Tuesday, March 09, 2010
Flashback: What Happened on March 09, ....

• 1847 - The Virginia General Assembly passed an act authorizing the improvement of navigation on the Little Kanawha River. In accordance, the Little Kanawha Navigation Company was incorporated to improve the river from its mouth in Parkersburg to Bulltown, Braxton County. Little progress was made until the development of the oil industry on Burning Springs, Wirt County, in the 1860s.
• 1847 - The Virginia General Assembly passed an act which incorporated the Little Kanawha Navigation Company to improve navigation on the Little Kanawha River from its mouth to Bulltown in Braxton County. Subscription books were opened in Parkersburg under the direction of the following commissioners: J. Dickerson, Alfred Beauchamp, Hiram Pribble, Peyton Butcher, Willis Leech, Abraham Enoch, Peter G. Vanwinkle, and Jefferson Gibbsons.
• 1847 - The Virginia General Assembly passed an act which incorporated the Harrisville Turnpike Company to construct a road from a point on the Northwestern Turnpike through the town of Harrisville in Ritchie County, to a point on the Staunton and Parkersburg Road west of Weston in Lewis County. Subscription books were opened in Harrisville under the direction of the following commissioners: Noah Rexroad, Eli Riddle, J. B. Blair, Austin Berkeley, George J. Howe, Isaiah Wells, William Martin, W. B. Lowther, James McKennedy, John Harris, and Spencer Bukey.
• 1848 - The Virginia General Assembly passed an act providing for the incorporation of the Weston and Fairmont Turnpike Company to construct a road from Weston in Lewis County, to Clarksburg and Shinnston in Harrison County, to Fairmont in Marion County. Subscription books were opened under the direction of the following: in Weston, under John Lorentz, Charles B. Bayly, Jonathan M. Bennett, William J. Bland, and Weedon Hoffman; in Clarksburg, under Gideon D. Camden, John S. Duncan, Waldo P. Goff, Aaron Criss, Benjamin Bassell, Jr., Cyrus Vance, and Cruger W. Smith; at West Milford, under Alexander L. Patton, John Hoff, Samuel Sheets, and _____ Austin; in Shinnston, under Seth M. Shiner, Reason K. Shinn, John M. Fertney, and James W. Jane; and in Fairmont, under P. B. Arnett, John J. Moore, and Thomas L. Boggus.
• 1848 - The Virginia General Assembly passed an act which incorporated the Clarksburg and Buckhannon Turnpike Company to construct a road from Clarksburg in Harrison County to Buckhannon in Lewis County, present-day Upshur County. Subscription books were opened under the direction of the following commissioners: in Clarksburg, under George H. Lee, Robert Johnston, Charles Lewis, Edmund L. Stealey, Richard Fowks, and Hamilton G. Johnson; in Romine, Harrison County, under Judge E. S. Duncan, Andrew Radcliff, John H. Shuttlesworth, Edward Stewart, and Martin E. Hall; and in Buckhannon, under David S. Pennell, Leonard L. D. Lowden, Adam Carper, David S. Hazelden, and John B. Brake.
• 1836 - The Virginia General Assembly passed an act establishing the 148th Regiment of the Virginia Militia in Preston County.
• 1843 - A post office was established at Murraysville, Jackson County.
• 1891 - The West Virginia Legislature passed an act authorizing the sale of the building of the Fairmont State Normal School, which later became Fairmont State College, Marion County. It also provided for the construction of a new building. It was approved by the governor on March 13.
• 1920 - The Jackson County government moved from the I.O.O.F. building to the newly completed courthouse in Ripley.
• 1921 - The Parkersburg Business and Professional Women’s Club was chartered.
• 1959 - Eighteen thousand UMW coal miners in West Virginia, Kentucky, and Tennessee went on strike over wages, lasting 3 days.
• 1977 - A federal judge ordered FMC to stop manufacturing carbon tetrachloride, following charges of toxic spills by the Environmental Protection Agency.
• 1982 - Democratic state Senator Bob Wise announced his candidacy for the Third Congressional District against incumbent Republican Mick Staton.
• 1983 - Senator Jennings Randolph announced he would not run for re-election. He had served in the Senate since 1959 and first went to Washington as a congressman in 1933.
Features • History • (0) Comments • Permalink
Leave a Comment • Print This Article

