Settlement of Lumberport, West Virginia

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Looking through the spectacles of time reflects the changes in our lifestyle and culture through the years and how it has made us into the people that we are today. Every day we are stepping into a footstep that is bigger than our own, living lives that have been created and inspired by our ancestors that have come before us. Being raised in the rural, rolling hills of West Virginia provides a childhood that is unforgettable. Being able to see the four different seasons and how they always change so beautifully into each other is beautiful. The hills are sprinkled with timbered forest of many types of trees, accompanied by different types of wild flowers and wild life. Passing through all of the small towns and hollers, you can still see the small farms that have been passed down from generation to generation within the families. The first settlement in Lumberport, West Virginia, was in 1770 by Major Benjamin Robinson. He bought some land from the Indians but later got a large sum of land from the government as payment for his services in the Revolutionary War. In 1775, Captain Thomas Harbert, who served under Benjamin Robinson, came to the Lumberport area and built a blockhouse to serve as a place of refuge for settlers. When the Europeans first migrated to America, they didn’t know much about the ancestral background of the different types of the Indian tribes that were settled in Virginia and along the East Coast. Many of the Indian tribes became hostile towards the colonist because the colonists were interfering with their way of life. This lead the natives to attempt to destroy the frontier settlements. Many forts in this area were erected to protect the settlers and their families. One the historical land... ... middle of paper ... ...ther’s family came from England to Port Tobacco Maryland and later moved south to what is now Harrison County, West Virginia. Reflections of the past make me thankful that my ancestors took the risk and hardships to let me have a better life and the opportunities that I have today. Work Cited History of Lumberport and Surrounding Communities. Salem, W. Va.: ProComPrint, 1977. Print . Withers, Alexander Scott., Reuben Gold Thwaites, and Lyman Copeland Draper. Chronicles of Border Warfare: Or, a History of the Settlement by the Whites, of Northwestern Virginia, and of the Indian Wars and Massacres in That Section of the State, with Reflections, Anecodotes, &c. Parsons, WV: McClain Print., 1961. Print. Eller, Ronald D. Miners, Millhands, and Mountaineers: Industrialization of the Appalachian South, 1880-1930. Knoxville: University of Tennessee, 1982. Print.

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