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Welcome to Summers County WVGenWeb Associated with the USGenWeb Project |
Summers County was created by an act of the Virginia General Assembly on February 27, 1871 from parts of Fayette, Greenbrier, Mercer and Monroe counties. It was named in honor of George W. Summers (1804-1868).
George W. Summers was born on March 4, 1804 in Fayette County, Virginia. He was moved to the Kanawha Valley, near Clarksburg, by his parents when he was an infant. He graduated from Ohio University, studied the law and was admitted to the Virginia bar in 1827. In 1830, he was elected to the Virginia General Assembly and represented Kanawha County in the General Assembly from 1830 to 1840. He was elected as a Whig to the U.S. House of Representatives and served there from 1841 to 1844. He was a member of the Virginia Constitutional Convention of 1850, ran for the Governorship of Virginia in 1850 but lost to Joseph Johnson, and was then elected Judge of the Eighteenth Judicial Circuit of Virginia, serving from 1852 to 1858. In 1861, he represented Kanawha County in the Virginia Convention that passed the Ordinance of Secession, which he opposed. He died in September 1868.
Colonel Abraham Wood became the first Englishman to explore the Summers County area when he traveled down the New River Valley in 1654. Christopher Gist passed through the county on his way home after exploring much of the present state of West Virginia on behalf of a land investment company, the Ohio Company, in 1750-1751.
Andrew Culbertson was the first English settler in present day Summers County. He moved into the present county in 1753 and his farm became known as Culbertson's Bottom. He abandoned the farm the following year after the Indians went on the warpath. His farm was then occupied and claimed by Thomas Farely.
After the county's formation, the county court was first held at the
Baptist Church, two miles north of New River. The court was later moved to an office above
C.L. Thompson's printing shop in Avis. That building burnt down in 1875 and the court
moved to John Pack's storehouse on Hilton Island. A legal dispute then ensued between Dr.
John Manser and E.B. Meader, who wanted the county seat at Foss, and Evan Hinton (called
"Father of the County" due to his efforts to form the county) and his friends
who wanted the county seat at Avis. The impasse over the location of the county seat was
finally resolved when the Chesapeake & Ohio River Railroad Company donated three acres
of land for county purposes, in the present site of Hinton, if the county seat was moved
there. The county court house was constructed in Hinton in 1876 and occupied by the county
court in 1877.
Hinton has been the county seat since.
Hinton was laid out on the land of Avis Gwinn Hinton by her husband, John Hinton, in 1831. The town grew very slowly until 1871 when the Chesapeake & Ohio River Railroad company blasted a path through the New River gorge and made Hinton the division terminal. The town then started to grow and was incorporated on September 21, 1880. Some historians claim that the town was named for Evan Hinton, who was active in the movement to create Summers County. Others suggest that it was named for John (Jack) Hinton, who was a prominent lawyer in the county and laid out the town in 1831. In 1927, the towns of Avis, Bellepoint and Hinton were consolidated and incorporated as the city of Hinton by the West Virginia state legislature.
Published Resources Lookup Volunteers
Published Resources For Purchase
Sources for Additional Information
History Summary of Summers Co.
Map of Summers County & Vicinity
Summers Co. WVGenWeb Project Genealogy Library
Summers County Reunions - If you know
of a reunion please contact us via email .
Communities - *Under Construction* ALL Links are not Online Yet
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Who invented the monkey-wrench?
Where did Lick Creek get it's name?
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