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Always in Season
Summersville History
Civil War History


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Written by former Mayor
Stanley Adkins
An Act of
Legislation, dated June 20, 1820, gave life to
Summersville, Virginia and also provided that the
County seat of Nicholas County, formed in 1818, be
moved from Hutchinson’s on Muddelty to a square tree
on Peters Creek Road, above Galoway improvement.
That tree, which had earlier been hewed with an ax,
turned out to be located in the center of the Quilt
Shoppe in present day Summersville.
The name of
Summersville was controversial as well. A Virginia
legislator by the name of Burton claimed the County
seat should be named for him because of his work
establishing the town but found the honor had
already been promised to Judge Lewis Summers who had
lobbied hard for the formation of Nicholas County in
1818, and had also introduced the bill into the
Virginia Assembly to form the new county. Even the
boundaries of the town were controversial. According
to historian W. G. Brown, “The boundaries of the new
county seat, and fixed by the new county court,
included an irregular area as it was laid off to
exclude certain citizens who were opposed to the
incorporation and only including the main business
places and the citizens sponsoring the measure.”
John Hamilton was
both a soldier and a well connected speculator and
he was instrumental in the formation of Nicholas
County. Unfortunately he passed away in September
1818, a short month after the county’s formation.
Many still consider John Hamilton to be the father
of Summersville.
From its early
formation, Summersville was a sleepy farming
community, and by 1860 was home to less than 100
residents. For Summersville, the Civil War changed
everything. During the winter of 1864-65, both Union
and Confederate armies were encamped in Summersville
or nearby. It was during that winter that the town
and all its buildings were burned to the ground.
Although the war ended soon after, the destruction
of the town was discouraging, and citizens were very
slow to return and rebuild.
By 1884,
Summersville was again home to over 100 citizens,
and slowly became the commerce center of the county.
Agriculture continued to be the major commerce of
the area until the late 1930s when large coal
operations began to spring up in various locations
near Summersville. Since that time the coal industry
has been the major employer in the area.
HISTORY OF SUMMERSVILLE DAM
Summersville Dam, located just off Rt. 19, in
Nicholas County, West Virginia, is the second
largest rock fill dam in the Eastern United States.
Since the dam’s dedication by Lyndon B. Johnson in
1966, millions of local residents and visitors have
enjoyed the largest lake in West Virginia as well as
the surrounding wildlife management lands. Visitors
continue to be awed by the clarity of the lake and
the surrounding majestic sandstone cliffs. Over
2,700 surface acres of water and 60 miles of
shoreline provide a large assortment of outdoor
activities.
Construction of the
dam began in February 1960, and work was completed
in May of 1966. Western Construction of Sioux City,
Iowa built the rock fill dam with clay center for
the Army Corps of Engineers at a cost of
$48,075,800. The Army Corps’ desire was to build a
dam that would: reduce flood damage, augment low
water flow, provide recreation, and enable fish and
wildlife management.
Traditionally, the dam is
usually named after the closest town. In this case,
however, the town of Gad was closest and
purposefully flooded for construction. Local
residents were averse to naming the dam “Gad Dam,”
and instead opted to name the dam after the town of
Summersville.
On September 3,
1966, President Lyndon B. Johnson presided over the
dedication of the dam.
The Corps of
Engineers estimated the prevention of flood damage
has saved over $407,400,000. Reservoir releases are
maintained by a minimum release of 100 cubic feet
per second and a maximum of 18,000 cubic feet per
second along with a flood pool. The dam has a base
thickness of 1,400 feet and a top elevation of 1,738
feet.
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