Paint Bank, Virginia

Paint Bank, Virginia
Unincorporated community

Paint Bank General Store
Paint Bank
Coordinates: 37°34′8″N 80°15′43″W / 37.56889°N 80.26194°W / 37.56889; -80.26194Coordinates: 37°34′8″N 80°15′43″W / 37.56889°N 80.26194°W / 37.56889; -80.26194
Country United States
State Virginia
County Craig
Elevation 1,847 ft (563 m)
Time zone Eastern (EST) (UTC-5)
  Summer (DST) EDT (UTC-4)
ZIP code 24131
Area code(s) 540
GNIS feature ID 1486039[1]
USGS[2]

Paint Bank is an unincorporated community in northern Craig County, Virginia, United States. It is located at the intersection of State Route 18 and State Route 311 northwest of the town of New Castle, the county seat.[3] The village is located between Potts Mountain and Peters Mountain.

History

Paint Bank got its name from the iron ochre and red clay taken from the banks of Potts Creek that was used by Native Americans, notably the Cherokees, as war paint, and to make their pottery with a distinctive red color.[4] Reportedly settled by permanent settlers in the 18th century, during the early days of the 19th century, the same red clay was later made into a commercial paint and red bricks for permanent buildings. A number of land grants were made by Lord Fairfax and the Commonwealth of Virginia, especially by the later around Paint Bank in the 1820s through the 1850s.[5]

A few miles up the road between Sweet Springs, West Virginia and Paint Bank, is the location of the home of Ann Royal Anne Royall.[6] By some accounts, she was the first professional female journalist in America.

"During the Civil War, the off-the-beaten-path community became known as the “Union hole,” a place for deserters and resisters. It was close to this area that Union General David Hunter fought his most difficult battle, a confrontation involving two of Craig County’s highest mountains, on his trek from Lynchburg, Va., to Sweet Springs, West Virginia"[7]

The Order of the Heroes of America, also known as the "Red Strings", extended into southwestern Virginia as well. Paint Bank, Virginia was known as a Union-Hole because of the pro-Union membership in these societies. One of the members of the Order was a Christiansburg, Virginia wheelwright named Williams. It is not known if this is the same man named Williams that residents of Back Valley, Virginia spoke about as a member of the Loyal League.[8] "Paint Bank, in Craig County, was the core of what local citizen George A. Linton called the "Union Hole"-an area with mixed loyalties that sometimes swayed heavily to the north, in this traditionally southern state."[9]

Milling

Colonel William Preston (Virginia) established a grist mill for corn and wheat in Paint Bank. "The grist mill sits on Potts Creek, on property originally owned by Revolutionary War hero Colonel William Preston. Colonel Preston was given the land grants in 1780 for his service in the war." Through the years since the American Revolution, ownership of the mill changed several times, and eventually became known as "Tingler's Mill".

A sign advertising Jim Dandy High Energy Dog Ration at the Paint Bank General Store in Paint Bank, Virginia

Although the Tingler's Mill building today only dates to 1873, the mill site has been in Botetourt County, where it was originally established in 1783. Then the land became part of Monroe County, Virginia in 1851. Then Craig County was formed in 1863 when West Virginia became a state, then was returned to Virginia. "Because of Civil War boundary changes, the mill has been in two different states and five different counties without ever having been moved."[10] The mill site is now undergoing renovation and conservation.

Mining

Iron ore and manganese were mined in the area during the 19th and early 20th centuries by the Virginia Iron, Coal & Coke Company.[11][12]

During World War I, some further investigations were made in the region for strategic minerals needed for the war.[13] Again during World War II, the Strategic Minerals Investigations team of the United States Geological Survey promoted the mining of manganese as a strategic mineral. Sandstones and cherty sandstones of the Helderberg group are impregnated with manganese oxides, and they are exposed by a cut in the road 2 miles southwest of Paint Bank on the floor of Potts Creek.[14]

Forestry

During the 19th century, timber cutting was prevalent in the area, especially for the hardwoods. Oak and hemlock bark was used in tanning leather during this period, and these products were highly prized. The George Washington and Jefferson National Forests are located nearby, as are the Shawvers Run Wilderness and Barbours Creek Wilderness areas. On Peters Mountain are parts of the Old-growth forest. "The Shawvers Run Wilderness Area is located in northern Craig County. This is an area of rugged and remote mountain terrain on the northwestern slope of Potts Mountain, just over the hill from Barbours Creek Wilderness. Elevations range from 2,000 feet on Shawvers Run in the extreme north to 3,800 feet on the top of Hanging Rock in the south. Hanging Rock, Virginia is a 240-acre geologic attraction. Rough hiking will take you through a hardwood forest interspersed with yellow pine, hemlock, and white pine growing in some of the drainages. Within the Wilderness, the headwaters of Valley Branch contain native brook trout, as does Shawvers Run. There is plenty of wildlife."[15]

Railroads

At the beginning of the 20th century, the local branch line of the Potts Valley Branch line of the Norfolk & Western Railway. The Train Depot dates from 1909, and the Section Foreman’s Cottage dates from 1910. During this period, daily trains carried out the ore and lumber, and brought in passengers and goods.[16] Paint Bank was the center of a mining and timber boom in the early 1900s, when over 2,000 people lived around Potts Creek. The trains had to turn around at the terminus of a dead end run at Paint Bank.[17]

Originally, the Big Stony Railway was extended from the Norfolk and Western Railroad tracks at Ripplemead in 1896. The track followed the Big Stony Creek along an easy grade to reach the timber stands in the mountains. In 1909 the tracks were extended 27 miles to Paint Bank, and renamed "The Potts Valley Branch", the "Virginia and Potts Creek Railroad" or the "Punkin Vine." The tracks were removed during the 1930s and the Depression.[18][19]

Potts Creek

Potts Creek, originally called "Carpenter Creek", runs through the village. The name was originally applied to a land grant of over 700 acres dating from 1750 to John Carpenter, which was located near present day Covington, Virginia. The Paint Bank Virginia Fish Hatchery run by the Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries is located in Paint Bank, and the trout that are raised there are released locally. Brown trout, Brook trout and Rainbow trout are raised there. The trout are released when they are about 18 months old, and are used to stock streams in nine counties.[20] "This state fish hatchery, just south of Paint Bank, provides a unique look into the trout rearing and stocking process. Numerous concrete tanks hold up to 1.6 million trout in all stages of development, thus providing an easy viewing experience. Around the fish hatchery is a variety of wildlife. The creek that runs along the edge of the property should be checked for butterflies, birds and at dusk some white-tailed deer."[21]

References

  1. "US Board on Geographic Names". United States Geological Survey. 2007-10-25. Retrieved 2008-01-31.
  2. USGS. "Geographic Names Information System Feature Detail Report: Paint Bank". Retrieved 2008-07-19.
  3. "Google Maps". Retrieved 2008-07-19.
  4. Highroad Guide to the Virginia Mountains. by Deane Winegar. 2002. Page 143.
  5. Sims Index to Land Grants in West Virginia.
  6. Ann Royal
  7. "Down Home in Paint Bank. By Gwen Johnson, Cooperative Living. 2015.
  8. Turk, David S. The Union Hole: Unionist Activity and Local Conflict in Western Virginia. Bowie, MD: Heritage Books, 1994. Pages 83-84. The author is also quoting from the "Report of Detectives," October 10, 1864, published in the Official Records of the War of the Rebellion, Series IV, Volume 3, page 807.
  9. Turk, David S. 1994. The Union Hole: Unionist Activity and Local Conflict in Western Virginia. Heritage Press.
  10. Virginia's Blue Ridge. Page 17.
  11. Virginia Iron, Coal and Coke Company, and Standard Statistics Company. Virginia Iron, Coal & Coke Company. New York: Standard Statistics Co., Inc, 1927.
  12. Virginia Iron, Coal and Coke Company. Report of the Virginia Iron, Coal & Coke Co. and the Virginia & Southwestern Railway Company. Bristol, Va.?: Virginia Iron, Coal and Coke Company], 1903.
  13. Virginia Geological Survey. 1918. Bulletin - Virginia Geological Survey, Issues 16-17. "Paint Bank and Sink-Hole Openings." Pages 128 et seq.
  14. Manganese Deposits of the Sweet Springs District, West Virginia and Virginia. Report by Harry Ladd. Washington: U.S. Govt. Print. Off, 1944. Description: iii, 199-217 pages map, tables, diagram 24 cm. Series Title: Strategic minerals investigations.; Bulletin (Geological Survey (U.S.)), 940-G. Page 216.
  15. "Shawvers Run Wilderness Area." Paint Bank, Va.
  16. Depot Lodge
  17. "Braking for Paint Bank: Paint Bank General Store and Swinging Bridge Restaurant, Paint Bank, Virginia." The Place Setting: Timeless Tastes of the Mountain South, from Bright Hope to Frog Level, Volume 3. by Sauceman, Fred W. 2009. Pages 233-235.
  18. Pearisburg and Giles County. by Terri L. Fisher. 2008. Page 87.
  19. "The Potts Valley Branch Railroad and Tri-State Incline Lumber Operation in West Virginia and Virginia, 1892-1932" by Will Sarvis. West Virginia History. Volume 54 (1995), pp. 42-58.
  20. "Paint Bank hatchery giving trout a little more breathing room" By Carmen Forman, Roanoke Times. April 27, 2015.
  21. "Paint Bank Fish Hatchery."

Bibliography

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, August 27, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.