Newsletter of Tom Perry's Website Of Patrick County Virginia History

                        The Free State Of Patrick Internet History Group

 

                       

 

            Notes From The Free State Of Patrick Volume Four Number Nine September 2007

                                        "There is nothing new in the world except the history you don't know"  -- Harry Truman

                                                                                                    

 

Click Here To Contribute To The Hokie Spirit Memorial Fund For The Victims Of April 16, 2007

                   

                            "We are the Hokies. We will prevail, we will prevail. We are Virginia Tech. "  -- Nikki Giovanni

 

                                       Virginia Tech We Remember Webpage http://www.vt.edu/remember/

                                                                                              

                                                                                           

The Free State Of Patrick Is A Sponsor Of The Star Theatre

 

                                                                                                       

The Free State Of Patrick Supports The Patrick County High School Alumni Association

Visit Our Friends Page www.freestateofpatrick.com/friends.htm

WORLD WAR TWO DOCUMENTARY TO AIR IN SEPTEMBER

Love him or leave him Ken Burns will bring out his 15 and 1/2 hour documentary on World War Two beginning on September 23 on PBS. His documentary on the Civil War released in 1990 was one of the most watched events in television history and helped to spring board interest in the War Between The States that helped us save J. E. B. Stuart's Birthplace. Although criticized by many, Burns gets people interested in history on a massive scale.

Seven Episodes: Episode One: A Necessary War, Episode Two: When Things Get Tough, Episode Three: A Deadly Calling, Episode Four: Pride Of Our Nation, Episode Five: Fubar, Episode Six: The Ghost Front. Episode Seven: A World Without War

The documentary THE WAR explores the history and horror of World War II from an American perspective by following the fortunes of so-called ordinary men and women who became caught up in one of the greatest cataclysms in human history. This epic film focuses on the stories of citizens from four American towns taking the viewer through their personal and harrowing journeys, painting vivid portraits of how the war dramatically altered their lives

Click Here To Learn More  http://www.pbs.org/thewar/

From Pilot To The Buffalo

Looking east from the "Little Pinnacle" towards the "Big Pinnacle" and Sauratown Mountain.

    The Indians called it “Jomeokee” meaning pilot or guide. In August 1854 Lt. James Ewell Brown “Jeb” Stuart had used it as just that, a guide, piloting his trip around piedmont North Carolina and Virginia visiting friends and relatives. One night he found himself camping on Pilot Mountain. Just out of the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York, Stuart was soon to head west to Texas to join the cavalry of the United States and seven years of service mainly in the 1st U. S. Cavalry stationed in Kansas. Later that night a storm filled with thunder and lightning woke the young officer, who would become our region’s most important historical figure as commander of Robert E. Lee’s cavalry in the War Between the States. Stuart thought of himself as a romantic wrote down a poem dedicated to one of his six sisters entitled “The Dream of Youth.”

 

    While the dreams of a young man are nice to read about what can they do for us today? History can be a force for economic growth in our region. Today from the overlook at the little pinnacle you can see our entire region including the Buffalo Mountain resting on top of the Blue Ridge plateau. The Buffalo is famous due to another young man from Ararat, Virginia, just like “Jeb” Stuart. The Reverend Bob Childress spent half his life at the foot of the Blue Ridge before he moved on top to preach and build the six rock churches made famous in The Man Who Moved a Mountain by Richard Davids.

 

 

Looking north from the "Little Pinnacle." On a clear day you can see Buffalo Mountain from here.

 

    From the Buffalo to the Pilot is the region whose history I write about. I was born in Mount Airy and grew up in Ararat, Virginia. Many people have come from Patrick County to Surry County in North Carolina. Richard Joshua Reynolds left Virginia to go to Winston to start a tobacco business, but he came to Mount Airy to get a wife, Katharine Smith. The Ararat River itself flows from Bell Spur Church in Patrick County down a mountain named after a groundhog to meet the Yadkin River at Siloam. A railroad the Mount Airy and Eastern “The Dinky” ran from the banks of the Ararat to the banks of the Dan River in Patrick County’s Kibler Valley. The Native-Americans who named Pilot Mountain or the raptors that migrate to it each year did not see the state line as a barrier and we should not either. We have much common history and we should think regionally in promoting each other. There is plenty of room for Jeb Stuart to walk the same streets as the Siamese Twins and the fictional Barnie Fife.

 

    While the focus is often on the Andy Griffith show as a way to bring tourists to the area if you look just across the street from the statue of Andy and Opie is one for George Stoneman’s Raid at the end of the Civil War that came through Mount Airy on April 2, 1865, a week before Lee surrendered to Grant at Appomattox. These were the first Yankees to visit the “Granite City,” but judging from the tour buses on Main Street not the last. So, with this first article on our region’s history along the model of Ruth Minick started years ago I am reminded of another connection between Surry County and Patrick County. In the 1920s Carl Griffith crossed the state line into Patrick County to marry Geneva Nunn. Their marriage license is in the Patrick County Courthouse. You probably heard of their son.

 

 

Looking south from the "Little Pinnacle" towards Winston-Salem, North Carolina.

 

Andy Griffith’s Patrick County Connection
 

            As a boy, I remember walking up Pine Street from my grandparent’s apartment to Main Street in Mount Airy and having a hot dog at the Snappy Lunch with my grandmother. I remember watching my grandfather get his haircut in the City Barber Shop, now Floyd’s City Barber Shop, next door. To this day, I enjoy a good watching of the Andy Griffith Show preferably with Don Knotts, while color and Howard Sprague do nothing for me. Even Andy seems bored in those shows.

 

            Later, I took a class in Appalachian Studies at Virginia Tech. The professor could not say enough bad things about Andy Griffith. Her thesis was that every known stereotype to make Southerners look stupid was on display in the show. She felt Griffith was cutting the people of Mount Airy with such a sharp knife they did not even feel it. I wonder what she would think of the plethora of tourists who visit every year in September for Mayberry Days.

 

            Patrick County has a claim to the “Real Mayberry.” On the Blue Ridge Parkway sits one of the most beautiful churches I have ever seen. Mayberry Presbyterian Church is one of the rock churches of “The Man Who Moved a Mountain,” the Reverend Bob Childress of Ararat ministered and worked construction.

 

            Just down the road is Mayberry Trading Post, where you can buy a “Real Mayberry” T-shirt. They will tell you that Andy Griffith’s father would bring him up here as a boy. Jerry Bledsoe’s book Blue Horizons about biking the Blue Ridge Parkway tells of his encounter with Addie Wood on page 63, where she sits the record straight that this is where Andy Griffith got the name for the fictional town in his television show.

 

On July 11, 1925, Geneva, the daughter of Sam and Jopine Nunn of Patrick County, received a marriage license along with Carl, the son of John D. and Sallie Griffith, of Surry County, North Carolina. Andy Griffith’s mother was from Patrick County and her marriage to Griffith is recorded on page 27 of Marriage Register Book #5 in the Patrick County Court House. Two years later their son Andrew was born in Mount Airy.

 

            It is easy to criticize those who promote the idea of Mayberry. For them Mayberry represents the wholesome, nostalgic and sanitized feelings we hope our hometown will have. Mount Airy is like Hannibal, Missouri, where Tom Sawyers and Becky Thatchers roam the street bringing the writings of Mark Twain to life. Just like Hannibal, where the message of Huck Finn is ignored, there are only white faces in Mayberry. It is not a real place with real problems. It is good for the proverbial search for the tourist buck and there can be little down it saved the downtown area from economic collapse.

 

            Several years ago, I was present when North Carolina named Highway 52 the Andy Griffith Parkway. Like me and anyone who watched Matlock, Andy likes hot dogs from the Snappy Lunch better than pork chop sandwich. Cagey as he was as Sheriff Taylor, Andy Griffith hinted that the town Mayberry comes from his life in Mount Airy. He never confirmed it, but I have a theory. I imagine an actor in Hollywood in the early 1960s working with others to come up with the idea for a show. The actor remembers as a young boy traveling with his father and stopping in for a bottle of pop at a place called Mayberry. Shazam! (From a previous newsletter.)

 

Tom Perry Opens Retail Booth in Stuart, Virginia

 

 

Booth #110 recently opened in the Just Plain Country Store in Stuart, Virginia, is the place to purchase Tom Perry's books along with other books including hard cover fiction, history, civil war and paperback books at reasonable prices. Also, included is an exhibit about the seven men from Patrick County who lost their lives in Vietnam. Click here to learn more about the Just Plain Country Store Antiques and Crafters Mall http://www.justplaincountrystore.com, which is located at 301 South Main Street Suite A, Stuart, Virginia, (276)694-5556.

Perry Donates Photo Collection To Regional Repositories

For Release August  1, 2007, Ararat, Virginia

Patrick County Historian Tom Perry is pleased to announce a donation of over 14,000 photos and images to two regional libraries including the Bassett Historical Center of the Blue Ridge Regional Library, Mount Airy (North Carolina) Museum of History. The main collection is housed in the Special Collections Department of the Carol M. Newman Library at Virginia Tech, Perry’s alma mater, in Blacksburg, Virginia.

Patricia Ross, Director of the Bassett Historical Center comments: "Tom Perry has completed quite a lengthy project and one so important for anyone who has a Patrick County connection.  These 14,000 plus photographs are an integral part of our area history and such a treasure.  We at the Bassett Historical Center are so fortunate to be one of the facilities with whom Tom has shared his work, and will be sharing this wonderful project.  Thank you, Tom, for being the historian that you are and for always sharing your research and exciting projects with others."
 
Linda Blue Stanfield, Director of the Mount Airy Museum comments: “The Museum is very fortunate to be the recipient of such a massive collection of photographs and images documenting the rich heritage of this region. We are indebted to Mr. Perry for preserving a wealth of information for future generations and for considering the Mount Airy Museum of History as a repository for his collection.”

Perry said, “As I have no children of my own to pass this down too, I began this collection of material over twenty years ago and recently began to preserve the many years I have worked to preserve and promote Patrick County history. I do not feel there is anywhere in the county that has staff, facilities or the proper vision to preserve this material. I am sure there are many people and groups who love to horde such material, bury it in their own collections or use it for their own financial gain, but I believe it should be available to the public and more importantly to people and groups who are serious about working together to promote or region through our vast and varied histories.”

The material includes over thirty compact disks with over 14,000 images scanned or photographed by Perry. Include are topics such as the Mount Airy and Eastern Railroad “The Dinky,” Patrick County topics such as covered bridges, places on the national and state registers of history and Perry’s soon to be released photo book and his writings on Patrick County in the Civil War. There are Surry County North Carolina topics and several historical related topics that cross the state line such as George Stoneman’s 1865 raid through the area and history collected along the Ararat River, which flows from Patrick into Surry County. All materials from Perry’s webpage www.freestateofpatrick.com are included.  The majority of the material includes Perry’s twenty years working to preserve J. E. B. Stuart’s Birthplace, Laurel Hill, in Patrick County’s most historic community of Ararat, Virginia. Also included are materials relating to Perry’s travels and research all over the country on Civil War General James Ewell Brown “Jeb” Stuart.

Access to the material will be restricted and researchers will have to have Tom Perry’s permission to publish or use the materials.

Bassett Historical Center http://www.brrl.lib.va.us/location_historicalcenter.html

Mount Airy Museum of History http://www.northcarolinamuseum.org/home.asp

Perry Photo Collection http://www.freestateofpatrick.com/perrypictures.htm

Perry Exhibits Photos And Other Materials (NEW!)

    Beginning this fall Tom Perry will be exhibiting photos and other materials around the region. First, a revolving exhibit will be at Perry's booth #110 in the Just Plain Country Store in Stuart, Virginia, where Perry's books will be on sale beginning in August. Each year an exhibit is carried around to local festivals. In 2007, an exhibit on "The Dinky" Mount Airy and Eastern Railroad is being carried around. This includes photos of the train when it ran and photos of the discovery of the rails recently along with two topographical taps showing the route of the railroad. It will be on display in the booth beginning in November. In August through September an exhibit on Patrick County in the Vietnam Conflict will be on display in the booth (www.freestateofpatrick.com/vietnam.htm). It includes a shadowbox of rubbings taken from the Vietnam Memorial in Washington, D. C. from the seven men from Patrick County who gave their lives in Vietnam. Also, included will be material on one man who came back from Vietnam to make a difference. This exhibit will be on display at the Patrick County Branch of the Blue Ridge Regional Library in October for Veteran's Day and at the Bassett Historical Center in December and January.

Patrick County In The Vietnam Conflict: Seven Men Who Gave All and One Who Came Home

August-September and November 2007, Just Plain Country Store, Free State of Patrick Booth #110.

October 2007, Patrick County Branch, Blue Ridge Regional Library, Stuart, VA.

December 2007-January 2008, Bassett Historical Center, Bassett, VA.

Two of the rubbings from Vietnam shadowbox to be displayed this fall.

"The Dinky" Mount Airy and Eastern Railroad

December-January 2008, Just Plain Country Store, Free State Of Patrick Booth #110.

Visit Tom Perry's Display About The Dinky Railroad At The Following Events

 

 

 

 

August 23-25, Antique Show at Rotary Field in Stuart, Virginia

 

September 1-3, Meadows of Dan, VA (Mountain Meadow Farm)

 

September 8, Bassett VA Heritage Festival

 

September 30, The Hollow History Center Fall Festival, Ararat, VA

 

October 13, Botetourt Heritage Festival, Buchanan VA

 

October 20, Meadows of Dan, VA (Mountain Meadow Farm)

 

More Dinky Rails Found

 

 

    Craig and Jane Tesh, owners of the Sparger House on Riverside Drive just north of Mount Airy recently found more rails from the Mount Airy and Eastern Railroad "The Dinky". Tom Perry hopes to take the rails to the Mount Airy Museum to set up another exhibit like the one at The Hollow History Center near Doe Run Church in Ararat, Virginia shown below.
 
    The Sparger House built in 1865 by Winston Smith for his daughter who married into the Wolfensparger Family was the site of a tobacco factory. They later shortened the family name to Sparger. A daughter Christine Sparger married into the Marshall Family of White Plains. Craig Tesh descends from Christine Sparger Marshall. Craig also descends from Joseph Alexander Tesh, who built many of the Victorian homes in Mount Airy noted for their granite keystones above the doors. He is credited with Trinity Episcopal Church, one of the oldest buildings, built of granite, in the "Granite City."
 	          Click Here To See The New Exhibit On The Dinky Railroad

                                                                       

            Click Here To Learn More About The Mount Airy and Eastern Railroad "The Dinky"

The Dinky Railroad

 

Beginning in 2005, several of us set out on a journey to find the Mount Airy and Eastern Railroad as it made a nineteen mile trip from Mount Airy, North Carolina to Kibler Valley in Patrick County, Virginia along narrow gauge rails. Affectionately called “The Dinky,” we found history and many new friends. During the entire journey we never had an unfriendly landowner or any angry dog, but we did find out that history is right before our eyes if we are willing to look for it.

 

“A narrow gauge railroad is technically defined as any line where the distance between the rails is less than 4 feet eight and a half inches."  Between roughly 1870 and 1885, "narrow gauge fever" swept the nation under the pretenses that the smaller equipment cost less, construction requirements were less stringent, and therefore, were easier to finance and build. By far, the most common of these narrow gauges was 36 inches, or rather, 3-foot gauge.

 

At the end of the 1800s and early years of the 1900s the railroad including the Mount Airy and Eastern Railroad aided in an economic boom in Mount Airy with the granite, tobacco and furniture industries. This modern marvel brought tourists and industry on its narrow gauge tracks to the White Sulphur Springs Hotel along the Ararat River. The railroad running from Mount Airy, North Carolina to Kibler Valley was only the second railroad in Patrick County.

 

We believe the railroad began with a Wye (Y) that paralleled the standard gauge railroad that still exists today beside Cross Creek Apparel on Riverside Drive (Hwy 104) in Mount Airy, North Carolina. “The Mount Airy and Eastern connected with the Atlantic and Yadkin Railroad on the Flat Rock branch near the granite quarry. The narrow gauge tracks were parallel to the standard gauge tracks and freight was transferred from car to car. According to Gareth McDonald, there was no evidence of moving cars from narrow gauge to standard gauge trucks by lifting, as was done elsewhere with different gauge interchanges.”

T. E. Houston chartered the rail line on May 3, 1899. This rail service ran for 19.50 miles with only five of that being in North Carolina. The first 15.75 miles to Goins, Virginia, opened on February 1, 1900. C. B. Keesee of Martinsville, VA was appointed receiver on May 4, 1901, as the business enterprise had not been successful.  Under Keesee the line was extended to Kibler Valley November 1, 1902, to serve a lumber mill operated by Kibler and Kay. An extension to Stuart, Virginia, was surveyed in 1904 but never built. 

 

Various owners operated the track along the Ararat River, Clark’s Creek, Fall Creek and then along the Dan River and into the Kibler Valley. The road was sold under foreclosure on November 15, 1910 and purchased for $20,000 by the Rosslyn Lumber Company, Inc. from northern Virginia.  It was sold again on April 1, 1915 to Sidney Bieber of Washington, D.C., who reorganized it without changing the name. Bieber and some New York Associates had bought 12,000 acres of hardwood timber lands in southwest Virginia and planned to use the railroad to deliver the lumber. The Mayo-Dan Lumber Company was organized to handle this enterprise. 

 

The later history of the line is obscure, but the railroad stopped operations in the spring of 1918. We believe that a flood in 1916 due to a hurricane or storms knocked out operations along the Dan River. It was sold and reorganized as the Virginia & Mount Airy Railway on February 6, 1920, but there is no evidence that it was restored to operation. It was apparently liquidated in 1930.

Help Our Regional History Library Expand

Click Here To Read About The Bassett Historical Center Building Fund

Click Here To Red About Patrick County Collections At The Bassett Historical Center

Bassett Historical Center Building Fund $176,554.15 raised of $800,000.00

Henry County Civil War Roster Available at Bassett Historical Center

 

Henry County in the Civil War, 1861-1865 is on sale by the Bassett Historical Center Building Committee as a fund-raiser. 
Half the profits from this book go to the fund, to build an addition to their great library. This book contains the military records of Henry County Soldiers as well as some letters and other articles of interest. If you would like to
send a donation to them, or buy a book to help them, you can contact Pat Ross at baslib@hotmail.com for more information.

 

"Always give your best, never get discouraged, never be petty; always remember, others may hate you,

but those who hate you don't win unless you hate them, and then you destroy yourself." --Richard Nixon

News From the Website

New Web Pages

If you would like to receive this monthly email newsletter, please send an email to freestateofpatrick@yahoo.com with the word ADD in the subject line or visit www.freestateofpatrick.com for more information.
 

Membership is up to 461 people interested in Patrick County History and receiving the monthly email newsletter.

 

The Free State Of Patrick website www.freestateofpatrick.com reached 62,000 hits in August.

 

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Laurel Hill Birthplace of J. E. B. Stuart

Click Here To Take the Online Laurel Hill Tour

Cover Photo Chosen For Patrick County Images Of American Book

Tom Perry's new book of photos will go to the publisher in July with an expected publication before Christmas 2007.

Special Offer To Members Of The Free State Of Patrick www.freestateofpatrick.com/arcadia.htm

 

www.arcadiapublishing.com

New Series Of Books By Tom Perry Beginning In 2008

Click Here To Learn of Tom Perry's Efforts In Promoting Patrick County

Tom Perry presents Brian Jessup, Treasurer of the J. E. B. Stuart Birthplace proceeds from the sale of his book Stuart's Birthplace: The History of the Laurel Hill Farm. Perry gave the J. E. B. Stuart Birthplace $5 from the sale of each book the organization helped promote since the book's release in February.

 

FALL PROGRAMS GIVEN BY TOM PERRY

 

"If Thee Must Fight, Then Fight Well" The Life of Brevet Brigadier General William Jackson Palmer

 

This talk will focus on Medal of Honor recipient and Delaware native William J. Palmer, who rode with

George Stoneman on his 1865 raid through our area. Palmer, a railroad engineer before the Civil War

went on to found the city of Colorado Springs, Colorado, and built railroads amassing a fortune after the war.

He retired and left his estate to educational and service organizations.

 

November 7, Civil War Round Table of Wilmington, Delaware.

 

 

Tom Perry with Otis D. Alexander, Director of the Danville Public Library, 

during the August 9 presentation of J. E. B. Stuart's Long Ride From Laurel Hill To Yellow Tavern.

Photo courtesy of Wilford Burson.

J. E. B. Stuart’s Long Ride From Laurel Hill To Yellow Tavern

A slide program begun in 2004 commemorating the 140th Anniversary of the battle that took Stuart’s life.

Presented by Tom Perry, Founder of the J. E. B. Stuart Birthplace Preservation Trust, Inc. This program given over a hundred times all over the country is used as a vehicle to promote Patrick County history and tourism. It covers James Ewell Brown's entire life from birth in Patrick County on February 6, 1833, until his death in Richmond on May 12, 1864.

September 25, Kansas City, Missouri, Civil War Round Table.

September 26, St Louis, Missouri, Civil War Round Table.

September 27, Topeka, Kansas, Civil War Round Table.

October 6, Museum of Middle Appalachia, Saltville, Virginia.

November 5, Montgomery County Pennsylvania Civil War Round Table.

March 1, 2008, Bassett Historical Center Symposium

NEW J. E. B. Stuart Program Coming To Star Theatre

Tom Perry and the Star Theatre will be holding a program on Sunday, November 11, at 3 p.m. entitled "From Laurel Hill To Yellow Tavern: The Life Of J. E. B. Stuart." This PowerPoint slide program will include images and music from the Civil War era while telling the life story of Patrick County's most famous solider James Ewell Brown "Jeb" Stuart on Veterans Day in the historic Star Theatre in Stuart, Virginia.  http://www.historicstartheatre.com

 

 

                                                                               

Copyright 2007 Tom Perry. No material to be used without permission. 

Contact Information: Tom Perry P. O. Box 50 Ararat VA 24053 freestateofpatrick@yahoo.com

 

Sponsors Are Available Via Credit Card Here!

Sponsorships For The Free State Of Patrick webpage are available yearly for $25.

Thanks to our sponsors for 2007 The Wolf Creek Farm and the White Sulphur Springs.

 

VISIT THE FRIENDS PAGE BY CLICKING HERE www.freestateofpatrick.com/friends.htm

 

                                                  

                                                                   

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