History References & Appendix

References Cited

Addington, Robert M.

1992 History of Scott County, Virginia. The Overmountain Press, Kingsport, TN.

 

Anico, Marta and Elsa Peralta

2009 Heritage and Identity: Engagement and Demission in the Contemporary World. Routledge/Taylor & Francis Group, London.

 

Badertscher, Eric

2015 “Virginia’s History.” Let’s Take A Look At Virginia (2015): 7-10. History Reference Center. Accessed 1 May 2016.

 

Ballard, Linda-May

2008 Curating Intangible Cultural Heritage. Anthropological Journal of European Cultures 17(1, Thematic Focus: Ethnological Approaches to Cultural Heritages): 74-95.

 

Barker, Garry

1991 The Handcraft Revival in Southern Appalachia, 1930-1990. University of Tennessee Press, Knoxville.

 

Bense, Judith A.

1994 Archaeology of the Southeastern United States: Paleoindian to World War I. Academic Press. San Diego, California.

 

Biernacki, Patrick and Waldorf, Dan

1981 Snowball Sampling: Problems and Techniques of Chain Referral Sampling. Sociological Methods & Research; Nov81, Vol. 10 Issue 2, p141, 23p.

 

Boyd, C.R.

1881 South-West Virginia Showing the Mineral Deposits of Iron, Coal, Zinc, Copper and Lead. Also, the Staples of the Various Counties Methods of Transportation, Access and Etc. John Wiley and Sons, New York.

 

Brown, Ralph M.

1937 “A Sketch of the Early History of South-Western Virginia.” The William and Mary Quarterly 17.4:501-513.

 

Calloway, Colin G.

 

References Cited, continued

2007 The Shawnee and the War for America. The Penguin Library of American Indian History. The Penguin Group, New York.

 

Clinch-Powell Resource Conservation & Development Council

2015 Patterns by County. AQT Appalachian Quilt Trail.  Electronic Web Directory. http://www.vacationaqt.com/. Accessed 25 July 2016.

 

Cox, W. Eugene and Joyce Cox

2007 Keokee, Virginia: Origins of an Appalachian Coal Mining Community. Keokee High School Alumni Association, Inc. Johnson City, Tennessee.

 

Deutsch, Eberhard P.

1967 The Constitutional Controversy Over the Louisiana Purchase. American Bar Association Journal 53(1): 50-57.

 

Draper, Lyman C.

1998 The Life of Daniel Boone. Ed. Ted F. Blue.1st ed. Stackpole Books, Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania.

 

Friends of Wilderness Road State Park

2015 About Wilderness Road State Park. Friends of Wilderness Road State Park. Web. <http://www.friendsofwildernessroad.org/park.html>

 

Gannett, Henry

1905 The Origin of Certain Place Names in the United States Bulletin (Geological Survey (U.S.))) Issue 258 of U.S. Geological survey. Bulletin. U.S. Government Printing Office: The University of Michigan 2007

 

Hagy, James W.

1967 The Frontier at Castle’s Woods, 1769-1786. The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography 75(4): 410-428.

 

Harrison, Rodney.

2012 Heritage : Critical Approaches. Milton Park, Abingdon: Routledge, eBook Collection (EBSCOhost), EBSCOhost, viewed 14 July 2016.

 

Holt, Wythe W. jr.

1968 Constitutional Revision in Virginia, 1902 and 1928: Some Lessons on Roadblocks to Institutional Reform. Virginia Law Review. Vol. 54, No. 5 pgs. 903-927.

 

Horne, John C. Van

1975 The Correspondence of William Nelson as Acting Governor of Virginia, 1770-1771. Published for the Virginia Historical Scoiety the Univeristy Press of Virginia, Charlottesville. Pg.176.

References Cited, continued

Hudson, Charles

  1976 The Southeastern Indians. The University of Tennessee Press. Knoxville,    Tennessee.

 

Jeffery, Thomas

1755 North America from the French of Mr. D’Anville, improved with the back settlements of Virginia and course of Ohio, illustrated with geographical and historical remarks. Map on file, Digital Commonwealth Massachusetts Collection Online Norman B. Leventhal Map Center Collection, Norman B. Leventhal Map Center, Boston Public Library, Boston, Massachusetts.

 

Johnston, David E.

1906 A History of Middle New River Settlements and Contiguous Territory. Standard Ptg. & Pub. Co., Huntington W. Va.

 

Kincaid, Robert

1966 The Wilderness Road. Lincoln Memorial University, Harrogate, Tennessee.

 

Kirshenblatt-Gimblett, Barbara

1995 Theorizing Heritage. Ethnomusicology 39(3):367-380.

 

Lowe, Robert G.

1972 Virginia’s Reconstruction Convention. General Schofield Rates the Delegates. The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography 80(3):341-360.

 

Luckett, William W.

1964 Cumberland Gap National Historical Park. Tennessee Historical Quarterly 23(4):303-320.

 

Maeer, Gareth

2014 The Values and Benefits of Heritage: Do Economists Think about More than Money? APT Bulletin 45(2/3, Special Issue on Values-Based Preservation): 57-63.

 

Marvasti, Amir B.

2004 Qualitative Research in Sociology. London; Thousand Oaks, Calif. : SAGE Publications. University of Alabama Libraries’ Classic Catalog.

 

McAnear, Beverly

1950 The Income of the Royal Govenors of Virginia. The Journal of Southern History 16(2):196.

 

McKnight, Brian Dallas

2006 Contested Borderland: The Civil War in Appalachian Kentucky and Virginia. University of Kentucky Press. Lexington, Kentucky.

 

References Cited, continued

Milspaw, Yvonne J.

1997 Regional Style in Quilt Design. The Journal of American Folklore 110(438):363-390.

 

Morgan, Robert

2007 Boone: A Biography. A Shannon Ravenel Book. Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina.

 

National Park Service

2016 CONFEDERATE VIRGINIA TROOPS: 64th Regiment, Virginia Mounted Infantry. Web page. National Park Service. https://www.nps.gov/civilwar/search-battle-units-detail.htm?battleUnitCode=CVA0064RIT

 

National Records and Archives Administration

1840 1840 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2010. Images reproduced by FamilySearch. Original data: Sixth Census of the United States, 1840. (NARA microfilm publication M704, 580 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C.

 

Pownall, Thomas

1776 A general map of the middle British colonies, in America : containing Virginia, Maryland, the Delaware counties, Pennsylvania and New Jersey : with the addition of New York, and the greatest part of New England, as also of the bordering parts of the province of Quebec, improved from several surveys made after the late war, and corrected from Governor Pownall’s late map 1776. Pub: Robert Sayer and John Bennett (Firm), Map on File, Digital Commonwealth Massachusetts Collection Online Norman B. Leventhal Map Center Collection, Norman B. Leventhal Map Center, Boston Public Library, Boston, Massachusetts.

 

Prown, Jules David

1982 Mind in Matter: An Introduction to Material Culture Theory and Method. Winterthur Portfolio 17(1):1-19.

 

Roberts, W. D.

1912 Miners And Operators Are Always Together in Southwestern Virginia. The Big Stone Gap Post. May 8,1912: page 1.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

References Cited, continued

Roeser, C.

1891 Post route map of the states of Virginia and West Virginia together with Maryland and Delaware with adjacent parts of Pennsylvania, Ohio, Kentucky, Tennessee and North Carolina: showing post offices with the intermediate distances and mail routes in operation on the 1st of October 1891. Pub:  McClelland, D. United States Postal Service. Map on File. Digital Commonwealth Massachusetts Collection Online Norman B. Leventhal Map Center Collection, Norman B. Leventhal Map Center, Boston Public Library, Boston, Massachusetts.

 

Royster, Charles

1981 Light-Horse Harry Lee and the Legacy of the American Revolution. Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. New York.

 

Smith, Laurajane

2006 Uses of Heritage, Routledge, New York.

 

Tennis, Joe

2014 Virginia Rail Trails: Crossing the Commonwealth. The History Press.

 

The Big Stone Gap Post

1917 Recruiting Station: for Company H Established in Big Stone Gap. June 13,1917: 1.

 

The Crooked Road: Virginia’s Heritage Music Trail

2014 About The Crooked Road Trail. The Crooked Road. Accessed August 2, 2016

 

The New York Times

2017 Election 2016 Virginia Results. Electronic Document. http://www.nytimes.com/elections/results/virginia, accessed January 15, 2017.

 

United States Census Bureau

2017 QuickFacts: Lee County, Virginia. Electronic Report, https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/table/BZA010214/51105, accessed January 15, 2017.

 

United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Naval Affairs

1914 Transportation of Coal: Hearings Before a Subcommittee of the Committee on Naval Affairs, United States Senate, Sixty-third Congress, Second Session Pursuant to S. Res. 291, a Resolution Authorizing the Committee on Naval Affairs to Investigate the Natural and Strategic Advantages of Charleston, S.C., as Compared with Norfolk and Other Chesapeake Bay Ports, as a Permanent Point for Coal Distribution, Etc, United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Naval Affairs. U.S. Government Printing OfficeHarvard University.

 

 

References Cited, continued

Virginia Argus [Richmond, Virginia]

1812 [Proclamation of the Declaration of War on Great Britain by President James Madison] 25 June: page 2 col. 4. Richmond, Virginia. Digital Collection, Library of Virginia, Richmond, Va.

 

Von Haake, A.

1895 Post route map of the states of Virginia and West Virginia showing post offices with the intermediate distances and mail routes in operation on the 1st of December, 1895. Pub: William L. Wilson United States Postmaster by Gillin Printing Co. Map on file. Norman B. Leventhal Map Center Collection, Norman B. Leventhal Map Center, Boston Public Library, Boston, Massachusetts.

 

Weaver, Jeffery C.

1992 64th Virginia Infantry. The Virginia regimental histories series. H.E. Howard. the University of Wisconsin – Madison, Lynchburg, VA.

 

Wehtje, Myron F.

1970 Opposition in Virginia to the War of 1812. The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography 78(1, Part One): 65-86.

 

Wells, Patricia Atkinson

2006 Public Folklore in the Twenty-First Century: New Challenges for the Discipline. The Journal of American Folklore 119(471, Working for and with the Folk: Public Folklore in the Twenty-First Century): 5-18.

 

Westmoreland Coal Company

2016 About Us. Westmoreland Coal Company. Updated August 24, 2016. http://westmoreland.com/about-us/

 

Wiley, Martha E.

2014 Cumberland Gap National Historical Park: Images of America Series. Arcadia Publishing.

 

William and Mary Quarterly      

1900 Francis Fauquier’s Will. The William and Mary Quarterly 8(3):171-177

 

Williams, John Alexander

2002 Appalachia: A History. The University of North Carolina Press Chapel Hill and London.

 

Young, Jay H.

1857 A new map of the state of Virginia : exhibiting its internal improvements, roads, distances, &c. Pub: Charles DeSilver. Map on File, Norman B. Leventhal Map Center Collection, Norman B. Leventhal Map Center, Boston Public Library, Boston, Massachusetts.

APPENDIX A

History Supplement

Transcription of original historical document titled: Inhabitants: Petition, Lee County, Virginia, 11-18-1794

The Inhabitants petition reads:

 

“To the honorable, the speaker and gentlemen of the General Assembly

The petition of the inhabitants of Lee County humbly represents That the court have thought of place to establish pfree of holding court for this County, on the Lands of Mr. Fredrick Jones. That in consequence thereof the said Frederick Jones has unofficially given up fiftyfive acres of Land to be disposed of for the use of the County; That your petitioners think it would conduce much to their advantage and interest and to the case and accommodation of traveler if a town was established thereon.

Your petitioners therefore humbly pray that your Honorable Bgdy in their wisdom and justice would establish a town on the said land to be known by the name of Jonesville and your petitioners as in duty bound will conplay”  (Inhabitants: Petition, Lee County, Virginia, 11-18-1794, Legislative Petitions Digital Collection, Library of Virginia, Richmond, Va.)

 

  • Inhabitants: Petition, Lee County, Virginia, 11-18-1794, Legislative Petitions Digital Collection, Library of Virginia, Richmond, Va. Original source: Legislative Petitions of the General Assembly, 1776-1865, Accession Number 36121, Box 137, Folder 2. Biographical/Historical Note: Formed from Russell and Scott Counties, and named to honor Henry Lee, governor of Virginia from 1791-1794.

 

  • Page 27- (Inhabitants: Petition, Lee County, Virginia, 11-18-1794, Legislative Petitions Digital Collection, Library of Virginia, Richmond, Va. Original source: Legislative Petitions of the General Assembly, 1776-1865, Accession Number 36121, Box 137, Folder 2. Biographical/Historical Note: Formed from Russell and Scott Counties, and named to honor Henry Lee, governor of Virginia from 1791-1794.)

 

  • Page 29- (Inhabitants: Petition, Jonesville, Lee County, Virginia, 12-15-1802, Legislative Petitions Digital Collection, Library of Virginia, Richmond, Va. Legislative Petitions of the General Assembly, 1776-1865, Accession Number 36121, Box 137, Folder 10.)

 

  • Page 30 Quote- ( Inhabitants: Petition, Jonesville, Lee County, Virginia, 12-15-1802, Legislative Petitions Digital Collection, Library of Virginia, Richmond, Va. Legislative Petitions of the General Assembly, 1776-1865, Accession Number 36121, Box 137, Folder 10)

 

  • Page 30-1- (Citizens of Lee, Russell, & Washington: Petition, Lee County, December 9, 1806, Legislative Petitions Digital Collection, Library of Virginia, Richmond, Va.  Legislative Petitions of the General Assembly, 1776-1865, Accession Number 36121, Box 331, Folder 20)

 

  • Page 30-2- (Inhabitants of Washington, Russell, & Lee: Petition, Washington County, October 17, 1814, Legislative Petitions Digital Collection, Library of Virginia, Richmond, Va. Legislative Petitions of the General Assembly, 1776-1865, Accession Number 36121, Box 249, Folder 91.)

 

  • Page 30-3- (Citizens: Counter-Petition Subject: Division of County/New County, Russell County, XX 28, 1813, Legislative Petitions Digital Collection, Library of Virginia, Richmond, Va. Legislative Petitions of the General Assembly, 1776-1865, Accession Number 36121, Box 347, Folder 6)

 

  • Page 31- (Inhabitants: Petition Division of County/New County, Scott County, 1822-12-11, Legislative Petitions Digital Collection, Library of Virginia, Richmond, Va. Legislative Petitions of the General Assembly, 1776-1865, Accession Number 36121, Box 228, Folder 7)

 

  • Page 32- (Inhabitants: Petition Division of County/New County, Scott County, 1822-12-11, Legislative Petitions Digital Collection, Library of Virginia, Richmond, Va. Legislative Petitions of the General Assembly, 1776-1865, Accession Number 36121, Box 228, Folder 7)

 

  • Page 37- (Roster of the 64th Virginia Mounted Infantry Regiment Company I, undated, Virginia Sesquicentennial of the American Civil War and the Tazewell County Local Sesquicentennial Committee. Roster, undated, of the 64th Virginia Mounted Infantry Regiment, Company I, Captain William J. Collier)