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City of Parsons

City of Parsons
341 Second Street
Parsons, West Virginia 26287
(304) 478-2311 (Phone)
(304) 478-2182 (Fax)
History of Parsons, West Virginia
Parsons, the county seat, is located on Shaver's
Fork of the Cheat River. It was incorporated in 1893 and named for Ward
Parsons, a pioneer who owned the land on which the town was built.
Tucker County lies in the north-eastern part of
the state and includes some of its most rugged and mountainous terrain.
It is drained almost entirely by the Cheat River.
The first permanent settlers in the area were
the Parsons brothers, Thomas and John, who came from the South Branch of
the Potomac and settled about 1772 at Holly Meadows on the Cheat River.
In 1774, John Minear, a German immigrant, founded a settlement where the
town of St. George now stands. Tucker County was formed in 1856 from the
northern portion of Randolph County, by an act of the Virginia General
Assembly. It was named for Henry St. George Tucker (1780-1848), an
eminent jurist and statesman of Virginia. In 1860, the county had a
population of 1,428.
Tucker County has always been primarily an
agricultural area, but the large reserves of coal, limestone, shale and
timber have encouraged industrial development. With the coming of the
railroads in the last years of the 19th Century, the county began an era
of rapid economic expansion. In 1889, the West Virginia Central and
Pittsburgh Railway Company completed a line from Elkins northward
through Parsons and Thomas to Piedmont in Mineral County, linking Tucker
County with the Baltimore and Ohio main line. This railway made possible
the development of the timber and coal resources, and by 1911 the coal
mines of the county were producing 2,213,947 tons -- an all-time high.
By 1910, the population of the area had grown to
18,675 and the county boasted two railroads, two paper mills, three
tanneries, fifteen large sawmills, ten logging railways, lime kilns,
stone crushers and almost a thousand coke ovens. The population declined
substantially after 1910.
Besides agricultural products, the county
produces leather, textiles and charcoal. The recreation and tourist
industries have become increasingly important. Canaan Valley National
Wildlife Refuge, Canaan Valley State Park, Blackwater Falls State Park
and a part of the Monongahela National Forest are located in Tucker
County.
Elevation: 1,649
Population : 1463 (2000 Census)
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