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Preston County, West Virginia, USA

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Profiles

  • Theodore Koley Stemple (c.1836 - c.1917)
    Theodore Kohler Stemple Birth Feb 1836 West Virginia, USA Death 1917 (aged 80–81) Burial Aurora Cemetery Aurora, Preston County, West Virginia,
  • Leonides Pinkney Riggleman (1863 - 1960)
    Leonides Pinkney Riggleman BIRTH 29 Aug 1863 Preston County, West Virginia, USA DEATH 6 Aug 1960 (aged 96) Morgantown, Monongalia County, West Virginia, USA BURIAL Gordon Cemetery Preston County, West...
  • Mary Alice Hawley (1857 - 1936)
    Mary Alice Riggleman Hawley BIRTH 7 May 1857 Preston County, West Virginia, USA DEATH 23 Aug 1936 (aged 79) Manown, Preston County, West Virginia, USA BURIAL Bethlehem Cemetery Reedsville, Preston Coun...
  • Florence Hardin (1860 - 1943)
    Florence Dennison Hardin BIRTH 26 Mar 1860 Preston County, West Virginia, USA DEATH 6 Oct 1943 (aged 83) Barbour County, West Virginia, USA BURIAL Mount Morris Cemetery Moatsville, Barbour County, Wes...
  • Arthur James Funk (1887 - 1965)
    Arthur James Funk BIRTH 12 May 1887 West Virginia, USA DEATH 9 Jan 1965 (aged 77) Preston County, West Virginia, USA BURIAL Red Rock Cemetery Macomber, Preston County, West Virginia, USA MEMORIAL ID 3...

This project is a table of contents for all projects relating to this County of West Virginia. Please feel free to add profiles of anyone who was born, lived or died in this county.

Native Americans lived in (and traveled through) what would one day become Preston County; they crossed-over from the Ohio River watershed, which drains into the Mississippi River, into the Chesapeake Bay watershed. From 1736, European traders and explorers lived in the County, and one boundary stone was laid in 1746—the Fairfax Stone marking the limits of the North Branch of the River. Larger numbers of white settlers began arriving in 1766, with even more coming to the region after the American Revolutionary War. Traveling by foot or horseback, settlers built their own log cabins. Further development followed from 1818, when the National Road was built slightly to the north. When the earliest railroads came, in 1851, all land passed into private ownership, the population increased 70% in a decade, and industrialization truly began.

During the American Civil War, more Preston County men enlisted in Union service than with the Confederacy. There were relatively few slave owners in Preston County, and naturally, few slaves. There were virtually none within a half-hour’s walk from the old Clarksburg-Winchester Road, dated to the late colonial era. The United States Census indicates that Preston County’s all-time slavery peak occurred in 1830, with 125 slaves accounted for, alongside 27 free colored persons.

On June 20, 1863, Preston was one of 50 Virginia counties that were admitted to the Union as the State of West Virginia. Later that year, the counties were divided into civil townships, with the intention of encouraging local government. This proved impractical in the heavily rural state of West Virginia, and the townships were converted into magisterial districts in 1872. Preston County was divided into eight districts: Grant, Kingwood, Lyon, Pleasant, Portland, Reno, Union, and Valley. These remained largely unchanged until the 1990s, when they were consolidated into five new magisterial districts: First, Second, Third, Fourth, and Fifth.

Cemeteries

Cemeteries of West Virginia

Links

Wikipedia