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Wikipedia

West Virginia

West Virginia is a state in the Appalachian, Mid-Atlantic and Southeastern regions of the United States.[Note 1] It is bordered by Pennsylvania to the north and east, Maryland to the east and northeast, Virginia to the southeast, Kentucky to the southwest, and Ohio to the northwest. West Virginia is the 10th-smallest state by area and ranks as the 12th-least populous state, with a population of 1,793,716 residents.[7] The capital and largest city is Charleston.

West Virginia
State of West Virginia
Nickname
Mountain State
Motto(s)
Montani semper liberi
(English: Mountaineers Are Always Free)
Anthem: 4 songs
Map of the United States with West Virginia highlighted
CountryUnited States
Before statehoodPart of Virginia
Admitted to the UnionJune 20, 1863; 159 years ago (1863-06-20) (35th)
Capital
(and largest city)
Charleston
Largest metro and urban areasCharleston–Huntington (combined)
Huntington (metro and urban)
Government
 • GovernorJim Justice (R)
 • Lieutenant GovernorCraig Blair (R)
LegislatureWest Virginia Legislature
 • Upper houseSenate
 • Lower houseHouse of Delegates
JudiciarySupreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia
U.S. senatorsJoe Manchin (D)
Shelley Moore Capito (R)
U.S. House delegation1: Carol Miller (R)
2: Alex Mooney (R) (list)
Area
 • Total24,230 sq mi (62,755 km2)
 • Land24,078 sq mi (62,361 km2)
 • Water152 sq mi (394 km2)  0.6%
 • Rank41st
Dimensions
 • Length240 mi (385 km)
 • Width130 mi (210 km)
Elevation
1,513 ft (461 m)
Highest elevation4,863 ft (1,482 m)
Lowest elevation240 ft (73 m)
Population
 (2020)
 • Total1,793,716[4]
 • Rank39th
 • Density77.1/sq mi (29.8/km2)
  • Rank29th
 • Median household income
$43,469[5]
 • Income rank
49th
DemonymsWest Virginian, Mountaineer
Language
 • Official languageDe jure: English[6]
Time zoneUTC−05:00 (Eastern)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−04:00 (EDT)
USPS abbreviation
WV
ISO 3166 codeUS-WV
Traditional abbreviationW.Va. and W.V.
Latitude37°12′ N to 40°39′ N
Longitude77°43′ W to 82°39′ W
Websitewv.gov
West Virginia state symbols
Living insignia
BirdNorthern cardinal
(Cardinalis cardinalis)
ButterflyMonarch butterfly
(Danaus plexippus)
FishBrook trout
(Salvelinus fontinalis)
FlowerRhododendron
(Rhododendron maximum)
InsectWestern honey bee
(Apis mellifera)
MammalBlack bear
(Ursus americanus)
ReptileTimber rattlesnake
(Crotalus horridus)
TreeSugar maple
(Acer saccharum)
Inanimate insignia
ColorsOld gold and blue
FoodGolden Delicious apple
(Malus domestica)
FossilJefferson's ground sloth
(Megalonyx jeffersonii)
GemstoneSilicified Mississippian fossil coral
(Lithostrotionella)
RockCoal
Slogan"Wild and Wonderful"
"Open for Business" (former)
"Almost Heaven" (former)
SoilMonongahela Silt Loam
Song"The West Virginia Hills"
TartanWest Virginia Shawl
State route marker
State quarter
Released in 2005
Lists of United States state symbols

West Virginia was admitted to the Union on June 20, 1863, and was a key border state during the American Civil War. It was the only state to form by separating from a Confederate state, the second to separate from a state after Maine separated from Massachusetts, and one of two states (along with Nevada) admitted to the Union during the Civil War. Some of its residents held slaves, but most were yeoman farmers, and the delegates provided for the gradual abolition of slavery in the new state constitution. The state legislature abolished slavery in the state, and at the same time ratified the 13th Amendment abolishing slavery nationally on February 3, 1865.

West Virginia's Northern Panhandle extends adjacent to Pennsylvania and Ohio to form a tristate area, with Wheeling and Weirton just across the border from the Pittsburgh metropolitan area. Huntington in the southwest is close to Ohio and Kentucky, while Martinsburg and Harpers Ferry in the Eastern Panhandle region are considered part of the Washington metropolitan area, between Maryland and Virginia. West Virginia is often included in several U.S. geographical regions, including the Mid-Atlantic, the Upland South, and the Southeastern United States. It is the only state entirely within the area served by the Appalachian Regional Commission; the area is commonly defined as "Appalachia".[8]

The state is noted for its mountains and rolling hills, its historically significant coal mining and logging industries, and its political and labor history. It is also known for a wide range of outdoor recreational opportunities, including skiing, whitewater rafting, fishing, hiking, backpacking, mountain biking, rock climbing, and hunting. From the Great Depression to the 1990s, the state voted heavily for the Democratic Party due to its tradition of union-based politics. Since then, the state has become heavily Republican, and is considered a "deep red" state at the federal level.[9]

Other nominated names for the state included Vandalia, Kanawha, Appalachia, and Western Virginia. The capital was originally Wheeling, before switching to Charleston, moving back to Wheeling, and finally back to Charleston. The first governor was Arthur Boreman.

History

Many ancient manmade earthen mounds from various prehistoric mound builder cultures survive in West Virginia, especially in the areas of present-day Moundsville, South Charleston, and Romney. Artifacts uncovered in these give evidence of village societies with a tribal trade system culture that crafted cold-worked copper pieces.

In the 1670s, during the Beaver Wars, the powerful Iroquois, five allied nations based in present-day New York and Pennsylvania, drove out other American Indian tribes from the region to reserve the upper Ohio Valley as a hunting ground. Siouan language tribes, such as the Moneton, had previously been recorded in the area.

A century later, the area now identified as West Virginia was contested territory among Anglo-Americans as well, with the colonies of Pennsylvania and Virginia claiming territorial rights under their colonial charters to this area before the American Revolutionary War. Some speculative land companies, such as the Vandalia Company,[10] the Ohio Company and the Indiana Company, tried but failed to legitimize their claims to land in parts of West Virginia and present-day Kentucky. This rivalry resulted in some settlers petitioning the Continental Congress to create a new territory called Westsylvania. With the federal settlement of the Pennsylvania and Virginia border dispute, creating Kentucky County, Virginia, Kentuckians "were satisfied [...] and the inhabitants of a large part of West Virginia were grateful."[11]

The Crown considered the area of West Virginia part of the British Virginia Colony from 1607 to 1776. The United States considered this area the western part of the state of Virginia (commonly called Trans-Allegheny Virginia) from 1776 to 1863, before West Virginia's formation. Its residents were discontented for years with their position in Virginia, as the government was dominated by the planter elite of the Tidewater and Piedmont areas. The legislature had electoral malapportionment, based on the counting of slaves toward regional populations, and western white residents were underrepresented in the state legislature. More subsistence and yeoman farmers lived in the west, and they were generally less supportive of slavery, although many counties were divided on their support. Residents of that area became more sharply divided after the planter elite of eastern Virginia voted to secede from the Union during the Civil War.

Residents of the western and northern counties set up a separate government under Francis Pierpont in 1861, which they called the Restored Government. Most voted to separate from Virginia, and the new state was admitted to the Union in 1863. In 1864 a state constitutional convention drafted a constitution, which was ratified by the legislature without putting it to popular vote. West Virginia abolished slavery by a gradual process and temporarily disenfranchised those who had held Confederate office or fought for the Confederacy.

West Virginia's history has been profoundly affected by its mountainous terrain, numerous and vast river valleys, and rich natural resources. These were all factors driving its economy and the lifestyles of its residents, who tended to live in many small, relatively isolated communities in the mountain valleys.

Prehistory

A 2010 analysis of a local stalagmite revealed that Native Americans were burning forests to clear land as early as 100 BCE.[12] Some regional late-prehistoric Eastern Woodland tribes were more involved in hunting and fishing, practicing the Eastern Agricultural Complex gardening method which used fire to clear out underbrush from certain areas. Another group progressed to the more time-consuming, advanced companion crop fields method of gardening. Also continuing from the ancient indigenous people of the state, they cultivated tobacco through to early historic times. It was used in numerous social and religious rituals.

"Maize (corn) did not make a substantial contribution to the diet until after 1150 BP", to quote Mills (OSU 2003).[full citation needed] Eventually, tribal villages began depending on corn to feed their turkey flocks, as Kanawha Fort Ancients practiced bird husbandry. The local Indians made cornbread and a flat rye bread called "bannock" as they emerged from the protohistoric era. A horizon extending from a little before the early 18th century is sometimes called the acculturating Fireside Cabin culture. Trading posts were established by European traders along the Potomac and James rivers.

Tribes that inhabited West Virginia as of 1600 were the Siouan Monongahela Culture to the north, the Fort Ancient culture along the Ohio River from the Monongahela to Kentucky and extending an unknown distance inland,[13] and the Eastern Siouan Tutelo and Moneton tribes in the southeast. There was also the Iroquoian Susquehannock in the region approximately east of the Monongahela River and north of the Monongahela National Forest, a possible tribe called the Senandoa, or Shenandoah, in the Shenandoah Valley and the easternmost tip of the state may have been home to the Manahoac people. The Monongahela may have been the same as a people known as the Calicua, or Cali.[14] The following may have also all been the same tribe—Moneton, Moheton, Senandoa, Tomahitan.

During the Beaver Wars, other tribes moved into the region. The Iroquoian Tiontatecaga (also Little Mingo, Guyandotte)[15] seem to have split off from the Petun after they were defeated by the Iroquois. They eventually settled somewhere between the Kanawha and Little Kanawha Rivers. During the 1750s, when the Mingo Seneca seceded from the Iroquois and returned to the Ohio River Valley, they contend that this tribe merged with them. The Shawnee arrived as well; though primarily stationed within former Monongahela territory approximately until 1750, they extended their influence throughout the Ohio River region. They were West Virginia's last Native tribe and were driven out by the United States during the Shawnee Wars (1811–1813). The Erie, who were chased out of Ohio around 1655, are now believed to be the same as the Westo, who invaded as far as South Carolina before being destroyed in the 1680s. If so, their path would have brought them through West Virginia. The historical movement of the Tutelo[16] and carbon dating of the Fort Ancients seem to correspond with the given period of 1655–1670 as the time of their removal.[13] The Susquehannocks were original participants in the Beaver Wars but were cut off from the Ohio River by the Iroquois around 1630 and found themselves in dire straits. Suffering from disease and constant warfare and unable to provide for themselves financially, they began to collapse and moved further and further east, to the Susquehanna River of Eastern Pennsylvania.[17] The Manahoac were probably forced out in the 1680s when the Iroquois began to invade Virginia.[18] The Siouan tribes there moved into North Carolina and later returned as one tribe, known as the Eastern Blackfoot, or Christannas.[19]

The Westo did not secure the territory they conquered. Even before they were gone, displaced natives from the south flooded into freshly conquered regions and took them over.[20] These became known as the Shattaras, or West Virginia Cherokees. They took in and merged with the Monetons, who began to call themselves the Mohetons. The Calicua also began to call themselves Cherokees soon after, showing an apparent further merger. These Shattaras were closely related to the tribes that formed to the south in the aftermath of the Westo—the Yuchi and Cherokee. From 1715 to 1717, the Yamasee War sprang up. The Senandoa allegedly sided with the Yuchi and were destroyed by Yamasee allies.[21] Therefore, if the Senandoa were the same tribe as the Moneton, this would mean the collapse of Shattara-Moneton culture. Another tribe that appeared in the region was the Canaragay, or Kanawha.[22] It later migrated to Maryland and merged into colonial culture.

European exploration and settlement

 
Thomas Lee, the first manager of the Ohio Company of Virginia

In 1671, General Abraham Wood, at the direction of Royal Governor William Berkeley of the Virginia Colony, sent a party from Fort Henry led by Thomas Batts and Robert Fallam to survey this territory. They were the first Europeans recorded as discovering Kanawha Falls. Some sources state that Governor Alexander Spotswood's 1716 Knights of the Golden Horseshoe Expedition (for which the state's Golden Horseshoe Competition for 8th graders is named) had penetrated as far as Pendleton County, but modern historians interpret the original accounts of the excursion as suggesting that none of the expedition's horsemen ventured much farther west of the Blue Ridge Mountains than Harrisonburg, Virginia. John Van Metre, an Indian trader, penetrated into the northern portion in 1725. The same year, German settlers from Pennsylvania founded New Mecklenburg, the present Shepherdstown, on the Potomac River, and others followed.[23]

King Charles II of England, in 1661, granted to a company of gentlemen the land between the Potomac and Rappahannock rivers, known as the Northern Neck. Thomas Fairfax, 6th Lord Fairfax of Cameron ultimately took possession of this grant, and in 1746 a stone was erected at the source of the North Branch Potomac River to mark his grant's western limit. George Washington surveyed a considerable part of this land between 1748 and 1751. His diary recorded that there were already many squatters, largely of German origin, along the South Branch Potomac River.[24]

Christopher Gist, a surveyor in the employ of the first Ohio Company, which was composed chiefly of Virginians, explored the country along the Ohio River north of the mouth of the Kanawha River between 1751 and 1752. The company sought to have a 14th colony established with the name "Vandalia". Many settlers crossed the mountains after 1750, though they were hindered by Native American resistance. Few Native Americans lived permanently within the state's present limits, but the region was a common hunting ground, crossed by many trails. During the French and Indian War (the North American front of the Seven Years' War in Europe), Indian allies of the French nearly destroyed the scattered British settlements.[25]

Shortly before the American Revolutionary War, in 1774 Crown Governor of Virginia John Murray, 4th Earl of Dunmore, led a force over the mountains. A body of militia under then-Colonel Andrew Lewis dealt the Shawnee Indians, under Hokoleskwa (or "Cornstalk"), a crushing blow during the Battle of Point Pleasant at the junction of the Kanawha and the Ohio rivers.[25] At the Treaty of Camp Charlotte concluding Dunmore's War, Cornstalk agreed to recognize the Ohio River as the new boundary with the "Long Knives". But by 1776 the Shawnee returned to war, joining the Chickamauga, a band of Cherokee known for the area where they lived.[citation needed] Native American attacks on settlers continued until after the American Revolutionary War. During the war, the settlers in western Virginia were generally active Whigs; many served in the Continental Army.[25] Claypool's Rebellion of 1780–1781, in which a group of men refused to pay taxes to the Continental Army, showed war-weariness in what became West Virginia.

Trans-Allegheny Virginia

 
A slave wedding in Virginia, 1838

Social conditions in western Virginia were entirely unlike those in the eastern part. The population was not homogeneous, as a considerable part of the immigration came by way of Pennsylvania and included Germans, Protestant Scotch-Irish, and settlers from states farther north. Counties in the east and south were settled mostly by eastern Virginians. During the American Revolution, the movement to create a state beyond the Alleghenies was revived and a petition for the establishment of "Westsylvania" was presented to Congress, on the grounds that the mountains presented an almost impassable barrier to the east. The rugged terrain made slavery unprofitable, and time only increased the social, political, economic, and cultural differences (see Tuckahoe-Cohee) between Virginia's two sections.[25]

In 1829, a constitutional convention met in Richmond to consider reforms to Virginia's outdated constitution. Philip Doddridge of Brooke County championed the cause of western Virginians who sought a more democratic frame of government,[26] but western reforms were rejected by leaders from east of the Alleghenies who "clung to political power in an effort to preserve their plantation lifestyles dependent on enslaving blacks".[27] Virginia leaders maintained a property qualification for suffrage, effectively disenfranchising poorer farmers in the west whose families did much of the farm work themselves. In addition, the 1829–30 convention gave slaveholding counties the benefit of three-fifths of their slave population in apportioning the state's representation in the U.S. House of Representatives. As a result, every county west of the Alleghenies except one voted to reject the constitution, which nevertheless passed because of eastern support.[25] The eastern planter elite's failure to make constitutional reforms exacerbated existing east–west sectionalism in Virginia and contributed to its division.[28]

The Virginia Constitutional Convention of 1850–51, the Reform Convention, addressed a number of issues important to western Virginians. It extended the vote to all white males 21 years or older. The governor, lieutenant governor, the judiciary, sheriffs, and other county officers were to be elected by public vote. The General Assembly's composition was changed. Representation in the House of Delegates was apportioned on the basis of the census of 1850, counting whites only. The Senate representation was arbitrarily fixed at 50 seats, with the west receiving 20 senators and the east 30. This was made acceptable to the west by a provision that required the General Assembly to reapportion representation on the basis of the white population in 1865, or else put the matter to a public referendum. But the east also gave itself a tax advantage in requiring a property tax at true and actual value, except for slaves. Slaves under age 12 were not taxed and slaves over that age were taxed at only $300, a fraction of their true value, but small farmers had all their assets, animals, and land taxed at full value. Despite this tax and the lack of internal improvements in the west, the vote was 75,748 for and 11,063 against the new constitution. Most of the opposition came from delegates from eastern counties, who did not like the compromises made for the west.[29]

Given these differences, many in the west had long contemplated a separate state. In particular, men such as lawyer Francis H. Pierpont from Fairmont had long chafed under the Tidewater and Piedmont slaveholders' political dominance. In addition to differences over slavery, he and allies felt the Virginia government ignored and refused to spend funds on needed internal improvements in the west, such as turnpikes and railroads.[30]

Separation from Virginia

 
Map of Virginia dated June 13, 1861, featuring the percentage of slave population within each county at the 1860 census and the proposed state of Kanawha
 
Francis H. Pierpont, a leader during the Second Wheeling Convention
 
Abraham Lincoln Walks at Midnight, a statue on the grounds of the West Virginia State Capitol
 
Harpers Ferry alternated between Confederate and Union rule eight times during the American Civil War, and was finally annexed by West Virginia.[31]
 
Votes by county in the October 1861 statehood vote

West Virginia was the only state in the Union to separate from a Confederate state (Virginia) during the Civil War.[32] In Richmond on April 17, 1861, the Virginia Secession Convention of 1861 voted to secede from the Union, but of the 49 delegates from the northwestern corner (which ultimately became West Virginia) only 17 voted in favor of the Ordinance of Secession, while 30 voted against[33] (with two abstentions).[34] Almost immediately after that vote, a mass meeting at Clarksburg recommended that each county in northwestern Virginia send delegates to a convention to meet in Wheeling on May 13, 1861. When this First Wheeling Convention met, 425 delegates from 25 counties were present, though more than one-third of the delegates were from the northern panhandle area.[35] Soon there was a division of sentiment.[25]

Some delegates led by pro-Union slaveowner John S. Carlile favored the immediate formation of a new state, while others led by Waitman Willey argued that, as Virginia's secession had not yet been passed by the required referendum (as happened on May 23), such action would constitute revolution against the United States.[36] The convention decided that if Virginians adopted the secession ordinance (of which there was little doubt), another convention including the members-elect of the legislature would meet in Wheeling in June 1861. On May 23, 1861, secession was ratified by a large majority in Virginia as a whole, but in the western counties 34,677 voted against and 19,121 voted for the ordinance.[37]

The Second Wheeling Convention met as agreed on June 11 and declared that, since the Secession Convention had been called without popular consent, all its acts were void and all who adhered to it had vacated their offices.[25] The Wheeling Conventions, and the delegates themselves, were never actually elected by public ballot to act on behalf of western Virginia.[38] Of its 103 members, 33 had been elected to the Virginia General Assembly[39] on May 23. This included some hold-over state senators whose four-year terms had begun in 1859, and some who vacated their offices to convene in Wheeling. Other members "were chosen even more irregularly—some in mass meetings, others by county committee, and still others were seemingly self-appointed".[40] An act for the reorganization of the government was passed on June 19. The next day, convention delegates chose Francis H. Pierpont as governor of Virginia and elected other officers to a rival state government and two U.S. senators (Willey and Carlile) to replace secessionists before adjourning. The federal government promptly recognized the new government and seated the two new senators. Thus there were two state governments in Virginia: one pledging allegiance to the United States and one to the Confederacy.[25]

The second Wheeling Convention had recessed until August 6, then reassembled on August 20 and called for a popular vote on the formation of a new state and for a convention to frame a constitution if the vote were favorable. In the October 24, 1861, election, 18,408 votes were cast for the new state and 781 against.[25] The election results were questioned since the Union army then occupied the area and Union troops were stationed at many of the polls to prevent Confederate sympathizers from voting.[41] This was also election day for local offices, and elections were also held in camps of Confederate soldiers, who elected rival state officials, such as Robert E. Cowan. Most pro-statehood votes came from 16 counties around the Northern panhandle.[42] Over 50,000 votes had been cast on the Ordinance of Secession, yet the vote on statehood garnered little more than 19,000.[43] In Ohio County, home to Wheeling, only about a fourth of the registered voters cast votes.[44] In most of what would become West Virginia, there was no vote at all, as two-thirds of the territory of West Virginia had voted for secession, and county officers remained loyal to Richmond. Votes recorded from pro-secession counties were mostly cast elsewhere by Unionist refugees from these counties.[45]

Despite that controversy, delegates (including many Methodist ministers) met to write a constitution for the new state, beginning on November 26, 1861. During that constitutional convention, a Mr. Lamb of Ohio County and a Mr. Carskadon claimed that in Hampshire County, out of 195 votes only 39 were cast by citizens of the state; the rest were cast illegally by Union soldiers.[46] One of the key figures was Gordon Battelle, who also represented Ohio County, and who proposed resolutions to establish public schools, as well as to limit the movement of slaves into the new state, and to gradually abolish slavery. The education proposal succeeded, but the convention tabled the slavery proposals before finishing its work on February 18, 1862. The new constitution was more closely modeled on Ohio's than Virginia's, adopting a township model of government rather than the "courthouse cliques" of Virginia which Carlile criticized, and a compromise demanded by the Kanawha region (Charleston lawyers Benjamin Smith and Brown) allowed counties and municipalities to vote subsidies for railroads or other improvement organizations.[47] The resulting instrument was ratified (18,162 for and 514 against) on April 11, 1862.

On May 13, 1862, the state legislature of the reorganized government approved the formation of the new state. An application for admission to the Union was made to Congress, introduced by Senator Waitman Willey of the Restored Government of Virginia. Carlile sought to sabotage the bill, first trying to expand the new state's boundaries to include the Shenandoah Valley, and then to defeat the Willey amendment at home.[48] On December 31, 1862, President Abraham Lincoln approved an enabling act admitting West Virginia on the condition that a provision for the gradual abolition of slavery be inserted in its constitution[25] (as Battelle had urged in the Wheeling Intelligencer and also written to Lincoln). While many felt West Virginia's admission as a state was both illegal and unconstitutional, Lincoln issued his Opinion on the Admission of West Virginia finding that "the body which consents to the admission of West Virginia is the Legislature of Virginia", and that its admission was therefore both constitutional and expedient.[49]

The convention was reconvened on February 12, 1863, and the abolition demand of the federal enabling act was met. The revised constitution was adopted on March 26, 1863, and on April 20, 1863, Lincoln issued a proclamation admitting the state 60 days later on June 20, 1863. Meanwhile, officers for the new state were chosen, while Pierpont moved his pro-Union Virginia capital to Union-occupied Alexandria, where he asserted and exercised jurisdiction over all the remaining Virginia counties within the federal lines.[25]

The question of the constitutionality of the formation of the new state was later brought before the Supreme Court of the United States in Virginia v. West Virginia. Berkeley and Jefferson counties, lying on the Potomac east of the mountains, voted in favor of annexation to West Virginia in 1863, with the consent of Virginia's reorganized government.[25]

Many voters of the strongly pro-secessionist counties were absent in the Confederate Army when the vote was taken and refused to acknowledge the transfer when they returned. The Virginia General Assembly repealed the act of secession and in 1866 brought suit against West Virginia asking the court to declare the counties part of Virginia, which would have made West Virginia's admission as a state unconstitutional. Meanwhile, on March 10, 1866, Congress passed a joint resolution recognizing the transfer.[25] The Supreme Court decided in West Virginia's favor in 1870.[50]

During the Civil War, Union General George B. McClellan's forces gained possession of the greater part of the territory in the summer of 1861, culminating at the Battle of Rich Mountain, and Union control was never again seriously threatened. In 1863, General John D. Imboden, with 5,000 Confederates, raided a considerable portion of the state and burned Pierpont's library, although Willey escaped their grasp. Bands of guerrillas burned and plundered in some sections, and were not entirely suppressed until the war ended.[25] The Eastern Panhandle counties were more affected by the war, with military control of the area repeatedly changing hands.

The area that became West Virginia actually furnished about an equal number of soldiers to the Union and Confederate armies,[51] about 22,000–25,000 each. In 1865, the Wheeling government found it necessary to strip voting rights from returning Confederates in order to retain control. James Ferguson, who proposed the law, said if it was not enacted he would lose the election by 500 votes.[52] Confederates' property might also be confiscated, and in 1866 a constitutional amendment disfranchising all who had given aid and comfort to the Confederacy was adopted. The addition of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution caused a reaction. The Democratic party secured control in 1870, and in 1871 the constitutional amendment of 1866 was abrogated. Republicans had taken the first steps toward this change in 1870. On August 22, 1872, an entirely new constitution was adopted.[25]

Beginning in Reconstruction, and for several decades thereafter, the two states disputed the new state's share of the prewar Virginia government's debts, which had mostly been incurred to finance public infrastructure improvements, such as canals, roads, and railroads under the Virginia Board of Public Works. Virginians—led by former Confederate general William Mahone—formed a political coalition based upon this: the Readjuster Party. West Virginia's first constitution provided for the assumption of a part of the Virginia debt, but negotiations opened by Virginia in 1870 were fruitless, and in 1871 Virginia funded two-thirds of the debt and arbitrarily assigned the remainder to West Virginia.[53] The issue was finally settled in 1915, when the Supreme Court of the United States ruled that West Virginia owed Virginia $12,393,929.50.[54] The final installment of this sum was paid in 1939.

Claims by Maryland

The original charters for Maryland and Virginia were silent as to which branch of the upper Potomac was the boundary. This was settled by the 1785 Mount Vernon Conference. Nevertheless, when West Virginia seceded from Virginia, Maryland claimed West Virginia land north of the South Branch (all of Mineral and Grant Counties and parts of Hampshire, Hardy, Tucker and Pendleton Counties). The Supreme Court rejected these claims in two separate decisions in 1910.[55][56]

Development of natural resources

 
Child labor in the coal mines of West Virginia, 1908
 
Family of a coal miner, circa 1935
 
Saturday afternoon street scene, Welch, McDowell County, 1946

After Reconstruction, the new 35th state benefited from the development of its mineral resources more than any other single economic activity.

Saltpeter caves had been employed throughout Appalachia for munitions; the border between West Virginia and Virginia includes the "Saltpeter Trail", a string of limestone caverns containing rich deposits of calcium nitrate which were rendered and sold to the government. The trail stretched from Pendleton County to the western terminus of the route in the town of Union, Monroe County. Nearly half of these caves are on the West Virginia side, including Organ Cave and Haynes Cave. In the late 18th century, saltpeter miners in Haynes Cave found large animal bones in the deposits. These were sent by a local historian and frontier soldier Colonel John Stuart to Thomas Jefferson. The bones were named Megalonyx jeffersonii, or great-claw, and became known as Jefferson's three-toed sloth. It was declared the official state fossil of West Virginia in 2008. The West Virginia official state rock is bituminous coal,[57] and the official state gemstone is silicified Mississippian fossil Lithostrotionella coral.[58]

The limestone also produced a useful quarry industry. Usually small, and softer, high-calcium seams were burned to produce industrial lime. This lime was used for agricultural and construction purposes; for many years a specific portion of the C & O Railroad carried limestone rock to Clifton Forge, Virginia as an industrial flux.

Salt mining had been underway since the 18th century, though it had largely played out by the time of the American Civil War, when the red salt of Kanawha County was a valued commodity of first Confederate, and later Union, forces. In the years following, more sophisticated mining methods would restore West Virginia's role as a major producer of salt.

However, in the second half of the 19th century, there was an even greater treasure not yet developed: bituminous coal. It would fuel much of the Industrial Revolution in the U.S. and the steamships of many of the world's navies.

The residents (both Native Americans and early European settlers) had long known of the underlying coal, and that it could be used for heating and fuel. However, for a long time, "personal" or artisanal mining was the only practical development. After the War, with the new railroads came a practical method to transport large quantities of coal to expanding U.S. and export markets. As the anthracite mines of northwestern New Jersey and Pennsylvania began to play out during this same time period, investors and industrialists focused new interest in West Virginia. Geologists such as Dr. David T. Ansted surveyed potential coal fields and invested in land and early mining projects.

The completion of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway (C&O) across the state to the new city of Huntington on the Ohio River in 1872 opened access to the New River Coal Field. Soon, the C&O was building its huge coal pier at Newport News, Virginia, on the large harbor of Hampton Roads. In 1881, the new Philadelphia-based owners of the former Atlantic, Mississippi and Ohio Railroad (AM&O), which stretched across Virginia's southern tier from Norfolk, had sights clearly set on the Mountain State, where the owners had large landholdings. Their railroad was renamed Norfolk and Western (N&W), and a new railroad city was developed at Roanoke to handle planned expansion. After its new president Frederick J. Kimball and a small party journeyed by horseback and saw firsthand the rich bituminous coal seam, which Kimball's wife named Pocahontas, the N&W redirected its planned westward expansion to reach it. Soon, the N&W was also shipping from new coal piers at Hampton Roads.

In 1889, in the southern part of the state, along the Norfolk and Western rail lines, the important coal center of Bluefield, West Virginia, was founded. The "capital" of the Pocahontas coalfield, this city would remain the largest city in the southern portion of the state for several decades. It shares its name with a sister city, Bluefield, in Virginia.

In the northern portion of the state and elsewhere, the older Baltimore and Ohio Railroad (B&O) and other lines also expanded to take advantage of coal opportunities. The B&O developed coal piers in Baltimore and at several points on the Great Lakes. Other significant rail carriers of coal were the Western Maryland Railway (WM), Southern Railway (SOU), and the Louisville and Nashville Railroad (L&N).

Particularly notable was a latecomer, the Virginian Railway (VGN). By 1900, only the most rugged terrain of southern West Virginia was any distance from the existing railroads and mining activity. Within this area west of the New River Coalfield in Raleigh and Wyoming counties lay the Winding Gulf Coalfield, later promoted as the "Billion Dollar Coalfield".

A protégé of Dr. Ansted was William Nelson Page (1854–1932), a civil engineer and mining manager in Fayette County. Former West Virginia governor William A. MacCorkle described him as a man who knew the land "as a farmer knows a field". Beginning in 1898, Page teamed with northern and European-based investors to take advantage of the undeveloped area. They acquired large tracts of land in the area, and Page began the Deepwater Railway, a short-line railroad chartered to stretch between the C&O at its line along the Kanawha River and the N&W at Matoaka—a distance of about 80 miles (130 km).

Although the Deepwater plan should have provided a competitive shipping market via either railroad, leaders of the two large railroads did not appreciate the scheme. In secret collusion, each declined to negotiate favorable rates with Page, nor did they offer to purchase his railroad, as they had many other short-lines. However, if the C&O and N&W presidents thought they could thus kill the Page project, they were to be proved mistaken. One of the silent partner investors Page had enlisted was millionaire industrialist Henry Huttleston Rogers, a principal in John D. Rockefeller's Standard Oil Trust and an old hand at developing natural resources and transportation. A master at competitive "warfare", Henry Rogers did not like to lose in his endeavors and also had "deep pockets".

Instead of giving up, Page (and Rogers) quietly planned and then built their tracks all the way east across Virginia, using Rogers' private fortune to finance the $40  million cost. When the renamed Virginian Railway (VGN) was completed in 1909, no fewer than three railroads were shipping ever-increasing volumes of coal to export from Hampton Roads. West Virginia coal was also in high demand at Great Lakes ports. The VGN and the N&W ultimately became parts of the modern Norfolk Southern system, and the VGN's well-engineered 20th-century tracks continue to offer a favorable gradient to Hampton Roads.

As coal mining and related work became major employment activities in the state, there was considerable labor strife as working conditions, safety issues and economic concerns arose. Even in the 21st century, mining safety and ecological concerns are still challenging to the state whose coal continues to power electrical generating plants in many other states.

Coal is not the only valuable mineral found in West Virginia, as the state was the site of the 1928 discovery of the 34.48 carat (6.896 g) Jones Diamond.

Geography

Located in the Appalachian Mountain range, West Virginia covers an area of 24,229.76 square miles (62,754.8 km2), with 24,077.73 square miles (62,361.0 km2) of land and 152.03 square miles (393.8 km2) of water, making it the 41st-largest state in the United States.[59] West Virginia borders Pennsylvania and Maryland in the northeast, Virginia in the southeast, Ohio in the northwest, and Kentucky in the southwest. Its longest border is with Virginia at 381 miles (613 km), followed by Ohio at 243 miles (391 km), Maryland at 174 miles (280 km), Pennsylvania at 118 miles (190 km), and Kentucky at 79 miles (127 km).[60]

Geology and terrain

 

West Virginia is located entirely within the Appalachian Region, and the state is almost entirely mountainous, giving the reason for the nickname The Mountain State and the motto Montani Semper Liberi ("Mountaineers are always free"). The elevations and ruggedness drop near large rivers like the Ohio River or Shenandoah River. About 75% of the state is within the Cumberland Plateau and Allegheny Plateau regions. Though the relief is not high, the plateau region is extremely rugged in most areas. The average elevation of West Virginia is approximately 1,500 feet (460 m) above sea level, which is the highest of any U.S. state east of the Mississippi River.

On the eastern state line with Virginia, high peaks in the Monongahela National Forest region give rise to an island of colder climate and ecosystems similar to those of northern New England and eastern Canada. The highest point in the state is atop Spruce Knob, at 4,863 feet (1,482 m),[61] and is covered in a boreal forest of dense spruce trees at altitudes above 4,000 feet (1,200 m). Spruce Knob lies within the Monongahela National Forest and is a part of the Spruce Knob–Seneca Rocks National Recreation Area.[62] A total of six wilderness areas can also be found within the forest. Outside the forest to the south, the New River Gorge is a canyon 1,000 feet (300 m) deep, carved by the New River. The National Park Service manages a portion of the gorge and river that has been designated as the New River Gorge National Park and Preserve.

Other areas under protection and management include:

 
The summit of Spruce Knob is often covered in clouds.

Most of West Virginia lies within the Appalachian mixed mesophytic forests ecoregion, while the higher elevations along the eastern border and in the panhandle lie within the Appalachian–Blue Ridge forests. The native vegetation for most of the state was originally mixed hardwood forest of oak, chestnut, maple, beech, and white pine, with willow and American sycamore along the state's waterways. Many of the areas are rich in biodiversity and scenic beauty, a fact appreciated by native West Virginians, who refer to their home as Almost Heaven (from the song "Take Me Home, Country Roads" by John Denver). Before the song, it was known as "The Cog State" (Coal, Oil, and Gas) or "The Mountain State".

The underlying rock strata are sandstone, shale, bituminous coal beds, and limestone laid down in a near-shore environment from sediments derived from mountains to the east, in a shallow inland sea on the west. Some beds illustrate a coastal swamp environment, some river delta, and some shallow water. Sea level rose and fell many times during the Mississippian and Pennsylvanian eras, giving a variety of rock strata. The Appalachian Mountains are some of the oldest on earth, having formed more than three hundred million years ago.[63]

Climate

 
Köppen climate types of West Virginia, using 1991-2020 climate normals
West Virginia state-wide averages
Climate chart (explanation)
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D
 
 
3.3
 
 
39
22
 
 
2.9
 
 
43
24
 
 
3.8
 
 
53
32
 
 
3.7
 
 
64
40
 
 
4.4
 
 
73
50
 
 
4
 
 
80
59
 
 
4.2
 
 
83
64
 
 
4
 
 
82
62
 
 
3.4
 
 
76
56
 
 
2.9
 
 
65
44
 
 
3.5
 
 
54
35
 
 
3.3
 
 
44
27
Average max. and min. temperatures in °F
Precipitation totals in inches
Source: West Virginia University data
Metric conversion
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D
 
 
84
 
 
4
−6
 
 
74
 
 
6
−4
 
 
97
 
 
12
0
 
 
94
 
 
18
4
 
 
112
 
 
23
10
 
 
102
 
 
27
15
 
 
107
 
 
28
18
 
 
102
 
 
28
17
 
 
86
 
 
24
13
 
 
74
 
 
18
7
 
 
89
 
 
12
2
 
 
84
 
 
7
−3
Average max. and min. temperatures in °C
Precipitation totals in mm

The climate of West Virginia is generally a humid subtropical climate (Köppen climate classification Cfa, except Dfb at the higher elevations) with warm to hot, humid summers and chilly winters, increasing in severity with elevation. Some southern highland areas also have a mountain temperate climate (Köppen Cfb) where winter temperatures are more moderate and summer temperatures are somewhat cooler. However, the weather is subject in all parts of the state to change. The hardiness zones range from zone 5b in the central Appalachian mountains to zone 7a in the warmest parts of the lowest elevations.[64]

In the Eastern Panhandle and the Ohio River Valley, temperatures are warm enough to see and grow subtropical plants such as southern magnolia (Magnolia grandiflora), crepe myrtle, Albizia julibrissin, American sweetgum and even the occasional needle palm and sabal minor. These plants do not thrive as well in other parts of the state. The eastern prickly pear grows well in many portions of the state.

Average January temperatures range from around 26 °F (−4 °C) near the Cheat River to 41 °F (5 °C) along sections of the border with Kentucky. July averages range from 67 °F (19 °C) along the North Branch Potomac River to 76 °F (24 °C) in the western part of the state. It is cooler in the mountains than in the lower sections of the state.[65] The highest recorded temperature in the state is 112 °F (44 °C) at Martinsburg on July 10, 1936, and the lowest recorded temperature in the state is −37 °F (−38 °C) at Lewisburg on December 30, 1917.

Annual precipitation ranges from less than 32 inches (810 mm) in the lower eastern section to more than 56 inches (1,400 mm) in higher parts of the Allegheny Front. Valleys in the east have lower rainfall because the Allegheny mountain ridges to the west create a partial rain shadow. Slightly more than half the rainfall occurs from April to September. Dense fogs are common in many valleys of the Kanawha section, especially the Tygart Valley. West Virginia is also one of the cloudiest states in the nation, with the cities of Elkins and Beckley ranking 9th and 10th in the U.S. respectively for the number of cloudy days per year (over 210). In addition to persistent cloudy skies caused by the damming of moisture by the Alleghenies, West Virginia also experiences some of the most frequent precipitation in the nation, with Snowshoe averaging nearly 200 days a year with either rain or snow. Snow usually lasts only a few days in the lower sections but may persist for weeks in the higher mountain areas. An average of 34 inches (860 mm) of snow falls annually in Charleston, although during the winter of 1995–1996 more than three times that amount fell as several cities in the state established new records for snowfall. Average snowfall in the Allegheny Highlands can range up to 180 inches (4,600 mm) per year. Severe weather is somewhat less prevalent in West Virginia than in most other eastern states, and it ranks among the least tornado-prone states east of the Rockies.

Adjacent states

Flora and fauna

Major cities

Originally, the state capital was Wheeling, from 1863 to 1870. It was then moved to Charleston, a more central city, from 1870 to 1875, when it returned to Wheeling. In 1885, the capitol burned down and it was moved back to Charleston that year, where a vote was held to determine the permanent capital between Charleston, Clarksburg, and Martinsburg. Charleston was selected, and it has remained the capital since.[66]

There are 232 incorporated municipalities in West Virginia.

 
 
Largest cities or towns in West Virginia
Source:[67]
Rank Name County Pop. Rank Name County Pop.
 
Charleston
 
Huntington
1 Charleston Kanawha 47,215 11 South Charleston Kanawha 12,240  
Morgantown
 
Parkersburg
2 Huntington Cabell 46,048 12 Vienna Wood 10,230
3 Morgantown Monongalia 30,955 13 St. Albans Kanawha 10,069
4 Parkersburg Wood 29,675 14 Bluefield Mercer 9,730
5 Wheeling Ohio 26,771 15 Bridgeport Harrison 8,681
6 Weirton Hancock 18,449 16 Moundsville Marshall 8,401
7 Fairmont Marion 18,411 17 Oak Hill Fayette 8,218
8 Martinsburg Berkeley 17,465 18 Dunbar Kanawha 7,205
9 Beckley Raleigh 16,183 19 Elkins Randolph 7,026
10 Clarksburg Harrison 15,480 20 Hurricane Putnam 6,506

Metropolitan areas

Other metropolitan areas that contain cities in West Virginia, but are primarily in other states include:

Micropolitan areas

Demographics

 
West Virginia population density map
Historical population
Census Pop.
179055,873
180078,59240.7%
1810105,46934.2%
1820136,80829.7%
1830176,92429.3%
1840224,53726.9%
1850302,31334.6%
1860376,68824.6%
1870442,01417.3%
1880618,45739.9%
1890762,79423.3%
1900958,80025.7%
19101,221,11927.4%
19201,463,70119.9%
19301,729,20518.1%
19401,901,97410.0%
19502,005,5525.4%
19601,860,421−7.2%
19701,744,237−6.2%
19801,949,64411.8%
19901,793,477−8.0%
20001,808,3440.8%
20101,852,9942.5%
20201,793,716−3.2%
Source:1910–2020[69]

The United States Census Bureau estimates that the population of West Virginia was 1,792,147 on July 1, 2018, a 3.28% decrease since the 2010 United States census.[70] The center of population of West Virginia is located in Braxton County, in the town of Gassaway.[71]

Ethnic composition as of the 2020 census
Race and ethnicity[72] Alone Total
White (non-Hispanic) 89.1% 89.1
 
93.0% 93
 
African American (non-Hispanic) 3.6% 3.6
 
4.9% 4.9
 
Hispanic or Latino[Note 2] 1.9% 1.9
 
Asian 0.8% 0.8
 
1.2% 1.2
 
Native American 0.2% 0.2
 
2.0% 2
 
Pacific Islander 0.02% 0.02
 
0.1% 0.1
 
Other 0.3% 0.3
 
1.0% 1
 
West Virginia Racial Breakdown of Population
Racial composition 1990[73] 2000[74] 2010[75] 2019[76]
White 96.2% 95.0% 93.9% 93.1%
Black 3.1% 3.2% 3.4% 3.7%
Asian 0.4% 0.5% 0.7% 0.8%
Native 0.1% 0.2% 0.2% 0.2%
Native Hawaiian and
other Pacific Islander
-
Other race 0.1% 0.2% 0.3% 0.4%
Two or more races 0.9% 1.5% 1.8%

As of 2019,[76] West Virginia has an estimated population of 1,792,147, which is a decrease of 10,025 (0.55%) from the prior year and a decrease of 47,162 (2.55%) since the previous census. This includes a natural decrease of 3,296 (108,292 births minus 111,588 deaths) and an increase from net migration of 14,209 into the state. West Virginia is the least populous southeastern state. Immigration from outside the United States resulted in a net increase of 3,691, and migration within the country produced a net increase of 10,518.

Only 1.6% of the state's residents were foreign-born, placing West Virginia last among the 50 states in that statistic. It also has the lowest percentage of residents who speak a language other than English at home (2.6%).

The five largest ancestry groups in West Virginia are: German (18.9%), Irish (15.1%) American (12.9%), English (11.8%) and Italian (4.7%)[77][78] In the 2000 census, people who identified their ethnicity as simply American made up 18.7% of the population.[79]

Large numbers of people of German ancestry are present in the northeastern counties of the state. People of English ancestry are present throughout the entire state. Many West Virginians who self-identify as Irish are actually Scots-Irish Protestants.

2010 census data show that 16 percent of West Virginia's residents are 65 or older (exceeded only by Florida's 17 percent).[80]

 
Racial plurality in West Virginia by county, per the 2020 U.S. census
Legend
Population Aged 65 and Older: Top 10 States[80]
State % of population
Florida 17.3
West Virginia 16.0
Maine 15.9
Pennsylvania 15.4
Iowa 14.9
Montana 14.8
Vermont 14.6
North Dakota 14.5
Rhode Island 14.4
Arkansas 14.4

There were 20,928 births in 2006. Of these, 19,757 (94.40% of the births, 95.19% of the population) were to non-Hispanic whites. There were 22 births to American Indians (0.11% of the births and 0.54% of the population), 177 births to Asians (0.85% of the births and 0.68% of the population), 219 births to Hispanics (1.05% of the births and 0.88% of the population) and 753 births to blacks and others (3.60% of the births and 3.56% of the population).[81]

The state's Northern Panhandle, and North-Central region feel an affinity for Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Also, those in the Eastern Panhandle feel a connection with the Washington, D.C. suburbs in Maryland and Virginia, and southern West Virginians often consider themselves Southerners. Finally, the towns and farms along the mid-Ohio River, which forms most of the state's western border, have an appearance and culture somewhat resembling the Midwest.[82]

Birth data

Note: Births in table do not add up, because Hispanics are counted both by their ethnicity and by their race, giving a higher overall number.

Live Births by Race/Ethnicity of Mother
Race 2013[83] 2014[84] 2015[85] 2016[86] 2017[87] 2018[88] 2019[89] 2020[90]
White: 19,823 (95.2%) 19,245 (94.8%) 18,814 (95.0%) ... ... ... ... ...
> non-Hispanic White 19,542 (93.8%) 18,860 (92.9%) 18,442 (93.1%) 17,460 (91.5%) 16,943 (90.7%) 16,621 (91.1%) 16,476 (90.8%) 15,698 (90.6%)
Black 754 (3.6%) 813 (4.0%) 738 (3.7%) 587 (3.1%) 629 (3.4%) 626 (3.4%) 620 (3.4%) 603 (3.5%)
Asian 229 (1.1%) 214 (1.0%) 225 (1.1%) 170 (0.9%) 201 (1.1%) 176 (1.0%) 173 (1.0%) 160 (0.9%)
American Indian 19 (0.1%) 29 (0.1%) 28 (0.1%) 17 (0.1%) 26 (0.1%) 16 (0.1%) 13 (0.1%) 16 (0.1%)
Hispanic (of any race) 219 (1.1%) 350 (1.7%) 331 (1.7%) 378 (2.0%) 390 (2.1%) 378 (2.1%) 383 (2.1%) 373 (2.1%)
Total West Virginia 20,825 (100%) 20,301 (100%) 19,805 (100%) 19,079 (100%) 18,675 (100%) 18,248 (100%) 18,136 (100%) 17,323 (100%)
  • Since 2016, data for births of White Hispanic origin are not collected, but included in one Hispanic group; persons of Hispanic origin may be of any race.

Languages

Top 10 non-English languages spoken in West Virginia
Language Percentage of population
(as of 2010)[91]
Spanish 1.07%
French 0.17%
German 0.14%
Italian 0.09%
Chinese 0.09%
Tagalog 0.06%
Japanese 0.05%
Vietnamese 0.04%
Urdu 0.04%
Korean 0.04%

In 2010 97.67% (1,697,042) of West Virginia residents aged 5 years and older spoke English as their primary language. 2.33% of residents spoke a mother language other than English.[91]

Religion

Religion in West Virginia[92]
religion percent
Protestant
70%
Unaffiliated
18%
Catholic
6%
Mormon
2%
Jewish
1%
Muslim
1%
Other faith
1%
Unanswered
1%

Several surveys have been made in recent years, in 2008 by the American Religion Identity Survey,[93] in 2010 by the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life.[94] The Pew survey results admit to a 6.5% margin of error plus or minus, while the ARIS survey says "estimates are subject to larger sampling errors in states with small populations." A characteristic of religion in Appalachian communities is the abundance of independent, non-affiliated churches, which "remain unnoted and uncounted in any census of church life in the United States". This sometimes leads to the belief that these communities are "unchurched".[95]

The largest denomination as of 2010 was the United Methodist Church with 136,000 members in 1,200 congregations. The second-largest Protestant church was the American Baptist Churches USA with 88,000 members and 381 congregations. The Southern Baptist church had 44,000 members and 232 congregations. The Churches of Christ had 22,000 members and 287 congregations. The Presbyterian Church (USA) had 200 congregations and 20,000 members.[96]

A survey conducted in 2015 by the Pew Research Center found that West Virginia was the seventh most "highly religious" state in the United States.[97] A separate 2020 survey by the Public Religion Research Institute found that 69% of the adult population was Christian, reflecting a slight decrease since the Pew Research Center's 2015 survey.[98]

In 2020, a survey of nearly 1,900 West Virginians reported that 78.6% were Christian, and 16.2% were unaffiliated.[99]

Economy

Overview

The economy of West Virginia nominally would be the 62nd largest economy globally behind Iraq and ahead of Croatia according to 2009 World Bank projections,[100] and the 64th largest behind Iraq and ahead of Libya according to 2009 International Monetary Fund projections.[101] The state has a projected nominal GDP of $63.34 billion in 2009 according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis report of November 2010, and a real GDP of $55.04 billion. The real GDP growth of the state in 2009 of .7% was the 7th best in the country.[102] West Virginia was one of only ten states in 2009 that grew economically.[103]

While per capita income fell 2.6% nationally in 2009, West Virginia's grew at 1.8%.[104] Through the first half of 2010, exports from West Virginia topped $3 billion, growing 39.5% over the same period from the previous year and ahead of the national average by 15.7%.[104]

Morgantown was ranked by Forbes as the #10 best small city in the nation to conduct business in 2010.[105] The city is also home to West Virginia University, the 95th best public university according to U.S. News & World Report in 2011.[106] The proportion of West Virginia's adult population with a bachelor's degree is the lowest in the U.S. at 17.3%.[107]

The net corporate income tax rate is 6.5% while business costs are 13% below the national average.[108][109]

The U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis reported that in 2014 West Virginia's economy grew twice as fast as the next fastest-growing state east of the Mississippi River, ranking third alongside Wyoming and just behind North Dakota and Texas among the fastest-growing states in the United States.[110]

Tourism

Tourism contributed $4.27 billion to the state's economy and employed 44,400 people in 2010, making it one of the state's largest industries.[111] Many tourists, especially in the eastern mountains, are drawn to the region's notable opportunities for outdoor recreation. Canaan Valley is popular for winter sports, Seneca Rocks is one of the premier rock climbing destinations in the eastern U.S., the New River Gorge/Fayetteville area draws rock climbers as well as whitewater rafting enthusiasts, and the Monongahela National Forest is popular with hikers, backpackers, hunters, and anglers.

 
Seneca Rocks, Pendleton County

Also drawing tourism to the state is the West Virginia State Park & State Forest system, which comprises 45 units covering 164,000 acres. In 2021, over 9 million people visited a West Virginia state park, the highest number on record. This is partly due to a recent $151 million improvement project that has seen improvements at every park and forest.[112]

In addition to such outdoor recreation opportunities, the state offers a number of historic and cultural attractions. Harpers Ferry National Historical Park is a historic town situated at the confluence of the Shenandoah and Potomac rivers. Harpers Ferry was the site of John Brown's 1859 raid on the U.S. Armory and Arsenal. Located at the approximate midpoint of the Appalachian Trail, Harpers Ferry is the base of the Appalachian Trail Conservancy.

The Greenbrier hotel and resort, originally built in 1778, has long been considered a premier hotel, frequented by numerous world leaders and U.S. presidents over the years.

West Virginia is the site of the National Radio Astronomy Observatory, which features the Green Bank Telescope. For the 1963 Centennial of the State, it hosted two high school graduate delegates from each of the 50 States at the National Youth Science Camp near Bartow, and has continued this tradition ever since. The main building of Weston State Hospital is the largest hand-cut sandstone building in the western hemisphere, second worldwide only to the Kremlin in Moscow. Tours of the building, which is a National Historic Landmark and part of the National Civil War Trail, are offered seasonally and by appointment year-round. West Virginia has numerous popular festivals throughout the year.

Resources

 
Bituminous coal seam in southwestern West Virginia

One of the major resources in West Virginia's economy is coal. According to the Energy Information Administration, West Virginia is a top coal producer in the United States, second only to Wyoming. West Virginia is located in the heart of the Marcellus Shale Natural Gas Bed, which stretches from Tennessee north to New York in the middle of Appalachia.

As of 2017, the coal industry accounted for 2% of state employment.[113]

Nearly all the electricity generated in West Virginia is from coal-fired power plants. West Virginia produces a surplus of electricity and leads the Nation in net interstate electricity exports.[114] Farming is also practiced in West Virginia, but on a limited basis because of the mountainous terrain over much of the state.

Green energy

An assessment from 2012 estimated that West Virginia had the potential to generate 8,627 GWh/year from 2,772 MW of 100-meter wind turbines, and 60,000 GWh from 40,000 MW of photovoltaics, including 3,810 MW of rooftop photovoltaics.[115] This was based on then-existing technologies and apparently was based on some assumed requirements for the economic performance of the respective resources.

West Virginia Wind Generation (GWh, Million kWh)
Year Capacity
(MW)
Total Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sept Oct Nov Dec
2009 330 742 86 86 69 71 31 49 49 32 46 71 68 86
2010 431 939 92 79 85 86 66 69 49 33 66 114 89 112
2011 564 1099 102 113 112 114 49 62 45 68 60 122 124 132
2012 583 1286 201 147 136 130 59 90 85 41 65 98 100 133
2013 583 1387 175 154 174 140 134 78 55 58 52 58 159 152[116]
2014 583 1451 166 146 167 143 100 62 76 64 67 154 157 149
2015 583 1376 158 137 181 137 75 103 65 44 71 122 147 136
2016 686 1432 166 164 134 120 74 92 69 57 67 130 135 222
2017 686 1682 124 123 171 174 152 140 112 52 70 116 167 211
2018 686 1779 191 181 183 180 138 132 97 108 106 144 160 160
2019 160 131 144 185 152 162

Source:[117][118][119][120]

Taxes

West Virginia personal income tax is based on federal adjusted gross income (not taxable income), as modified by specific items in West Virginia law. Citizens are taxed within five income brackets, which range from 3.0% to 6.5%. The state's consumer sales tax is levied at 6% on most products except for non-prepared foods.[121]

West Virginia counties administer and collect property taxes, although property tax rates reflect levies for state government, county governments, county boards of education and municipalities. Counties may also impose a hotel occupancy tax on lodging places not located within the city limits of any municipality that levies such a tax. Municipalities may levy license and gross receipts taxes on businesses located within the city limits and a hotel occupancy tax on lodging places in the city. Although the Department of Tax and Revenue plays a major role in the administration of this tax, less than half of one percent of the property tax collected goes to state government.

The primary beneficiaries of the property tax are county boards of education. Property taxes are paid to the sheriff of each of the state's 55 counties. Each county and municipality can impose its own rates of property taxation within the limits set by the West Virginia Constitution. The West Virginia legislature sets the rate of tax of county boards of education. This rate is used by all county boards of education statewide. However, the total tax rate for county boards of education may differ from county to county because of excess levies. The Department of Tax and Revenue supervises and otherwise assists counties and municipalities in their work of assessment and tax rate determination. The total tax rate is a combination of the tax levies from four state taxing authorities: state, county, schools and municipal. This total tax rate varies for each of the four classes of property, which consists of personal, real and intangible properties. Property is assessed according to its use, location and value as of July 1. WV Assessments has a free searchable database of West Virginia real estate tax assessments, covering current and past years. All property is reappraised every three years; annual adjustments are made to assessments for property with a change of value. West Virginia does not impose an inheritance tax. Because of the phase-out of the federal estate tax credit, West Virginia's estate tax is not imposed on estates of persons who died on or after January 1, 2005.[122]

Largest private employers

The largest private employers in West Virginia, as of March 2019, were:[123]

  1. ^ Labelled as "General Mills Restaurants", one of Darden's predecessors. GMRI, Inc. remains Darden's main operating subsidiary.[124]

Quality of life

 
Bluefield, a major center for coal mining, in 2014

Economy

West Virginia coal exports declined 40% in 2013—a loss of $2.9 billion and overall total exports declined 26%.[125] West Virginia ranked last in the Gallup Economic Index for the fourth year running. West Virginia's score was −44, or a full 17 points lower than the average of −27 for the other states in the bottom ten.[126] West Virginia ranked 48th in the CNBC "Top States for Business 2013" based on measures of competitiveness such as economy, workforce and cost of living—ranking among the bottom five states for the last six years running.[127] West Virginia ranked 49th in the 2014 State New Economy Index and has ranked in the bottom three states since 1999. West Virginia ranked last or next-to-last in critical indicators such as Workforce Education, Entrepreneurial Activity, High-Tech Jobs, and Scientists and Engineers.[128]

On January 9, 2014, a chemical spill contaminated the water supply of 300,000 people in nine West Virginia counties near Charleston. According to Bloomberg News, lost wages, revenue, and other economic harm from the chemical spill could top $500 million.[129][needs update] and West Virginia's Marshall University Center for Business and Economic Research estimated that about $61 million was lost by businesses in the first four days alone after the spill.[130]

Employment

In 2012, West Virginia's Gross Domestic Product (GDP) grew by 3.3%.[131] The state issued a report highlighting the state's GDP as indicating a fast-growing economy, but did not address employment indicators.[132] In 2009–2013, the U.S. real GDP increased 9.6% and total employment increased 3.9%. In West Virginia during the same time period, its real GDP increased about 11%, while total employment decreased by 1,000 jobs from 746,000 to 745,000.

In 2013, West Virginia ranked last in the nation with an employment-to-population ratio of only 50%, compared to the national average of 59%.[133] The state lost 5,600 jobs in its labor force in four critical economic sectors: construction (1,900), manufacturing (1,100), retail (1,800), and education (800), while gaining just 400 in mining and logging.[134] The state's Civilian Labor Force dropped by 15,100.[135]

Wages and poverty

Personal income growth in West Virginia during 2013 was only 1.5%—the lowest in the nation—and about half the national average (2.6%).[136] Overall income growth in West Virginia in the last thirty years has been only 13%—about a third of the national average (37%). Wages of the impoverished bottom 1% income earners decreased by 3%, compared to the national average, which increased 19%.[137]

West Virginia's poverty rate is one of the highest in the nation. 2017 estimates indicate that 19% of the state's population lives in poverty, exceeding the national average of 13%.[138]

The West Virginia teachers' strike in 2018 inspired teachers in other states to take similar action.[139]

Population

United Van Lines 37th Annual Migration Study showed in 2013 that 60% more people moved out of West Virginia than moved in.[140] West Virginia's population is expected to decline by more than 19,000 residents by 2030, and West Virginia lost one of its three seats in the United States House of Representatives in the 2020 census.[141] West Virginia is the only state where death rates exceed birth rates. During 2010–2013, about 21,000 babies per year were born in West Virginia, but over these three years West Virginia had 3,000 more deaths than births.[142]

Family

Gallup-Healthways annual "State of American Well-Being" rankings reports that 1,261 concerned West Virginians rated themselves as "suffering" in categories such as Quality of Life, Physical Health, and Access to Basic Needs. Overall, West Virginia citizens rated themselves as being more miserable than people in all other states—for five years running.[143] In addition, the Gallup Well-Being Index for 2013 ranked Charleston, the state capital, and Huntington last and next-to-last out of 189 U.S. Metropolitan Statistical Areas.[144]

The Annie E. Casey Foundation's National Index of Children's Progress ranked West Virginia 43rd in the nation for all kids, and last for white kids.[145] The Annie E. Casey Foundation's 2013 KIDS COUNT Data Book also ranked West Virginia's education system 47th in the nation for the second straight year.[146] Charleston, West Virginia has the worst divorce rate among 100 cities in the nation. Stephen Smith, the executive director of the West Virginia Healthy Kids and Families Coalition, said poor employment prospects are to blame: "The pressure to make a good living puts strain on a marriage, and right now it is infinitely harder to make a living here than it was 40 years ago."[147]

Health

United Health Foundation's "America's Health Rankings" for 2013 found that Americans are making considerable progress in key health measures. West Virginia, however, ranked either last or second-to-last in twenty categories, including cancer, child immunization, diabetes, disabilities, drug deaths, teeth loss, low birth weight, missed work days due to health, prescription drug overdose, preventable hospitalizations, and senior clinical care.[148] Wisconsin Population Health Institute annual "Health Rankings" for 2012 showed West Virginia spends $9,671 per capita on health care annually. El Salvador spends just $467, yet both have the same life expectancy.[149] In 2012, according to the Census Bureau, West Virginia was the only state where death rates exceed birth rates. During 2010–2013, about 21,000 babies per year were born in West Virginia, but there were 24,000 deaths.[142] In demographics, this is called a "net mortality society".[150]

The National Center for Health Statistics says national birth rates for teenagers are at historic lows—during 2007–2010, teen birth rates fell 17% nationally. West Virginia, however, ranked last with a 3% increase in birth rates for teenagers.[151] A study by West Virginia's Marshall University showed that 19% of babies born in the state have evidence of drug or alcohol exposure.[152] This is several times the national rate, where studies show that about 5.9% of pregnant women in the U.S. use illicit drugs, and about 8.5% consume any alcohol.[153] An Institute for Health Policy Research study determined that mortality rates in Appalachia are correlated with coal production. In twenty West Virginia coal counties mining more than a million tons of coal per year and having a total population of 850,000, there are about 10,100 deaths per year, with 1,400 of those statistically attributed to deaths from heart, respiratory and kidney disease from living in an Appalachian coal county.[154]

In 2015, McDowell County had the highest rate of drug-induced deaths of any county in the United States, with a rate of 141 deaths per 100,000 people. Four of the five counties with the highest rates of drug-induced deaths are in West Virginia (McDowell, Wyoming, Cabell and Raleigh Counties).[155]

American environmental attorney Robert Bilott exposed how DuPont had been knowingly polluting water with perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) in Parkersburg, West Virginia, since the 1980s.[156] This battle with DuPont is depicted in the film Dark Waters.

Life expectancy

The residents of West Virginia have a lower life expectancy than the national average. In 2014 life expectancy for both sexes in the state was 76.0 years compared to 79.1 years for the United States as a whole. In 2014, males in West Virginia lived an average of 73.6 years compared to a national average of 76.7 years and females lived an average of 77.5 years compared to a national average of 81.5 years. Male life expectancy in West Virginia between 1980 and 2014 increased by 4.7 years, compared to a national average of a 6.7-year increase. Life expectancy for females in West Virginia between 1980 and 2014 increased by 1.7 years, compared to a national average of a 4.0-year increase. Life expectancy for both sexes is among the lowest of all states.[157]

Life expectancies in 2014 for both sexes in West Virginia counties ranged from a low of 70.3 years in McDowell County to a high of 79.3 years in Pendleton County. McDowell and several other West Virginia counties are among the counties in the U.S. with the lowest life expectancies.[158]

Governance

Legislative branch

The West Virginia Legislature is bicameral. It consists of the House of Delegates and the Senate, both housed in the West Virginia State Capitol. It is a citizen's legislature, meaning that legislative office is not a full-time occupation, but rather a part-time position. Consequently, the legislators often hold full-time jobs in their community of residence.

Typically, the legislature is in session for 60 days between January and early April. The final day of the regular session ends in a bewildering fury of last-minute legislation to meet a constitutionally imposed midnight deadline. During the remainder of the year, monthly interim sessions are held in preparation for the regular session. Legislators also gather periodically for 'special' sessions when called by the governor.

The title of Lieutenant Governor is assigned by statute to the senate president.

Executive branch

The governor, elected every four years on the same day as the U.S. presidential election, is sworn in during the following January.

Governors of West Virginia can serve two consecutive terms but must sit out a term before serving a third term in office.

The title of Lieutenant Governor is assigned by statute to the senate president.

West Virginia's current governor is Jim Justice.

Judicial branch

West Virginia is one of 27 states that do not have a death penalty, and it was the only state in the southeastern United States to have abolished it until 2021, when Virginia did so as well.

For the purpose of courts of general jurisdiction, the state is divided into 31 judicial circuits. Each circuit is made up of one or more counties. Circuit judges are elected in non-partisan elections to serve eight-year terms.

West Virginia's highest court is the Supreme Court of Appeals. The Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia is the busiest appellate court of its type in the United States. West Virginia is one of 11 states with a single appellate court. The state constitution allows for the creation of an intermediate court of appeals, but the Legislature has never created one. The Supreme Court is made up of five justices, elected in non-partisan elections to 12-year terms.

West Virginia is an alcoholic beverage control state. However, unlike most such states, it does not operate retail outlets, having exited that business in 1990. It retains a monopoly on wholesaling of distilled spirits only.

Politics

 
From left, Senator Joe Manchin, Energy Secretary Rick Perry, Senator Shelley Moore Capito, and Representative David McKinley in 2017

At the state level, West Virginia's politics were largely dominated by the Democratic Party from the Great Depression through the 2000s. This was a legacy of West Virginia's very strong tradition of union membership.[9] After the 2014 midterm elections Democrats controlled the governorship, the majority of statewide offices, and one U.S. Senate seat, while Republicans held one U.S. Senate seat, all three of the state's U.S. House seats, and a majority in both houses of the West Virginia Legislature. In the 2016 elections, the Republicans held on to their seats and made gains in the State Senate and gained three statewide offices.[159][160]

Since 2000, West Virginians have supported the Republican candidate in every presidential election. The state is regarded as a "deep red" state at the federal level.[9][161] In 2012 Republican Mitt Romney won the state, defeating Democrat Barack Obama with 62% of the vote to 35% for Obama. In the 2016 presidential election, Republican Donald Trump won the state with 67.86% of the popular vote, with West Virginia giving him the highest vote share of any state.[162] The 2008 presidential election was the last to date in which the Democratic nominee won any of the state's counties.

Evangelical Christians comprised 52% of the state's voters in 2008.[163] A poll in 2005 showed that 53% of West Virginia voters are anti-abortion, the seventh highest in the country.[164] A 2014 poll by Pew Research found that 35% of West Virginians supported legal abortion in "all or most cases" while 58% wanted it to be banned "in all or most cases".[165]

United States presidential election results for West Virginia[166]
Year Republican Democratic Third party
No.  % No.  % No.  %
2020 545,382 68.62% 235,984 29.69% 13,365 1.68%
2016 489,371 67.85% 188,794 26.18% 43,096 5.98%
2012 417,655 62.14% 238,269 35.45% 16,195 2.41%
2008 397,466 55.58% 303,857 42.49% 13,800 1.93%
2004 423,778 56.06% 326,541 43.20% 5,568 0.74%
2000 336,475 51.92% 295,497 45.59% 16,152 2.49%
1996 233,946 36.76% 327,812 51.51% 74,701 11.74%
1992 241,974 35.39% 331,001 48.41% 110,736 16.20%
1988 310,065 47.46% 341,016 52.20% 2,230 0.34%
1984 405,483 55.11% 328,125 44.60% 2,134 0.29%
1980 334,206 45.30% 367,462 49.81% 36,047 4.89%
1976 314,760 41.93% 435,914 58.07% 0 0.00%
1972 484,964 63.61% 277,435 36.39% 0 0.00%
1968 307,555 40.78% 374,091 49.60% 72,560 9.62%
1964 253,953 32.06% 538,087 67.94% 0 0.00%
1960 395,995 47.27% 441,786 52.73% 0 0.00%
1956 449,297 54.08% 381,534 45.92% 0 0.00%
1952 419,970 48.08% 453,578 51.92% 0 0.00%
1948 316,251 42.24% 429,188 57.32% 3,311 0.44%
1944 322,819 45.11% 392,777 54.89% 0 0.00%
1940 372,414 42.90% 495,662 57.10% 0 0.00%
1936 325,358 39.20% 502,582 60.56% 2,005 0.24%
1932 330,731 44.47% 405,124 54.47% 7,919 1.06%
1928 375,551 58.43% 263,784 41.04% 3,417 0.53%
1924 288,635 49.45% 257,232 44.07% 37,795 6.48%
1920 282,007 55.30% 220,789 43.30% 7,146 1.40%
1916 143,124 49.38% 140,403 48.44% 6,325 2.18%
1912 56,754 21.11% 113,197 42.11% 98,877 36.78%
1908 137,869 53.42% 111,418 43.17% 8,818 3.42%
1904 132,620 55.26% 100,855 42.03% 6,511 2.71%
1900 119,829 54.27% 98,807 44.75% 2,160 0.98%
1896 105,379 52.23% 94,480 46.83% 1,898 0.94%
1892 80,292 46.93% 84,467 49.37% 6,320 3.69%
1888 78,171 49.03% 78,677 49.35% 2,592 1.63%
1884 63,096 47.75% 67,311 50.94% 1,738 1.32%
1880 46,243 41.05% 57,390 50.95% 9,008 8.00%
1876 41,997 42.15% 56,546 56.75% 1,104 1.11%
1872 32,320 51.74% 29,532 47.28% 615 0.98%
1868 29,015 58.83% 20,306 41.17% 0 0.00%
1864 23,799 68.24% 11,078 31.76% 0 0.00%

A September 2011 Public Policy Polling survey found that 19% of West Virginia voters thought same-sex marriage should be legal, while 71% thought it should be illegal and 10% were not sure. A separate question on the same survey found that 43% of West Virginia voters supported the legal recognition of same-sex couples, with 17% supporting same-sex marriage, 26% supporting civil unions but not marriage, 54% favoring no legal recognition and 3% not sure.[167] In 2008, 58% favored troop withdrawal from Iraq while just 32% wanted troops to remain.[168] On fiscal policy in 2008, 52% said raising taxes on the wealthier individuals would benefit the economy, while 45% disagreed.[169]

Voter registration as of September 30, 2022[170]
Party Total voters Percentage
Republican 450,278 39.17%
Democratic 379,886 33.05%
Unaffiliated 269,095 23.41%
Minor parties 50,207 4.37%
Total 1,149,466 100%

In a 2020 study, West Virginia was ranked as the 16th hardest state for citizens to vote in.[171]

Transportation

 
A toll plaza on the West Virginia Turnpike
 
The Veterans Memorial Bridge carries US 22 from Steubenville into Ohio.

Highways form the backbone of transportation systems in West Virginia, with over 37,300 miles (60,000 km) of public roads in the state.[172] Airports, railroads, and rivers complete the commercial transportation modes for West Virginia. Commercial air travel is facilitated by airports in Charleston, Huntington, Morgantown, Beckley, Lewisburg, Clarksburg, and Parkersburg. All but Charleston and Huntington are subsidized by the federal Department of Transportation's Essential Air Service program. The cities of Charleston, Huntington, Beckley, Wheeling, Morgantown, Clarksburg, Parkersburg and Fairmont have bus-based public transit systems.

West Virginia University in Morgantown boasts the PRT (personal rapid transit) system, the state's only single-rail public transit system. Developed by Boeing, the WVU School of Engineering and the Department of Transportation, it was a model for low-capacity light transport designed for smaller cities. Recreational transportation opportunities abound in West Virginia, including hiking trails,[173] rail trails,[174] ATV off-road trails,[175] white water rafting rivers,[176] and two tourist railroads, the Cass Scenic Railroad[177] and the Potomac Eagle Scenic Railroad.[178]

West Virginia is crossed by seven Interstate Highways. I-64 enters the state near White Sulphur Springs in the mountainous east, and exits for Kentucky in the west, near Huntington. I-77 enters from Virginia in the south, near Bluefield. It runs north past Parkersburg before it crosses into Ohio. I-64 and I-77 between Charleston and Beckley are merged as toll road known as the West Virginia Turnpike, which continues as I-77 alone from Beckley to Princeton. It was constructed beginning in 1952 as a two-lane road, but rebuilt beginning in 1974 to Interstate standards. Today almost nothing of the original construction remains. I-68's western terminus is in Morgantown. From there it runs east into Maryland. At the I-68 terminus in Morgantown, it meets I-79, which enters from Pennsylvania and runs through the state to its southern terminus in Charleston. I-70 briefly runs through West Virginia, crossing the northern panhandle through Wheeling, while I-470 is a bypass of Wheeling (making Wheeling among the smallest cities with an interstate bypass). I-81 also briefly runs in West Virginia through the Eastern Panhandle where it goes through Martinsburg.

The interstates are supplemented by roads constructed under the Appalachian Corridor system. Four Corridors are complete. Corridor D, carrying US 50, runs from the Ohio River, and I-77, at Parkersburg to I-79 at Clarksburg. Corridor G, carrying US 119, runs from Charleston to the Kentucky border at Williamson. Corridor L, carrying US 19, runs from the Turnpike at Beckley to I-79 near Sutton (and provides a short cut of about 40 miles (64 km) and bypasses Charleston's urban traffic for traveler heading to and from Florida). Corridor Q, carrying US 460, runs through Mercer County, entering the state from Giles County, Virginia and then reentering Virginia at Tazewell County.

Work continues on the long-delayed Corridor H, which will carry US 48 from Weston to the Virginia line near Wardensville. As of 2018, a section from Weston to Kerens just past Elkins, and another section from Wardensville to Davis are complete. Other projects under development are a four-lane upgrade of US 35 from Scott Depot to the Ohio River at Point Pleasant, which is about two-thirds complete; a four-lane upgrade of WV 10 from Logan to Man and then of WV 80 from Man to Gilbert, which is about half completed; and four-lane upgrades to US 52 from Bluefield to Williamson, known as the "King Coal Highway" and from Williamson to Huntington, known as the "Tolsia Highway" which are many years from completion. A project known as the "Coalfields Expressway" is also ongoing, and will carry US 121 from Beckley west across Raleigh, Wyoming, and McDowell counties, entering Virginia near Bishop.

Rail lines in the state used to be more prevalent, but many lines have been discontinued because of increased automobile traffic. Many old tracks have been converted to rail trails for recreational use, although the coal-producing areas still have railroads running at near capacity. Amtrak's Cardinal roughly parallels I-64's path through the state. MARC trains serve commuters to Washington, D.C. in the eastern panhandle. In 2006 Norfolk Southern along with the West Virginia and U.S. Government approved a plan to modify many of the rail tunnels in West Virginia, especially in the southern half of the state, to allow for double-stacked cars (see inter-modal freight). This is expected to also help bring economic growth to the southern half of the state. An Intermodal Freight Facility is located at Prichard, just south of Huntington.

Because of the mountainous nature of the entire state, West Virginia has several notable tunnels and bridges. The most famous of these is the New River Gorge Bridge, which was at a time the longest steel single-arch bridge in the world with a 3,031-foot (924 m) span. The bridge is also pictured on the West Virginia state quarter. The Fort Steuben Bridge (Weirton-Steubenville Bridge) was at the time of its construction one of only three cable-stayed steel girder trusses in the United States. "The Veterans Memorial Bridge was designed to handle traffic from the Fort Steuben Bridge as well as its own traffic load", to quote the Weirton Daily Times newspaper.[179] The 80-year-old Fort Steuben Bridge (Weirton-Steubenville Bridge) was permanently closed on January 8, 2009. The Wheeling Suspension Bridge was the first bridge built across the Ohio River in 1849 and for a time was the longest suspension bridge in the world. It is still the oldest vehicular suspension bridge in the United States still in use.

Education

Colleges and universities

Culture

Sports

West Virginia is home to college sports teams from two schools—West Virginia and Marshall—that play in NCAA Division I. West Virginia is also home to several professional minor league baseball, football, hockey, and other sports teams.

Music

Appalachian music

West Virginia's folk heritage is a part of the Appalachian folk music tradition, and includes styles of fiddling, ballad singing, and other styles that draw on Scots-Irish music. Camp Washington-Carver, a Mountain Cultural Arts Center located at Clifftop in Fayette County, hosts an annual Appalachian String Band Festival.[182] The Capitol Complex in Charleston hosts The Vandalia Gathering, where traditional Appalachian musicians compete in contests and play in impromptu jam sessions and evening concerts over the weekend.[183] The Augusta Heritage Center sponsored by Davis & Elkins College in Elkins in Randolph County produces the annual Augusta Heritage Festival, which includes intensive week-long workshops in the summer that help preserve Appalachian heritage and traditions.[184]

Classical music

The West Virginia Symphony Orchestra was founded in 1939, as the Charleston Civic Orchestra, before becoming the Charleston Symphony Orchestra in 1943. The first conductor was William R. Wiant, followed by the conductor Antonio Modarelli, who was written about in the November 7, 1949 Time Magazine for his composition of the River Saga, a six-section program piece about the Kanawha River according to the Charleston Gazette's November 6, 1999, photo essay, "Snapshots of the 20th Century".[185] Before coming to Charleston, Modarelli had conducted the Wheeling Symphony Orchestra and the Philadelphia Orchestra, according to the orchestra's website.[186]

The Pulitzer Prize-winning 20th-century composer George Crumb was born in Charleston and earned his bachelor's degree there before moving outside the state. There had also been a series of operatic-style concerts performed in Wheeling during mid-century as well.

Musical innovation

The West Virginia Cultural Center in Charleston[187] is home to the West Virginia Department of Arts, Culture and History,[188] which helps underwrite and coordinate a large number of musical activities. The center is also home to Mountain Stage, an internationally broadcast live-performance music radio program established in 1983 which is carried by many affiliates of National Public Radio.[189] The program also travels to other venues in the state such as the West Virginia University Creative Arts Center in Morgantown.[190]

The center hosts concerts sponsored by the Friends of Old Time Music and Dance, which brings an assortment of acoustic roots music to West Virginians.[191] The center also hosts the West Virginia Dance Festival, which features classical and modern dance.[192]

Huntington's historic Keith-Albee Theatre, built by brothers A.B. and S.J. Hyman, was originally opened to the public on May 7, 1928, and hosts a variety of performing arts and music attractions. The theatre was eventually gifted to Marshall University and is currently going through renovation to restore it to its original splendor.

Every summer Elkins hosts the Augusta Heritage Festival, which brings folk musicians from around the world.[193] The town of Glenville has long been home to the annual West Virginia State Folk Festival.[194]

The Mountaineer Opera House in Milton hosts a variety of musical acts.

John Denver's hit song "Take Me Home, Country Roads" describes the experience of driving through West Virginia. The song mentions the Shenandoah River and the Blue Ridge Mountains, both features traversing the easternmost extremity of the state's "eastern panhandle", in Jefferson County. On March 8, 2014, West Virginia Governor Earl Ray Tomblin signed House Concurrent Resolution 40 naming "Take Me Home, Country Roads" the fourth official state song of West Virginia.

Symphony Sunday is an annual event hosted by the West Virginia Symphony Orchestra held in June. It is a day full day of music by community groups, food, and family fun, culminating in a free performance by the West Virginia Symphony Orchestra with a fireworks display following. The event began in 1982 and is held on the front lawn of the University of Charleston.

The Daily Mail Kanawha County Majorette and Band Festival is West Virginia's longest-running music festival. It is for the eight public high schools in Kanawha County. The festival began in 1947. It is held at the University of Charleston Stadium at Laidley Field in downtown Charleston.

See also

Explanatory notes

  1. ^ The Census Bureau and the Association of American Geographers classify West Virginia as part of the Southern United States while the Bureau of Labor Statistics classifies the state as a part of the Mid-Atlantic region "Mid-Atlantic Home : Mid-Atlantic Information Office: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics". www.bls.gov. Archived.
  2. ^ Persons of Hispanic or Latino origin are not distinguished between total and partial ancestry.

References

  1. ^ "Spruce Knob Cairn 1956". NGS Data Sheet. National Geodetic Survey, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, United States Department of Commerce. Retrieved October 24, 2011.
  2. ^ a b . United States Geological Survey. 2001. Archived from the original on October 15, 2011. Retrieved October 24, 2011.
  3. ^ a b Elevation adjusted to North American Vertical Datum of 1988.
  4. ^ Bureau, US Census (April 26, 2021). "2020 Census Apportionment Results". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved August 13, 2021.
  5. ^ . The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. Archived from the original on December 20, 2016. Retrieved December 9, 2016.
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on March 8, 2016. Retrieved March 8, 2016.
  7. ^ "Census Data" (PDF). Census.gov. April 26, 2021. Retrieved April 26, 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  8. ^ . Appalachian Regional Commission. Archived from the original on September 17, 2008. Retrieved November 13, 2007.
  9. ^ a b c Woodruff, Betsy (October 29, 2014). "Goodbye West Virginia". from the original on July 21, 2017 – via Slate. But by 2000, tectonic changes in the state’s politics were underway. West Virginians tended to be economically liberal but socially conservative, and as social issues like abortion came to the forefront in national politics, the state started looking better for Republicans. The leftward tilt of the national Democratic Party helped matters, too.
  10. ^ Charles Henry Ambler, "A History of West Virginia" pg. 104
  11. ^ Charles H. Ambler. A History of West Virginia, pp. 132–138
  12. ^ Thier, David (April 18, 2010). . Science. aolnews.com. Archived from the original on April 20, 2010.
  13. ^ a b Ellis, Laura Elizabeth "Investigating the Orchard Site: A Protohistoric Fort AncientSite in West Virginia" 2015
  14. ^ (Extrapolation from the 16th-century Spanish, 'Cali' ˈkali a rich agricultural area—geographical sunny climate. also 1536, Cauca River, linking Cali, was important for higher population agriculture and cattle raising & Colombia's coffee is produced in the adjacent uplands. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. 'Cali', city, metropolis, urban center. Pearson Education 2006. "Calica", Yucatán place name called rock pit, a port an hour south of Cancún. Sp. root: "Cal", limestone. Also today, 'Calicuas', supporting cylinder or enclosing ring, or moveable prop as in holding a strut)
  15. ^ Franquelin, Jean Baptiste Louis. "Franquelin's map of Louisiana". LOC.gov. Retrieved August 17, 2017.
  16. ^ "Discoveries of John Lederer," reprinted by O.H. Harpel, Cincinnati (1879)
  17. ^ Jennings, Francis "Glory, Death & Transfiguration: The Susquehannock Indians in the 17th Century" 1968
  18. ^ "Lambreville to Bruyas Nov. 4,1696" N.Y. Hist. Col. Vol. III, p. 484
  19. ^ Lawson's "History of Carolina" reprinted by Stroller & Marcom. Raleigh, 1860, p. 384
  20. ^ Cherokee Lessons Introductory Edition
  21. ^ "The Shenandoah Valley of Virginia . . . its Secret Native American History". October 23, 2016. from the original on March 1, 2019. Retrieved March 17, 2018.
  22. ^ Mooney 1894:7–8.
  23. ^ Chisholm 1911, p. 562.
  24. ^ Chisholm 1911, pp. 562–563.
  25. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Chisholm 1911, p. 563.
  26. ^ Richards, Samuel J. (2019). "Reclaiming Congressman Philip Doddridge from Tidewater Cultural Imperialism". West Virginia History: A Journal of Regional Studies. 13 (2): 1–26. doi:10.1353/wvh.2019.0019. ISSN 1940-5057. S2CID 211648744.
  27. ^ Richards, Samuel J. (Fall 2019). "Reclaiming Congressman Philip Doddridge from Tidewater Cultural Imperialism". West Virginia History: A Journal of Regional Studies. 13 (2): 7. doi:10.1353/wvh.2019.0019. S2CID 211648744.
  28. ^ Ambler, Charles H. (1964). Sectionalism in Virginia from 1776–1861. New York: Russell & Russell.
  29. ^ Charles H. Amber, A History of West Virginia, pp. 276–79
  30. ^ Grady, John (July 16, 2012). "The Birth of a State". New York Times. from the original on July 19, 2012. Retrieved July 27, 2012.
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  33. ^ A detailed list of delegate names and votes are located in Virgil Lewis' How West Virginia Was Made, pg. 30, and also Charles Ambler's A History of West Virginia, 1933, pg. 309. Missing from both lists, however, are the delegates for McDowell County, William P. Cecil and Samuel L. Graham, who also represented Tazewell and Buchanan counties, which are still part of Virginia. Both Cecil and Graham voted in favor of the Ordinance. See Pendleton, William C. History of Tazewell County and Southwest Virginia, 1748–1920, Richmond, 1920, pgs. 600 and 603.
  34. ^ Those not voting were Thomas Maslin of Hardy County and Benjamin Wilson of Harrison County. Ambler, Charles H. A History of West Virginia, pg. 309, footnote 32.
  35. ^ J. McGregor "The Disruption of Virginia", pg. 193
  36. ^ The United States Constitution provides that no state may be divided without its consent.
  37. ^ Richard O. Curry "A House Divided", pg. 147
  38. ^ C. Ambler "The History of West Virginia", pg. 318
  39. ^ Virgil Lewis "How West Virginia Was Made" pgs. 79–80
  40. ^ Charles Ambler "The History of West Virginia", pg. 318
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  43. ^ Richard O. Curry "A House Divided", pgs. 149–150
  44. ^ Richard O. Curry "A House Divided", pg. 149
  45. ^ Richard O. Curry "A House Divided", pg. 86
  46. ^ J. McGregor "The Disruption of Virginia", pg. 270
  47. ^ Williams p. 80
  48. ^ John Alexander Williams, West Virginia: A Bicentennial History (W.W. Norton 1976), p. 78
  49. ^ "Opinion of Abraham Lincoln on the Admission of West Virginia". Wvculture.org. from the original on April 13, 2010. Retrieved July 31, 2010.
  50. ^ Virginia v. West Virginia, 78 U.S. 39 (1870) October 17, 2010, at the Wayback Machine.
  51. ^ . Wvculture.org. Archived from the original on July 7, 2010. Retrieved July 2, 2010.
  52. ^ Charles Ambler "Disfranchisement in West Virginia", Yale Review, 1905, pg. 41
  53. ^ Chisholm 1911, pp. 563–564.
  54. ^ Virginia v. West Virginia, 238 U.S. 202 (1915).
  55. ^ Maryland v. West Virginia, 217 U.S. 1 (1910)
  56. ^ Maryland v. West Virginia, 217 U.S. 577 (1910)
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Further reading

  • Charles H. Ambler, A History of Education in West Virginia From Early Colonial Times to 1949 (1951)
  • Charles H. Ambler and Festus P. Summers. West Virginia, the Mountain State (1958)
  • Jane S. Becker, Inventing Tradition: Appalachia and the Construction of an American Folk, 1930–1940 1998.
  • Richard A. Brisbin, et al. West Virginia Politics and Government (1996)
  • James Morton Callahan, History of West Virginia (1923) 3 vol
  • John C. Campbell, The Southern Highlander and His Homeland (1921) reissued 1969.
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "West Virginia". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 28 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 560–564.
  • Richard Orr Curry, A House Divided: A Study of Statehood Politics and Copperhead Movement in West Virginia (1964)
  • Donald Edward Davis. Where There Are Mountains: An Environmental History of the Southern Appalachians 2000.
  • Ronald D, Eller. Miners, Millhands, and Mountaineers: Industrialization of the Appalachian South, 1880–1930 1982.
  • Carl E. Feather, Mountain People in a Flat Land: A Popular History of Appalachian Migration to Northeast Ohio, 1940–1965. Athens: Ohio University Press, 1998.
  • Thomas R. Ford ed. The Southern Appalachian Region: A Survey. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 1967.
  • Horace Kephart, Our Southern Highlanders. Rev. ed. New York: Macmillan, 1922. Reprinted as Our Southern Highlanders: A Narrative of Adventure in the Southern Appalachians and a Study of Life among the Mountaineers. With an Introduction by George Ellison. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1976.
  • Gerald Milnes, Play of a Fiddle: Traditional Music, Dance, and Folklore in West Virginia. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 1999.
  • Otis K. Rice, The Allegheny Frontier: West Virginia Beginnings, 1730–1830 (1970),
  • Otis K. Rice and Stephen W. Brown, West Virginia: A History, 2d ed. (Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 1993), standard
  • Curtis Seltzer, Fire in the Hole: Miners and Managers in the American Coal Industry (Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 1985), conflict in the coal industry to the 1980s.
  • John E. Stealey III, West Virginia's Civil War-Era Constitution: Loyal Revolution, Confederate Counter-Revolution, and the Convention of 1872. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press, 2013.
  • Joe William Trotter Jr., Coal, Class, and Color: Blacks in Southern West Virginia, 1915–32 (1990)
  • John Alexander Williams, West Virginia: A History for Beginners. 2nd ed. Charleston, W.Virginia: Appalachian Editions, 1997.
  • John Alexander Williams. West Virginia: A Bicentennial History (1976)
  • John Alexander Williams. West Virginia and the Captains of Industry 1976.
  • John Alexander Williams. Appalachia: A History (2002)

Primary sources

  • Elizabeth Cometti, and Festus P. Summers. The Thirty-fifth State: A Documentary History of West Virginia. Morgantown: West Virginia University Library, 1966.

External links

State government

  • State of West Virginia government website
  • West Virginia Department of Commerce August 17, 2020, at the Wayback Machine
  • West Virginia State Guide, from the Library of Congress
  • West Virginia Legislature website
  • Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia website
  • West Virginia Code

U.S. government

  • Energy Profile for West Virginia—Economic, environmental, and energy data November 17, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  • USGS real-time, geographic, and other scientific resources of West Virginia
  • West Virginia State Fact Sheet from the U.S. Department of Agriculture

Other

  • Governor Earl Ray Tomblin's website
  • West Virginia Division of Tourism
  • Visiting West Virginia
  • West Virginia Archives and History
  • West Virginia Department of Education
  • West Virginia Explorer
  • West Virginia at Curlie
  • West Virginia Encyclopedia
  •   Geographic data related to West Virginia at OpenStreetMap
Preceded by List of U.S. states by date of statehood
Admitted on June 20, 1863 (35th)
Succeeded by

Coordinates: 39°N 80°W / 39°N 80°W / 39; -80 (State of West Virginia)

west, virginia, this, article, about, state, other, uses, disambiguation, mountain, state, redirect, here, region, western, united, states, mountain, states, other, uses, disambiguation, state, appalachian, atlantic, southeastern, regions, united, states, note. This article is about the U S state For other uses see West Virginia disambiguation Mountain State and WV redirect here For the region in the Western United States see Mountain states For other uses see WV disambiguation West Virginia is a state in the Appalachian Mid Atlantic and Southeastern regions of the United States Note 1 It is bordered by Pennsylvania to the north and east Maryland to the east and northeast Virginia to the southeast Kentucky to the southwest and Ohio to the northwest West Virginia is the 10th smallest state by area and ranks as the 12th least populous state with a population of 1 793 716 residents 7 The capital and largest city is Charleston West VirginiaStateState of West VirginiaFlagSealNickname Mountain StateMotto s Montani semper liberi English Mountaineers Are Always Free Anthem 4 songsMap of the United States with West Virginia highlightedCountryUnited StatesBefore statehoodPart of VirginiaAdmitted to the UnionJune 20 1863 159 years ago 1863 06 20 35th Capital and largest city CharlestonLargest metro and urban areasCharleston Huntington combined Huntington metro and urban Government GovernorJim Justice R Lieutenant GovernorCraig Blair R LegislatureWest Virginia Legislature Upper houseSenate Lower houseHouse of DelegatesJudiciarySupreme Court of Appeals of West VirginiaU S senatorsJoe Manchin D Shelley Moore Capito R U S House delegation1 Carol Miller R 2 Alex Mooney R list Area Total24 230 sq mi 62 755 km2 Land24 078 sq mi 62 361 km2 Water152 sq mi 394 km2 0 6 Rank41stDimensions Length240 mi 385 km Width130 mi 210 km Elevation1 513 ft 461 m Highest elevation Spruce Knob 1 2 3 4 863 ft 1 482 m Lowest elevation Potomac River at Virginia border 2 3 240 ft 73 m Population 2020 Total1 793 716 4 Rank39th Density77 1 sq mi 29 8 km2 Rank29th Median household income 43 469 5 Income rank49thDemonymsWest Virginian MountaineerLanguage Official languageDe jure English 6 Time zoneUTC 05 00 Eastern Summer DST UTC 04 00 EDT USPS abbreviationWVISO 3166 codeUS WVTraditional abbreviationW Va and W V Latitude37 12 N to 40 39 NLongitude77 43 W to 82 39 WWebsitewv wbr govWest Virginia state symbolsFlag of West VirginiaLiving insigniaBirdNorthern cardinal Cardinalis cardinalis ButterflyMonarch butterfly Danaus plexippus FishBrook trout Salvelinus fontinalis FlowerRhododendron Rhododendron maximum InsectWestern honey bee Apis mellifera MammalBlack bear Ursus americanus ReptileTimber rattlesnake Crotalus horridus TreeSugar maple Acer saccharum Inanimate insigniaColorsOld gold and blueFoodGolden Delicious apple Malus domestica FossilJefferson s ground sloth Megalonyx jeffersonii GemstoneSilicified Mississippian fossil coral Lithostrotionella RockCoalSlogan Wild and Wonderful Open for Business former Almost Heaven former SoilMonongahela Silt LoamSong The West Virginia Hills TartanWest Virginia ShawlState route markerState quarterReleased in 2005Lists of United States state symbolsWest Virginia was admitted to the Union on June 20 1863 and was a key border state during the American Civil War It was the only state to form by separating from a Confederate state the second to separate from a state after Maine separated from Massachusetts and one of two states along with Nevada admitted to the Union during the Civil War Some of its residents held slaves but most were yeoman farmers and the delegates provided for the gradual abolition of slavery in the new state constitution The state legislature abolished slavery in the state and at the same time ratified the 13th Amendment abolishing slavery nationally on February 3 1865 West Virginia s Northern Panhandle extends adjacent to Pennsylvania and Ohio to form a tristate area with Wheeling and Weirton just across the border from the Pittsburgh metropolitan area Huntington in the southwest is close to Ohio and Kentucky while Martinsburg and Harpers Ferry in the Eastern Panhandle region are considered part of the Washington metropolitan area between Maryland and Virginia West Virginia is often included in several U S geographical regions including the Mid Atlantic the Upland South and the Southeastern United States It is the only state entirely within the area served by the Appalachian Regional Commission the area is commonly defined as Appalachia 8 The state is noted for its mountains and rolling hills its historically significant coal mining and logging industries and its political and labor history It is also known for a wide range of outdoor recreational opportunities including skiing whitewater rafting fishing hiking backpacking mountain biking rock climbing and hunting From the Great Depression to the 1990s the state voted heavily for the Democratic Party due to its tradition of union based politics Since then the state has become heavily Republican and is considered a deep red state at the federal level 9 Other nominated names for the state included Vandalia Kanawha Appalachia and Western Virginia The capital was originally Wheeling before switching to Charleston moving back to Wheeling and finally back to Charleston The first governor was Arthur Boreman Contents 1 History 1 1 Prehistory 1 2 European exploration and settlement 1 3 Trans Allegheny Virginia 1 4 Separation from Virginia 1 5 Claims by Maryland 1 6 Development of natural resources 2 Geography 2 1 Geology and terrain 2 2 Climate 2 3 Adjacent states 2 4 Flora and fauna 3 Major cities 3 1 Metropolitan areas 3 2 Micropolitan areas 4 Demographics 4 1 Birth data 4 2 Languages 4 3 Religion 5 Economy 5 1 Overview 5 2 Tourism 5 3 Resources 5 3 1 Green energy 5 4 Taxes 5 5 Largest private employers 6 Quality of life 6 1 Economy 6 2 Employment 6 3 Wages and poverty 6 4 Population 6 5 Family 6 6 Health 6 6 1 Life expectancy 7 Governance 7 1 Legislative branch 7 2 Executive branch 7 3 Judicial branch 7 4 Politics 8 Transportation 9 Education 9 1 Colleges and universities 10 Culture 10 1 Sports 10 2 Music 10 2 1 Appalachian music 10 2 2 Classical music 10 2 3 Musical innovation 11 See also 12 Explanatory notes 13 References 14 Further reading 14 1 Primary sources 15 External links 15 1 State government 15 2 U S government 15 3 OtherHistory EditMain article History of West Virginia Many ancient manmade earthen mounds from various prehistoric mound builder cultures survive in West Virginia especially in the areas of present day Moundsville South Charleston and Romney Artifacts uncovered in these give evidence of village societies with a tribal trade system culture that crafted cold worked copper pieces In the 1670s during the Beaver Wars the powerful Iroquois five allied nations based in present day New York and Pennsylvania drove out other American Indian tribes from the region to reserve the upper Ohio Valley as a hunting ground Siouan language tribes such as the Moneton had previously been recorded in the area A century later the area now identified as West Virginia was contested territory among Anglo Americans as well with the colonies of Pennsylvania and Virginia claiming territorial rights under their colonial charters to this area before the American Revolutionary War Some speculative land companies such as the Vandalia Company 10 the Ohio Company and the Indiana Company tried but failed to legitimize their claims to land in parts of West Virginia and present day Kentucky This rivalry resulted in some settlers petitioning the Continental Congress to create a new territory called Westsylvania With the federal settlement of the Pennsylvania and Virginia border dispute creating Kentucky County Virginia Kentuckians were satisfied and the inhabitants of a large part of West Virginia were grateful 11 The Crown considered the area of West Virginia part of the British Virginia Colony from 1607 to 1776 The United States considered this area the western part of the state of Virginia commonly called Trans Allegheny Virginia from 1776 to 1863 before West Virginia s formation Its residents were discontented for years with their position in Virginia as the government was dominated by the planter elite of the Tidewater and Piedmont areas The legislature had electoral malapportionment based on the counting of slaves toward regional populations and western white residents were underrepresented in the state legislature More subsistence and yeoman farmers lived in the west and they were generally less supportive of slavery although many counties were divided on their support Residents of that area became more sharply divided after the planter elite of eastern Virginia voted to secede from the Union during the Civil War Residents of the western and northern counties set up a separate government under Francis Pierpont in 1861 which they called the Restored Government Most voted to separate from Virginia and the new state was admitted to the Union in 1863 In 1864 a state constitutional convention drafted a constitution which was ratified by the legislature without putting it to popular vote West Virginia abolished slavery by a gradual process and temporarily disenfranchised those who had held Confederate office or fought for the Confederacy West Virginia s history has been profoundly affected by its mountainous terrain numerous and vast river valleys and rich natural resources These were all factors driving its economy and the lifestyles of its residents who tended to live in many small relatively isolated communities in the mountain valleys Prehistory Edit Further information Prehistory of West Virginia Further information Protohistory of West Virginia A 2010 analysis of a local stalagmite revealed that Native Americans were burning forests to clear land as early as 100 BCE 12 Some regional late prehistoric Eastern Woodland tribes were more involved in hunting and fishing practicing the Eastern Agricultural Complex gardening method which used fire to clear out underbrush from certain areas Another group progressed to the more time consuming advanced companion crop fields method of gardening Also continuing from the ancient indigenous people of the state they cultivated tobacco through to early historic times It was used in numerous social and religious rituals Maize corn did not make a substantial contribution to the diet until after 1150 BP to quote Mills OSU 2003 full citation needed Eventually tribal villages began depending on corn to feed their turkey flocks as Kanawha Fort Ancients practiced bird husbandry The local Indians made cornbread and a flat rye bread called bannock as they emerged from the protohistoric era A horizon extending from a little before the early 18th century is sometimes called the acculturating Fireside Cabin culture Trading posts were established by European traders along the Potomac and James rivers Tribes that inhabited West Virginia as of 1600 were the Siouan Monongahela Culture to the north the Fort Ancient culture along the Ohio River from the Monongahela to Kentucky and extending an unknown distance inland 13 and the Eastern Siouan Tutelo and Moneton tribes in the southeast There was also the Iroquoian Susquehannock in the region approximately east of the Monongahela River and north of the Monongahela National Forest a possible tribe called the Senandoa or Shenandoah in the Shenandoah Valley and the easternmost tip of the state may have been home to the Manahoac people The Monongahela may have been the same as a people known as the Calicua or Cali 14 The following may have also all been the same tribe Moneton Moheton Senandoa Tomahitan During the Beaver Wars other tribes moved into the region The Iroquoian Tiontatecaga also Little Mingo Guyandotte 15 seem to have split off from the Petun after they were defeated by the Iroquois They eventually settled somewhere between the Kanawha and Little Kanawha Rivers During the 1750s when the Mingo Seneca seceded from the Iroquois and returned to the Ohio River Valley they contend that this tribe merged with them The Shawnee arrived as well though primarily stationed within former Monongahela territory approximately until 1750 they extended their influence throughout the Ohio River region They were West Virginia s last Native tribe and were driven out by the United States during the Shawnee Wars 1811 1813 The Erie who were chased out of Ohio around 1655 are now believed to be the same as the Westo who invaded as far as South Carolina before being destroyed in the 1680s If so their path would have brought them through West Virginia The historical movement of the Tutelo 16 and carbon dating of the Fort Ancients seem to correspond with the given period of 1655 1670 as the time of their removal 13 The Susquehannocks were original participants in the Beaver Wars but were cut off from the Ohio River by the Iroquois around 1630 and found themselves in dire straits Suffering from disease and constant warfare and unable to provide for themselves financially they began to collapse and moved further and further east to the Susquehanna River of Eastern Pennsylvania 17 The Manahoac were probably forced out in the 1680s when the Iroquois began to invade Virginia 18 The Siouan tribes there moved into North Carolina and later returned as one tribe known as the Eastern Blackfoot or Christannas 19 The Westo did not secure the territory they conquered Even before they were gone displaced natives from the south flooded into freshly conquered regions and took them over 20 These became known as the Shattaras or West Virginia Cherokees They took in and merged with the Monetons who began to call themselves the Mohetons The Calicua also began to call themselves Cherokees soon after showing an apparent further merger These Shattaras were closely related to the tribes that formed to the south in the aftermath of the Westo the Yuchi and Cherokee From 1715 to 1717 the Yamasee War sprang up The Senandoa allegedly sided with the Yuchi and were destroyed by Yamasee allies 21 Therefore if the Senandoa were the same tribe as the Moneton this would mean the collapse of Shattara Moneton culture Another tribe that appeared in the region was the Canaragay or Kanawha 22 It later migrated to Maryland and merged into colonial culture European exploration and settlement Edit Main articles Colony of Virginia French and Indian War Treaty of Paris 1763 Indian Reserve 1763 American Revolutionary War Lee Resolution United States Declaration of Independence and Treaty of Paris 1783 Thomas Lee the first manager of the Ohio Company of Virginia In 1671 General Abraham Wood at the direction of Royal Governor William Berkeley of the Virginia Colony sent a party from Fort Henry led by Thomas Batts and Robert Fallam to survey this territory They were the first Europeans recorded as discovering Kanawha Falls Some sources state that Governor Alexander Spotswood s 1716 Knights of the Golden Horseshoe Expedition for which the state s Golden Horseshoe Competition for 8th graders is named had penetrated as far as Pendleton County but modern historians interpret the original accounts of the excursion as suggesting that none of the expedition s horsemen ventured much farther west of the Blue Ridge Mountains than Harrisonburg Virginia John Van Metre an Indian trader penetrated into the northern portion in 1725 The same year German settlers from Pennsylvania founded New Mecklenburg the present Shepherdstown on the Potomac River and others followed 23 King Charles II of England in 1661 granted to a company of gentlemen the land between the Potomac and Rappahannock rivers known as the Northern Neck Thomas Fairfax 6th Lord Fairfax of Cameron ultimately took possession of this grant and in 1746 a stone was erected at the source of the North Branch Potomac River to mark his grant s western limit George Washington surveyed a considerable part of this land between 1748 and 1751 His diary recorded that there were already many squatters largely of German origin along the South Branch Potomac River 24 Christopher Gist a surveyor in the employ of the first Ohio Company which was composed chiefly of Virginians explored the country along the Ohio River north of the mouth of the Kanawha River between 1751 and 1752 The company sought to have a 14th colony established with the name Vandalia Many settlers crossed the mountains after 1750 though they were hindered by Native American resistance Few Native Americans lived permanently within the state s present limits but the region was a common hunting ground crossed by many trails During the French and Indian War the North American front of the Seven Years War in Europe Indian allies of the French nearly destroyed the scattered British settlements 25 Shortly before the American Revolutionary War in 1774 Crown Governor of Virginia John Murray 4th Earl of Dunmore led a force over the mountains A body of militia under then Colonel Andrew Lewis dealt the Shawnee Indians under Hokoleskwa or Cornstalk a crushing blow during the Battle of Point Pleasant at the junction of the Kanawha and the Ohio rivers 25 At the Treaty of Camp Charlotte concluding Dunmore s War Cornstalk agreed to recognize the Ohio River as the new boundary with the Long Knives But by 1776 the Shawnee returned to war joining the Chickamauga a band of Cherokee known for the area where they lived citation needed Native American attacks on settlers continued until after the American Revolutionary War During the war the settlers in western Virginia were generally active Whigs many served in the Continental Army 25 Claypool s Rebellion of 1780 1781 in which a group of men refused to pay taxes to the Continental Army showed war weariness in what became West Virginia Trans Allegheny Virginia Edit Main articles Vandalia colony and Westsylvania See also History of slavery in West Virginia A slave wedding in Virginia 1838 Social conditions in western Virginia were entirely unlike those in the eastern part The population was not homogeneous as a considerable part of the immigration came by way of Pennsylvania and included Germans Protestant Scotch Irish and settlers from states farther north Counties in the east and south were settled mostly by eastern Virginians During the American Revolution the movement to create a state beyond the Alleghenies was revived and a petition for the establishment of Westsylvania was presented to Congress on the grounds that the mountains presented an almost impassable barrier to the east The rugged terrain made slavery unprofitable and time only increased the social political economic and cultural differences see Tuckahoe Cohee between Virginia s two sections 25 In 1829 a constitutional convention met in Richmond to consider reforms to Virginia s outdated constitution Philip Doddridge of Brooke County championed the cause of western Virginians who sought a more democratic frame of government 26 but western reforms were rejected by leaders from east of the Alleghenies who clung to political power in an effort to preserve their plantation lifestyles dependent on enslaving blacks 27 Virginia leaders maintained a property qualification for suffrage effectively disenfranchising poorer farmers in the west whose families did much of the farm work themselves In addition the 1829 30 convention gave slaveholding counties the benefit of three fifths of their slave population in apportioning the state s representation in the U S House of Representatives As a result every county west of the Alleghenies except one voted to reject the constitution which nevertheless passed because of eastern support 25 The eastern planter elite s failure to make constitutional reforms exacerbated existing east west sectionalism in Virginia and contributed to its division 28 The Virginia Constitutional Convention of 1850 51 the Reform Convention addressed a number of issues important to western Virginians It extended the vote to all white males 21 years or older The governor lieutenant governor the judiciary sheriffs and other county officers were to be elected by public vote The General Assembly s composition was changed Representation in the House of Delegates was apportioned on the basis of the census of 1850 counting whites only The Senate representation was arbitrarily fixed at 50 seats with the west receiving 20 senators and the east 30 This was made acceptable to the west by a provision that required the General Assembly to reapportion representation on the basis of the white population in 1865 or else put the matter to a public referendum But the east also gave itself a tax advantage in requiring a property tax at true and actual value except for slaves Slaves under age 12 were not taxed and slaves over that age were taxed at only 300 a fraction of their true value but small farmers had all their assets animals and land taxed at full value Despite this tax and the lack of internal improvements in the west the vote was 75 748 for and 11 063 against the new constitution Most of the opposition came from delegates from eastern counties who did not like the compromises made for the west 29 Given these differences many in the west had long contemplated a separate state In particular men such as lawyer Francis H Pierpont from Fairmont had long chafed under the Tidewater and Piedmont slaveholders political dominance In addition to differences over slavery he and allies felt the Virginia government ignored and refused to spend funds on needed internal improvements in the west such as turnpikes and railroads 30 Separation from Virginia Edit Main articles Ordinance of Secession Wheeling Convention Restored Government of Virginia State of Kanawha Admission to the Union List of U S states by date of admission to the Union Border states American Civil War and West Virginia in the American Civil War Map of Virginia dated June 13 1861 featuring the percentage of slave population within each county at the 1860 census and the proposed state of Kanawha Francis H Pierpont a leader during the Second Wheeling Convention Abraham Lincoln Walks at Midnight a statue on the grounds of the West Virginia State Capitol Harpers Ferry alternated between Confederate and Union rule eight times during the American Civil War and was finally annexed by West Virginia 31 Votes by county in the October 1861 statehood vote West Virginia was the only state in the Union to separate from a Confederate state Virginia during the Civil War 32 In Richmond on April 17 1861 the Virginia Secession Convention of 1861 voted to secede from the Union but of the 49 delegates from the northwestern corner which ultimately became West Virginia only 17 voted in favor of the Ordinance of Secession while 30 voted against 33 with two abstentions 34 Almost immediately after that vote a mass meeting at Clarksburg recommended that each county in northwestern Virginia send delegates to a convention to meet in Wheeling on May 13 1861 When this First Wheeling Convention met 425 delegates from 25 counties were present though more than one third of the delegates were from the northern panhandle area 35 Soon there was a division of sentiment 25 Some delegates led by pro Union slaveowner John S Carlile favored the immediate formation of a new state while others led by Waitman Willey argued that as Virginia s secession had not yet been passed by the required referendum as happened on May 23 such action would constitute revolution against the United States 36 The convention decided that if Virginians adopted the secession ordinance of which there was little doubt another convention including the members elect of the legislature would meet in Wheeling in June 1861 On May 23 1861 secession was ratified by a large majority in Virginia as a whole but in the western counties 34 677 voted against and 19 121 voted for the ordinance 37 The Second Wheeling Convention met as agreed on June 11 and declared that since the Secession Convention had been called without popular consent all its acts were void and all who adhered to it had vacated their offices 25 The Wheeling Conventions and the delegates themselves were never actually elected by public ballot to act on behalf of western Virginia 38 Of its 103 members 33 had been elected to the Virginia General Assembly 39 on May 23 This included some hold over state senators whose four year terms had begun in 1859 and some who vacated their offices to convene in Wheeling Other members were chosen even more irregularly some in mass meetings others by county committee and still others were seemingly self appointed 40 An act for the reorganization of the government was passed on June 19 The next day convention delegates chose Francis H Pierpont as governor of Virginia and elected other officers to a rival state government and two U S senators Willey and Carlile to replace secessionists before adjourning The federal government promptly recognized the new government and seated the two new senators Thus there were two state governments in Virginia one pledging allegiance to the United States and one to the Confederacy 25 The second Wheeling Convention had recessed until August 6 then reassembled on August 20 and called for a popular vote on the formation of a new state and for a convention to frame a constitution if the vote were favorable In the October 24 1861 election 18 408 votes were cast for the new state and 781 against 25 The election results were questioned since the Union army then occupied the area and Union troops were stationed at many of the polls to prevent Confederate sympathizers from voting 41 This was also election day for local offices and elections were also held in camps of Confederate soldiers who elected rival state officials such as Robert E Cowan Most pro statehood votes came from 16 counties around the Northern panhandle 42 Over 50 000 votes had been cast on the Ordinance of Secession yet the vote on statehood garnered little more than 19 000 43 In Ohio County home to Wheeling only about a fourth of the registered voters cast votes 44 In most of what would become West Virginia there was no vote at all as two thirds of the territory of West Virginia had voted for secession and county officers remained loyal to Richmond Votes recorded from pro secession counties were mostly cast elsewhere by Unionist refugees from these counties 45 Despite that controversy delegates including many Methodist ministers met to write a constitution for the new state beginning on November 26 1861 During that constitutional convention a Mr Lamb of Ohio County and a Mr Carskadon claimed that in Hampshire County out of 195 votes only 39 were cast by citizens of the state the rest were cast illegally by Union soldiers 46 One of the key figures was Gordon Battelle who also represented Ohio County and who proposed resolutions to establish public schools as well as to limit the movement of slaves into the new state and to gradually abolish slavery The education proposal succeeded but the convention tabled the slavery proposals before finishing its work on February 18 1862 The new constitution was more closely modeled on Ohio s than Virginia s adopting a township model of government rather than the courthouse cliques of Virginia which Carlile criticized and a compromise demanded by the Kanawha region Charleston lawyers Benjamin Smith and Brown allowed counties and municipalities to vote subsidies for railroads or other improvement organizations 47 The resulting instrument was ratified 18 162 for and 514 against on April 11 1862 On May 13 1862 the state legislature of the reorganized government approved the formation of the new state An application for admission to the Union was made to Congress introduced by Senator Waitman Willey of the Restored Government of Virginia Carlile sought to sabotage the bill first trying to expand the new state s boundaries to include the Shenandoah Valley and then to defeat the Willey amendment at home 48 On December 31 1862 President Abraham Lincoln approved an enabling act admitting West Virginia on the condition that a provision for the gradual abolition of slavery be inserted in its constitution 25 as Battelle had urged in the Wheeling Intelligencer and also written to Lincoln While many felt West Virginia s admission as a state was both illegal and unconstitutional Lincoln issued his Opinion on the Admission of West Virginia finding that the body which consents to the admission of West Virginia is the Legislature of Virginia and that its admission was therefore both constitutional and expedient 49 The convention was reconvened on February 12 1863 and the abolition demand of the federal enabling act was met The revised constitution was adopted on March 26 1863 and on April 20 1863 Lincoln issued a proclamation admitting the state 60 days later on June 20 1863 Meanwhile officers for the new state were chosen while Pierpont moved his pro Union Virginia capital to Union occupied Alexandria where he asserted and exercised jurisdiction over all the remaining Virginia counties within the federal lines 25 The question of the constitutionality of the formation of the new state was later brought before the Supreme Court of the United States in Virginia v West Virginia Berkeley and Jefferson counties lying on the Potomac east of the mountains voted in favor of annexation to West Virginia in 1863 with the consent of Virginia s reorganized government 25 Many voters of the strongly pro secessionist counties were absent in the Confederate Army when the vote was taken and refused to acknowledge the transfer when they returned The Virginia General Assembly repealed the act of secession and in 1866 brought suit against West Virginia asking the court to declare the counties part of Virginia which would have made West Virginia s admission as a state unconstitutional Meanwhile on March 10 1866 Congress passed a joint resolution recognizing the transfer 25 The Supreme Court decided in West Virginia s favor in 1870 50 During the Civil War Union General George B McClellan s forces gained possession of the greater part of the territory in the summer of 1861 culminating at the Battle of Rich Mountain and Union control was never again seriously threatened In 1863 General John D Imboden with 5 000 Confederates raided a considerable portion of the state and burned Pierpont s library although Willey escaped their grasp Bands of guerrillas burned and plundered in some sections and were not entirely suppressed until the war ended 25 The Eastern Panhandle counties were more affected by the war with military control of the area repeatedly changing hands The area that became West Virginia actually furnished about an equal number of soldiers to the Union and Confederate armies 51 about 22 000 25 000 each In 1865 the Wheeling government found it necessary to strip voting rights from returning Confederates in order to retain control James Ferguson who proposed the law said if it was not enacted he would lose the election by 500 votes 52 Confederates property might also be confiscated and in 1866 a constitutional amendment disfranchising all who had given aid and comfort to the Confederacy was adopted The addition of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments to the U S Constitution caused a reaction The Democratic party secured control in 1870 and in 1871 the constitutional amendment of 1866 was abrogated Republicans had taken the first steps toward this change in 1870 On August 22 1872 an entirely new constitution was adopted 25 Beginning in Reconstruction and for several decades thereafter the two states disputed the new state s share of the prewar Virginia government s debts which had mostly been incurred to finance public infrastructure improvements such as canals roads and railroads under the Virginia Board of Public Works Virginians led by former Confederate general William Mahone formed a political coalition based upon this the Readjuster Party West Virginia s first constitution provided for the assumption of a part of the Virginia debt but negotiations opened by Virginia in 1870 were fruitless and in 1871 Virginia funded two thirds of the debt and arbitrarily assigned the remainder to West Virginia 53 The issue was finally settled in 1915 when the Supreme Court of the United States ruled that West Virginia owed Virginia 12 393 929 50 54 The final installment of this sum was paid in 1939 Claims by Maryland Edit The original charters for Maryland and Virginia were silent as to which branch of the upper Potomac was the boundary This was settled by the 1785 Mount Vernon Conference Nevertheless when West Virginia seceded from Virginia Maryland claimed West Virginia land north of the South Branch all of Mineral and Grant Counties and parts of Hampshire Hardy Tucker and Pendleton Counties The Supreme Court rejected these claims in two separate decisions in 1910 55 56 Development of natural resources Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message Child labor in the coal mines of West Virginia 1908 Family of a coal miner circa 1935 Saturday afternoon street scene Welch McDowell County 1946 After Reconstruction the new 35th state benefited from the development of its mineral resources more than any other single economic activity Saltpeter caves had been employed throughout Appalachia for munitions the border between West Virginia and Virginia includes the Saltpeter Trail a string of limestone caverns containing rich deposits of calcium nitrate which were rendered and sold to the government The trail stretched from Pendleton County to the western terminus of the route in the town of Union Monroe County Nearly half of these caves are on the West Virginia side including Organ Cave and Haynes Cave In the late 18th century saltpeter miners in Haynes Cave found large animal bones in the deposits These were sent by a local historian and frontier soldier Colonel John Stuart to Thomas Jefferson The bones were named Megalonyx jeffersonii or great claw and became known as Jefferson s three toed sloth It was declared the official state fossil of West Virginia in 2008 The West Virginia official state rock is bituminous coal 57 and the official state gemstone is silicified Mississippian fossil Lithostrotionella coral 58 The limestone also produced a useful quarry industry Usually small and softer high calcium seams were burned to produce industrial lime This lime was used for agricultural and construction purposes for many years a specific portion of the C amp O Railroad carried limestone rock to Clifton Forge Virginia as an industrial flux Salt mining had been underway since the 18th century though it had largely played out by the time of the American Civil War when the red salt of Kanawha County was a valued commodity of first Confederate and later Union forces In the years following more sophisticated mining methods would restore West Virginia s role as a major producer of salt However in the second half of the 19th century there was an even greater treasure not yet developed bituminous coal It would fuel much of the Industrial Revolution in the U S and the steamships of many of the world s navies The residents both Native Americans and early European settlers had long known of the underlying coal and that it could be used for heating and fuel However for a long time personal or artisanal mining was the only practical development After the War with the new railroads came a practical method to transport large quantities of coal to expanding U S and export markets As the anthracite mines of northwestern New Jersey and Pennsylvania began to play out during this same time period investors and industrialists focused new interest in West Virginia Geologists such as Dr David T Ansted surveyed potential coal fields and invested in land and early mining projects The completion of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway C amp O across the state to the new city of Huntington on the Ohio River in 1872 opened access to the New River Coal Field Soon the C amp O was building its huge coal pier at Newport News Virginia on the large harbor of Hampton Roads In 1881 the new Philadelphia based owners of the former Atlantic Mississippi and Ohio Railroad AM amp O which stretched across Virginia s southern tier from Norfolk had sights clearly set on the Mountain State where the owners had large landholdings Their railroad was renamed Norfolk and Western N amp W and a new railroad city was developed at Roanoke to handle planned expansion After its new president Frederick J Kimball and a small party journeyed by horseback and saw firsthand the rich bituminous coal seam which Kimball s wife named Pocahontas the N amp W redirected its planned westward expansion to reach it Soon the N amp W was also shipping from new coal piers at Hampton Roads In 1889 in the southern part of the state along the Norfolk and Western rail lines the important coal center of Bluefield West Virginia was founded The capital of the Pocahontas coalfield this city would remain the largest city in the southern portion of the state for several decades It shares its name with a sister city Bluefield in Virginia In the northern portion of the state and elsewhere the older Baltimore and Ohio Railroad B amp O and other lines also expanded to take advantage of coal opportunities The B amp O developed coal piers in Baltimore and at several points on the Great Lakes Other significant rail carriers of coal were the Western Maryland Railway WM Southern Railway SOU and the Louisville and Nashville Railroad L amp N Particularly notable was a latecomer the Virginian Railway VGN By 1900 only the most rugged terrain of southern West Virginia was any distance from the existing railroads and mining activity Within this area west of the New River Coalfield in Raleigh and Wyoming counties lay the Winding Gulf Coalfield later promoted as the Billion Dollar Coalfield A protege of Dr Ansted was William Nelson Page 1854 1932 a civil engineer and mining manager in Fayette County Former West Virginia governor William A MacCorkle described him as a man who knew the land as a farmer knows a field Beginning in 1898 Page teamed with northern and European based investors to take advantage of the undeveloped area They acquired large tracts of land in the area and Page began the Deepwater Railway a short line railroad chartered to stretch between the C amp O at its line along the Kanawha River and the N amp W at Matoaka a distance of about 80 miles 130 km Although the Deepwater plan should have provided a competitive shipping market via either railroad leaders of the two large railroads did not appreciate the scheme In secret collusion each declined to negotiate favorable rates with Page nor did they offer to purchase his railroad as they had many other short lines However if the C amp O and N amp W presidents thought they could thus kill the Page project they were to be proved mistaken One of the silent partner investors Page had enlisted was millionaire industrialist Henry Huttleston Rogers a principal in John D Rockefeller s Standard Oil Trust and an old hand at developing natural resources and transportation A master at competitive warfare Henry Rogers did not like to lose in his endeavors and also had deep pockets Instead of giving up Page and Rogers quietly planned and then built their tracks all the way east across Virginia using Rogers private fortune to finance the 40 million cost When the renamed Virginian Railway VGN was completed in 1909 no fewer than three railroads were shipping ever increasing volumes of coal to export from Hampton Roads West Virginia coal was also in high demand at Great Lakes ports The VGN and the N amp W ultimately became parts of the modern Norfolk Southern system and the VGN s well engineered 20th century tracks continue to offer a favorable gradient to Hampton Roads As coal mining and related work became major employment activities in the state there was considerable labor strife as working conditions safety issues and economic concerns arose Even in the 21st century mining safety and ecological concerns are still challenging to the state whose coal continues to power electrical generating plants in many other states Coal is not the only valuable mineral found in West Virginia as the state was the site of the 1928 discovery of the 34 48 carat 6 896 g Jones Diamond Geography EditMain article Geography of West Virginia Map of West Virginia counties Located in the Appalachian Mountain range West Virginia covers an area of 24 229 76 square miles 62 754 8 km2 with 24 077 73 square miles 62 361 0 km2 of land and 152 03 square miles 393 8 km2 of water making it the 41st largest state in the United States 59 West Virginia borders Pennsylvania and Maryland in the northeast Virginia in the southeast Ohio in the northwest and Kentucky in the southwest Its longest border is with Virginia at 381 miles 613 km followed by Ohio at 243 miles 391 km Maryland at 174 miles 280 km Pennsylvania at 118 miles 190 km and Kentucky at 79 miles 127 km 60 Geology and terrain Edit Main article Geology of West Virginia Shaded relief map of the Cumberland Plateau and Ridge and valley Appalachians West Virginia is located entirely within the Appalachian Region and the state is almost entirely mountainous giving the reason for the nickname The Mountain State and the motto Montani Semper Liberi Mountaineers are always free The elevations and ruggedness drop near large rivers like the Ohio River or Shenandoah River About 75 of the state is within the Cumberland Plateau and Allegheny Plateau regions Though the relief is not high the plateau region is extremely rugged in most areas The average elevation of West Virginia is approximately 1 500 feet 460 m above sea level which is the highest of any U S state east of the Mississippi River On the eastern state line with Virginia high peaks in the Monongahela National Forest region give rise to an island of colder climate and ecosystems similar to those of northern New England and eastern Canada The highest point in the state is atop Spruce Knob at 4 863 feet 1 482 m 61 and is covered in a boreal forest of dense spruce trees at altitudes above 4 000 feet 1 200 m Spruce Knob lies within the Monongahela National Forest and is a part of the Spruce Knob Seneca Rocks National Recreation Area 62 A total of six wilderness areas can also be found within the forest Outside the forest to the south the New River Gorge is a canyon 1 000 feet 300 m deep carved by the New River The National Park Service manages a portion of the gorge and river that has been designated as the New River Gorge National Park and Preserve Other areas under protection and management include Appalachian National Scenic Trail Bluestone National Scenic River Canaan Valley National Wildlife Refuge Chesapeake and Ohio Canal National Historical Park Gauley River National Recreation Area George Washington National Forest Harpers Ferry National Historical Park Ohio River Islands National Wildlife Refuge The summit of Spruce Knob is often covered in clouds Most of West Virginia lies within the Appalachian mixed mesophytic forests ecoregion while the higher elevations along the eastern border and in the panhandle lie within the Appalachian Blue Ridge forests The native vegetation for most of the state was originally mixed hardwood forest of oak chestnut maple beech and white pine with willow and American sycamore along the state s waterways Many of the areas are rich in biodiversity and scenic beauty a fact appreciated by native West Virginians who refer to their home as Almost Heaven from the song Take Me Home Country Roads by John Denver Before the song it was known as The Cog State Coal Oil and Gas or The Mountain State The underlying rock strata are sandstone shale bituminous coal beds and limestone laid down in a near shore environment from sediments derived from mountains to the east in a shallow inland sea on the west Some beds illustrate a coastal swamp environment some river delta and some shallow water Sea level rose and fell many times during the Mississippian and Pennsylvanian eras giving a variety of rock strata The Appalachian Mountains are some of the oldest on earth having formed more than three hundred million years ago 63 Climate Edit Further information Climate change in West Virginia This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message Koppen climate types of West Virginia using 1991 2020 climate normals West Virginia state wide averagesClimate chart explanation J F M A M J J A S O N D 3 3 39 22 2 9 43 24 3 8 53 32 3 7 64 40 4 4 73 50 4 80 59 4 2 83 64 4 82 62 3 4 76 56 2 9 65 44 3 5 54 35 3 3 44 27Average max and min temperatures in FPrecipitation totals in inchesSource West Virginia University dataMetric conversionJ F M A M J J A S O N D 84 4 6 74 6 4 97 12 0 94 18 4 112 23 10 102 27 15 107 28 18 102 28 17 86 24 13 74 18 7 89 12 2 84 7 3Average max and min temperatures in CPrecipitation totals in mmThe climate of West Virginia is generally a humid subtropical climate Koppen climate classification Cfa except Dfb at the higher elevations with warm to hot humid summers and chilly winters increasing in severity with elevation Some southern highland areas also have a mountain temperate climate Koppen Cfb where winter temperatures are more moderate and summer temperatures are somewhat cooler However the weather is subject in all parts of the state to change The hardiness zones range from zone 5b in the central Appalachian mountains to zone 7a in the warmest parts of the lowest elevations 64 In the Eastern Panhandle and the Ohio River Valley temperatures are warm enough to see and grow subtropical plants such as southern magnolia Magnolia grandiflora crepe myrtle Albizia julibrissin American sweetgum and even the occasional needle palm and sabal minor These plants do not thrive as well in other parts of the state The eastern prickly pear grows well in many portions of the state Average January temperatures range from around 26 F 4 C near the Cheat River to 41 F 5 C along sections of the border with Kentucky July averages range from 67 F 19 C along the North Branch Potomac River to 76 F 24 C in the western part of the state It is cooler in the mountains than in the lower sections of the state 65 The highest recorded temperature in the state is 112 F 44 C at Martinsburg on July 10 1936 and the lowest recorded temperature in the state is 37 F 38 C at Lewisburg on December 30 1917 Annual precipitation ranges from less than 32 inches 810 mm in the lower eastern section to more than 56 inches 1 400 mm in higher parts of the Allegheny Front Valleys in the east have lower rainfall because the Allegheny mountain ridges to the west create a partial rain shadow Slightly more than half the rainfall occurs from April to September Dense fogs are common in many valleys of the Kanawha section especially the Tygart Valley West Virginia is also one of the cloudiest states in the nation with the cities of Elkins and Beckley ranking 9th and 10th in the U S respectively for the number of cloudy days per year over 210 In addition to persistent cloudy skies caused by the damming of moisture by the Alleghenies West Virginia also experiences some of the most frequent precipitation in the nation with Snowshoe averaging nearly 200 days a year with either rain or snow Snow usually lasts only a few days in the lower sections but may persist for weeks in the higher mountain areas An average of 34 inches 860 mm of snow falls annually in Charleston although during the winter of 1995 1996 more than three times that amount fell as several cities in the state established new records for snowfall Average snowfall in the Allegheny Highlands can range up to 180 inches 4 600 mm per year Severe weather is somewhat less prevalent in West Virginia than in most other eastern states and it ranks among the least tornado prone states east of the Rockies Adjacent states Edit Pennsylvania North Maryland Northeast Kentucky Southwest Virginia East Ohio West Flora and fauna Edit Main article Fauna of West VirginiaMajor cities EditSee also List of cities in West Virginia List of towns in West Virginia List of villages in West Virginia and List of census designated places in West Virginia Originally the state capital was Wheeling from 1863 to 1870 It was then moved to Charleston a more central city from 1870 to 1875 when it returned to Wheeling In 1885 the capitol burned down and it was moved back to Charleston that year where a vote was held to determine the permanent capital between Charleston Clarksburg and Martinsburg Charleston was selected and it has remained the capital since 66 There are 232 incorporated municipalities in West Virginia Largest cities or towns in West Virginia Source 67 Rank Name County Pop Rank Name County Pop Charleston Huntington 1 Charleston Kanawha 47 215 11 South Charleston Kanawha 12 240 Morgantown Parkersburg2 Huntington Cabell 46 048 12 Vienna Wood 10 2303 Morgantown Monongalia 30 955 13 St Albans Kanawha 10 0694 Parkersburg Wood 29 675 14 Bluefield Mercer 9 7305 Wheeling Ohio 26 771 15 Bridgeport Harrison 8 6816 Weirton Hancock 18 449 16 Moundsville Marshall 8 4017 Fairmont Marion 18 411 17 Oak Hill Fayette 8 2188 Martinsburg Berkeley 17 465 18 Dunbar Kanawha 7 2059 Beckley Raleigh 16 183 19 Elkins Randolph 7 02610 Clarksburg Harrison 15 480 20 Hurricane Putnam 6 506 Metropolitan areas Edit Beckley 68 Charleston Huntington Ashland Morgantown Parkersburg Marietta Vienna Weirton Steubenville WheelingOther metropolitan areas that contain cities in West Virginia but are primarily in other states include Cumberland Hagerstown Martinsburg Washington Arlington Alexandria WinchesterMicropolitan areas Edit Bluefield Clarksburg Elkins 68 Fairmont Logan 68 Point PleasantDemographics Edit West Virginia population density map Historical populationCensus Pop 179055 873 180078 59240 7 1810105 46934 2 1820136 80829 7 1830176 92429 3 1840224 53726 9 1850302 31334 6 1860376 68824 6 1870442 01417 3 1880618 45739 9 1890762 79423 3 1900958 80025 7 19101 221 11927 4 19201 463 70119 9 19301 729 20518 1 19401 901 97410 0 19502 005 5525 4 19601 860 421 7 2 19701 744 237 6 2 19801 949 64411 8 19901 793 477 8 0 20001 808 3440 8 20101 852 9942 5 20201 793 716 3 2 Source 1910 2020 69 The United States Census Bureau estimates that the population of West Virginia was 1 792 147 on July 1 2018 a 3 28 decrease since the 2010 United States census 70 The center of population of West Virginia is located in Braxton County in the town of Gassaway 71 Ethnic composition as of the 2020 census Race and ethnicity 72 Alone TotalWhite non Hispanic 89 1 89 1 93 0 93 African American non Hispanic 3 6 3 6 4 9 4 9 Hispanic or Latino Note 2 1 9 1 9 Asian 0 8 0 8 1 2 1 2 Native American 0 2 0 2 2 0 2 Pacific Islander 0 02 0 02 0 1 0 1 Other 0 3 0 3 1 0 1 West Virginia Racial Breakdown of Population Racial composition 1990 73 2000 74 2010 75 2019 76 White 96 2 95 0 93 9 93 1 Black 3 1 3 2 3 4 3 7 Asian 0 4 0 5 0 7 0 8 Native 0 1 0 2 0 2 0 2 Native Hawaiian andother Pacific Islander Other race 0 1 0 2 0 3 0 4 Two or more races 0 9 1 5 1 8 As of 2019 76 West Virginia has an estimated population of 1 792 147 which is a decrease of 10 025 0 55 from the prior year and a decrease of 47 162 2 55 since the previous census This includes a natural decrease of 3 296 108 292 births minus 111 588 deaths and an increase from net migration of 14 209 into the state West Virginia is the least populous southeastern state Immigration from outside the United States resulted in a net increase of 3 691 and migration within the country produced a net increase of 10 518 Only 1 6 of the state s residents were foreign born placing West Virginia last among the 50 states in that statistic It also has the lowest percentage of residents who speak a language other than English at home 2 6 The five largest ancestry groups in West Virginia are German 18 9 Irish 15 1 American 12 9 English 11 8 and Italian 4 7 77 78 In the 2000 census people who identified their ethnicity as simply American made up 18 7 of the population 79 Large numbers of people of German ancestry are present in the northeastern counties of the state People of English ancestry are present throughout the entire state Many West Virginians who self identify as Irish are actually Scots Irish Protestants 2010 census data show that 16 percent of West Virginia s residents are 65 or older exceeded only by Florida s 17 percent 80 Racial plurality in West Virginia by county per the 2020 U S censusLegend Non Hispanic White 70 80 80 90 90 Population Aged 65 and Older Top 10 States 80 State of populationFlorida 17 3West Virginia 16 0Maine 15 9Pennsylvania 15 4Iowa 14 9Montana 14 8Vermont 14 6North Dakota 14 5Rhode Island 14 4Arkansas 14 4There were 20 928 births in 2006 Of these 19 757 94 40 of the births 95 19 of the population were to non Hispanic whites There were 22 births to American Indians 0 11 of the births and 0 54 of the population 177 births to Asians 0 85 of the births and 0 68 of the population 219 births to Hispanics 1 05 of the births and 0 88 of the population and 753 births to blacks and others 3 60 of the births and 3 56 of the population 81 The state s Northern Panhandle and North Central region feel an affinity for Pittsburgh Pennsylvania Also those in the Eastern Panhandle feel a connection with the Washington D C suburbs in Maryland and Virginia and southern West Virginians often consider themselves Southerners Finally the towns and farms along the mid Ohio River which forms most of the state s western border have an appearance and culture somewhat resembling the Midwest 82 Birth data Edit Note Births in table do not add up because Hispanics are counted both by their ethnicity and by their race giving a higher overall number Live Births by Race Ethnicity of Mother Race 2013 83 2014 84 2015 85 2016 86 2017 87 2018 88 2019 89 2020 90 White 19 823 95 2 19 245 94 8 18 814 95 0 gt non Hispanic White 19 542 93 8 18 860 92 9 18 442 93 1 17 460 91 5 16 943 90 7 16 621 91 1 16 476 90 8 15 698 90 6 Black 754 3 6 813 4 0 738 3 7 587 3 1 629 3 4 626 3 4 620 3 4 603 3 5 Asian 229 1 1 214 1 0 225 1 1 170 0 9 201 1 1 176 1 0 173 1 0 160 0 9 American Indian 19 0 1 29 0 1 28 0 1 17 0 1 26 0 1 16 0 1 13 0 1 16 0 1 Hispanic of any race 219 1 1 350 1 7 331 1 7 378 2 0 390 2 1 378 2 1 383 2 1 373 2 1 Total West Virginia 20 825 100 20 301 100 19 805 100 19 079 100 18 675 100 18 248 100 18 136 100 17 323 100 Since 2016 data for births of White Hispanic origin are not collected but included in one Hispanic group persons of Hispanic origin may be of any race Languages Edit Top 10 non English languages spoken in West Virginia Language Percentage of population as of 2010 91 Spanish 1 07 French 0 17 German 0 14 Italian 0 09 Chinese 0 09 Tagalog 0 06 Japanese 0 05 Vietnamese 0 04 Urdu 0 04 Korean 0 04 In 2010 97 67 1 697 042 of West Virginia residents aged 5 years and older spoke English as their primary language 2 33 of residents spoke a mother language other than English 91 Religion Edit Religion in West Virginia 92 religion percentProtestant 70 Unaffiliated 18 Catholic 6 Mormon 2 Jewish 1 Muslim 1 Other faith 1 Unanswered 1 Several surveys have been made in recent years in 2008 by the American Religion Identity Survey 93 in 2010 by the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life 94 The Pew survey results admit to a 6 5 margin of error plus or minus while the ARIS survey says estimates are subject to larger sampling errors in states with small populations A characteristic of religion in Appalachian communities is the abundance of independent non affiliated churches which remain unnoted and uncounted in any census of church life in the United States This sometimes leads to the belief that these communities are unchurched 95 The largest denomination as of 2010 was the United Methodist Church with 136 000 members in 1 200 congregations The second largest Protestant church was the American Baptist Churches USA with 88 000 members and 381 congregations The Southern Baptist church had 44 000 members and 232 congregations The Churches of Christ had 22 000 members and 287 congregations The Presbyterian Church USA had 200 congregations and 20 000 members 96 A survey conducted in 2015 by the Pew Research Center found that West Virginia was the seventh most highly religious state in the United States 97 A separate 2020 survey by the Public Religion Research Institute found that 69 of the adult population was Christian reflecting a slight decrease since the Pew Research Center s 2015 survey 98 In 2020 a survey of nearly 1 900 West Virginians reported that 78 6 were Christian and 16 2 were unaffiliated 99 Economy EditMain article Economy of West Virginia See also West Virginia locations by per capita income Overview Edit The economy of West Virginia nominally would be the 62nd largest economy globally behind Iraq and ahead of Croatia according to 2009 World Bank projections 100 and the 64th largest behind Iraq and ahead of Libya according to 2009 International Monetary Fund projections 101 The state has a projected nominal GDP of 63 34 billion in 2009 according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis report of November 2010 and a real GDP of 55 04 billion The real GDP growth of the state in 2009 of 7 was the 7th best in the country 102 West Virginia was one of only ten states in 2009 that grew economically 103 While per capita income fell 2 6 nationally in 2009 West Virginia s grew at 1 8 104 Through the first half of 2010 exports from West Virginia topped 3 billion growing 39 5 over the same period from the previous year and ahead of the national average by 15 7 104 Morgantown was ranked by Forbes as the 10 best small city in the nation to conduct business in 2010 105 The city is also home to West Virginia University the 95th best public university according to U S News amp World Report in 2011 106 The proportion of West Virginia s adult population with a bachelor s degree is the lowest in the U S at 17 3 107 The net corporate income tax rate is 6 5 while business costs are 13 below the national average 108 109 The U S Bureau of Economic Analysis reported that in 2014 West Virginia s economy grew twice as fast as the next fastest growing state east of the Mississippi River ranking third alongside Wyoming and just behind North Dakota and Texas among the fastest growing states in the United States 110 Tourism Edit Tourism contributed 4 27 billion to the state s economy and employed 44 400 people in 2010 making it one of the state s largest industries 111 Many tourists especially in the eastern mountains are drawn to the region s notable opportunities for outdoor recreation Canaan Valley is popular for winter sports Seneca Rocks is one of the premier rock climbing destinations in the eastern U S the New River Gorge Fayetteville area draws rock climbers as well as whitewater rafting enthusiasts and the Monongahela National Forest is popular with hikers backpackers hunters and anglers Seneca Rocks Pendleton County Also drawing tourism to the state is the West Virginia State Park amp State Forest system which comprises 45 units covering 164 000 acres In 2021 over 9 million people visited a West Virginia state park the highest number on record This is partly due to a recent 151 million improvement project that has seen improvements at every park and forest 112 In addition to such outdoor recreation opportunities the state offers a number of historic and cultural attractions Harpers Ferry National Historical Park is a historic town situated at the confluence of the Shenandoah and Potomac rivers Harpers Ferry was the site of John Brown s 1859 raid on the U S Armory and Arsenal Located at the approximate midpoint of the Appalachian Trail Harpers Ferry is the base of the Appalachian Trail Conservancy The Greenbrier hotel and resort originally built in 1778 has long been considered a premier hotel frequented by numerous world leaders and U S presidents over the years West Virginia is the site of the National Radio Astronomy Observatory which features the Green Bank Telescope For the 1963 Centennial of the State it hosted two high school graduate delegates from each of the 50 States at the National Youth Science Camp near Bartow and has continued this tradition ever since The main building of Weston State Hospital is the largest hand cut sandstone building in the western hemisphere second worldwide only to the Kremlin in Moscow Tours of the building which is a National Historic Landmark and part of the National Civil War Trail are offered seasonally and by appointment year round West Virginia has numerous popular festivals throughout the year Resources Edit Bituminous coal seam in southwestern West Virginia One of the major resources in West Virginia s economy is coal According to the Energy Information Administration West Virginia is a top coal producer in the United States second only to Wyoming West Virginia is located in the heart of the Marcellus Shale Natural Gas Bed which stretches from Tennessee north to New York in the middle of Appalachia As of 2017 the coal industry accounted for 2 of state employment 113 Nearly all the electricity generated in West Virginia is from coal fired power plants West Virginia produces a surplus of electricity and leads the Nation in net interstate electricity exports 114 Farming is also practiced in West Virginia but on a limited basis because of the mountainous terrain over much of the state Green energy Edit An assessment from 2012 estimated that West Virginia had the potential to generate 8 627 GWh year from 2 772 MW of 100 meter wind turbines and 60 000 GWh from 40 000 MW of photovoltaics including 3 810 MW of rooftop photovoltaics 115 This was based on then existing technologies and apparently was based on some assumed requirements for the economic performance of the respective resources West Virginia Wind Generation GWh Million kWh Year Capacity MW Total Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sept Oct Nov Dec2009 330 742 86 86 69 71 31 49 49 32 46 71 68 862010 431 939 92 79 85 86 66 69 49 33 66 114 89 1122011 564 1099 102 113 112 114 49 62 45 68 60 122 124 1322012 583 1286 201 147 136 130 59 90 85 41 65 98 100 1332013 583 1387 175 154 174 140 134 78 55 58 52 58 159 152 116 2014 583 1451 166 146 167 143 100 62 76 64 67 154 157 1492015 583 1376 158 137 181 137 75 103 65 44 71 122 147 1362016 686 1432 166 164 134 120 74 92 69 57 67 130 135 2222017 686 1682 124 123 171 174 152 140 112 52 70 116 167 2112018 686 1779 191 181 183 180 138 132 97 108 106 144 160 1602019 160 131 144 185 152 162Source 117 118 119 120 Taxes Edit West Virginia personal income tax is based on federal adjusted gross income not taxable income as modified by specific items in West Virginia law Citizens are taxed within five income brackets which range from 3 0 to 6 5 The state s consumer sales tax is levied at 6 on most products except for non prepared foods 121 West Virginia counties administer and collect property taxes although property tax rates reflect levies for state government county governments county boards of education and municipalities Counties may also impose a hotel occupancy tax on lodging places not located within the city limits of any municipality that levies such a tax Municipalities may levy license and gross receipts taxes on businesses located within the city limits and a hotel occupancy tax on lodging places in the city Although the Department of Tax and Revenue plays a major role in the administration of this tax less than half of one percent of the property tax collected goes to state government The primary beneficiaries of the property tax are county boards of education Property taxes are paid to the sheriff of each of the state s 55 counties Each county and municipality can impose its own rates of property taxation within the limits set by the West Virginia Constitution The West Virginia legislature sets the rate of tax of county boards of education This rate is used by all county boards of education statewide However the total tax rate for county boards of education may differ from county to county because of excess levies The Department of Tax and Revenue supervises and otherwise assists counties and municipalities in their work of assessment and tax rate determination The total tax rate is a combination of the tax levies from four state taxing authorities state county schools and municipal This total tax rate varies for each of the four classes of property which consists of personal real and intangible properties Property is assessed according to its use location and value as of July 1 WV Assessments has a free searchable database of West Virginia real estate tax assessments covering current and past years All property is reappraised every three years annual adjustments are made to assessments for property with a change of value West Virginia does not impose an inheritance tax Because of the phase out of the federal estate tax credit West Virginia s estate tax is not imposed on estates of persons who died on or after January 1 2005 122 Largest private employers Edit The largest private employers in West Virginia as of March 2019 were 123 Rank Company1 WVU Medicine2 Walmart3 CAMC Health System4 Mountain Health Network5 Kroger6 Lowe s Home Centers7 Contura Energy8 Wheeling Hospital Inc 9 Mylan Pharmaceuticals10 Murray American Energy11 ResCare12 Mon Health13 Macy s Corporate Services14 American Electric Power15 West Virginia s Choice Inc 16 FirstEnergy Corp17 Dolgencorp LLC Dollar General Stores 18 Thomas Health Systems19 Pilgrim s Pride Corporation of West Virginia20 Frontier West Virginia21 Blackhawk Mining LLC22 Darden Restaurants GMRI Inc a 23 Arch Coal Inc 24 Walgreens25 DowDuPont Inc Labelled as General Mills Restaurants one of Darden s predecessors GMRI Inc remains Darden s main operating subsidiary 124 Quality of life EditThe examples and perspective in this article may not include all significant viewpoints Please improve the article or discuss the issue February 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Bluefield a major center for coal mining in 2014 Economy Edit West Virginia coal exports declined 40 in 2013 a loss of 2 9 billion and overall total exports declined 26 125 West Virginia ranked last in the Gallup Economic Index for the fourth year running West Virginia s score was 44 or a full 17 points lower than the average of 27 for the other states in the bottom ten 126 West Virginia ranked 48th in the CNBC Top States for Business 2013 based on measures of competitiveness such as economy workforce and cost of living ranking among the bottom five states for the last six years running 127 West Virginia ranked 49th in the 2014 State New Economy Index and has ranked in the bottom three states since 1999 West Virginia ranked last or next to last in critical indicators such as Workforce Education Entrepreneurial Activity High Tech Jobs and Scientists and Engineers 128 On January 9 2014 a chemical spill contaminated the water supply of 300 000 people in nine West Virginia counties near Charleston According to Bloomberg News lost wages revenue and other economic harm from the chemical spill could top 500 million 129 needs update and West Virginia s Marshall University Center for Business and Economic Research estimated that about 61 million was lost by businesses in the first four days alone after the spill 130 Employment Edit In 2012 West Virginia s Gross Domestic Product GDP grew by 3 3 131 The state issued a report highlighting the state s GDP as indicating a fast growing economy but did not address employment indicators 132 In 2009 2013 the U S real GDP increased 9 6 and total employment increased 3 9 In West Virginia during the same time period its real GDP increased about 11 while total employment decreased by 1 000 jobs from 746 000 to 745 000 In 2013 West Virginia ranked last in the nation with an employment to population ratio of only 50 compared to the national average of 59 133 The state lost 5 600 jobs in its labor force in four critical economic sectors construction 1 900 manufacturing 1 100 retail 1 800 and education 800 while gaining just 400 in mining and logging 134 The state s Civilian Labor Force dropped by 15 100 135 Wages and poverty Edit Personal income growth in West Virginia during 2013 was only 1 5 the lowest in the nation and about half the national average 2 6 136 Overall income growth in West Virginia in the last thirty years has been only 13 about a third of the national average 37 Wages of the impoverished bottom 1 income earners decreased by 3 compared to the national average which increased 19 137 West Virginia s poverty rate is one of the highest in the nation 2017 estimates indicate that 19 of the state s population lives in poverty exceeding the national average of 13 138 The West Virginia teachers strike in 2018 inspired teachers in other states to take similar action 139 Population Edit United Van Lines 37th Annual Migration Study showed in 2013 that 60 more people moved out of West Virginia than moved in 140 West Virginia s population is expected to decline by more than 19 000 residents by 2030 and West Virginia lost one of its three seats in the United States House of Representatives in the 2020 census 141 West Virginia is the only state where death rates exceed birth rates During 2010 2013 about 21 000 babies per year were born in West Virginia but over these three years West Virginia had 3 000 more deaths than births 142 Family Edit Gallup Healthways annual State of American Well Being rankings reports that 1 261 concerned West Virginians rated themselves as suffering in categories such as Quality of Life Physical Health and Access to Basic Needs Overall West Virginia citizens rated themselves as being more miserable than people in all other states for five years running 143 In addition the Gallup Well Being Index for 2013 ranked Charleston the state capital and Huntington last and next to last out of 189 U S Metropolitan Statistical Areas 144 The Annie E Casey Foundation s National Index of Children s Progress ranked West Virginia 43rd in the nation for all kids and last for white kids 145 The Annie E Casey Foundation s 2013 KIDS COUNT Data Book also ranked West Virginia s education system 47th in the nation for the second straight year 146 Charleston West Virginia has the worst divorce rate among 100 cities in the nation Stephen Smith the executive director of the West Virginia Healthy Kids and Families Coalition said poor employment prospects are to blame The pressure to make a good living puts strain on a marriage and right now it is infinitely harder to make a living here than it was 40 years ago 147 Health Edit United Health Foundation s America s Health Rankings for 2013 found that Americans are making considerable progress in key health measures West Virginia however ranked either last or second to last in twenty categories including cancer child immunization diabetes disabilities drug deaths teeth loss low birth weight missed work days due to health prescription drug overdose preventable hospitalizations and senior clinical care 148 Wisconsin Population Health Institute annual Health Rankings for 2012 showed West Virginia spends 9 671 per capita on health care annually El Salvador spends just 467 yet both have the same life expectancy 149 In 2012 according to the Census Bureau West Virginia was the only state where death rates exceed birth rates During 2010 2013 about 21 000 babies per year were born in West Virginia but there were 24 000 deaths 142 In demographics this is called a net mortality society 150 The National Center for Health Statistics says national birth rates for teenagers are at historic lows during 2007 2010 teen birth rates fell 17 nationally West Virginia however ranked last with a 3 increase in birth rates for teenagers 151 A study by West Virginia s Marshall University showed that 19 of babies born in the state have evidence of drug or alcohol exposure 152 This is several times the national rate where studies show that about 5 9 of pregnant women in the U S use illicit drugs and about 8 5 consume any alcohol 153 An Institute for Health Policy Research study determined that mortality rates in Appalachia are correlated with coal production In twenty West Virginia coal counties mining more than a million tons of coal per year and having a total population of 850 000 there are about 10 100 deaths per year with 1 400 of those statistically attributed to deaths from heart respiratory and kidney disease from living in an Appalachian coal county 154 In 2015 McDowell County had the highest rate of drug induced deaths of any county in the United States with a rate of 141 deaths per 100 000 people Four of the five counties with the highest rates of drug induced deaths are in West Virginia McDowell Wyoming Cabell and Raleigh Counties 155 American environmental attorney Robert Bilott exposed how DuPont had been knowingly polluting water with perfluorooctanoic acid PFOA in Parkersburg West Virginia since the 1980s 156 This battle with DuPont is depicted in the film Dark Waters Life expectancy Edit The residents of West Virginia have a lower life expectancy than the national average In 2014 life expectancy for both sexes in the state was 76 0 years compared to 79 1 years for the United States as a whole In 2014 males in West Virginia lived an average of 73 6 years compared to a national average of 76 7 years and females lived an average of 77 5 years compared to a national average of 81 5 years Male life expectancy in West Virginia between 1980 and 2014 increased by 4 7 years compared to a national average of a 6 7 year increase Life expectancy for females in West Virginia between 1980 and 2014 increased by 1 7 years compared to a national average of a 4 0 year increase Life expectancy for both sexes is among the lowest of all states 157 Life expectancies in 2014 for both sexes in West Virginia counties ranged from a low of 70 3 years in McDowell County to a high of 79 3 years in Pendleton County McDowell and several other West Virginia counties are among the counties in the U S with the lowest life expectancies 158 Governance EditMain articles Law and government of West Virginia and West Virginia Constitution The West Virginia State Capitol in Charleston is home to the West Virginia Legislature Legislative branch Edit Further information West Virginia Legislature The West Virginia Legislature is bicameral It consists of the House of Delegates and the Senate both housed in the West Virginia State Capitol It is a citizen s legislature meaning that legislative office is not a full time occupation but rather a part time position Consequently the legislators often hold full time jobs in their community of residence Typically the legislature is in session for 60 days between January and early April The final day of the regular session ends in a bewildering fury of last minute legislation to meet a constitutionally imposed midnight deadline During the remainder of the year monthly interim sessions are held in preparation for the regular session Legislators also gather periodically for special sessions when called by the governor The title of Lieutenant Governor is assigned by statute to the senate president Executive branch Edit Further information List of Governors of West Virginia The governor elected every four years on the same day as the U S presidential election is sworn in during the following January Governors of West Virginia can serve two consecutive terms but must sit out a term before serving a third term in office The title of Lieutenant Governor is assigned by statute to the senate president West Virginia s current governor is Jim Justice Judicial branch Edit Further information Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia West Virginia is one of 27 states that do not have a death penalty and it was the only state in the southeastern United States to have abolished it until 2021 when Virginia did so as well For the purpose of courts of general jurisdiction the state is divided into 31 judicial circuits Each circuit is made up of one or more counties Circuit judges are elected in non partisan elections to serve eight year terms West Virginia s highest court is the Supreme Court of Appeals The Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia is the busiest appellate court of its type in the United States West Virginia is one of 11 states with a single appellate court The state constitution allows for the creation of an intermediate court of appeals but the Legislature has never created one The Supreme Court is made up of five justices elected in non partisan elections to 12 year terms West Virginia is an alcoholic beverage control state However unlike most such states it does not operate retail outlets having exited that business in 1990 It retains a monopoly on wholesaling of distilled spirits only Politics Edit Main articles Elections in West Virginia and Political party strength in West Virginia From left Senator Joe Manchin Energy Secretary Rick Perry Senator Shelley Moore Capito and Representative David McKinley in 2017 At the state level West Virginia s politics were largely dominated by the Democratic Party from the Great Depression through the 2000s This was a legacy of West Virginia s very strong tradition of union membership 9 After the 2014 midterm elections Democrats controlled the governorship the majority of statewide offices and one U S Senate seat while Republicans held one U S Senate seat all three of the state s U S House seats and a majority in both houses of the West Virginia Legislature In the 2016 elections the Republicans held on to their seats and made gains in the State Senate and gained three statewide offices 159 160 Since 2000 West Virginians have supported the Republican candidate in every presidential election The state is regarded as a deep red state at the federal level 9 161 In 2012 Republican Mitt Romney won the state defeating Democrat Barack Obama with 62 of the vote to 35 for Obama In the 2016 presidential election Republican Donald Trump won the state with 67 86 of the popular vote with West Virginia giving him the highest vote share of any state 162 The 2008 presidential election was the last to date in which the Democratic nominee won any of the state s counties Evangelical Christians comprised 52 of the state s voters in 2008 163 A poll in 2005 showed that 53 of West Virginia voters are anti abortion the seventh highest in the country 164 A 2014 poll by Pew Research found that 35 of West Virginians supported legal abortion in all or most cases while 58 wanted it to be banned in all or most cases 165 United States presidential election results for West Virginia 166 Year Republican Democratic Third partyNo No No 2020 545 382 68 62 235 984 29 69 13 365 1 68 2016 489 371 67 85 188 794 26 18 43 096 5 98 2012 417 655 62 14 238 269 35 45 16 195 2 41 2008 397 466 55 58 303 857 42 49 13 800 1 93 2004 423 778 56 06 326 541 43 20 5 568 0 74 2000 336 475 51 92 295 497 45 59 16 152 2 49 1996 233 946 36 76 327 812 51 51 74 701 11 74 1992 241 974 35 39 331 001 48 41 110 736 16 20 1988 310 065 47 46 341 016 52 20 2 230 0 34 1984 405 483 55 11 328 125 44 60 2 134 0 29 1980 334 206 45 30 367 462 49 81 36 047 4 89 1976 314 760 41 93 435 914 58 07 0 0 00 1972 484 964 63 61 277 435 36 39 0 0 00 1968 307 555 40 78 374 091 49 60 72 560 9 62 1964 253 953 32 06 538 087 67 94 0 0 00 1960 395 995 47 27 441 786 52 73 0 0 00 1956 449 297 54 08 381 534 45 92 0 0 00 1952 419 970 48 08 453 578 51 92 0 0 00 1948 316 251 42 24 429 188 57 32 3 311 0 44 1944 322 819 45 11 392 777 54 89 0 0 00 1940 372 414 42 90 495 662 57 10 0 0 00 1936 325 358 39 20 502 582 60 56 2 005 0 24 1932 330 731 44 47 405 124 54 47 7 919 1 06 1928 375 551 58 43 263 784 41 04 3 417 0 53 1924 288 635 49 45 257 232 44 07 37 795 6 48 1920 282 007 55 30 220 789 43 30 7 146 1 40 1916 143 124 49 38 140 403 48 44 6 325 2 18 1912 56 754 21 11 113 197 42 11 98 877 36 78 1908 137 869 53 42 111 418 43 17 8 818 3 42 1904 132 620 55 26 100 855 42 03 6 511 2 71 1900 119 829 54 27 98 807 44 75 2 160 0 98 1896 105 379 52 23 94 480 46 83 1 898 0 94 1892 80 292 46 93 84 467 49 37 6 320 3 69 1888 78 171 49 03 78 677 49 35 2 592 1 63 1884 63 096 47 75 67 311 50 94 1 738 1 32 1880 46 243 41 05 57 390 50 95 9 008 8 00 1876 41 997 42 15 56 546 56 75 1 104 1 11 1872 32 320 51 74 29 532 47 28 615 0 98 1868 29 015 58 83 20 306 41 17 0 0 00 1864 23 799 68 24 11 078 31 76 0 0 00 A September 2011 Public Policy Polling survey found that 19 of West Virginia voters thought same sex marriage should be legal while 71 thought it should be illegal and 10 were not sure A separate question on the same survey found that 43 of West Virginia voters supported the legal recognition of same sex couples with 17 supporting same sex marriage 26 supporting civil unions but not marriage 54 favoring no legal recognition and 3 not sure 167 In 2008 58 favored troop withdrawal from Iraq while just 32 wanted troops to remain 168 On fiscal policy in 2008 52 said raising taxes on the wealthier individuals would benefit the economy while 45 disagreed 169 Voter registration as of September 30 2022 170 Party Total voters PercentageRepublican 450 278 39 17 Democratic 379 886 33 05 Unaffiliated 269 095 23 41 Minor parties 50 207 4 37 Total 1 149 466 100 In a 2020 study West Virginia was ranked as the 16th hardest state for citizens to vote in 171 Transportation EditMain article Transportation in West Virginia A toll plaza on the West Virginia Turnpike The iconic New River Gorge Bridge near Fayetteville The Veterans Memorial Bridge carries US 22 from Steubenville into Ohio Highways form the backbone of transportation systems in West Virginia with over 37 300 miles 60 000 km of public roads in the state 172 Airports railroads and rivers complete the commercial transportation modes for West Virginia Commercial air travel is facilitated by airports in Charleston Huntington Morgantown Beckley Lewisburg Clarksburg and Parkersburg All but Charleston and Huntington are subsidized by the federal Department of Transportation s Essential Air Service program The cities of Charleston Huntington Beckley Wheeling Morgantown Clarksburg Parkersburg and Fairmont have bus based public transit systems West Virginia University in Morgantown boasts the PRT personal rapid transit system the state s only single rail public transit system Developed by Boeing the WVU School of Engineering and the Department of Transportation it was a model for low capacity light transport designed for smaller cities Recreational transportation opportunities abound in West Virginia including hiking trails 173 rail trails 174 ATV off road trails 175 white water rafting rivers 176 and two tourist railroads the Cass Scenic Railroad 177 and the Potomac Eagle Scenic Railroad 178 West Virginia is crossed by seven Interstate Highways I 64 enters the state near White Sulphur Springs in the mountainous east and exits for Kentucky in the west near Huntington I 77 enters from Virginia in the south near Bluefield It runs north past Parkersburg before it crosses into Ohio I 64 and I 77 between Charleston and Beckley are merged as toll road known as the West Virginia Turnpike which continues as I 77 alone from Beckley to Princeton It was constructed beginning in 1952 as a two lane road but rebuilt beginning in 1974 to Interstate standards Today almost nothing of the original construction remains I 68 s western terminus is in Morgantown From there it runs east into Maryland At the I 68 terminus in Morgantown it meets I 79 which enters from Pennsylvania and runs through the state to its southern terminus in Charleston I 70 briefly runs through West Virginia crossing the northern panhandle through Wheeling while I 470 is a bypass of Wheeling making Wheeling among the smallest cities with an interstate bypass I 81 also briefly runs in West Virginia through the Eastern Panhandle where it goes through Martinsburg The interstates are supplemented by roads constructed under the Appalachian Corridor system Four Corridors are complete Corridor D carrying US 50 runs from the Ohio River and I 77 at Parkersburg to I 79 at Clarksburg Corridor G carrying US 119 runs from Charleston to the Kentucky border at Williamson Corridor L carrying US 19 runs from the Turnpike at Beckley to I 79 near Sutton and provides a short cut of about 40 miles 64 km and bypasses Charleston s urban traffic for traveler heading to and from Florida Corridor Q carrying US 460 runs through Mercer County entering the state from Giles County Virginia and then reentering Virginia at Tazewell County Work continues on the long delayed Corridor H which will carry US 48 from Weston to the Virginia line near Wardensville As of 2018 a section from Weston to Kerens just past Elkins and another section from Wardensville to Davis are complete Other projects under development are a four lane upgrade of US 35 from Scott Depot to the Ohio River at Point Pleasant which is about two thirds complete a four lane upgrade of WV 10 from Logan to Man and then of WV 80 from Man to Gilbert which is about half completed and four lane upgrades to US 52 from Bluefield to Williamson known as the King Coal Highway and from Williamson to Huntington known as the Tolsia Highway which are many years from completion A project known as the Coalfields Expressway is also ongoing and will carry US 121 from Beckley west across Raleigh Wyoming and McDowell counties entering Virginia near Bishop Rail lines in the state used to be more prevalent but many lines have been discontinued because of increased automobile traffic Many old tracks have been converted to rail trails for recreational use although the coal producing areas still have railroads running at near capacity Amtrak s Cardinal roughly parallels I 64 s path through the state MARC trains serve commuters to Washington D C in the eastern panhandle In 2006 Norfolk Southern along with the West Virginia and U S Government approved a plan to modify many of the rail tunnels in West Virginia especially in the southern half of the state to allow for double stacked cars see inter modal freight This is expected to also help bring economic growth to the southern half of the state An Intermodal Freight Facility is located at Prichard just south of Huntington Because of the mountainous nature of the entire state West Virginia has several notable tunnels and bridges The most famous of these is the New River Gorge Bridge which was at a time the longest steel single arch bridge in the world with a 3 031 foot 924 m span The bridge is also pictured on the West Virginia state quarter The Fort Steuben Bridge Weirton Steubenville Bridge was at the time of its construction one of only three cable stayed steel girder trusses in the United States The Veterans Memorial Bridge was designed to handle traffic from the Fort Steuben Bridge as well as its own traffic load to quote the Weirton Daily Times newspaper 179 The 80 year old Fort Steuben Bridge Weirton Steubenville Bridge was permanently closed on January 8 2009 The Wheeling Suspension Bridge was the first bridge built across the Ohio River in 1849 and for a time was the longest suspension bridge in the world It is still the oldest vehicular suspension bridge in the United States still in use Education EditMain article Education in West Virginia Colleges and universities Edit Further information List of colleges and universities in West Virginia Alderson Broaddus University American Public University System Appalachian Bible College Bethany College Bluefield State University Blue Ridge Community and Technical College BridgeValley Community and Technical College Concord University Davis and Elkins College Eastern West Virginia Community and Technical College Fairmont State University Future Generations Graduate School Glenville State College Marshall University Mountwest Community and Technical College New River Community and Technical College Pierpont Community and Technical College Potomac State College of West Virginia University Salem International University Shepherd University Southern West Virginia Community and Technical College University of Charleston West Liberty University West Virginia Northern Community College West Virginia School of Osteopathic Medicine West Virginia State University West Virginia University West Virginia University at Parkersburg West Virginia University Institute of Technology West Virginia Wesleyan College Wheeling UniversityCulture EditSports Edit West Virginia is home to college sports teams from two schools West Virginia and Marshall that play in NCAA Division I West Virginia is also home to several professional minor league baseball football hockey and other sports teams Club Sport LeagueWest Virginia Mountaineers Football Basketball Big 12 ConferenceMarshall Thundering Herd Football Basketball Sun Belt ConferenceBluefield Ridge Runners Baseball Appalachian LeagueCharleston Dirty Birds Baseball Atlantic League of Professional BaseballPrinceton WhistlePigs Baseball Appalachian LeagueWest Virginia Miners Baseball Prospect LeagueWest Virginia Black Bears Baseball MLB Draft LeagueWheeling Nailers Ice hockey ECHLWest Virginia Lightning 180 Football Elite Mid Continental Football League 181 West Virginia United Soccer USL League TwoWest Virginia Bruisers Football Women s Football AllianceMusic Edit Main article Music of West Virginia Appalachian music Edit West Virginia s folk heritage is a part of the Appalachian folk music tradition and includes styles of fiddling ballad singing and other styles that draw on Scots Irish music Camp Washington Carver a Mountain Cultural Arts Center located at Clifftop in Fayette County hosts an annual Appalachian String Band Festival 182 The Capitol Complex in Charleston hosts The Vandalia Gathering where traditional Appalachian musicians compete in contests and play in impromptu jam sessions and evening concerts over the weekend 183 The Augusta Heritage Center sponsored by Davis amp Elkins College in Elkins in Randolph County produces the annual Augusta Heritage Festival which includes intensive week long workshops in the summer that help preserve Appalachian heritage and traditions 184 Classical music Edit The West Virginia Symphony Orchestra was founded in 1939 as the Charleston Civic Orchestra before becoming the Charleston Symphony Orchestra in 1943 The first conductor was William R Wiant followed by the conductor Antonio Modarelli who was written about in the November 7 1949 Time Magazine for his composition of the River Saga a six section program piece about the Kanawha River according to the Charleston Gazette s November 6 1999 photo essay Snapshots of the 20th Century 185 Before coming to Charleston Modarelli had conducted the Wheeling Symphony Orchestra and the Philadelphia Orchestra according to the orchestra s website 186 The Pulitzer Prize winning 20th century composer George Crumb was born in Charleston and earned his bachelor s degree there before moving outside the state There had also been a series of operatic style concerts performed in Wheeling during mid century as well Musical innovation Edit The West Virginia Cultural Center in Charleston 187 is home to the West Virginia Department of Arts Culture and History 188 which helps underwrite and coordinate a large number of musical activities The center is also home to Mountain Stage an internationally broadcast live performance music radio program established in 1983 which is carried by many affiliates of National Public Radio 189 The program also travels to other venues in the state such as the West Virginia University Creative Arts Center in Morgantown 190 The center hosts concerts sponsored by the Friends of Old Time Music and Dance which brings an assortment of acoustic roots music to West Virginians 191 The center also hosts the West Virginia Dance Festival which features classical and modern dance 192 Huntington s historic Keith Albee Theatre built by brothers A B and S J Hyman was originally opened to the public on May 7 1928 and hosts a variety of performing arts and music attractions The theatre was eventually gifted to Marshall University and is currently going through renovation to restore it to its original splendor Every summer Elkins hosts the Augusta Heritage Festival which brings folk musicians from around the world 193 The town of Glenville has long been home to the annual West Virginia State Folk Festival 194 The Mountaineer Opera House in Milton hosts a variety of musical acts John Denver s hit song Take Me Home Country Roads describes the experience of driving through West Virginia The song mentions the Shenandoah River and the Blue Ridge Mountains both features traversing the easternmost extremity of the state s eastern panhandle in Jefferson County On March 8 2014 West Virginia Governor Earl Ray Tomblin signed House Concurrent Resolution 40 naming Take Me Home Country Roads the fourth official state song of West Virginia Symphony Sunday is an annual event hosted by the West Virginia Symphony Orchestra held in June It is a day full day of music by community groups food and family fun culminating in a free performance by the West Virginia Symphony Orchestra with a fireworks display following The event began in 1982 and is held on the front lawn of the University of Charleston The Daily Mail Kanawha County Majorette and Band Festival is West Virginia s longest running music festival It is for the eight public high schools in Kanawha County The festival began in 1947 It is held at the University of Charleston Stadium at Laidley Field in downtown Charleston See also Edit United States portalIndex of West Virginia related articles Outline of West Virginia West Virginia portalExplanatory notes Edit The Census Bureau and the Association of American Geographers classify West Virginia as part of the Southern United States while the Bureau of Labor Statistics classifies the state as a part of the Mid Atlantic region Mid Atlantic Home Mid Atlantic Information Office U S Bureau of Labor Statistics www bls gov Archived Persons of Hispanic or Latino origin are not distinguished between total and partial ancestry References Edit Spruce Knob Cairn 1956 NGS Data Sheet National Geodetic Survey National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration United States Department of Commerce Retrieved October 24 2011 a b Elevations and Distances in the United States United States Geological Survey 2001 Archived from the original on October 15 2011 Retrieved October 24 2011 a b Elevation adjusted to North American Vertical Datum of 1988 Bureau US Census April 26 2021 2020 Census Apportionment Results United States Census Bureau Retrieved August 13 2021 Median Annual Household Income The Henry J Kaiser Family Foundation Archived from the original on December 20 2016 Retrieved December 9 2016 West Virginia is the 32nd State to pass Official English Archived from the original on March 8 2016 Retrieved March 8 2016 Census Data PDF Census gov April 26 2021 Retrieved April 26 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Appalachian Region Counties in Appalachia Appalachian Regional Commission Archived from the original on September 17 2008 Retrieved November 13 2007 a b c Woodruff Betsy October 29 2014 Goodbye West Virginia Archived from the original on July 21 2017 via Slate But by 2000 tectonic changes in the state s politics were underway West Virginians tended to be economically liberal but socially conservative and as social issues like abortion came to the forefront in national politics the state started looking better for Republicans The leftward tilt of the national Democratic Party helped matters too Charles Henry Ambler A History of West Virginia pg 104 Charles H Ambler A History of West Virginia pp 132 138 Thier David April 18 2010 W Va Stalagmite Points to Surprising Carbon Footprint Science aolnews com Archived from the original on April 20 2010 a b Ellis Laura Elizabeth Investigating the Orchard Site A Protohistoric Fort AncientSite in West Virginia 2015 Extrapolation from the 16th century Spanish Cali ˈkali a rich agricultural area geographical sunny climate also 1536 Cauca River linking Cali was important for higher population agriculture and cattle raising amp Colombia s coffee is produced in the adjacent uplands Britannica Concise Encyclopedia Cali city metropolis urban center Pearson Education 2006 Calica Yucatan place name called rock pit a port an hour south of Cancun Sp root Cal limestone Also today Calicuas supporting cylinder or enclosing ring or moveable prop as in holding a strut Franquelin Jean Baptiste Louis Franquelin s map of Louisiana LOC gov Retrieved August 17 2017 Discoveries of John Lederer reprinted by O H Harpel Cincinnati 1879 Jennings Francis Glory Death amp Transfiguration The Susquehannock Indians in the 17th Century 1968 Lambreville to Bruyas Nov 4 1696 N Y Hist Col Vol III p 484 Lawson s History of Carolina reprinted by Stroller amp Marcom Raleigh 1860 p 384 Cherokee Lessons Introductory Edition The Shenandoah Valley of Virginia its Secret Native American History October 23 2016 Archived from the original on March 1 2019 Retrieved March 17 2018 Mooney 1894 7 8 Chisholm 1911 p 562 Chisholm 1911 pp 562 563 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Chisholm 1911 p 563 Richards Samuel J 2019 Reclaiming Congressman Philip Doddridge from Tidewater Cultural Imperialism West Virginia History A Journal of Regional Studies 13 2 1 26 doi 10 1353 wvh 2019 0019 ISSN 1940 5057 S2CID 211648744 Richards Samuel J Fall 2019 Reclaiming Congressman Philip Doddridge from Tidewater Cultural Imperialism West Virginia History A Journal of Regional Studies 13 2 7 doi 10 1353 wvh 2019 0019 S2CID 211648744 Ambler Charles H 1964 Sectionalism in Virginia from 1776 1861 New York Russell amp Russell Charles H Amber A History of West Virginia pp 276 79 Grady John July 16 2012 The Birth of a State New York Times Archived from the original on July 19 2012 Retrieved July 27 2012 Harpers Ferry and the Civil War Chronology National Park Service July 24 2019 Chapter Twelve Reorganized Government of Virginia Approves Separation Wvculture org Archived from the original on April 7 2010 Retrieved July 31 2010 A detailed list of delegate names and votes are located in Virgil Lewis How West Virginia Was Made pg 30 and also Charles Ambler s A History of West Virginia 1933 pg 309 Missing from both lists however are the delegates for McDowell County William P Cecil and Samuel L Graham who also represented Tazewell and Buchanan counties which are still part of Virginia Both Cecil and Graham voted in favor of the Ordinance See Pendleton William C History of Tazewell County and Southwest Virginia 1748 1920 Richmond 1920 pgs 600 and 603 Those not voting were Thomas Maslin of Hardy County and Benjamin Wilson of Harrison County Ambler Charles H A History of West Virginia pg 309 footnote 32 J McGregor The Disruption of Virginia pg 193 The United States Constitution provides that no state may be divided without its consent Richard O Curry A House Divided pg 147 C Ambler The History of West Virginia pg 318 Virgil Lewis How West Virginia Was Made pgs 79 80 Charles Ambler The History of West Virginia pg 318 West Virginia Statehood Wvculture org Archived from the original on March 7 2007 Retrieved July 31 2010 Richard 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Virginia LMI Darden Restaurants Form 10 K July 23 2021 Retrieved March 14 2022 Darden Restaurants Inc is a Florida corporation incorporated in March 1995 and is the parent company of GMRI Inc also a Florida corporation GMRI Inc and certain other of our subsidiaries own and operate our restaurants We were acquired by General Mills Inc in 1970 and became a separate publicly held company in 1995 State Exports via West Virginia Archived April 13 2014 at the Wayback Machine U S Census Bureau March 26 2014 Accessed April 12 2014 Economic Confidence Still Highest in D C in 2013 Confidence improved in most states West Virginia still least confident Archived March 9 2014 at the Wayback Machine Gallup February 10 2014 Accessed April 14 2014 America s Top States for Business 2013 Archived August 22 2017 at the Wayback Machine CNBC July 9 2013 Accessed April 14 2014 2014 State New Economy Index Archived August 19 2014 at the Wayback Machine Information Technology and Innovation Foundation June 11 2014 Accessed August 16 2014 Diners Urged to Tip More as West Virginia Water Ban Ends Archived January 21 2014 at the Wayback Machine Bloomberg News January 15 2014 Accessed April 12 2014 CBER Calculates Impact from Chemical Spill into Elk River Archived April 13 2014 at the Wayback Machine Marshall University Center for Business and Economic Research February 4 2014 Accessed April 12 2014 Widespread Economic Growth in 2012 Archived June 11 2014 at the Wayback Machine U S Bureau of Economic Analysis June 6 2013 Accessed April 12 2014 Governor Releases July Edge Business Report West Virginia Department of Commerce July 9 2013 Accessed April 12 2014 Regional and State Unemployment 2013 Annual Averages Archived March 8 2014 at the Wayback Machine U S Bureau of Labor February 28 2014 Accessed April 12 2014 West Virginia s February Unemployment Rate at 6 0 Percent Archived April 13 2014 at the Wayback Machine WorkForce West Virginia March 18 2014 Accessed April 12 2014 Labor Market Information by West Virginia County February 2014 Archived April 13 2014 at the Wayback Machine WorkForce West Virginia March 25 2014 Accessed April 12 2014 State Personal Income 2013 Archived April 13 2014 at the Wayback Machine U S Bureau of Economic Analysis March 25 2014 Accessed April 11 2014 Income Equality by State Archived September 6 2015 at the Wayback Machine Economic Policy Institute February 2014 Accessed April 11 2014 Small Area Income and Poverty Estimates US Census Bureau Archived from the original on June 20 2019 Retrieved June 16 2019 Inspired by West Virginia Strike Teachers in Oklahoma and Kentucky Plan Walk Out KTLA April 2 2018 Archived from the original on August 12 2019 Retrieved September 4 2019 United Van Lines annual migration study reveals Oregon as top moving destination of 2013 Archived April 13 2014 at the Wayback Machine United Van Lines January 2 2014 Accessed April 12 2014 West Virginia Economic Outlook 2014 Archived April 2 2014 at the Wayback Machine 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Results West Virginia United States Election Atlas Archived from the original on July 9 2018 Retrieved November 18 2016 Local Exit Polls Election Center 2008 Elections amp Politics from CNN com CNN Archived from the original on June 5 2010 SurveyUSA 50 State Abortion 0805 Sorted by Pro Life SurveyUSA com Archived from the original on February 21 2010 Retrieved July 31 2010 Religion in America U S Religious Data Demographics and Statistics Pew Research Center Pew Research Center s Religion amp Public Life Project Archived from the original on October 12 2018 Retrieved October 11 2018 Leip David Presidential General Election Results Comparison West Virginia US Election Atlas Retrieved January 3 2023 Public Policy Polling WV against gay marriage for Tea Party Steelers Reds Bucs September 15 2011 Archived July 23 2012 at the Wayback Machine accessed September 20 2011 Rasmussenreports com Rasmussenreports com Retrieved July 31 2010 Rasmussenreports com Rasmussenreports com Archived from the 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Retrieved July 31 2010 Augustaheritage com Augustaheritage com Archived from the original on August 14 2010 Retrieved July 31 2010 WVgazette com Archived from the original on April 10 2008 West Virginia Symphony Orchestra Archived from the original on November 6 2008 West Virginia Cultural Center Archived January 18 2006 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved January 19 2006 West Virginia Division of Culture and History Archived February 16 2008 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved January 19 2006 In 2001 Mountain Stage debuted a television show featuring many of the radio program s guests Mountain Stage Archived October 30 2009 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved January 20 2006 Greater Morgantown Convention amp Visitors Bureau Archived February 3 2006 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved January 20 2006 Ballman Stephen October 30 2002 Footmad Footmad Archived from the original on January 23 2011 Retrieved July 31 2010 West Virginia Dance Festival Archived January 3 2006 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved January 20 2006 Augustaheritage com Augustaheritage com July 4 2010 Archived from the original on July 22 2010 Retrieved July 31 2010 West Virginia State Folk Festival Etc4u com Archived from the original on January 25 2011 Retrieved July 31 2010 Further reading EditCharles H Ambler A History of Education in West Virginia From Early Colonial Times to 1949 1951 Charles H Ambler and Festus P Summers West Virginia the Mountain State 1958 Jane S Becker Inventing Tradition Appalachia and the Construction of an American Folk 1930 1940 1998 Richard A Brisbin et al West Virginia Politics and Government 1996 James Morton Callahan History of West Virginia 1923 3 vol John C Campbell The Southern Highlander and His Homeland 1921 reissued 1969 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 West Virginia Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 28 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 560 564 Richard Orr Curry A House Divided A Study of Statehood Politics and Copperhead Movement in West Virginia 1964 Donald Edward Davis Where There Are Mountains An Environmental History of the Southern Appalachians 2000 Ronald D Eller Miners Millhands and Mountaineers Industrialization of the Appalachian South 1880 1930 1982 Carl E Feather Mountain People in a Flat Land A Popular History of Appalachian Migration to Northeast Ohio 1940 1965 Athens Ohio University Press 1998 Thomas R Ford ed The Southern Appalachian Region A Survey Lexington University Press of Kentucky 1967 Horace Kephart Our Southern Highlanders Rev ed New York Macmillan 1922 Reprinted as Our Southern Highlanders A Narrative of Adventure in the Southern Appalachians and a Study of Life among the Mountaineers With an Introduction by George Ellison Knoxville University of Tennessee Press 1976 Gerald Milnes Play of a Fiddle Traditional Music Dance and Folklore in West Virginia Lexington University Press of Kentucky 1999 Otis K Rice The Allegheny Frontier West Virginia Beginnings 1730 1830 1970 Otis K Rice and Stephen W Brown West Virginia A History 2d ed Lexington University Press of Kentucky 1993 standard Curtis Seltzer Fire in the Hole Miners and Managers in the American Coal Industry Lexington University Press of Kentucky 1985 conflict in the coal industry to the 1980s John E Stealey III West Virginia s Civil War Era Constitution Loyal Revolution Confederate Counter Revolution and the Convention of 1872 Kent Ohio Kent State University Press 2013 Joe William Trotter Jr Coal Class and Color Blacks in Southern West Virginia 1915 32 1990 John Alexander Williams West Virginia A History for Beginners 2nd ed Charleston W Virginia Appalachian Editions 1997 John Alexander Williams West Virginia A Bicentennial History 1976 John Alexander Williams West Virginia and the Captains of Industry 1976 John Alexander Williams Appalachia A History 2002 Primary sources Edit Elizabeth Cometti and Festus P Summers The Thirty fifth State A Documentary History of West Virginia Morgantown West Virginia University Library 1966 External links EditWest Virginia at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Textbooks from Wikibooks Travel information from Wikivoyage Resources from Wikiversity State government Edit State of West Virginia government website West Virginia Department of Commerce Archived August 17 2020 at the Wayback Machine West Virginia State Guide from the Library of Congress West Virginia Legislature website Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia website Constitution of West Virginia West Virginia CodeU S government Edit Energy Profile for West Virginia Economic environmental and energy data Archived November 17 2010 at the Wayback Machine USGS real time geographic and other scientific resources of West Virginia West Virginia State Fact Sheet from the U S Department of AgricultureOther Edit Governor Earl Ray Tomblin s website West Virginia Division of Tourism Visiting West Virginia West Virginia Archives and History West Virginia Department of Education West Virginia Explorer West Virginia at Curlie West Virginia Encyclopedia Geographic data related to West Virginia at OpenStreetMap Preceded byKansas List of U S states by date of statehoodAdmitted on June 20 1863 35th Succeeded byNevada Coordinates 39 N 80 W 39 N 80 W 39 80 State of West Virginia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title West Virginia amp oldid 1131420603, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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