Tags
Appalachia, county clerk, genealogy, history, J.C. Buskirk, Logan, Logan Banner, Logan County, photos, Republican Party, West Virginia

Republican-Elect for County Clerk, Logan (WV) Banner, 8 October 1926.
19 Saturday Aug 2017
Posted in Logan
Tags
Appalachia, county clerk, genealogy, history, J.C. Buskirk, Logan, Logan Banner, Logan County, photos, Republican Party, West Virginia

Republican-Elect for County Clerk, Logan (WV) Banner, 8 October 1926.
17 Thursday Aug 2017
Posted in Boone County, Timber
Tags
Appalachia, Boone County, history, logging, photos, timber, timbering, West Virginia

Shay locomotive in Boone County, WV. Photo credit undetermined. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TbsbcZKCWDY
15 Tuesday Aug 2017

Logan (WV) Banner, 3 July 1914.
13 Sunday Aug 2017
Posted in Logan
Tags
Appalachia, history, Logan, Logan Banner, Logan County, Methodist Episcopal Church South, pastor, photos, R.H. Scaggs, West Virginia

Logan Methodist Episcopal Church South, Logan (WV) Banner, 1 May 1914.
31 Monday Jul 2017
Posted in Logan
Tags
Appalachia, history, Logan, Logan Banner, Logan County, Logan Court House, photos, West Virginia

Logan Court House, Logan (WV) Banner, 8 October 1926.
20 Thursday Jul 2017
Posted in Big Harts Creek, Halcyon
Tags
Appalachia, crime, Doc Workman, Harts Creek, history, Logan County, photos, true crime, West Virginia, Workman Fork

Doc Workman (1893-1956) lived and died here on Workman Fork of Harts Creek in Logan County, WV.
19 Wednesday Jul 2017
Tags
34th Battalion Virginia Cavalry, 3rd West Virginia Cavalry, Battle of Curry Farm, Benjamin F. Curry, Big Buffalo Creek, Blountsville, Brandon Kirk, Brandy Station, Cabell County, Carroll District, civil war, Confederate Army, Curry Chapel, Curry Chapel Cemetery, Curry Farm, Duval District, George A. Holton, Granville Curry, Hamlin, Hamlin Chapel, Henry H. Hardesty, history, Hurricane Bridge, Isaac Jackson, James A. Holly, Jeremiah Witcher, John L. Chapman, John S. Witcher, John Scites, John W. Harshbarger, Lincoln County, Logan County, Mathias Kayler, Milton, photos, Phyllis Kirk, Pound Gap, Raleigh County, Russell County, Sheridan, Straight Fork, Tennessee, Union Army, Virginia, West Virginia, West Virginia Division of Culture and History, White Hall, William A. Holstein, William C. Mahone, Winchester
This entry compiles information relating to the Battle or Skirmish at Curry Farm, which occurred as part of the War Between the States in May of 1864 at Hamlin in present-day Lincoln County, WV. It is a working entry and will be updated based on the discovery of new information.
On May 29, 1864, Confederates commanded by Captain John L. Chapman of Company B, 34th Battalion Virginia Cavalry, attacked a detachment of the 3rd West Virginia Cavalry, Company G, commanded by 1st Lt. John W. Harshbarger at Curry Farm near Hamlin in present-day Lincoln County. H.H. Hardesty’s History of Lincoln County, West Virginia, compiled in c.1883, provides the only known account of the battle: “The Federals had marched from Hurricane Bridge and were proceeding up Mud river when they were fired upon by the Confederates, who were concealed on the opposite side of the river. The Federal commander at once ordered a charge and the Confederates retreated without loss. The Federals had one killed, a man named Mathias Kayler from Raleigh county, and two wounded — one being Isaac Jackson, who was shot through the left arm; and another, a member of Company K” (98-99).
Prior to the battle, on May 10, 1864, Capt. John Chapman had been sent with a detachment of dismounted men from the area of Russell County, Virginia, into Cabell and Logan counties “to gather up absentees and deserters from the 34th Battalion” (Cole, 80). Capt. Chapman had been wounded in action at Brandy Station, Virginia, on August 14, 1863 and at Blountsville, Tennessee, on March 10, 1864 (Cole, 147).
Isaac Jackson, one of the two Union soldiers wounded at Curry Farm, was a private in Company G, 3rd WV Cavalry, formerly commanded by Captain John S. Witcher (who had been promoted to major in April 1864). Hardesty cites Mr. Jackson as “wounded in action at Currys Farm, May 29, 1864” (98). Following the battle, on July 6, 1864, 1st Lt. Harshbarger was promoted to captain of Company G. On December 7, 1864, an Adjutant General’s Report shows Company G, 3rd WV Cavalry, stationed near Winchester, VA. The muster roll shows 108 names, citing Private Isaac Jackson as “Wounded in skirmish, May 5, 1864. In hospital since this date.” (Note how this record provides a different date of his wounding from the date provided by Hardesty, who compiled his history about 1881.) http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~wvwayne/roster3G.htm
Curry Farm, according to Hardesty, was located 1/4 mile above Hamlin (Hardesty, 90, 98).

The West Virginia Division of Culture and History has recently erected this historical marker on Curry Farm. 12 November 2017. Photo by Mom.
Capt. John Chapman left Cabell and Logan counties and rejoined the 34th Battalion Virginia Cavalry in the vicinity of Pound Gap, Virginia, by the end of June 1864 (Cole, 82).
Capt. John W. Harshbarger (1836-1909) is buried here: https://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=35761174
Selected Sources:
Scott C. Cole, 34th Battalion Virginia Cavalry (Lynchburg, VA: H.E. Howard, Inc., 1993) 80, 82, 121, 147.
Michael Graham, The Coal River Valley in the Civil War (Charleston, SC: The History Press, 2014) 150-151.
Some modern writers have misunderstood the Battle of Curry Farm as occurring at the Curry farm located four miles north of Hamlin on Big Buffalo Creek, near Hamlin Chapel (later Curry Chapel). Hamlin Chapel is important for the role it played in the creation of Lincoln County in 1867. “The first meeting of the Board of Supervisors was held on the 11th day of March, 1867, in what was known as Hamlin chapel, an old church which stood on the Curry farm, about one-fourth of a mile above the present county seat. There were present: William C. Mahone, of Carroll District; John Scites, of Sheridan, and William A. Holstein, of Duval. W. C. Mahone was made president, and Benjamin F. Curry, clerk, the latter giving bond in the penalty of $2000, with James A. Holly and Jeremiah Witcher as his securities. It was then ordered that the Board of Supervisors have the White Hall, a Southern Methodist church one-fourth of a mile below where the county seat now stands arranged for holding the courts until the proper buildings could be erected, George A. Holton and a majority of the trustees consenting thereto” (Hardesty, 90-91). Curry Chapel no longer stands but its former location can be found near the intersection of Route 1 and Route 3/11 above the mouth of Straight Fork of Big Buffalo Creek.

Curry Chapel Cemetery, 18 July 2017. The battle did not occur here.

Granville Curry grave, 18 July 2017. Photo by Mom. The battle did not occur here.
![IMG_7076[1]](https://brandonraykirk.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/07/img_70761.jpg?w=529)
Curry Chapel Cemetery, north of Hamlin. The battle did not occur here. Instead, it occurred just to the left of the [3] in the above map.
08 Saturday Jul 2017
Posted in Ferrellsburg, Hamlin, Lincoln County Feud
Tags
Albert Adkins, Appalachia, Bob Adkins, Brooke Adkins, Ferrellsburg, genealogy, Hamlin, history, Lincoln County, oil, photos, West Virginia, West Virginia Oil and Gas Man of the Year

Robert Henderson “Bob” Adkins (1903-1999), son of Albert G. and Mary “Brooke” (Dingess) Adkins. Bob, born in my hometown of Ferrellsburg, Lincoln County, WV, spent most of his life in Hamlin where he operated a lucrative gas business. In 1984, he was chosen West Virginia Oil and Gas Man of the Year. I first met Bob in March of 1995. I really miss him.
06 Thursday Jul 2017
Posted in Coal, Culture of Honor, Turner-Howard Feud
Tags
Appalachia, crime, feud, feuds, Harlan, Harlan County, history, Kentucky, photos, Turner-Howard Feud

Harlan, Kentucky. 1928. Population, 1910: 657. Population, 1920: 2647. Population, 1930: 4327. Population today (2010): 1745.
04 Tuesday Jul 2017
Posted in Cemeteries, Giles County, Harts, Native American History
Tags
American Revolution, Appalachia, Beech Fork, Beech Fork State Park, Billy Adkins, Brandon Kirk, cemeteries, Continental Line, genealogy, Giles County, Harts, Hezekiah Adkins, Hezekiah Adkins Cemetery, history, Isaac Adkins, John Lucas, Lincoln County, Missionary Baptist, Molly Adkins, Montgomery County, Native Americans, New River, photos, preacher, Revolutionary War, Ronnie Adkins, tourism, Virginia, Wayne County, West Virginia, Winslow

In 1990, Ronnie Adkins published THE definitive Adkins genealogy book. A great many researchers appreciated his work on Hezekiah Adkins’ line of the family. Hezekiah Adkins was born in 1759 in Virginia, served in the American Revolutionary War, moved from Giles County, Virginia, to present-day Wayne County, West Virginia, about 1810, and died in 1842. His grave markers are yet visible at Winslow on Beech Fork in Wayne County, WV. If you visit the grave site, you will find Hezekiah Adkins buried on the left and his wife Mary “Molly” buried on the right (unlike in this photo). Any Adkins researcher owes a great debt to Ronnie Adkins and his book. THANK YOU, RONNIE.

Here is a photo of my good friend and mentor Billy Adkins visiting the grave site in 1991. Years ago, Billy assisted Ronnie in gathering information about members of the Adkins family who settled in the Harts area of Lincoln County, WV.

Here is Hezekiah’s grave as it appears today (left). His wife Molly is buried to the right.

Hezekiah Adkins is my paternal great-great-great-great-great-great-grandfather through his son, Isaac Adkins (1790-1854).

Here is Molly Adkins’ grave as it appears today. She is my great-great-great-great-great-great-grandmother.

Hezekiah Adkins has a nice military marker positioned at his feet.

I recently visited Hezekiah Adkins’ grave. 30 June 2017.

A short distance from the cemetery, beside of the highway, is this great historical marker commemorating Hezekiah Adkins’ service in the Revolutionary War. Beech Fork State Park is less than five minutes away. 30 June 2017.
28 Wednesday Jun 2017
Tags
Appalachia, Aracoma Coal Company, coal, Coal Branch, history, Logan, Logan Banner, Logan County, photos, West Virginia

Logan (WV) Banner, 26 June 1914.
28 Wednesday Jun 2017
Posted in Harts, Lincoln County Feud
Tags
Appalachia, Caroline Brumfield, Charley Brumfield, genealogy, Harts, history, Lincoln County, photos, West Virginia

Charley and Caroline (Dingess) Brumfield residence in Harts, Lincoln County, WV. 1990s.
26 Monday Jun 2017
Posted in Logan
Tags
Appalachia, genealogy, grocer, history, John M. Perry, Logan, Logan Banner, Logan County, photos, Republican Party, West Virginia

John M. Perry, the Republican Party candidate for Logan County Clerk, was a grocer in Logan, WV. Logan (WV) Banner, 30 October 1914.
26 Monday Jun 2017
Posted in Harts, Women's History

Residents of Harts, Lincoln County, WV.
20 Tuesday Jun 2017
Posted in Logan
Tags
Appalachia, genealogy, history, J. Carey Alderson, Logan, Logan County, photos, Republican Party, West Virginia

Logan (WV) Banner, 8 October 1926.
20 Tuesday Jun 2017
Posted in Big Harts Creek, Shively
Tags
Albert Dingess, Appalachia, genealogy, Harts Creek, history, Logan County, photos, Smokehouse Fork, West Virginia

This photo is partly labeled as “…bert Dingess.” I found this photo among old Dingess photos on Smokehouse Fork of Harts Creek in Logan County, WV. Perhaps this is “Albert Dingess.”
15 Thursday Jun 2017
Posted in Huntington
Tags
Appalachia, Cabell County, education, history, Huntington, Marshall College, Marshall University, photos, West Virginia

Marshall College, Huntington, WV, 1910.
13 Tuesday Jun 2017
Tags
Appalachia, Atenville, Big Creek, C&O Railroad, coal, crime, Dr. D.P. Crockett, Eden Park, Eden Park Coal Company, Green Porter, Hadley, Hamlin, Harts, history, Huntington, J.X. Hill, John D. Shelton, Lincoln County, Philip Hager, photos, Sand Creek, Shelby Shelton, Silas Gibson, West Virginia
Eden Park is an extinct coal town located between Harts and Atenville along the C&O Railroad and Guyandotte River in Lincoln County, WV. Eden Park Coal Company created the town in the early 1920s. What follows is the company’s founding document:
Eden Park Coal Company
Date: August 24, 1922
Headquarters: Atenville
Chief works: Eden Park
Capital stock: $50,000
500 shares of $100
Incorporators:
Dr. D.P. Crockett of Big Creek, WV: 45 shares
Mrs. D.P. Crockett of Huntington, WV: 5 shares
John D. Shelton of Sand Creek, WV: 50 shares
Philip Hager of Hamlin, WV: 50 shares
Shelby Shelton of Sand Creek, WV: 50 shares
Note: Corporation will expire in fifty years.
Source: Corporation Record Book 2, Lincoln County Clerk’s Office, Hamlin, WV.

Eden Park hosted at least two murders, one of which essentially closed the mine. Reportedly, the company left much of its equipment inside of the mine. Photo by Mom.

Mr. Silas Gibson, in an interview conducted on 1 August 1927, stated that J.X. Hill sold his property at present-day Hadley, WV, and moved here…where he was killed by Green Porter. Photo by Mom.
12 Monday Jun 2017
Posted in Big Harts Creek, Harts, Timber
Tags
Appalachia, Harts, Harts Creek, history, Lincoln County, logging, photos, Samp Davis, timber, West Fork, West Virginia

Samp Davis’ sawmill, most likely on West Fork of Harts Creek, Lincoln County, WV.
04 Sunday Jun 2017
Posted in Cemeteries, Ferrellsburg, Harts
Tags
Appalachia, Charley Davis, Ferrellsburg, genealogy, Harts, history, Jake Adkins, Lincoln County, Mandy Davis, photos, Samp Davis, West Virginia

Charley Davis (1907-1995), son of Samp and Mandy (Messer) Davis, was a great man and a good friend. He always greeted me with a smile and shared many stories. Charley was one of the key persons who inspired me to seek out local history. In this photo, he is standing near the grave of his great-grandfather, Enos “Jake” Adkins (1825-1907). I really miss Charley and I always think of him when I drive past his old house.
Writings from my travels and experiences. High and fine literature is wine, and mine is only water; but everybody likes water. Mark Twain
This site is dedicated to the collection, preservation, and promotion of history and culture in Appalachia.
Genealogy and History in North Carolina and Beyond
A site about one of the most beautiful, interesting, tallented, outrageous and colorful personalities of the 20th Century