Your Guide to US States - SHG Resources: Profiles data, sorted by topics and US states such as state agencies, colleges, education, economy, government, history, media, symbols, statistics, facts, and figures.
LET LENDERS COMPETE FOR YOUR LOAN NEEDS
Loan Type Location Type  
Home  Agencies  Channels  Chat  Colleges & Universities  Columnists  Financial Services  Forums  Gemstones  Home Services  Local Venue  Money Auction  Movies Reviews  Newspapers  Personals  Radio Stations  Search  Site Guide  State Symbols  Television Stations  Traffic Center  Travel  US States
State History Guide

Profiles resources and data , sorted by topics and by US states

SHG, LLC

West Virginia
County Histories

WV Counties

 

History Index

 

State:

History

 

Timeline

 


My West Virginia 

 

 

West Virginia: Boone County History

University of Phoenix

Earn your degree, advance your career, secure your future – all online. University of Phoenix is a true innovator in distance education. Their Business, Technology, Criminal Justice, Nursing, and Education degree programs are designed specifically for busy professionals. Imagine earning the degree you've always wanted – from home, at work, or while traveling.
Click here to learn more.

Boone County History

Court House:

 

206 Court Street
County Courthouse
Madison, WV 25130-1106
Phone: (304)369-6896
Fax: (304)369-7306
NA
County Seat:  Madison Census Bureau Quick Facts
Organized: 1847 Capital Impact Data
Square Miles:   503 County Officials - NACo
Location:  38.020883 N, -81.719842 W Fedstats/Mapstats
Political Graveyard
    WVGenWeb
Named: For Daniel Boone, whose home was in the Kanawha Valley from 1789 to 1795
     
Neighbors: Northeast: Kanawha County
Northwest: Lincoln County
Southeast: Raleigh County; Wyoming County
Southwest: Logan County
 

Early History of Boone County, West Virginia

Boone County was created by an act of the Virginia General Assembly on March 11, 1847 from parts of Cabell, Kanawha, and Logan counties. The county was named for Daniel Boone (1734-1820), the famous hunter and explorer, founder of Kentucky, Lieutenant Colonel of the Virginia militia, and member of the Virginia General Assembly representing Kanawha County (in 1791).

Although known as a son of Kentucky, Daniel Boone was born on November 2, 1734 in the Schuylkill Valley in Pennsylvania. He moved with his parents to Yadkin Valley, North Carolina in 1750. He later married and started a family there and was active as an Indian trader in that area. He visited the present site of West Virginia in 1755 as a member of General Braddock's army that was defeated by the Indians on the Monongahela River. A few years later he explored the future site of Kentucky and moved his family there. In 1788, he lost his Kentucky property because he failed to properly enter his land grants. Homeless, he moved to Point Pleasant, in West Virginia, for nearly a year, and then moved to present day Charleston. He lived there for seven years (1788-1795). He was named a Lieutenant Colonel of the state militia in 1789, and, in 1790, he was elected to the Virginia General Assembly. He left West Virginia in 1799, moving to Missouri, where he had been granted 1,000 acres of land by the Spanish government and given a government position overseeing the area. He died on September 26, 1820 in Missouri.

John Peter Salley was the first Englishman to explore what is now called Boone County. He passed through the area in 1742. He is credited for the discovery of coal in the state, along the Coal River. Richard Hewett was exploring in the county when he was killed by Indians at the mouth of Hewett Creek in 1782. The county, and all of the present state of West Virginia, was the hunting grounds for several Indian tribes, including the Cherokee, Miami, and Delaware Indians, and the Europeans were considered trespassers.

By the end of the American Revolutionary War in 1783, there were very few Indians left in the county. Now that the county was considered relatively safe, English trappers and explorers, whose names were never recorded, began to enter the county in search of beaver pelts and adventure. The first, permanent English settlers arrived during the early 1790s.

The first meeting of the county court was held on the land of Albert Allen, at the mouth of Spruce Fork, across from present day Madison in 1847. The original courthouse was burned by the Union Army during the Civil War. The county court was then held at the Ballardsville Methodist Episcopal Church until 1866 when it was relocated to the lands of Johnson Copley, in Madison.

Madison, the county seat, was incorporated in 1906. Some historians claim that the town was named in honor of William Madison Peyton, a leader of the movement to form Boone County and a pioneer coal operator. Others have suggested that it was named in honor of James Madison (1751-1836) the 4th President of the United States (1809-1817), a leading member of the Philadelphia Convention that wrote the U.S. Constitution, and life-long friend and neighbor of Thomas Jefferson, the 3rd President of the United States (1800-1809).

 At the core of the of SHG's mission is a commitment to furthering the quality and quantity of content, which means offering a wealth of resources and experience. 

 

State Symbols

State Flag - Click for the history, official description, and picture of the state flag


Symbols Index

Bird

Flag

Seal

Almanac

Flower

Names

Tree

History

History Timeline


Elected Officials

 

The World Almanac for Kids Online!

 

National Forests


Monongahela National Forest

 

 

 

Profiles resources and data , sorted by topics and by US states

 

Directory About Partners: PR5  | PR5-1 | PR5-2  Policies Privacy Terms of Service

® Copyright 2009, SHG, LLC, All rights reserved,

Please report problems with this web site to the webmaster@shgresources.com