 it was made a port of entry
because of the flow of imports from its river trade. Sometimes the city
is known as "Nail City," because of its ironworks.
|