Hampshire County History
Hampshire County was created by the Virginia General Assembly on December 13, 1753 from parts of Frederick and
Augusta counties (Virginia) and is the oldest county in the state.
Although its creation was authorized in 1753, it was not actually organized until 1757 because the area was not
considered safe due to the outbreak of the French and Indian War (1754-1763). According to Samuel Kercheval's A
History of the Valley of Virginia (Strasburg, VA: Shenandoah Publishing House, 1925), the county was named in honor
of several prize hogs. The story goes that Lord Fairfax, who owned the Royal Grant to the area, came upon some
very large hogs in Winchester and asked where they had been raised. He was told that they were from the South Branch
of the Potomac Valley (now Hampshire County). He remarked that when a county was formed west of Frederick that
he would name it in honor of Hampshire County, England, famous for its very fat hogs.
The First Settlers
The first native settlers in West Virginia's Potomac Highlands (Grant, Hampshire, Hardy, Mineral, Pendleton, Pocahontas,
Randolph, and Tucker counties) were the Mound Builders, also known as the Adena people. Remnants of the Mound Builder's
civilization have been found throughout West Virginia, with many artifacts found in the Northern Panhandle, especially
in Marshall County.
A more thorough presentation of the first native settlers in West Virginia can be read on-line here.
The following is a brief overview of that history:
• Several thousand Hurons occupied present-day West Virginia during the late 1500s and early 1600s.
• During the 1600s, the Iroquois Confederacy (then consisting of the Mohawk, Onondaga, Cayuga, Oneida, and Seneca
tribes) drove the Hurons from the state and used it primarily as a hunting ground.
• During the early 1700s, the Shawnee, Mingo, Delaware, and other Indian tribes also used present-day West Virginia
as a hunting ground. West Virginia's Potomac Highlands was inhabited by the Tuscarora. They eventually migrated
northward to New York and, in 1712, became the sixth nation to formally be admitted to the Iroquois Confederacy.
The Cherokee Nation claimed southern West Virginia.
• In 1744, Virginia officials purchased the Iroquois title of ownership to West Virginia in the Treaty of Lancaster.
• The Delaware, Mingo, and Shawnee sided with the French during the French and Indian War (1755-1763). The Iroquois
Confederacy officially remained neutral, but many in the Iroquois Confederacy allied with the French.
• When the French and Indian War was over, England's King George III feared that more tension between Native Americans
and settlers was inevitable. In an attempt to avert further bloodshed, he issued the Proclamation of 1763, prohibiting
settlement west of the Allegheny Mountains. The Proclamation was, for the most part, ignored.
• During the summer of 1763, Ottawa Chief Pontiac led raids on key British forts in the Great Lakes region. Shawnee
Chief Keigh-tugh-qua, also known as Cornstalk, led similar raids on western Virginia settlements. The uprisings
ended on August 6, 1763 when British forces, under the command of Colonel Henry Bouquet, defeated Delaware and
Shawnee forces at Bushy Run in western Pennsylvania.
• In 1768, the Iroquois Confederacy (often called the Six Nations) and the Cherokee signed the Treaty of Hard Labour
and the Treaty of Fort Stanwix, relinquishing their claims on the territory between the Ohio River and the Alleghenies
to the British.
• In April 1774, the Yellow Creek Massacre took place near Wheeling. Among the dead were Mingo Chief Logan's brother
and pregnant sister. Violence then escalated intoLord Dunmore's War.
• On October 10, 1774, Colonel Andrew Lewis and approximately 800 men defeated 1,200 Indian warriors led by Shawnee
Chief Cornstalk at the Battle of Point Pleasant, ending Lord Dunmore's War.
• The Mingo and Shawnee allied with the British during the American Revolutionary War (1776-1783). One of the more
notable battles occurred in 1777 when a war party of 350 Wyandot, Shawnee, and Mingo warriors, armed by the British,
attacked Fort Henry, near present-day Wheeling. Nearly half of the Americans manning the fort were killed in the
three-day assault. Following the war, the Mingo and Shawnee, once again allied with the losing side, returned to
their homes in Ohio. As the number of settlers in the region grew, both the Mingo and the Shawnee move further
inland, leaving western Virginia to the white settlers.
Hampshire County's European Pioneers and Settlers
During the early 1700s, several fur traders and explorers were known to have traveled through Hampshire County,
but their names were not recorded. By 1735, six families had settled in the Springfield area, including the families
of James Howard, John and James Walker, Jonathan Coburn, James Rutledge and a Mr. Forman (possibly William).
In 1738, John Pearsall (or Pearsoll) and his brother Job built cabins near present-day Romney. It was reported
that Job paid Lord Fairfax five shillings for his 323-acre homestead. Initially, their settlement was known as
Pearsall's Flats. Within a few years, they were joined by the following seven families: Blue, Good, Hunter, Johnson,
Kuykendall, Parker, and Rodgers. By 1748, nearly 200 people lived near Pearsall's Flats.
At that time, Lord Fairfax realized that he had an opportunity to earn income by laying off his land in the area
into lots and requiring those residing there to pay him for the land or to pay rent. In 1748, Lord Fairfax sent
a surveying party, led by James Genn and including 16 year-old George Washington, to survey his lands along the
Potomac and South Branch Rivers. Washington spent three summers and falls surveying Lord Fairfax's estate, including
present-day Hampshire County. Washington's diary indicated that he was in present-day Romney on October 19, 1749.
Oral traditions claimed that Washington laid present-day Romney out into lots at that time, but written records
credit James Genn for surveying and laying out the town.
Important Events in Hampshire County during the 1700s and 1800s
Because he was a British citizen, all of Lord Fairfax's land holdings were confiscated by the state of Virginia
at the close of the American Revolutionary War (1776-1783). The state then auctioned off the land. Between 1788
and 1810, a total of 1,986 land entries were recorded in Hampshire County. As settlers continued to enter the county,
the state decided to build a state road from Winchester to Romney, passing by Capon Bridge and Hanging Rocks. The
road's construction was a boom to local economic development as several stage lines began operations, providing
settlers more ready access to eastern markets. In 1796, a post office, headed by John Jack, opened in Romney.
The opening of the Northwestern Turnpike, a toll road connecting Winchester, Romney, Moorefield, Beverly, Kingwood,
Pruntytown, Clarksburg, and Parkersburg, was a major event in Hampshire County. The Turnpike reached Romney in
1830, and Parkersburg in 1838. It assisted in the promoting the area's economy, and significantly reduced the area's
isolation from the eastern seaboard. By 1845, daily stage and mail service was established between Winchester and
Parkersburg. Romney was a popular rest stop along the Turnpike, and a number of inns and taverns were built in
the town to accommodate the many travels passing through the area.
Hampshire County's residents generally sided with the South during the Civil War. On May 18, 1861, the Hampshire
Guards and Frontier Riflemen left Romney to join other Virginia regiments forming at Harpers Ferry. During the
course of the war, Hampshire County raised thirteen Confederate companies and only one for the Union. Following
the war's conclusion, on Sept. 26, 1867, Hampshire County dedicated what is perhaps the first Confederate Memorial
in the United States. It still stands in Romney's Indian Mound Cemetery.
Although there were no major battles fought in Hampshire County, Romney changed hands at least 56 times during
the war. This places Romney second behind only Winchester, Virginia as the town that changed hands the most during
the Civil War. On June 11, 1861, Romney changed hands twice in the same day. Some historians speculate that Romney
actually changed hands more than Winchester, Virginia, but there are no surviving records to support the claim.
In the late 1860s and early 1870s, Professor Howard H. Johnson of Franklin, Virginia (later Pendleton County, West
Virginia), a blind teacher, was instrumental in bringing a school for the deaf and blind to Romney. Johnson had
attended a school for the deaf and blind at Staunton, Virginia and recognized the need for a school in West Virginia.
Beginning in the late 1860s, he lobbied the state legislature to provide funding for the project. On March 3, 1870,
Johnson's dreams became reality when the West Virginia State Legislature appropriated $8,000 for the creation of
a school for the deaf and blind in the state. Several towns, including Romney, Clarksburg, and Parkersburg, lobbied
to have the school located there, but Romney was chosen when it offered the buildings and grounds of the Romney
Literary Society. The school opened on September 29, 1870 with thirty students, twenty-five of them deaf and five
of them blind. Currently, the main campus consists of 16 major buildings on 79 acres of land.
The Hampshire County Seat
The first Hampshire County court meeting took place on June 11, 1755 in a private home located about five miles
north of present-day Romney. Thomas Byran Martin, a nephew of Lord Fairfax, presided at the meeting. There are
no records of the court's meetings from 1755 and 1757, presumably because most of the county's residents fled the
county during the French and Indian War.
In 1762, Lord Fairfax sent a survey party to Romney to formally lay out a new town, then known as Pearsall's Flats,
into 100, half-acre lots. He then renamed the town Romney, in honor of a port city on the English Channel. The
Virginia General Assembly formally recognized the town's formation on December 23, 1762. Some confusion ensued
for several decades concerning the ownership of land within the town as counterclaims were made by the original
settlers and those who purchased lots laid out by Lord Fairfax's surveyors.
Apparently, the town did not have a formal town government until December 4, 1789. At that time, the General Assembly
passed an act providing Romney a board of trustees comprised of: Isaac Parsons, Isaac Millar, Andrew Woodrow, Stephen
Colven, Jonathan Purcell, Nicholas Casey, William McGuire, Purez Drew, and James Murphy. The 1810 federal Census
indicated that Romney had 295 residents. The 1850 federal Census revealed that the town's population had gown slowly
over the years, reaching 456 people.
The county's first courthouse was constructed in Romney in 1833, and replaced in 1922.
Romney claims to be the oldest town in West Virginia. Both Shepherdstown (in Jefferson County, and then known
as Mecklenburg) and Romney were chartered by the Virginia General Assembly on December 23, 1762. However, Romney
claims that it is the oldest town in the state because its incorporation was listed before Shepherdstown's in the
Virginia Statutes at Large and its earliest settlers arrived in 1725 while Shepherdstown's earliest settlers did
not arrive until 1727. However, given the paucity of written records in the era, it is difficult to substantiate
the claim that Romney's earliest settlers arrived before Shepherdstown's earliest settlers, and both towns continue
to claim the title of oldest town in the state.
References
Branch, Shelden W. 1976. Historic Hampshire. Parsons, WV: McClain Printing Company.
Maxwell, Hu and H.L. Swisher. 1897. History of Hampshire, West Virginia. Morgantown: A. Brown Boughner Printing.
West Virginia Schools for the Deaf and the Blind. 2000. "In-Depth History: 1870 – 2000." Romney, WV:
West Virginia Schools for the Deaf and the Blind.
Accessed on-line at: http://wvsdb.state.k12.wv.us/in-depth_wvsd&b_history.htm.
Author
Dr. Robert Jay Dilger, Director, Institute for Public Affairs and Professor of Political Science, West Virginia
University.
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