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A Forward-Thinking Legacy: Women's Suffrage

 

 


During the American Civil War, Pocahontas County was a deeply fractured, heavily Confederate-leaning frontier. For local Unionists, survival required navigating a brutal landscape of partisan warfare, bushwhackers, and regular military raids. Captain Samuel Young emerged as one of the most prominent leaders of this mountain Union sentiment, bridging the gap between local guerrilla resistance and the birth of the new state of West Virginia.

1. Organizing the Mountain Scouts & Militia

Because Pocahontas County was isolated and largely controlled by Confederate forces or Southern-sympathizing guerrilla bands (such as the 19th and 20th Virginia Cavalry units operating nearby), local Unionists were frequently forced to flee across Cheat Mountain to Union-held strongholds like Beverly or Elkwater.

Samuel Young played an indispensable role in organizing these displaced pro-Union citizens. Operating as a captain and political organizer, he worked closely with other prominent local Unionists—notably Captain John Sharp—to gather intelligence, form specialized scout detachments, and establish an official Union military presence.

Archival records from the fall of 1863—just around the time of the pivotal Battle of Droop Mountain in Pocahontas County—reveal Young actively coordinating from the state capital. Writing to Captain John Sharp from the Senate Chamber, Young stressed the absolute urgency of immediately organizing an official Pocahontas County militia out of the county's Union refugees. His strategic goal was twofold:

  • Security: Provide an organized, armed deterrent to secure the mountain passes and protect Union families from partisan violence.

  • Political Power: Guarantee that loyal Union officers would be elected to lead the local commands, cementing a pro-Union power structure for the county's eventual return to civil governance.

2. From the Mountains to the Senate Floor

Young’s leadership in the mountains propelled him into the political arena during the birth of West Virginia. When the state officially broke away from Virginia, Samuel Young was elected to represent the region in the 1st West Virginia Legislature, serving in the State Senate at Wheeling from June to December 1863.

As a senator, Young became a fierce advocate for the fractured, war-torn border counties. He used his legislative platform to secure resources for regional defense, ensuring that state authorities recognized the strategic importance of the partisan warfare playing out in the Allegheny highlands.

3. A Forward-Thinking Legacy: Women's Suffrage

Beyond his wartime logistics and local defense organizing, Samuel Young held remarkably progressive views for a 19th-century mountain minister and politician.

In 1867, long before women’s suffrage gained mainstream traction across the country, Senator Young introduced an unprecedented resolution to the West Virginia Senate calling for the enfranchisement of women. He followed up on February 8, 1869, by introducing a resolution encouraging the U.S. Congress to grant women the right to vote nationally. Though these early efforts were soundly defeated by his contemporaries, Captain Young cemented his name in history as the very first legislator to formally propose women's suffrage in the state of West Virginia—more than fifty years before the ratification of the 19th Amendment.

Historical Note for Researchers:

Original wartime correspondence documenting Captain Young's efforts to raise the Pocahontas County Union militia can be found in the Samuel Young Letters collection housed within the West Virginia University (WVU) Libraries Archival Center.

Into the Shaking Earth

 


 

The mist didn’t roll into the Cranberry Glades; it seemed to exhale from the earth itself.

By the summer of 1928, the hum of the logging boom echoed all through the Monongahela. The surrounding ridges were being stripped bare of old-growth red spruce, but the heart of the Glades—the shaking earth—remained a dark, forbidden island. Heavy machinery sank like stones if it got too close to the edge.

Silas Finch, a seasoned timber cruiser, knew the rules. He knew the warnings the old-timers muttered over tobacco smoke, and he knew the rules his mother had drummed into him as a boy: “Step off the tussocks, Silas, and the mire’ll swallow you whole, bone and button.”

But tonight, Silas wasn’t thinking about the rules. He was looking for his hound, Blue. The blue-tick had caught a scent at twilight and bolted straight into the restricted bog, his baying abruptly cut short.

Into the Shaking Earth

Silas stepped past the safety of the tree line, his lantern casting a weak, trembling circle of light. The ground beneath his heavy boots didn’t feel like solid Appalachian stone. It rolled and pitched, a floating mat of sphagnum moss suspended over ten feet of ancient algal ooze. Every step sent a sickening ripple through the earth.

“Blue!” Silas called out, his voice instantly muffled by the heavy, damp air.

The silence that followed was suffocating. Then, a low, wet pop echoed to his left.

Silas swung his lantern. A pocket of trapped methane gas had breached the peat. In the humid dark, the escaping gas phosphoresced, flickering into a faint, pale-blue flame that danced just inches above the marsh grass.

A corpse candle.

His chest tightened. The old mountain superstition warned that to follow the floating light was to invite your own doom. He turned his eyes away, but as he did, a sound tore through the fog—a blood-curdling, unearthly shriek that made the hair on his arms stand on end.

It sounded exactly like a woman in terrible agony.

The Cranberry Panther

Silas froze, his heart hammering against his ribs. The eastern cougars were supposed to be gone, hunted out of these mountains years ago. Yet, the legend of the Cranberry Panther persisted in every logging camp. Some said it was a beast; others said it was the restless spirit of a pioneer woman lost to the wilderness, forever screaming for rescue.

The shriek rose again, closer this time, echoing off the invisible mountain walls.

Panic snapped his caution. Silas lunged forward, his boot missing a firm clump of grass. The false floor gave way instantly.

He plummeted through the moss, the bottomless quicksand of the Glades seizing his right leg up to the thigh. The mud was a living entity, cold and ravenous, pulling him down into the dark, suffocating peat. He dropped his lantern; it shattered on a nearby log, the flame dying with a hiss.

The Carnivorous Wild

Struggling only made him sink faster. Silas clawed at the surrounding flora, his fingers scraping through a patch of tiny, sticky sundews and the hollow hoods of purple pitcher plants. In the dark, his mind flashed to the exaggerated tall tales the woodsmen told around the campfires—stories of monstrous, man-eating flora hidden deep in the Big Glade that grew large enough to swallow a man whole. As the tiny, carnivorous tendrils clung to his skin, the line between folklore and terrifying reality blurred entirely.

He was sinking to his hips.

"Help!" he choked out, the mist filling his throat.

A wet nose suddenly nudged his cheek. Through the gloom, the silhouette of a dog appeared. Blue. The hound had found a fallen hemlock trunk half-buried in the mire and was standing safely on its rotting bark.

With a final, desperate burst of strength, Silas grabbed the dog’s heavy leather collar. He threw his weight toward the log, using the hound as an anchor, and dragged his legs free from the bog’s suffocating grip with a sickening thwack.

The Safe Path

Silas lay on the fallen log for a long time, chest heaving, his hand buried in Blue's thick fur. The unearthly screaming had faded, replaced by the gentle, rhythmic dripping of the mist on the cranberry vines.

They waited for dawn on that log, not daring to move another inch in the dark. When the sun finally broke over the ridges, burning away the ghostly mists, Silas and Blue carefully navigated their way back to the firm ground of the forest. Silas never spoke of what he heard or saw that night, but he never set foot in the bogs again.

The Glades Today

Nearly a century later, the wild heart of the Cranberry Glades remains just as mystical, though far less perilous. Today’s travelers can walk the safe, half-mile wooden boardwalk, looking down at the very same carnivorous pitcher plants and shifting peat that fueled Silas’s nightmares—safely separated from the ancient, shaking earth beneath.



Cranberry Glades

 


 

The Cranberry Glades Botanical Area is as rich in human history and mountain folklore as it is in unique ecology. The very characteristics that make it a scientific marvel—its disorienting landscape, dense mists, and unstable, shifting ground—have fueled centuries of cautionary tales, superstitious dread, and early Appalachian legends.

The Deep History of "The Glades"

The natural history of the Cranberry Glades stretches back over 12,000 years to the end of the Last Glacial Period. As the glaciers retreated far to the north, a unique combination of high altitude (around 3,400 feet) and a bowl-shaped valley topography trapped cold air and water, allowing a sub-arctic environment to persist in the southern mountains. Over millennia, decaying plant matter accumulated to form layers of peat up to ten feet thick, floating over an ancient layer of algal ooze and marl.

  • Indigenous Presence: Long before European exploration, Native American tribes, including the Shawnee and Cherokee, traversed the region. Archaeological evidence indicates they treated the Glades as seasonal hunting and foraging grounds rather than permanent settlement areas. The treacherous, spongy ground and nutrient-poor soils discouraged building, but the margins of the bogs provided an abundance of game and wild cranberries.

  • The Logging Boom: In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the timber industry heavily targeted the surrounding mountains for old-growth red spruce and hemlock. Between 1926 and 1933, intensive logging operations and temporary rail lines encircled the area. Remarkably, the fragile center of the bogs remained largely untouched because the heavy machinery would sink into the peat.

  • Conservation: Recognized for its immense ecological value, the 750-acre area was protected within the Monongahela National Forest and designated a National Natural Landmark in 1974.

Folklore and Legends of the Glades

The folklore of the Cranberry Glades is deeply tied to the physical reality of the bog. To early settlers and loggers, it was an unpredictable, alien environment surrounded by dense, unforgiving wilderness.

1. The "Bottomless" Quicksand and Sinking Devourers

Because the glades consist of thick mats of sphagnum moss and peat floating over water and ooze, the ground visibly rolls and shakes when walked upon—earning it the historical nickname of "the shaking earth."

  • The Lore: Early Appalachian folklore warned that the Glades were filled with "bottomless" pockets of quicksand disguised by harmless-looking moss. Local mothers warned children that if they stepped off the firm tussocks of grass, the bog would swallow them whole without leaving a trace. Loggers shared tales of prize hunting dogs or stray livestock vanishing instantly into the mire, giving the bogs an ominous reputation as a living entity that "ate" whatever stepped into its traps.

2. The Screaming Panther and Ghostly Mists

The dense mists that frequently roll off the surrounding mountains and settle into the bog valley have always played tricks on the senses, giving rise to auditory folklore.

  • The Lore: Long after panthers (eastern cougars) were largely eradicated from the region by hunters, tales persisted of the "Cranberry Panther." Pioneers and later loggers reported hearing unearthly, blood-curdling screams echoing across the open bogs on foggy nights—often described as sounding exactly like a woman in terrible agony. Over time, the line between an elusive predator and a supernatural manifestation blurred, and the sound became attributed to the restless spirits of those supposedly lost in the deep wilderness.

3. Willow-the-Wisps and Corpse Candles

The biological decomposition occurring deep within the ten-foot layers of peat naturally releases pockets of methane and other organic gases.

  • The Lore: On dark, humid summer nights, these escaping gases would occasionally ignite or phosphoresce, creating faint, flickering lights floating just above the marsh grass. Early travelers called these phenomena "will-o'-the-wisps," "jack-o'-lanterns," or "corpse candles." In regional superstition, spotting these floating lights inside the Glades was considered a severe omen of impending doom, an invitation by malicious spirits to lure travelers off the safe paths and into the dangerous, deep mire.

4. The Carnivorous Identity

The presence of native purple pitcher plants and tiny sundews—which capture and digest insects to survive in the nutrient-poor soil—magnified the area's eerie reputation.

  • The Lore: While small in reality, the existence of flesh-eating flora fueled exaggerated tall tales among early woodsmen. In local storytelling circles, the plants were sometimes romanticized or exaggerated into fantastic, monstrous variations hidden deep within the restricted "Big Glade," adding a sense of dark, primordial danger to the landscape.

Today, visitors can safely explore this legendary landscape via the half-mile wooden boardwalk, experiencing the same quiet, misty atmosphere that inspired generations of mountain storytellers.

Medical Practices & Surgical Procedures

 


 

In the remote, rugged mountains of Pocahontas County, West Virginia, medical care before 1900 was a blend of formal "heroic" medicine practiced by country doctors and deeply ingrained Appalachian folk traditions. Professional doctors traveled on horseback with saddlebags full of tools and tinctures, frequently collaborating with or relying on local "herb doctors" (or "yarb doctors") when supplies ran low.

Here are 20 documented medical practices, procedures, and herbal remedies used by Pocahontas County practitioners during the 19th century.

Medical Practices & Surgical Procedures

1. Bloodletting (Phlebotomy)

Well into the late 19th century, doctors used lancets to drain a patient's blood to treat "fevers," inflammation, or hypertension. This was rooted in the ancient belief that illness was caused by an imbalance of bodily humors.

2. Cupping and Blistering

To draw toxins or "bad blood" away from diseased internal organs, doctors applied heated glass cups to the skin to create a vacuum (cupping). They also applied caustic chemical agents, like Spanish fly (cantharides), to intentionally create blisters, believing the discharging fluid carried away the infection.

3. Kitchen-Table Amputations

Due to logging, sawmill, and railroad accidents, traumatic limb injuries were common. Country doctors performed amputations directly on the patient's kitchen table, using basic bone saws and knives. Before the widespread availability of ether, a heavy dose of local whiskey or a tight tourniquet was used to dull the pain.

4. Direct Chloroform and Ether Anesthesia

By the late 1800s, specialized country doctors administered chloroform or ether via a simple cloth cone held over the patient's nose and mouth for major surgeries or difficult childbirths, tracking the patient's breathing manually.

5. Carbolic Acid Wound Antisepsis

As Joseph Lister’s germ theory slowly reached rural West Virginia in the 1880s and 1890s, forward-thinking doctors began washing wounds and surgical tools in a diluted solution of carbolic acid (phenol) to prevent "hospital gangrene" and blood poisoning.

6. Calomel Purging

Doctors heavily prescribed calomel (mercurous chloride) as a powerful purgative. It was given in massive doses to induce severe vomiting and diarrhea, which was thought to completely cleanse the liver and gastrointestinal tract of disease. Unfortunately, it often resulted in severe mercury poisoning.

7. Forceps-Assisted Home Deliveries

While local midwives handled normal births, a doctor was called for "obstructed labor." Before 1900, this meant using heavy metal obstetrical forceps to manually pull the infant through the birth canal, a high-risk procedure performed entirely by candlelight.

8. Quill and Lancet Smallpox Vaccination

To fight regional smallpox outbreaks, doctors performed arm-to-arm vaccination or used bovine lymph. They would scrape the patient's upper arm with a steel lancet or an ivory quill until it bled, then rub the viral matter directly into the wound to induce immunity.

9. Tooth Pulling with Dental Keys

Dental care was treated as a basic medical procedure. Doctors used a terrifying tool called a "dental key" or heavy tooth keys to lock onto a decaying tooth and wrench it sideways out of the jawbone, usually without any numbing agent.

10. Setting Fractures with Improvised Wood Splints

For broken bones, doctors manually pulled the limbs to snap the bone back into place (reduction). Because plaster of Paris cast bandages were scarce in remote areas, they carved custom splints out of local hickory, oak, or pine bark, wrapping them tightly with strips of unbleached muslin.

Herbal Remedies & Botanical Medicines

11. Boneset (Eupatorium perfoliatum) Tea

Boneset was the absolute staple for treating the dreaded "breakbone fever" (dengue or severe influenza). Doctors and herbalists brewed an incredibly bitter hot tea from the leaves and flowers to induce intense sweating and break a patient's fever.

12. Wild Cherry Bark (Prunus serotina) Syrup

To treat consumption (tuberculosis), pneumonia, and severe winter coughs, practitioners harvested the inner bark of the wild cherry tree. They boiled it down with sugar or molasses to create a sedative cough syrup that effectively quieted the lungs.

13. Ginseng (Panax quinquefolius) Tinctures

Highly valued both as a local remedy and a cash crop in Pocahontas County, wild ginseng roots were dug from the rich mountain coves. Doctors soaked the roots in corn whiskey to create a stimulating tonic used to combat physical exhaustion, nervous debility, and the weaknesses of old age.

14. Pokeberry (Phytolacca americana) Wine or Tincture

For chronic rheumatism and arthritis, older generations and local doctors used a carefully dosed tincture made from mature, dark purple pokeberries soaked in alcohol. Because the plant is highly toxic, the dosage was strictly limited to a few drops a day.

15. Comfrey (Symphytum officinale) Poultices

Known colloquially in the mountains as "knit-bone," comfrey leaves and roots were mashed into a wet paste (poultice) and bound directly over closed bone fractures, sprains, and severe bruises to accelerate deep tissue healing.

16. Slippery Elm (Ulmus rubra) Mucilage

The inner bark of the slippery elm was scraped and mixed with warm water to create a slick, soothing paste. Doctors used it internally to coat the stomach during bouts of severe dysentery or typhoid fever, and externally as a soothing dressing for raw burns.

17. Black Cohosh (Actaea racemosa) Decoctions

Often called "rattleroot" or "squawroot," the roots of this native woodland plant were boiled to treat what 19th-century doctors termed "female complaints" (menstrual cramps, hot flashes, and complications of pregnancy), as well as a remedy for chorea (involuntary muscle twitching).

18. Bloodroot (Sanguinaria canadensis) Salve

The bright red, acrid sap squeezed from bloodroot rhizomes was mixed with lard to form an escharotic (tissue-destroying) salve. Doctors applied it topically to burn away warts, ringworm, fungal infections, and even early-stage skin cancers.

19. Catnip (Nepeta cataria) Tea for Infantile Colic

Because formal medicines were often too harsh for infants, doctors routinely recommended that mothers brew a weak, warm tea from catnip leaves. It acted as a mild sedative and carminative to relieve gas, colic, and crying fits in newborns.

20. Mayapple (Podophyllum peltatum) Resin

The underground rhizomes of the mayapple yielded a resin called podophyllin. Doctors used it as a drastically potent "hepatic stimulant" and laxative to treat severe, chronic constipation and torpid liver. Like many pioneer remedies, it was highly toxic if overadministered.

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In 19th-century medicine, "torpid liver" was a diagnosis given to a liver that was thought to be sluggish, inactive, or failing to produce enough bile. It wasn't a specific disease like modern hepatitis or cirrhosis, but rather a catch-all term for a broad metabolic slowdown.

Because early doctors believed the liver was the engine of the body's digestive and emotional balance, a "torpid" liver was blamed for a massive range of daily ailments.

The Symptoms

If you went to a country doctor in Pocahontas County in 1880 complaining of a combination of these symptoms, a "torpid liver" is almost certainly what they would have written in their ledger:

  • Chronic, severe constipation and flatulence

  • A thick, yellowish or white coating on the tongue (often called a "bilious tongue")

  • A dull, aching pain or heaviness under the right rib cage

  • Severe mental depression, irritability, and brain fog (which gave us the literal term "bilious" or "melancholic"—meaning dark bile)

  • A muddy, sallow skin complexion or slight yellowing of the eyes

The Pioneer Philosophy: "Wake Up" the Liver

Medical theory of the time held that when the liver stagnated, the blood became poisoned with waste matter, leading to systemic disease. The cure was straightforward: force the liver to work by violently purging the digestive tract.

Practitioners used powerful stimulants (known as cholagogues or hydragogue cathartics) to break the stagnation. This usually involved:

  1. Mayapple Root (Podophyllin): A native Appalachian plant known as "American Jalap." In small, strictly controlled doses, it forced the gallbladder to empty and caused intense bowel movements.

  2. Calomel: A heavy mercury-based powder. It was remarkably effective at causing immediate, explosive purging. Doctors knew it worked because the resulting stools were dark green—which they mistook for a massive release of "stored bile," but was actually a chemical reaction caused by the mercury speeding up intestinal transit time.

Once the patient was thoroughly emptied, doctors would follow up with bitter tonics like dandelion root, goldenseal, or ginseng soaked in whiskey to "tone" the stomach and keep the liver from slipping back into its lazy state.

By the early 1900s, as modern biochemistry advanced and doctors realized that mercury was poisoning patients rather than curing them, the diagnosis of a "torpid liver" faded away, replaced by specific understandings of gastrointestinal health, gallbladder disease, and metabolic nutrition.

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Bloodroot is a fascinating and vivid example of how 19th-century "eclectic medicine"—which heavily combined botanical knowledge with aggressive physical treatments—operated on the Appalachian frontier.

While the white flower looks delicate, the underground rhizome (root) contains a dark, blood-red juice packed with highly toxic alkaloids, primarily sanguinarine.

The Chemistry of the "Burn"

When country doctors or mountain healers mixed bloodroot juice with lard or zinc chloride to make a paste, they were creating a literal escharotic—a substance designed to kill living tissue on contact and form a thick, black scab called an eschar.

Sanguinarine destroys cells by blocking an essential enzyme pump ($Na^+/K^+-ATPase$) that keeps animal cells alive. When applied to a growth on the skin:

  • It causes rapid necrosis (cell death) of the tissue it touches.

  • The body responds with massive inflammation, physically walling off the dead, poisoned area.

  • Within a week or two, the entire mass sloughs off, leaving a deep, raw crater that eventually scars over.

The Problem with 19th-Century Cancer "Cures"

Before 1900, if an elderly resident developed a basal cell carcinoma on their face from decades of farming or logging in the sun, a doctor might apply a bloodroot salve.

To the old country doctors, it looked like a miracle. The salve would target the tumor, rot it out, and leave a hole that eventually healed. They believed the herb had a "magical intelligence" that only ate away the bad tissue while sparing the good.

Today, we know that isn't true. Bloodroot doesn't distinguish between healthy skin and cancerous cells; it destroys both indiscriminately. Because it liquefies tissue on contact, the dangers were severe:

  1. Incomplete Treatment: If a skin cancer had deep "roots" spreading under the skin, the surface salve might burn away the top layer but leave the deeper cancer behind to aggressively spread internally.

  2. Severe Disfigurement: If left on too long or applied too broadly, it could eat straight through normal skin, muscle, and even nasal cartilage, leaving terrible, permanent hollows in a patient's face.

Modern Context: "Black Salve" Warnings

While bloodroot extracts are sometimes safely used in highly diluted, strictly controlled pharmaceutical contexts (like certain veterinary treatments for bovine warts), traditional bloodroot paste is highly dangerous.

Under the name "Black Salve," versions of these 19th-century escharotic pastes are heavily regulated and banned for cancer treatment by the FDA today. What a pioneer doctor viewed as an essential, rugged tool for remote survival is now recognized as a severe medical risk that can cause extensive tissue destruction and delay proper, lifesaving surgical removal.

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 The logistics of smallpox vaccination in late-19th-century Appalachia were crude, chaotic, and often terrifying to local communities. Before mass-produced vials of liquid vaccine became a standard commercial product, a country doctor had to be highly resourceful just to keep the vaccine alive in the mountains.

The tools and methods they used show a fascinating, transitionary era in medical history—moving away from ancient, dangerous practices toward early modern immunology.

The Evolution of the Method

1. Arm-to-Arm Inoculation (The Early Way)

In the mid-to-late 1800s, if smallpox broke out in a nearby lumber camp or railroad town, a doctor might not have any fresh vaccine on hand. Their solution was to find a local child who had been successfully vaccinated a week prior and had a ripe, fluid-filled smallpox blister (vaccinia vesicle) on their arm.

Using a steel lancet, the doctor would puncture the child's blister to collect the clear lymph fluid on the tip. They would then turn directly to the next person, scarify (scratch) their upper arm until it was raw or bleeding, and press the fresh fluid directly into the wound.

2. The Ivory Quill (The Portable Way)

Because arm-to-arm vaccination carried a massive risk of spreading other bloodborne diseases like syphilis or hepatitis, doctors increasingly relied on "vaccine quills."

These were small, thin strips of ivory or bone shaped like a writing quill. Specialized medical suppliers in cities like Baltimore or Richmond would harvest fluid from infected calves (bovine lymph), coat the tips of these quills with the lymph, and let them dry.

When a Pocahontas County doctor received these quills via the mail or railroad:

  • They used a steel lancet or a specialized multi-pronged rotary lancet (like the one pictured above) to aggressively scratch a crosshatch pattern into the patient's skin.

  • They would moisten the dried lymph on the ivory quill with a drop of water.

  • They rubbed the wet quill tip firmly into the bleeding scratches.

Logistical Nightmare in the Mountains

Keeping these dried quills effective was incredibly difficult. The vaccine required live virus (Vaccinia), which degraded quickly when exposed to summer heat during long rides on horseback through the mountains. If a doctor stored the quills poorly, the vaccination would fail, leaving the community entirely unprotected during an outbreak.

Furthermore, these procedures were deeply unpopular with some locals. Because the scratch was deep and performed with unsterilized tools, the vaccination site frequently became infected with staphylococcus or streptococcus bacteria from everyday farm work. The resulting massive, painful ulcers and heavy scarring led to widespread resistance against traveling "vaccination doctors"—a friction that persisted until advanced, sterile needles and stable glycerinated lymph were introduced in the early 20th century.

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In the 19th and early 20th centuries, "nervous debility" (often diagnosed interchangeably with neurasthenia) was a widely accepted medical condition characterized by the total exhaustion of the body’s "nerve force."

Before modern neurology and psychiatry evolved, doctors viewed the nervous system as an electrical grid with a finite amount of energy. If a person overextended themselves, their battery ran dry, resulting in a systemic collapse of both physical and mental health.

The Symptoms

Because it was a catch-all diagnosis for a depleted nervous system, the symptom list was vast. A country doctor in the late 1800s would diagnose nervous debility if a patient complained of:

  • Chronic, overwhelming fatigue that sleep couldn't fix

  • Severe brain fog, lack of ambition, and "morbid dread" (anxiety/depression)

  • Frequent, throbbing headaches and insomnia

  • Palpitations of the heart and a weak pulse

  • Digestive issues like nervous dyspepsia (indigestion)

Who Got It? (Two Very Different Realities)

In urban centers like New York or Philadelphia, nervous debility was famously considered a disease of the elite—blamed on the fast-paced, high-stress lifestyle of businessmen, academics, and literary women.

But in rural areas like the mountains of West Virginia, the diagnosis took on a completely different flavor. Here, it was blamed on unremitting physical and emotional strain.

  • For Women: It was frequently attributed to isolation, the relentless physical labor of homesteading, and the toll of bearing and raising large families by candlelight.

  • For Men: It was often blamed on severe physical trauma from logging or sawmill accidents, or the heavy burden of financial ruin following crop failures or livestock disease.

The Mountain Cure: "Tonics" and Rest

Treatment for nervous debility in remote areas focused heavily on rebuilding the blood and stimulating the nerves to restore that lost "nerve force." Rural doctors and herbalists turned to a mixture of lifestyle changes and potent botanical extracts:

  • Ginseng (Panax quinquefolius): Dug directly from the rich mountain coves of Pocahontas County, wild ginseng was the ultimate rural remedy for debility. Doctors soaked the roots in corn whiskey to create a powerful, stimulating adaptogen meant to give immediate physical stamina and clear the mind.

  • Valerian and Catnip Teas: Used as mild sedatives at night to calm the "twitching nerves" and force the patient into deep sleep.

  • The "Rest Cure" vs. "Forced Labor": While wealthy city patients were sent to sanitariums for total bed rest, mountain residents rarely had that luxury. Instead, country doctors would prescribe bitter iron tonics (often containing wild cherry bark or dandelion root) to "build up the blood," advising the patient to avoid "undue excitement" or heavy lifting for a few weeks if their farm economy allowed it.

By the 1920s, the concept of a finite "nerve force" was disproven by modern medicine. The diagnosis of nervous debility faded away, split into modern classifications we recognize today, such as clinical depression, generalized anxiety disorder, chronic fatigue syndrome, and clinical burnout.

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The story of calomel (mercurous chloride) is one of the most tragic ironies in the history of medicine. For over a century, it was the ultimate weapon in a country doctor's saddlebag—the heavy artillery used to blast away everything from a mild winter cold to yellow fever, cholera, and that stubborn "torpid liver."

The very visible, violent bodily response it caused was exactly what convinced 19th-century doctors that they were successfully driving out the disease.

The Illusion of the "Green Stool"

As you noted, the trademark sign that calomel was "working" was the production of a dark, grass-green stool. In 1850, a physician would look at that and celebrate, believing the mercury had successfully unblocked a congested liver and released a massive, cleansing wave of stagnant bile.

The actual biological reality was entirely different:

  1. Chemical Rapid Transit: Calomel acts as an intense local irritant to the lining of the small intestine. It causes violent, rapid muscular contractions (peristalsis).

  2. Skipping the Breakdown: Normally, normal green bile secreted by the gallbladder travels slowly through the intestines, where gut bacteria break it down and change its color from green to brown.

  3. The Result: Calomel caused such explosive transit speeds that the bile was flushed out of the body completely unaltered. The doctor wasn't curing a "torpid liver"—he was simply emptying the intestines so fast that the body didn't have time to digest its own bile.

The Silent Horror: "Salivation"

Because calomel doesn't dissolve well in water, a single dose might sit in a patient's gut for days. If a country doctor felt the first dose didn't produce a strong enough reaction, they would routinely administer more, leading to a massive accumulation of mercury in the patient's tissues.

Doctors actually looked for the early signs of mercury poisoning—which they called "salivation"—as proof that the medicine had successfully saturated the patient's system. Symptoms included an metallic taste in the mouth, followed by a torrent of thick saliva (sometimes up to a quart a day).

In severe cases, especially among children or weakened patients, the unchecked mercury poisoning caused:

  • The gums to rot, turn black, and recede.

  • The teeth to loosen and completely drop out.

  • The jawbone itself to undergo necrosis (bone death), causing portions of the jaw and cheek to physically slough off.

The Great Calomel Rebellion

The overuse of calomel was so destructive that it eventually caused a massive schism in American medicine. During the Civil War, the Surgeon General of the Union Army, William A. Hammond, looked at the horrific jaw deformities and deaths caused by the drug and officially banned calomel from the army's medical supply list in 1863. The conservative medical establishment was so outraged by his assault on their favorite remedy that they successfully lobbied to have Hammond court-martialed and removed from his post.

Despite the controversies, the deep cultural belief in the power of calomel meant it lingered in rural regions like Appalachia well toward 1900. It took decades of education and the rise of safer, plant-based laxatives before patients and country doctors finally realized that their most trusted cure-all was actually a poison.

Most Prominent Persons in Pocahontas History

 


 

The history of Pocahontas County, West Virginia, is deeply rooted in the rugged landscapes of the Allegheny Mountains and shaped by the independent spirit of its people. From the earliest 18th-century pioneers who cleared the dense wilderness, to the influential civic leaders, industrial innovators, and cultural figures of the 19th and 20th centuries, the county's heritage is remarkably rich.

Culled from foundational local resources like William T. Price’s Historical Sketches of Pocahontas County, regional court records, and local archives, here is an exhaustive accounting of 50 of the most prominent and influential figures in Pocahontas County history.

1. The Explorers & Early Pioneers (1740s–1770s)

  • the extensive Pocahontas County Slaven lineage.

  • Elizabeth Warwick Slaven: Wife of John Slaven and sister to noted early pioneers Andrew and William Warwi

    • Jacob Marlin: One of the very first European settlers to venture into the region. In 1749, he and Stephen Sewell established a primitive camp at the confluence of Knapp's Creek and the Greenbrier River—a site known for generations as "Marlin’s Bottom" before becoming the county seat of Marlinton.

    • Stephen Sewell: Marlin’s contemporary and co-explorer. After a famous theological disagreement with Marlin, Sewell moved his living quarters into a large, hollow sycamore tree just a short distance away. He was later killed by Native Americans further west, leaving his name on Sewell Mountain.

    • General Andrew Lewis (1720–1781): A legendary colonial soldier and surveyor. While surveying land grants for the Greenbrier Company in 1751, Lewis officially "discovered" Marlin and Sewell living at Marlin’s Bottom. He later led Virginia forces in the Battle of Point Pleasant (1774).

    • John McNeel (1745–1825): An early, deeply influential pioneer who settled the fertile "Little Levels" area near Hillsboro around 1765. A devout early Methodist, he donated the land for and helped construct the historic Old Levels Academy and the McNeel Cemetery.

    • Martha Davis McNeel: Wife of John McNeel. She was renowned for her extreme fortitude and medical knowledge in the early frontier community, managing their vast homestead during times of frontier conflict and establishing one of the most prominent lineage trees in the county.

    • John Slaven (1723–1802): A native of Tyrone, Ireland, who settled near the headwaters of the Greenbrier River after serving in the Revolutionary War. A noted frontier scout, hunter, and trapper, he founded

    ck. Her deep family connections tied together multiple frontier fortresses along Deer Creek, cementing her family's central role in early regional defense.

  • Richard Hill (1763–1849): A veteran of the American Revolution who migrated to Pocahontas from North Carolina. He became one of the most distinguished early scouts and frontier defenders, eventually settling and farming in the Lobelia region.

  • Valentine Cackley, Sr.: An early industrial pioneer who established a very successful mill site at Mill Point. His mills served as a crucial economic hub for the early settlers of the Levels, grinding grain and sawing timber necessary for permanent settlements.

  • William Sharp: One of the earliest permanent settlers on Frost Ridge. He was a noted frontiersman whose descendants became prominent landowners, farmers, and civic leaders in the eastern and northern portions of the county.

  • John Burner: A pioneer of German descent who settled along the Upper Greenbrier River. His family cleared vast tracts of land and established early agricultural homesteads that helped anchor the northern boundary of the early county.

  • John Dilley: An early settler near Huntersville. He was instrumental in building some of the first fortified cabins in the area to protect pioneer families from regional conflicts during the late 18th century.

2. Founders, Statesmen & Civil War Figures (1800s–1860s)

  • William Poage (1779–1854): A highly influential civic leader who served as a member of the Virginia House of Delegates. He was a driving force behind the formal legislative creation of Pocahontas County in December 1821.

  • Major John Cartmill: A respected local officer and magistrate. On March 5, 1822, he presided over the very first organizational meeting of the Pocahontas County Court, held at the home of John Bradshaw in Huntersville.

  • John Bradshaw: A prominent citizen of Huntersville whose large home served as the first temporary courthouse, jail, and administrative center of the county while permanent public buildings were being constructed.

  • Thomas Hill: Son of pioneer Richard Hill. He was a highly active 19th-century magistrate, surveyor, and civic organizer who helped lay out early county roads and property boundaries around Hillsboro.

  • Colonel John Hill: A distinguished military officer in the local Virginia militia and a prominent farmer near Hillsboro. He later served as a magistrate and county leader before migrating with a large contingent of Pocahontas families to Missouri.

  • William Slaven (1798–1872): Son of pioneer John Slaven. He was a highly influential political figure who served multiple terms in the Virginia Legislature, worked as a county magistrate, and served as a regional assessor before moving westward to Lewis County.

  • Patrick Bruffey: A remarkable early craftsman and public servant. Renowned for his exceptional skill in stone, iron, and wood work, Bruffey built much of the early physical infrastructure in the county and filled nearly every local official office available during his lifetime.

  • Captain William L. McNeel: A prominent local figure who commanded the "Pocahontas Rescuers" (Company I, 3rd Virginia Infantry) during the Civil War, representing the heavily Confederate sentiment of the county's leadership at the time.

  • Paul McNeel (1806–1889): A wealthy landowner, high sheriff, and politician. He represented Pocahontas County at the Virginia Secession Convention of 181f, where he voted in favor of seceding from the United States.

  • Colonel George Washington Siple: A prominent resident of the Green Bank area who served as a officer in the local militia and later managed substantial land holdings and agricultural operations through the turbulent Civil War era.

  • Captain Samuel Young: A leader of regional Union sentiment in a deeply divided area. He helped organize local Union scouts and sympathizers, navigating the dangerous partisan warfare that plagued the mountains of Pocahontas.

  • Lanty Lockridge, Sr.: A prominent early landowner and farmer on Knapps Creek whose sprawling estate and business dealings made him a central figure in early 19th-century property and legal disputes.

3. Editors, Historians & Cultural Icons (Late 1800s–1950s)

  • Rev. William T. Price (1830–1921): A revered Presbyterian minister, author, and the preeminent historian of Pocahontas County. His monumental 1901 book, Historical Sketches of Pocahontas County, preserved the deep genealogical and narrative history of the county's pioneer families.

  • Pearl S. Buck (1892–1973): Globally recognized author and humanitarian. Born Pearl Comfort Sydenstricker at her mother’s family home (the Stulting House) in Hillsboro, she became the first American woman to win both the Pulitzer Prize (1932) and the Nobel Prize for Literature (1938).

  • Calvin W. "Cal" Price (1880–1957): The legendary, long-time editor and publisher of The Pocahontas Times. A fierce advocate for forest conservation, wildlife protection, and local lore, his widely read columns and colorful "panther stories" brought national attention to the region.

  • Andrew Price (1871–1930): Brother to Cal Price. He was a brilliant lawyer, poet, naturalist, and local historian who served as the first President of the West Virginia Historical Society and wrote extensive, witty articles on regional history under various pseudonyms.

  • James Cooper Slaven: A leading citizen, magistrate, and legal mind in the late 19th century who performed hundreds of marriages and arbitrated local civil disputes across the northern half of the county.

  • Reuben Slaven: A highly influential, long-serving magistrate in the upper Greenbrier region. He was widely celebrated as the leading civic authority of his section, managing local court days and community developments for decades.

  • Emma B. King: A pioneering educator in the late 19th and early 20th centuries who dedicated her life to improving rural, one-room schoolhouses across Pocahontas County, ensuring mountain children had access to classical instruction.

  • M. D. Dunlap: A progressive school superintendent and educational organizer who championed the modernization and standardized grading of the county's school systems during the early 20th-century educational reforms.

  • George E. Craig: A prominent merchant and businessman in early Marlinton who helped finance and construct several of the town's lasting brick commercial blocks following the arrival of the railroad.

  • F. R. Hunter: A major landowner and businessman after whom the town of Huntersville was largely styled and supported during its era as the original county seat.

4. Industrialists, Builders & Modern Leaders (1900s–Present)

  • Johnson Newlon Camden (1828–1908): A powerful U.S. Senator and industrial tycoon. He spearheaded the development of the Camden and Marlinton Railroad, a vital transportation artery that opened the massive timber resources of the Greenbrier Valley to global markets.

  • John W. Goodsell: A prominent regional physician and surgeon based in Woodward and Marlinton. He served as the official ship's doctor on Admiral Robert Peary's historic 1908 Arctic Expedition to the North Pole before returning to practice medicine in the county.

  • Fred C. Burns: A foundational figure in modern regional logistics and commerce. He founded Burns Motor Freight in Marlinton, transforming a small local hauling operation into a massive, iconic trucking enterprise that powered the Appalachian timber industry.

  • Skip Johnson: A legendary outdoor writer and columnist for The Charleston Gazette. Though working state-wide, his deep love for Pocahontas County's pristine trout streams and remote wilderness blocks filled his columns, cementing the county's reputation as a sportsman's paradise.

  • Dr. Drake Lodge: A dedicated country doctor who traveled by horseback, buggy, and early automobile across the rugged, roadless terrain of the backcountry to deliver babies and treat generations of isolated mountain families.

  • E. Sherman Beard: A major agricultural innovator and livestock dealer in the Little Levels who introduced advanced cattle breeding techniques to West Virginia, making the county a premier region for high-quality beef production.

  • John S. Wooddell: A prominent late 19th-century clerk of the Circuit Court and attorney who meticulously managed the county’s legal transitions during the post-Civil War Reconstruction era and the subsequent industrial boom.

  • J. H. Patterson: A dedicated Confederate veteran who served as the long-time Clerk of the Pocahontas Circuit Court. He was highly respected for his scrupulous record-keeping and deep personal knowledge of county land titles.

  • Levi Gay: A highly active 19th-century surveyor, farmer, and developer who laid out several residential and commercial additions to the town of Marlinton during its rapid expansion as an industrial timber hub.

  • Thomas J. Campbell: A leading citizen, legal advisor, and agriculturalist from the northern districts who frequently represented regional farming interests before the state government.

  • Dr. Frank H. Jett: A prominent community physician and health officer in the mid-20th century who led early public health campaigns, immunizations, and sanitation projects to modernize health standards across rural magisterial districts.

  • Jane Sharp: A pioneering female journalist and long-time editor of The Pocahontas Times who carried on the fierce independence of the local press, documenting the transition of the county from a timber-dominant economy to a tourism hub.

  • Dr. Otto Struve (1897–1963): A world-renowned astronomer who served as the first director of the National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO) in Green Bank, establishing Pocahontas County as a global capital for astrophysical research.

  • Frank Moore: A highly influential local banker and financier who steered the First National Bank of Marlinton through the Great Depression, ensuring the survival of local businesses and family farms when banks across the nation were failing.

  • Walt Helmick: A prominent modern political leader, state senator, and long-serving President of the Pocahontas County Commission who has directed major infrastructure, public utility, and economic development projects across the county for decades

Recommended Historical Focus

If you wish to explore any of these specific lineages or historical epochs further, please let me know. We can focus on:

  1. The complex 18th-century land grants and migrations of the pioneer families (McNeel, Slaven, Hill, Sharp, etc.).

  2. The economic impact of the Camden and Marlinton Railroad and the early timber booms.

  3. The specific 19th-century court documents and property disputes that shaped the county boundaries.

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