Source: WV History Film Project
WEST VIRGINIA ROLL 31, JUNE 4, 1992,
BLENNERHASSET ISLAND
SWICK INTERVIEW, TAKE ONE, CAMERA
ROLL 149, SOUND ROLL 31
Q: Ray, tell me about the earliest white people
that came to this area, the High Valley area, who
settled here, what kind of people were they?
JJCA 0023
RS: They came chiefly across Pennsylvania and
settled in the Pittsburgh area because the forks of the
Ohio, the headwaters of the Ohio, were recognized
very early by the French and English as being of
extremely strategic importance. So the Pittsburgh
area was settled, and then they drifted down the Ohio
Valley. The squatters seemed to stay ahead of the
legitimate settlers. When Washington went down the
river in October of 1770, he said that squatters had
taken over all the good bottom lands on both sides of
the Ohio as far south as what today is Point Pleasant,
the mouth of the Kanawha river.
JJCA 0082
And this became such a problem that the federal
government in the 1780's, actually before the federal
government was established in 1789 under George
Washington, but the national government under the
Articles of Confederation, recognized that they were
going to have a full-fledged Indian war on their hands
if they didn't do something about the squatters taking
over Indians' land. So they sent General Richard
Butler down the Ohio in 1785 to warn off the
squatters and drive them off their lands and burn their
houses and their crops. Then Fort Harmer was
established at the mouth of the Musquine river to
serve as a base for the soldiers who were engaged in
this kind of work. I have read, I don't know if it is
true, but I have read that Fort Harmer was the only
United States military fort established to protect
Indians from white men.
JJCA 0166
So from the upper Ohio you had the force of
settlement coming from Pittsburgh area and then
going down and then in the 1770's Daniel Boone and
others led the advance from across the mountains into
Kentucky. So it was sort of a two-pronged affair.
But, you know the Ohio river was known to the
French in the 17th century. There were French
settlements in what's now southern Illinois and French
traders and Dutch traders and English traders went
down the river as a matter of common occurrence. So
it wasn't to some people at least a dark and secret
land. It was something with which they were very
familiar.
Q: ? ? What interaction did they have with the
Native Americans?
JJCA 0253
RS: The Native Americans welcomed the traders
initially because they provided things they couldn't
get otherwise, the brass buckets, the guns, gun
powder, the alcohol. They became dependent on
these items. But then when the settlers started to
come in it was a different story altogether. The
Indians very quickly realized that this encroachment
was their doom; and there was nothing they do about
the conflict that eventually broke out in the mid 18th
century was inevitable. It cumulated with the Treaty
of Greenville in 1794 in which most of what's now the
state of Ohio was taken from the Indians and they
were shoved up into the northwestern part of what is
now Ohio and the whites ruled and ownership of the
land -- ...
SWICK INTERVIEW, TAKE 2, CAMERA ROLL 149, SOUND 31
Q: ... who are they... give a brief background of
Harman Blennerhassett?
JJCA 0367
RS: Harman Blennerhassett came to America with his
wife, Margaret Agnew Blennerhassett in 1796 from
England, although they'd started out from their home
in Ireland which was a 7,000 acre estate in County
Kerry named Castle Conway. The Blennerhassett
home which was a three story stone manor house and
the estate itself both had the same name, Castle
Conway and had been in the family since about 1600.
Blennerhassett had fallen heir to the Blennerhassett at
the death of his father in 1792. His father was
Conway Blennerhassett.
JJCA 0422
Harmon had had two older brothers who died without
male heirs, so according to the law of primogeniture,
the estate to keep it intact, fell to the next male heir,
which was the third brother Harman. He married
sometime in 1794. We don't know when. He and
Margaret, his wife, spent the rest of their lives trying
to conceal their early years, especially all the facts
concerning their marriage. This was because of their
close relationship -- they were uncle and niece. Of
course in the late 20th century this probably horrifies
all of us Americans, but in the 18th century scene
especially on the continent of Europe, uncle-niece
marriages were not uncommon. ... Uncle-niece
marriages were not uncommon in Europe in the 18th
century. But the Blennerhassetts were anxious that
any future children they might have not learn of their
relationship, and because of that and because of the
political difficulties in which Ireland, Blennerhassett
had gotten himself entangled in Ireland, they decided
to emigrate to America.
JJCA 0549
They arrived in New York in 1796 and they went
down to Philadelphia, which was the national capital
at that time, and they seemed to have planned from
the very beginning, even before they left Europe, to
settle in the American west. They had ingested a
great deal of writings stemming from the last half of
the 18th century, mainly by French writers, writings
which extolled the American west which was then the
Ohio Valley, the edge of American civilization, as a
kind of new Garden of Eden. The picture of it
projected in these pages was the image which we sort
of have of the south sea islands today. Life here was
effortless. The grounds, the lands were so fertile, the
vegetation was so lush that you just reached up and
plucked fruits off of trees to live. The Indian was the
noble savage of nature. He was the innocent child of
nature, the noble savage.
JJCA 0649
The Blennerhassetts swallowed all this baloney; and
they came here believing life would be like that.
Actually life on the frontier was very harsh and they
found that out to their dismay. They never became
accustomed to certain American social values -- for
example, in America you could have a great family
name but each generation of that family, that great
family, has to prove itself anew. In Europe if you had
a noble name or an ancient name, you could rest on
your family's laurels. And they never really
understood that. Their old European values, their old
world values clashed with the realities of the
American frontier.
Q: What were those realities?
JJCA 0720
RS: The harsh realities of the frontier which the
Blennerhassetts had to become accustomed to and
accept eventually ...
WEST VIRGINIA
SOUND ROLL 32, JUNE 4, 1992
SWICK INTERVIEW, TAKE 3
RS: There's some descendants here and they're still sensitive about that. Can you believe that after 200 years?
Q: Yes, I can believe it. Let's get back to the
harsh realities of life in the Ohio river valley.
JJCA 0761
RS: Someone asked a famous historian, writer once
and I don't know if were Corva? Doll? or one of the
English historians. They asked him. It was Trevor
Roper. Someone asked Trevor Roper the famous
historian once what century you would like to live in
if you had a choice. He said, he replied, "Any century
as long as I had money." Because without money
even in the 18th century when certain aspects of
western civilization were obtaining their peak of
conversation and cooking and manners, etc., some of
the social aspects, without money you were lost. The
Blennerhassetts were wealthy by frontier standards,
and yet that wealth was not a sufficient buffer from
the realities of disease. There were epidemics that
swept through the Ohio Valley that devastated whole
families.
JJCA 0859
One of the Blennerhassetts chiefest friends, their
dearest friends in this area were Mr. and Mrs. Aaron
Waldo Putnam, he was the grandson of General Israel
Putnam of Revolutionary War fame. She was a very
charming woman. Mrs. Blennerhassett, according to
the historian, Dr. Samuel B. Heldreth, loved Mrs.
Putnam with the fervor of a sister. They died within a
day of each other in a terrible epidemic that swept
through the valley in 1823. Earlier in the 1790's the
early 1790's before the Blennerhassetts came here to
the Ohio Valley there were families wiped out by
disease. Some of them lost their entire children. This
went on, up until the 19th century until after the Civil
War.
JJCA 0930
The weather was very harsh; there were times when
the Ohio river froze over and the streams froze and
the grist mills would not turn for lack of water.
People froze to death and they starved to death. They
couldn't get around by horseback because the ice in
the creeks and rivers hoved up into big blocks and
they were just like walls.
Q: Tell me about the isolation. ? ?
RS: There were no roads through the frontier Ohio
valley in the 1790's as we know roads now.
JJCA 0995
For people to get around in any speed, comfort or
safety had to go by the larger rivers. The greatest of
these 'liquid' highways was the Ohio river. It's why
Pittsburgh was called the gateway to the American
west because this is generally how you entered the
upper regions of the Ohio river. The Blennerhassetts
living here on this island were situated as though you
and I lived between two California freeways today
because there were hundreds of boats going up and
down the Ohio every year and sometimes thousands.
Blennerhassett operated a store here on the island for
this river trade. This was their only contact with the
outside world and even with this constant stream of
outsiders going up and down, they were isolated and
it took months for news, national news, to reach the
area.
Q: There was a stark contrast between the
Blennerhassetts and the people that lived in Wood
County and the Ohio Valley? How did they get along
with the natives around here?
JJCA 1092
RS: There were natives, and then there were natives.
The Blennerhassetts lived on an island, and they lived
between two worlds. Northwest of the Ohio in this
area of the island it was the world of the Yankee, the
New England settlement, the New Englanders from
chiefly Connecticut, Massachusetts, some from Rhode
Island, who had come here in 1788 and settled
Marietta and then Belpre, Ohio, the following year.
They brought their old ordered Yankee or New
England way of life with them. They brought their
churches and their schools. On the south side, or east
side of the river, you had the domain of Virginia,
where settlers drifted in.
JJCA 1162
You had a mixture of socio-economic patterns. You
had the backwoodsman, who lived in a log cabin or
lean to, who was a squatter, who had a few acres of
corn and survived by his rifle, by what game he could
kill, and you had the old planters who moved over
here with their slaves and their sideboards and their
silver from the Tidewater and lived here in Wood
Country on plantations which has particular names
just like east of the mountains. They were called
'Tuckahoes' or Virginians. Just like the New
Englanders had the nickname Yankees. So
Blennerhassett were caught between these two worlds,
and he leaned toward the New England settlements
because there was a degree of education and culture,
a high caliber of culture which was unusual on the
frontier at that time.
JJCA 1242
That was undoubtedly a deciding factor why he
decided to live here in the Ohio valley. You had very
cultured people, Virginians, on this side of the river
with whom he associated. And you had the other
type, the lower type, who hated him and who looted
his mansion when the Blennerhassetts were forced to
flee down river.
Q: Let me ask you about that. I don't want to
jump ahead too much, but they did, they come in and
destroyed the mansion. Why did they do it? Who led
that? What do you think really started it?
JJCA 1297
RS: Blennerhassett Island was invaded by a group of
soldiers in December 1806. They had been called the
Wood County militia, and yet they had no official
authorization to do what they did, so they were
actually a vigilante group. They were frightened that
treason was being committed on this island, on
Blennerhassett Island. What set them off was a
proclamation issued in November, 1806 by Thomas
Jefferson, president of the United States, calling for
the arrest of Burr and Blennerhassett on the charge of
treason. Jefferson was convinced that the military
force which Burr had come west in 1805 and
organized in that year and the following year in 1806,
was to be led against the United States to separate the
American west politically from the rest of the country.
Most historians no longer believe that charge of
treason by Jefferson. They think that Burr was
forming a filibuster against the Spanish-held Texas,
which was then in northern Mexico and was not
American Territory. But in any case, the people, the
public, believed Thomas Jefferson and not what
Aaron Burr was saying.
JJCA 1409
So the patriotic citizens of Wood County decided to
invade the island. When they did they discovered
Blennerhassett and Burr's men had fled downriver
under the cover of darkness at midnight on December
11, 1806, and they got away. The captured Mrs.
Blennerhassett and her two small children and her
servants and held them all prisoners here in the
mansion. They very quickly broke into
Blennerhassett's wine cellar and got drunk and this
was a very dangerous situation because of the
combination of booze and guns was as lethal in 1806
as it is in 1992. Plus, you add the factor that the
commander of the soldiers who was a very upright
person, Colonel Phelps, had left them almost
immediately with part of his men to gallop overland
to try to capture, intercept Blennerhassett and Burr's
fleeing soldiers, who were going by boat down the
Ohio.
JJCA 1493
So, the soldiers here who remained on the island were
effectively without leadership. They got drunk and
one of them shot his rifle through the hall ceiling here
in the mansion and nearly struck Mrs. Blennerhassett,
who was seated upstairs in her bedroom with her two
small sons. It must have seemed like a scene from the
French Revolution unfolding before her eyes, with her
as the principal victim.
Q: Why do you think Burr was attracted to the
Island?
JJCA 1535
RS: Burr was attracted to the island because he came
west in the spring of 1805 needing two things very
badly to make his enterprise, his military expedition
into the southwest a success: (1) Burr needed a base
of operations and (2) he needed a wealthy financial
backer. And he found both of them here on this
island.
SWICK INTERVIEW, TAKE FOUR, CAMERA ROLL 157, SOUND 32
Q: ?? Burr
JJCA 1584
RS: Burr came to Blennerhassett Island for two
reasons: number one when he entered the west in the
spring of 1805 he needed two things to make his
military operation, his planned expedition into the
southwest a success: number one, Burr needed a base
of operations and number two, he needed a financial
backer and he found both of them on this island.
Blennerhassetts were discontented with their life here
by late 1805 because Blennerhassett had made the
horrifying discovery that he had spent too much of his
capital in setting up the estate here, not leaving
enough to live off of. He did have business
investments which brought in a profit, but not
sufficient profits to support their extravagant lifestyle,
which they enjoyed. So, they decided reluctantly to
sell the Island and move south and become planters in
the south, where there were men making fortunes
practically overnight growing principally cotton.
Q: ? ?
JJCA 1683
RS: No, the Blennerhassett mansion has generally
been regarded as being the largest private residence
and the most beautiful private residence at that time.
By that time, I mean from the period from 1790 to
1810 in the Ohio valley. There was only one possible
rival to the house, and that was a home in
Steubenville which was built by Besalle? Wells, the
founder of Steubenville and home estate was called
'The Grove'. ...
WEST VIRGINIA ROLL 33, JUNE 4,
1992,
SWICK INTERVIEW, TAKE 5,
JJCB 0026
RS: Local people had never seen anything like the Blennerhassett mansion after it was completed and the Blennerhassetts moved into it in September, 1800. Travelers going down the river by boat could hardly believe their eyes because here in the middle of this raw wilderness where log cabins dominate, with dirt floors and scraped animal skins and little window glass, was an European estate. The Blennerhassetts brought furniture from England; they went on a shopping spree in London before they set sail for America. They brought additional furniture in Baltimore and Philadelphia and had it shipped across the mountains. Floors were covered by oriental rugs. The rooms were lighted by alabaster lamps, which were suspended from the ceilings by silver chains. The fireplaces made out of dark, polished marble. On the mantel pieces were clocks chiming that were made out of gold and marble and the walls were covered by oil paintings, so it was a little oasis of luxury and culture here at the edge of American civilization.
Q: How would you describe Harman
Blennerhassett? What kind of guy was he?
JJCA 0133
RS: Harman Blennerhassett was the product of a very
ancient family. The novelist Raymond Chandler who
had connections, family connections in County Kerry,
wrote that the Blennerhassetts were of such ancient
and distinguished lineage that they made earls and
marquises look parvo and that's how he saw himself,
as a member of a great family. He was very
aristocratic. He had practiced briefly as a lawyer
after his father died before he came to America, but
then abandoned that when he came here to the island
and lived as a gentleman. Off of his independent
income, he pursued his hobbies of science and
chemistry, medicine and music.
Q: Was he intelligent?
JJCB 0210
RS: He was very intelligent. He was very
handicapped in the eyes of his neighbors because even
though he was tall for the time, he was six feet tall in
an age in the 18th century when the average
American male stood five feet, five inches, he was tall
but he would probably be legally blind by standards
in the late 20th century. When he read a book his
nose had to rub the page. When he went out hunting,
his wife or servant went with him, pointed the gun
and told him when to fire and the gun would go off
and frequently the game too, as one early writer said.
He was a fish out of water here because by frontier
standards he didn't adapt very well. Some of his
neighbors were offended by his aristocratic airs and
jealous of his wealth.
Q: What about Margaret ? ?
JJCB 0293
RS: Margaret was a different case altogether.
Margaret had all the impact when she settled here on
this island. When local society would say -- Mrs.
Asterwood -- she had settled here in the 1880's or if
Madonna would come here to live in 1992 -- and I
threw in Madonna because when she, Margaret, was
on horseback and her scarlet riding habit with its gold
buttons and her long, white gloves, and her hat with
ostrich plumes it, she was a figure of such romance
and elegance and so exotic, that the men in the area
just simply lost their heads. She introduced some
little customs, European customs, which back in
England and Ireland in upper class circles were
considered very refined and very cultivated, but
which were misunderstood here on the frontier.
JJCB 0375
For example, when she was growing up in England in
the 1770's and the 1780's, young ladies of her status
and station in society were taught to fake a lisp, to
talk baby talk to initially their father's friends and
their brothers' friends and later on their husband's men
friends. This was considered refined. She, Margaret,
introduced this habit here, so you can imagine how it
stirred up the local housewives. When they would
come over here to a party and hear Margaret lisping
to their husbands, how -- things like that.
Q: On that note, what's the ? ? a lot of people
just think it's an aberration? and doesn't fit in, why is
it significant to West Virginia's history?
JJCB 0452
RS: Blennerhassett was typical of a number of settlers
who came west, to settle in western Virginia to go
across the mountains. The early settlers are often
seen by writers as a stereotype, wearing coonskin caps
like Daniel Boone. He never wore a coonskin cap; he
were a dark felt cap or hat. Blennerhassett was just
the pinnacle of this type of settler. There were
educated men, cultivated men who came to western
Virginia to live, men of wealth, men of
refinement.
JJCB 0522
Blennerhassett is seen as a figure of romance, chiefly
through the eyes of Victorian historians. There has
been -- how do I say this without sounding conceited
-- little research done on Blennerhassett from the time
of his first two historians, Dr. Heldreth of Marietta
and William H. Safford of Parkersburg and later of
Chillicothe, Ohio. After that nothing was done on
him, and they were both Victorians. They had the
flaws of Victorian historians. He was very important,
not because of his flashy and glittery role with Aaron
Burr in the so-called conspiracy, the Burr Conspiracy,
and not because of the glamorous home that he built
here through its sheer glamour, but because he really
set this section of the Ohio valley on its feet
economically and this extended into the counties here
in western Virginia.
JJCB 0618
He brought his fortune from Europe; he invested in
the fur trade; he invested in the cattle industry; he had
the first recorded cattle drive from this section of the
Ohio valley, from the Ohio valley period across the
mountains to the east coast. He invested in the
shipbuilding industry in Marietta, which took in the
western fringe of Virginia here. He had a chain of
general stores, several of which were located here in
Wood county that stretched through a large section of
the Ohio Valley. So he was a very important
entrepreneur and businessman, and this aspect of his
life, which is really the most important, had hardly
ever been explored. The building of the
Blennerhassett mansion had the same effect on the
local economy as the establishment of an industrial
plant would here today. It gave so many people jobs,
it loosened so much money, cash, into the local
economy.
Q: So then that helped stir up things and then
after that, industry started to take place in
Parkersburg. Wasn't that the ?? of trade and
everything?
JJCB 0732
RS: Yes, that's true. He started the interest in this; he
started it here in Wood County; he started it here in
Parkersburg; he started down at Belleview where
there was a mini-ship industry building going
on.
Q: Let's talk about Alexander Wilson and ? ?
Tell me about what he saw and what he said?
JJCB 0775
RS: Alexander Wilson was a Scottish ornithologist
who came down the river in 1810 and left a very
interesting travel journal behind him. He was
astounded by the great Creek Mound, which is one of
the largest conical pre-historical Indian burial mounds
in the United States. He tried to interest the owner,
Mr. Joseph Tomlinson, or Tumblestone, as Wilson
gave an alternative spelling for the name, in
excavating the mound, an Mr. Tomlinson was not all
impressed by Wilson's arguments. Wilson said that
he would not [he, Mr. Tomlinson] was so a thrifty a
farmer that he would not expend three cents to see the
whole of the mound sifted before his face. I think
that's a pretty classic line.
Q: Tell me ? ? we'll gonna get into ? ?
moun
RS: You want me to tell you about ??
SWICK, TAKE 6
JJCB 0894
RS: In frontier times, river life and the people who
lived on the river, for example here in Wood County
and across the river in Ohio, had a different kind of
existence than the people who lived in the remote
mountain areas. There was more contact with outside
life. There was this constant commerce, travel going
by. Many of the local farmers had sons, who had part
of their growing process when they were in their
teens, would take a flat boatload of produce down to
New Orleans, and it was their first peak at the outside
world. People lived in the mountains got more and
more isolated, thus did the dialect that's spoken in the
Appalachia now is almost pure Elizabethan because it
was never corrupted by outside influences. During
Civil War some of the Union soldiers got into areas of
West Virginia where they wrote that the local people
had never seen an American flag before. They were
that isolated.
WEST VIRGINIA, JUNE 4, 1992
SWICK INTERVIEW, SOUND ROLL 34, TAKE 7,
CAMERA ROLL 159
Q: How did Jackson connect and get established
between Clarksburg and Parkersburg?
JJCB 1019
RS: John George Jackson was a congressman and
probably the most important political figure
nationally speaking in western Virginia in the first
two decades of the 19th century. He was also very
prominent and very important in the Clarksburg area
in business and industrial development. He courted
around the year 1799 a young lady who lived in
Clarksburg. The young lady's name was Frances
Amelia Triplett. She belonged to a very prominent
Virginia family; her brother was the first county
surveyor of Wood County; the Tripletts more or less
made the surveyorship of Wood County a dynasty,
and there was nothing but Tripletts in the office until
the 1940's, when the last one didn't have a son so
there weren't any more Triplett surveyors. In any
case, she lived with another brother, Frances Amelia
lived with another brother in Clarksburg named
Hedgeman Triplett.
JJCB 1123
She met the congressmen and evidently she started
courting her after a fashion because she got in the
family way and then refused to marry her because he
had a chance to marry Dolly Madison's sister, Mary
Payne. John George Jackson was a friend of James
Madison; he admired him tremendously. He admired
Dolly Madison, whom he nicknamed Dora; they were
close friends. I think he genuinely loved her sister,
Mary Payne. So he threw over Frances Amelia
Triplett. She was a Triplett; she didn't take such
actions lightly so she sued him for breach of promise,
and she won. She had her child who was a boy, and
then she departed for Kentucky. She was the owner
of thousands of acres in Kentucky as an heiress of her
father, Colonel Francis Triplett who patented
thousands and thousands and thousands of acres in
western Virginia and Kentucky before his death in the
early 1790's.
JJCB 1225
Evidently she left her child back here in Virginia. I
don't know who raised him; I don't think anyone
knows who raised him. John George Jackson went
ahead and married Mary Payne. As far as we know,
they were very happy. They had a number of
children, all of whom except for one daughter, died of
childhood illnesses of the time. Then Mary Payne
Jackson took ill and died of consumption, which was
the old name for tuberculosis, and she is buried in
Clarksburg. John George Jackson married a second
time; his second wife was equally socially prominent
as his first. His second wife was Mary Maggs, whose
father, Jonathan Maggs, was one of the most
prominent men in Ohio politics and political life.
JJCB 1303
Return Jonathan Maggs who was a member of the
Ohio Supreme Court; he was governor of Ohio, and
then became Postmaster General of the United States
and served longer in that office than any other man
until Mr. Farley, who was Postmaster General under
F.D.R. Mary Maggs Jackson heard of her husband's
early liaison with Frances Amelia Triplett, and she
made him go get the boy, give him his name, and
educate him. He was eventually sent to West Point;
he not only had his father's brilliance, but he had the
brilliance of the Tripletts. Clarksburg historian,
Dorothy Davis, told me that it was this infusion of the
Triplett blood that led the success and the outstanding
prominence of the Jacksons in Parkersburg in the
19th century because they were the family of
Parkersburg, the outstanding family. They became
federal judges. One of them became governor of
West Virginia, Jacob Beeson Jackson, in the
1880's.
Q: Were the Jacksons union sympathizers in
Parkersburg?
JJCB 1424
RS: Jacksons were very much union sympathizers in
Parkersburg.
Q: Didn't they go to Wheeling to the
convention?
RS: They went to Wheeling and one of the Jacksons
was in Richmond at the time when the war broke out.
I believe it was John Jay Jackson and had a little
difficulty getting back home. But they were very
prominent in keeping this section of Virginia in the
union cause.
Q: Do you think this section of Virginia,
Parkersburg, was very much union because of the
commerce and the investorism that was starting to get
going here -- such as Wheeling?
JJCB 1484
RS: That is a very difficult question to ask or to
answer -- why was this section of western Virginia pro
unionist? I think the geography had as much as do
with it as anything. I think the fact that this section of
Ohio -- I'm sorry, Virginia ... I think that this section
of western Virginia, being so close to Ohio, and being
so close to the Yankee settlements across the river
where there were so many abolitionists eager to help
the slaves escape, was responsible for the low slave
population, especially as we got closer and closer to
the Civil War.
JJCB 1552
You can look at the census records of Wood County
and you have a considerable slave population, in the
hundreds, here starting in 1800, around 1810. Then
with every succeeding census, the number of blacks
gets fewer and fewer until you have very few by the
time the Civil War broke out because the planters
here in Wood County just couldn't hold them.
Freedom was across the river, and there were
abolitionists with a New England background who
would help them and did help them escape.
Q: How did that contribute to the beginning of
the Sumner School?
JJCB 1608
RS: Sumner school is an outgrowth of the
establishment by Robert Simmons, who was a
mulatto, who settled in Parkersburg and became a
barber, of his efforts. The black population of
Parkersburg and Wood County was always special.
...
WEST VIRGINIA, ROLL 35, JUNE 4,
1992
SWICK INTERVIEW, TAKE 8, ROLL 160,
SOUND 35
JJCB 1660
RS: The white settlers who came to the frontier in
this section of the Ohio valley in 1780's and 90's and
early 19th century had an unusually high caliber of
culture and education. This is both sides of the river,
not only the Yankee settlers north of the river but here
the Virginia territory had planters from the tidewater
who were equally culture. I think, I don't know, I
think this rubbed off on this side of the river in
Virginia on the slaves, because the back black
population had a degree of education and culture and
interest in these matters that was certainly unusual in
the south. It's reflected in the fact that the first free
grammar school for blacks in the south, south of the
Mason Dixon Line, was started here in Parkersburg in
1862. This was followed by the first Sabbath school
in the south for blacks being established here in
Parkersburg a year later.
JJCB 1772
This continued on in the 19th century. The blacks
here, if you look in the old newspaper accounts, had
coming out parties for their young ladies; they had
literary societies, and as I said a degree of culture and
educational sophistication that was unusual in
Virginia and most parts of the south.
Q: ? ? civil war ? were largely domestics and
service jobs, right.
JJCB 1813
RS: Yes, the culture that the blacks had was not
paralleled by any economic advance. They still had
their traditional jobs of blacks. They were barbers,
they were domestics, they were laborers, but the
school that was established here during the Civil War
thrived and became Sumner school and was an
outstanding school of its type for blacks in West
Virginia and in the south.
Q: ??? Robert Simmons and how he was very
prominent.
RS: Robert Simmons was really the leader of the
black community in Wood County, and he was very
important politically. He was offered the position of
Consul to Tahiti by President Grant, and he turned it
down. So he wouldn't have had such a offer if he
couldn't swing the votes for the Republican party. He
was a barber, and his obituary was published when he
died in the 1890's so all of Parkersburg mourned
him.
JJCB 1921
So he was a remarkable man for his values at the
time. He came from Virginia, and one of his
descendants told me that it was rumored that he was a
son of the master. In other words, the white
plantation owner was his father. This is family
tradition among his descendants, and has a chance of
being true.
SWICK INTERVIEW, TAKE 9.
JJCB 1996
RS: Margaret Blennerhassett certainly was not
typical of the frontier woman's status in life in the first
decades of the 19th century here in this section of the
Ohio valley in western Virginia. Margaret
Blennerhassett has come down as a very romantic,
perhaps over-romanticized, glamorous figure, more
typical of her sisters -- and I say sisters meaning her
gender -- of the time their existence was Mrs. Peter
Nicewonger? Her husband was a backwoodsman.
They were both Virginians. He was of German
descent. When the Irish traveler, Forthascoot?
Cumming? was going down the Ohio in 1807, he
stopped at the Nicewonger home for the night, and it
was about 40 miles below Blennerhassett Island and
was grudgingly allowed to spend the night. They had
supper. During supper Mrs. Nicewonger stood
behind her husband's chair and served him and Mr.
Forthascoot Cumming.
JJCB 2064
Many women had very degraded lives; they were the
work horses; they were the glue, though, that kept
society together, even though this period of their
history in the Ohio valley and western Virginia and
West Virginia there's little known, very little research.
They are, as the former librarian of congress, Daniel
Borstein? has said, "Women are the forgotten men of
history."
ROOM TUNE FOR DR. SWICK'S
INTERVIEW
JJCB 2121