Roane County History
Roane County was created by an act of the Virginia General Assembly on March 11, 1856 from parts of Gilmer,
Jackson and Kanawha counties. It was named in honor of Judge Spencer Roane (1762-1822).
Spencer Roane was born in Essex County, Virginia on April 4, 1762. In 1777, he began studies at William and Mary
College and later studied the law. After establishing his law practice he entered the Virginia House of Delegates,
and, in 1784, became a member of the council of state. He soon resigned that office and resumed the practice of
law, and was elected to the state legislature again. In 1789, he was appointed a judge of the Virginia general
court and, in 1794, a judge of the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals. He served in that office until his death
in 1822. He was widely considered one of the most able jurists in the state and nation, often writing political
commentaries for the state's leading newspapers. In 1819, he served on the commission that helped to establish
the University of Virginia. A life-long advocate of state's rights, he died on September 4, 1822. His wife, Anne,
was the daughter of Patrick Henry, his son, William H. Roane, served in the United States Senate, and his nephew,
Thomas Ritchie, was one of the nation's leading publishers and Ritchie County's namesake.
Local folklore indicates that the county was named for Judge Roane because of an act of kindness. According to
the story, when he was a young boy John P. Thomasson's wagon became stuck in the mud. Judge Roane helped him free
the wagon. Thomasson never forgot the kindness and decades later, when petitioning to form the new county before
the Virginia General Assembly, he recommended that the county be named in Judge Roane's honor.
The First Settlers
The first native settlers in central West Virginia (Braxton, Calhoun, Clay, Gilmer, Lewis, Nicholas, Roane, Upshur,
and Webster counties) were the Mound Builders, also known as the Adena people. Remnants of their civilization have
been found throughout northern 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.
Roane County's European Pioneers and Settlers
Jesse Hughes, of present-day Lewis County, is credited as the first Englishman to set foot in present-day Roane
County. In 1772, he led a small party, including William Lowther and Elias Hughes, into the Little Kanawha Valley
and is believed to have passed through the county. He told many of his relatives that the area would make a fine
home. Several of his and his wife, Grace (Tanner) Hughes, relatives and children became Roane County's earliest
settlers.
In 1812, Samuel Tanner and his wife, Sudna Carpenter Tanner, became Roane County's first settlers when they constructed
a rudimentary shelter inside a cave in present-day Spencer. The following year, they built a log cabin. In 1814,
several of their relatives moved to the Spring Creek area, just a few miles south of the Tanner homestead. Four
of these families last names were recorded: Tanner, Carpenter, Miller and Runnion. John Greathouse, Samuel Tanner's
cousin, arrived the following year. In 1816, the Spring Creek area became known as Tanner's Cross Roads because
two paths bisected the area.
Around 1816, several families moved to the Reedy area, then known as Three Forks. By 1823, the following pioneers
and their families resided in the Reedy area: Patrick Board, Robert Blosser, a Mr. Cain, a Mr. Roach, David and
Thomas Seaman, and Charles Stewart.
Important Events in Roane County during the 1800s
In 1853, the Gilmer (or Glenville), Ripley, and Ohio Turnpike opened between New California (Spencer) and Ripley.
The construction of wagon roads played an important role in opening up the county for economic development and
settlement.
Most of Roane County's residents sided with the Confederacy during the Civil War. Peregrine Hays, former sheriff
of Gilmer and Calhoun counties, led the "Moccasin Rangers," a band of para-military soldiers for the
Confederacy, in a series of raids against Union forces in the Roane County area throughout the war. Earlier, he
played an important role in Roane County's formation.
In 1893, Spencer State Hospital, the state's second hospital for the care of the insane, opened for business in
Spencer and continued in operation until 1989. At the time of its construction, it was known as the longest continuous
brick building in the nation (it was one-quarter of a mile in length). The Hospital's 184 acres of land were purchased
from William R. Goff in 1888 for $9,200. The following year, Mr. Goff, using the proceeds from the land sale, and
several other investors formed the county's first bank, the Bank of Spencer.
The Roane County Seat
Albert Gallatin explored present-day Roane County in 1785 and subsequently claimed over 50,000 acres of land in
the area, including present-day Spencer. Indian hostilities and the lack of transportation in the area prevented
its development and Gallatin turned his attention to his farm in then-Fayette County and to politics. He later
rose to national prominence as Thomas Jefferson's Secretary of the Treasury and James Madison's Ambassador to France.
As mentioned earlier, Samuel Tanner and his wife, Sudna, were Spencer's first residents. They arrived in 1812,
along with a man named Jonathan Wolf(e), who lived with them. Their daughter, Elizabeth, was born that year, reportedly
while they still lived in the cave. Several years later, as more setters arrived, the area became known as Tanner's
Cross Road, and later as Cassville. In 1849, Raleigh (Rollo) Butcher, intending to go to California to search for
gold, arrived in Cassville and decided to stay, building a large frame house and opening a popular tavern. The
area became known as New California, because it was the place where Butcher stopped on his way west. Some local
residents resented the name, seeing it as a way of poking fun at Mr. Butcher and local residents. When the petition
to form a new county was being circulated, Henry Hughes, a prominent lawyer in the town, also circulated a petition
to change the town's name.
The first meeting of the Roane County court was held at the home of M. Benson Armstrong on April 7, 1856 in New
California. The county's eleven Justices of the Peace elected John W. Cain presiding Judge, and J. Marcellus McWhorter
county clerk. Later, Thomas Ferrell became the county's first sheriff. The county's voters then selected New California
over Robert Luney's Farm as the county seat. In 1858, the town was chartered by the Virginia General Assembly and
renamed Spencer, presumably in honor of Judge Spencer Roane, although some historians argue that it may have also
been named in honor one of the town's first school teachers, John S. Spencer. The town was incorporated on February
20, 1867.
References
Bishop, William, H. 1927. History of Roane County, West Virginia. Spencer, WV: Willaim H. Bishop.
Mylott, James P. 1984. A Measure of Prosperity: A History of Roane County. Charleston, WV: Mountain State
Press.
Sergent, Robert L., Editor. 1990. Roane County West Virginia Family History, 1989. Waynesville, N.C.: Walsworth
Publishing Company.
Author
Dr. Robert Jay Dilger, Director, Institute for Public Affairs and Professor of Political Science, West Virginia University.
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