Tags
Appalachia, Elk Creek, genealogy, history, James Christian, justice of the peace, Logan, Logan County Banner, West Virginia

James Christian, Logan County (WV) Banner, 2 July 1891
04 Saturday Jul 2015
Posted in Man
Tags
Appalachia, Elk Creek, genealogy, history, James Christian, justice of the peace, Logan, Logan County Banner, West Virginia

James Christian, Logan County (WV) Banner, 2 July 1891
03 Sunday May 2015
Posted in Civil War, Lincoln County Feud, Logan
22 Wednesday Apr 2015
Posted in Dingess
22 Wednesday Apr 2015
Posted in Hatfield-McCoy Feud
Tags
Appalachia, crime, detective, Frank Phillips, genealogy, history, Logan County Banner, Shang Ferrell, Tennessee, U.S. South, West Virginia, Will Bevins, William Cole

Source: Logan County (WV) Banner, 19 April 1894
15 Wednesday Apr 2015
Posted in Big Harts Creek, Warren
Tags
A.B. Lowe, Aracoma, Cabell County, Harts Creek, history, Huntington, Island Creek, Lincoln County, Logan County, Logan County Banner, mail, Mud Fork, post offices, Trace Fork, Twelve Pole Creek, Warren Post Office, Wayne, Wayne County, West Virginia
This brief editorial regarding Warren Post Office appeared in the 6 March 1890 issue of the Logan County Banner, printed in Logan, WV.
“Warren, in Lincoln county, from which all the people on Harts Creek and upper Twelve Pole receive their mail, is eighteen miles from this place, but it takes us a full week to get a letter from that place. A letter arriving to this place from Warren has to go by Brownstown, thence by the C. & O. Ry. to Huntington, thence by Wayne C.H., and thence to Warren, a distance of two hundred miles. The route from Wayne C.H. to Warren should be extended up Harts Creek and Twelve Pole and then down the Mud Fork of Island Creek to this place, with new offices at the Mouth of the Trace Fork of Harts Creek and at or near A.B. Lowe’s on Twelve Pole.”
14 Tuesday Apr 2015
Tags
Appalachia, Big Creek, Boone County, genealogy, Guyandotte River, history, Logan County, Logan County Banner, logging, North Fork, T.S. Godby & Co., timbering, Tolbert S. Godby, U.S. South, West Virginia, William J. Berry

Logan County Banner (Logan, WV), 16 July 1891
31 Tuesday Mar 2015
Tags
A.S. Wellman, Appalachia, Brit Wellman, Ceredo, Dingess, Elisha Wellman, genealogy, history, John Workman, Logan County Banner, logging, Mingo County, Pittsburg, preachers, saw mill, sawyer, Tillie McCloud, timbering, U.S. South, Vane Dingess, W.R. Ellis, Wayne County, Wellman mill, West Virginia, William Mullins
“Quongo Tandem,” a local correspondent at Dingess in present-day Mingo County, West Virginia, offered the following items, written on August 26, 1891, which the Logan County Banner printed on September 3, 1891:
Wm. Mullins is able to walk about with the aid of crutches.
John Workman, sawyer at Wellman mill, has returned after a brief visit in Wayne county.
Vane Dingess, our wide-awake merchant, has enclosed the lot adjoining his new store with a neat board fence.
Contractor Tresher has returned from Pittsburg with his family and is domiciled in one of the “camp cottages.” His present contract demands his presence at this point.
On Tuesday last Brit Wellman, proprietor of the saw-mill at this place, procured a warrant and searched the premises of W.R. Ellis in request of chains, a yoke, a pair of lines, etc., said to have been stolen by the latter. Part of the property was recovered and the end is not yet.
Monday evening two of our “callud breddun,” preachers of the word, held forth at Camp Locker to a large congregation. As our native Hottentots are much given to “shooting craps” “chuck-a-luck” and similar delectable games, this will doubtless prove a good field for mission work.
On Monday, the 17th inst., at the residence of A.S. Wellman, Mr. Elisha Wellman and Miss Tillie McCloud were united in the bonds of wedlock. Elder Dingess, in his usual impressive manner, spoke the words that made them one. Mr. Wellman is one of Dingess’ best known young men with a host of friends, and his bride, a beautiful young lady from Twelve Pole, no less noted for her many endearing qualities than for her many graces of person. Mr. Wellman is to be congratulated upon his fortunate conquest, and if well wishes count for anything, the happy couple’s future will be one continued summer day. They will reside at Ceredo.
22 Sunday Mar 2015
Posted in Dingess
Tags
Appalachia, Commodore Andrew Perry, Dingess, Dingess tunnel, Elias Perry, genealogy, history, immigrants, Jack Mounts, Jim Spaulding, Logan, Logan County Banner, mandolin, miller, Mingo County, music, Perry mill, Peter Dingess, timbering, U.S. South, violin, Wayne County, West Virginia, William Mullins
“Quousquo Tandem,” a local correspondent at Dingess in present-day Mingo County, West Virginia, offered the following items, which the Logan County Banner printed on August 13, 1891:
Presuming upon the absence of any regular correspondent from this place I will give your readers the happenings at Dingess.
For the last few days there has been dearth of rain.
Health in general is good, except among some of those engaged in hard work and addicted to the too free use of water. An indisposition is prevalent at present, something akin to dysentery.
William Mullins, who was lately injured at the sawmill, is rapidly recovering.
Dingess now boasts of a string band, composed of a number of our Italian citizens, who are at present engaged in working in the tunnel, and “oft through the still night” may be heard the dulcet strains of the mandolin and violin cello ringing in harmony as they are gently wafted above.
Commodore Andrew Perry’s mill is running full time and things are speeding along nicely. Although not a large man, Commodore has a heart as big as the whole county, and he deserves all the success he is having.
Peter Dingess is hauling for the Perry mill and keeps an abundant supply of logs in the yard.
Jack Dingess has developed into a full-fledged “Boniface.” He has at present stopping with him some twelve or more men engaged in arching the tunnel. He sets a good table and has pleasant accommodations. At night, after the inner man has been refreshed all adjourn to the front porch, where an open air concert is rendered by the “string band,” in the delectation of all within hearing distance.
“Uncle” Jim Spaulding, son and daughter, and Jack Mounts left for a brief visit to their homes in Wayne county, last week.
Lias Perry is again with us looking well and hearty after his visit home.
18 Wednesday Mar 2015
Posted in Boone County
15 Sunday Mar 2015
Posted in Big Harts Creek, Lincoln County Feud, Logan
14 Saturday Mar 2015
Posted in Dingess
Tags
Dingess, farming, genealogy, history, Logan County, Logan County Banner, Mary Chafin, Mingo County, Norfolk and Western Railroad, Smith Dingess, teacher, W.F. Farley, West Virginia
“Jim Yats,” a local correspondent at Dingess in present-day Mingo County, West Virginia, offered the following items, which the Logan County Banner printed on June 26, 1890:
Farming is at a stand still in this locality on account of so much rain.
Railroading is lively along this part of the line. Mr. King is working two crews, one at day, the other at night.
W.F. Farley is teaching our public school at this place.
Smith Dingess and Mary Chafin were united in the holy bonds of matrimony at this place last Friday.
13 Friday Mar 2015
Posted in Culture of Honor, Hatfield-McCoy Feud
Tags
Appalachia, crime, Ellison Hatfield, feud, feuds, genealogy, Hatfield-McCoy Feud, history, Kentucky, Kentucky Penitentiary, Logan County Banner, Pharmer McCoy, Tolbert McCoy, true crime, Valentine Wall Hatfield, West Virginia

Logan County (WV) Banner, 13 March 1890.
13 Friday Mar 2015
Tags
Al M. Rodgers, Appalachia, Don Chafin, Francis M. Chafin, genealogy, history, Logan, Logan County, Logan County Banner, painter, sheriff, West Virginia

Don Chafin, later Sheriff of Logan County, WV, during the Mine Wars, nearly drowned at the age of two years. Logan County (WV) Banner, 15 May 1890
13 Friday Mar 2015
Posted in Culture of Honor, Hatfield-McCoy Feud
Tags
Appalachia, Bill Smith, Catlettsburg, Enquirer, Frank Phillips, genealogy, Hatfield-McCoy Feud, history, Johns Creek, Kentucky, Logan, Logan County Banner, Pike County, Rebel Bill Smith, U.S. South, West Virginia

Logan County (WV) Banner, 1 May 1890
25 Thursday Dec 2014
Posted in Logan
Tags
Appalachia, Aracoma, author, Ben Bolt, Henry Clay Ragland, history, lawyer, Logan, Logan County, Logan County Banner, New Jersey, Newark, physician, poet, statesman, Thomas Dunn English, West Virginia, writer

Thomas Dunn English obituary, Logan County (WV) Banner, 13 March 1902
30 Monday Jun 2014
Posted in Big Harts Creek, Big Sandy Valley, Harts, Inez, Timber, Wyoming County
Tags
Adam Runyon, Adam Runyon Sr., Alden Williamson Genealogy, Aquillia Runyon, Aubrey Lee Porter, Billy Adkins, Bob Spence, Brandon Kirk, Charleston, civil war, Clarence Hinkle, Crawley Creek, Cultural Center, Ellender Williamson, Enoch Baker, Garrett and Runyon, genealogy, Harts, Hattie Hinkle, Henderson Dingess, history, Inez, Izella Porter, James Bertrand Runyon, James Muncy, John W Runyon, John W. Porter, Kentucky, Land of the Guyandot, Lawrence County, Logan County, Logan County Banner, logging, Martin County, Mary Runyon, Milt Haley, Moses Parsley, Nat's Creek, Nellie Muncy, Nova Scotia, Peach Orchard, Pigeon Creek, Pike County, Pineville, Rockcastle Creek, Runyon Genealogy, Samuel W. Porter, Stephen Williamson, timbering, Wayne, Wayne County, Wealthy Runyon, West Virginia, Wolf Creek, writing, Wyoming County
In the late summer of 1996, Brandon and Billy turned their genealogical sights on John W. Runyon, that elusive character in the 1889 story who seemed to have stirred up a lot of trouble and then escaped unharmed into Kentucky. They arranged a biographical outline after locating two family history books titled Runyon Genealogy (1955) and Alden Williamson Genealogy (1962). Then, they chased down leads at the Cultural Center in Charleston, West Virginia; the Wyoming County Courthouse at Pineville, West Virginia; the Wayne County Courthouse in Wayne, West Virginia; the Martin County Courthouse at Inez, Kentucky; and at various small public libraries in eastern Kentucky. Runyon had left quite a trail.
John W. Runyon was born in February of 1856 to Adam and Wealthy (Muncy) Runyon, Jr. in Pike County, Kentucky. He was a twin to James Bertrand Runyon and the ninth child in his family. His mother was a daughter of James Muncy — making her a sister to Nellie Muncy and an aunt to Milt Haley. In other words, John Runyon and Milt Haley were first cousins.
According to Runyon Genealogy (1955), Adam and Wealthy Runyon left Pike County around 1858 and settled on the Emily Fork of Wolf Creek in present-day Martin County. In 1860, they sold out to, of all people, Milt Haley’s older half-brother, Moses Parsley, and moved to Pigeon Creek in Logan County. John’s grandfather, Adam Runyon, Sr., had first settled on Pigeon Creek around 1811. The family was primarily pro-Union during the Civil War.
At a young age, Runyon showed promise as a timber baron.
“The first lumber industry in Logan County of any importance was started on Crawley Creek by Garrett and Runyon during the year 1876,” Bob Spence wrote in Land of the Guyandot (1978). “Garrett and Runyon deserve credit for their efforts in opening the lumber business in Logan County. They were the first to hire labor in this field. It might be of interest to note here that they originally brought trained men from Catlettsburg… In a few years, Garrett and Runyon left Logan [County], and soon Enoch Baker from Nova Scotia came to Crawley Creek to take their place.”
John may have put his timber interests on hold due to new developments within his family. According to Runyon Genealogy, his mother died around 1878 and was buried at Peach Orchard on Nat’s Creek in Lawrence County, Kentucky. His father, meanwhile, went to live with a son in Minnesota. In that same time frame, on Christmas Day, 1878, Runyon married Mary M. Williamson, daughter of Stephen and Ellender (Blevins) Williamson, in Martin County, Kentucky. He and Mary were the parents of two children: Aquillia Runyon, born 1879; and Wealthy Runyon, born 1881. John settled on or near Nat’s Creek, where his father eventually returned to live with him and was later buried at his death around 1895.
During the late 1880s, of course, Runyon moved to Harts where he surely made the acquaintance of Enoch Baker, the timber baron from Nova Scotia. An 1883 deed for Henderson Dingess referenced “Baker’s lower dam,” while Baker was mentioned in the local newspaper in 1889. “Enoch Baker, who has been at work in the County Clerk’s office and post office for several weeks, is now on Hart’s creek,” the Logan County Banner reported on September 12. Baker was still there in December, perhaps headquartered at a deluxe logging camp throughout the fall of 1889.
After the tragic events of ’89, Runyon made his way to Wayne County where he and his wife “Mary M. Runyons” were referenced in an 1892 deed. Wayne County, of course, was a border county between Lincoln County and the Tug Fork where Cain Adkins and others made their home. He was apparently trying to re-establish himself in Martin County, where his wife bought out three heirs to her late father’s farm on the Rockhouse Fork of Rockcastle Creek between 1892-1895.
In the late 1890s, John’s two daughters found husbands and began their families. On January 3, 1896, Wealthy Runyon married Clarence Hinkle at “John Runyonses” house in Martin County. She had one child named Hattie, born in 1899 in West Virginia. On March 29, 1896, Aquillia Runyon married Samuel W. Porter at Mary Runyon’s house in Martin County. They had three children: John W. Porter, born in 1897 in West Virginia; Aubrey Lee Porter, born in 1899 in Kentucky; and Izella Porter, who died young.
18 Wednesday Jun 2014
Posted in Logan
03 Tuesday Jun 2014
Posted in Big Sandy Valley, Culture of Honor, Hatfield-McCoy Feud
Tags
Appalachia, crime, Frank Phillips, genealogy, Hatfield-McCoy Feud, history, Kentucky, Knox Creek, Logan County Banner, Pike County, U.S. South

Frank Phillips death, Logan County (WV) Banner, Thursday, July 14, 1898
26 Monday May 2014
Posted in African American History, Logan
Tags
Appalachia, Charles Dingess, Fannie Dingess, history, Logan County, Logan County Banner, slavery, U.S. South, West Virginia

Fannie Dingess obituary, Logan County Banner, May 15, 1902
26 Monday May 2014
Posted in Culture of Honor
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