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Coal Camps: Jewell Valley, Virginia

 

Deep within the once coal rich veins of Buchanan County, Virginia lies the remnants of a much more prosperous era. The southwestern county is bordered by two coal rich counties: Pike County, Kentucky to the north, and McDowell County, West Virginia to the northeast - also known as holding the billion dollar coalfield.

 

1 Jewell Valley, Virginia

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The regional topography is exceptionally rough and mountainous, coupled with narrow valleys and steep highwalls and narrow ridges.The population of the county grew slowly after it was formed from Russell and Tazewell counties on February 13, 1858, doubling every twenty years. At the turn of the century, the county still had that pioneer-edge and was isolated, with Grundy - the county seat, holding only 200 persons. The county itself grew to 9,692 by 1900 over 507 square miles.

 

The county was considered under-developed for much of the first three decades of the 20th century. While it was recognized that there were coal seams underneath the surface, only lumbering was considered the principal industry from the 1890s into the 1920s due to the lack of reliable transportation availability. The first railroad to connect to Buchanan County, a narrow-gauge - The Big Sandy and Cumberland Railroad, was put into operation in 1901. It connected Grundy with the Norfolk & Western Railroad (N&W) at Devon, West Virginia. The railroad traversed Knox Creek from West Virginia, traversed over a mountain, and then down Slate Creek at Matney to Grundy. The railroad was purchased by the N&W in 1923, and was rebuilt five years later and operated as the Buchanan Branch.

 

Much of the timber was managed by the William M. Ritter Lumber Company, a logging and timber operation founded as a sawmill in 1890 in Oakdale, West Virginia. Ritter soon expanded into McDowell and Mingo County, West Virginia, Pike County, Kentucky and Buchanan County, Virginia, along with counties in Tennessee, North Carolina and South Carolina. By the 1920s, Ritter began expanding into coal mining, purchasing several coal companies and coking operations. By the early 1950s, Ritter averaged an annual production of five million tons of coal. In 1957, the company stores were sold, and the coal mines leased to the Island Creek Coal Company. On October 1, 1960, the Ritter Lumber Company was sold to the Georgia-Pacific Corporation.

 

Island Creek became one of the bigger coal mining companies in the region, having constructed Keen Mountain, a model coal mining community whose mine closed in the 1980s. They were also the operator of the Whitewood Island Creek Loading Tipple No 1.

 

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The Jewell Smokeless Coal Co. Loading Tipple No. 1 at Whitewood in August 1956. It was later purchased by Island Creek Coal. Source: Negative #512982-B, Jewel Smokeless Coal Corp. #311 Whitewood, Va. Aug. 56, Norfolk & Western Historical Photograph Collection.

 

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The remains of the Island Creek Coal Virginian Pocahontas operation at Whitewood, Virginia. The MSHA ID expired in 2008.

 

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The former Norfolk & Western Dismal Creek Branch has been idled for years, although the tracks are still present and in serviceable condition. To the right, a N&W branch line curves south to Richlands.

 

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Further east, the tracks are still in serviceable condition but more track cleaning would need to be done.

 

Nearby was Jewell Valley, a model coal camp town built by George L. Carter, who was the founder and owner of the once mammoth Clinchfield Coal Company. Not much is known about Jewell Valley, except that the coal mines began closing in the 1960s as the seams were being exhausted. The town remained well into the 1970s, although not much is left today.

 

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One by one, the houses of Jewell Valley are falling victim to neglect and nature.

 

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Kudzu is a silent killer.

 

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Once sturdy, steady houses, that once provided secure quarters for hundreds of coal miners and their families, slowly decay into the abyss.

 

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Colorful houses lined the narrow valley. All but one are in a severe state of disrepair.

 

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Jewell Valley was remote. After the company store closed in the early 1970s, it became a laborious drive over narrow one-lane roads to the general store near Whitehead. Slowly, the community of Jewell Valley was reduced to one surviving residence, and the remainder were allowed to rot into the ground, serving as a reminder of the temporary nature of habitation. The community, which included a brick-and-mortar school, a community center and a company store, now boasts two living beings and the shells and ruins of everything else.

 

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I had little clue as to how remote this neck of Virginia was until I spent an hour photographing these houses - and not a car passed by.

 

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A kitchen, stripped down to its bare walls.

 

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Most of the underground coal seams in the region were exhausted by the 1970s, and the future of the region is now dependent on mountaintop removal-based mining and strip mining, both of which can considerably damage the environment.

 

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More recently, mining permits were being allowed for new coal mining operations in Jewell Valley.

 

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Read more about Jewell Valley, Virginia and view more photographs after the jump --

http://www.abandonedonline.net/neighborhoods/jewell-valley-virginia/

Great stuff.

"You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers

Very cool.

 

Jesus Sherman, you didn't walk on that floor in pic 11, did you?

 

I didn't know that the kudzu plague had traveled that far northwest.

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