Wednesday, May 27, 2015

Jenny Holmes and Mike Spears





Jenny Holmes and Mike Spears merged their artistic talents. Spears, a high school art teacher is a life long artist known for his murals, sculptures, and illustrations.

Holmes has a background in graphic design and is known for her hand painted wine glasses.

Martin Brescoach



Martin Brescoach, also know as the sign guy, didn’t have art training when he was young. He studied auto mechanics in high school and also would race Go Carts with his dad. He took an art class in high school and decided he had a knack for it. He liked to draw cartoon characters from magazines like, “Cracked and Mad”. In 1982, through his connections with racing, he acquired a job with a local sign company and that was the start of his career in the sign business.

Martin started off training in hand lettering for the first ten years, when computers came out; the need for hand lettering became a lost art. Martin worked for this sign company on and off for 12 years. In 1994, he decided to open his own business.

In 2015, Martin was approached by Phil Stanley with Cabell Huntington Hospital, who asked him to be a part of the Tri-State Artisans Express project. As first, he was reluctant to accept this job, because he is a sign guy not an artist (artist starve, he said, hence the starving artist). Martin then agreed. Phil had an idea for the train. Back in 1970, Marshall Football team was on their way home from a game when the plane went down.

In memory of this event, Phil came to Martin with this idea. Phil brought him a rendering of his design and he gave Martin free reign of the train.

Martin’s wanted his train to have a heavy metal look about it and went with a steam punk theme. He incorporated a lot of polished metal (brass, bronze, copper, gold, and, aluminum) and named it the “Rolling Thunder”. He craved a bison’s head for the front of his train, like a battering ram. He spent many hours sanding on the train so he could get a smooth finish because he used an automotive paint to give a metallic shine.

Martin has sense received complements for his train, but his favorite compliment was from a man that was in school at Marshall when the plane crashed and he told Martin that the train was, “A very fitting memorial”. Martin is grateful to be part of the Tri- State Artisan Express project and he hopes that Cabell Children’s Hoops Hospital benefits from his contribution.

Tuesday, May 26, 2015

Brianna Jarvis




Brianna Jarvis is a young, award winning graphic designer from Princeton, West Virginia. Having graduated high school with her Mercer County Technical Education Center Completer's Certificate she continued to Huntington, West Virginia to pursue her love for Fine Arts with an emphasis in graphic design, where she is currently in residence and attending classes.

Gerry Enrico




Bio-2013

Gerry Enrico honed his artistic talents from his elementary and high school years in the Philippines, where he was born.  He earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts Degree from the University of Northern Philippines in 1987. In his native country, he has won numerous awards in prestigious National Art Contests.
 Moving to Palm Springs, CA. in 1990, he became well known for his artworks.  He has won every major Art Competition in Palm Springs and is a member of the Artist Council of the Palm Springs Desert Museum.  His work has been recognized by the Portrait Society of America, of which he is a member.
Today his work flourishes throughout the Ohio River Valley.  He has earned numerous awards for his works ranging from People’s Choice, to Best of Show, both in the national and the tri-state-area.
Gerry offers classes in the following locations:  Huntington Museum of Art in Huntington, WV. Jackson, OH., Ripley, WV., Charleston, WV., and at the Gallery At 409 in Point Pleasant, WV., where he is an In-House Artist.

His hard work, multi-faceted talent, and passion for his craft, are self-evident in every work he creates. He is appreciated by people all over the world for his outstanding and exceptional portraits. 

Cari Burck





The Orphan Train

This project means a lot to me, my family, and our friends.  My husband and I love children and always talked about having a big family.  We never knew exactly how that would play out in our lives until a few years ago – right after our second child was born.

Most people don’t know it but there really is an orphan crisis in the world today.  Depending on whose stats you read, there are as many as 18 million children in the world who have lost both their parents and are growing up in orphanages.  International adoptions were a huge thing for the last 25 years.  The problem with that is that most countries are starting to shut down International adoptions because of the criminal elements that work there way into the process.  So countries like Romania, Bulgaria, and Guatemala (all of which continue to have orphan issues) no longer allow Americans to adopt their orphaned children.  Those children go into poorly run and funded orphanages.  Most of which – if you could see would make you turn your head in disgust.

We are not immune to the orphan challenge in the United States, 397,122 children in our country do not have permanent families.  They grow up in the foster system.  Sometimes that’s a wonderful experience for children.  Sometimes it isn’t.  About 25 percent of these children are eligible for adoption.

How we got involved with orphans is all a blur to me now because our son was so little but one of my husband’s clients was involved in International Adoptions in Guatemala and when the Guatemalan government shut that process down the adoption agencies just left.  There was an orphanage that one of his clients decided to just take over and run.  It had 40 children in it that would have just been shipped out to the kinds of institutions you see on television where there is like one care taker for 50 children.  She called us and said, “I need you to do this with me.”  We agreed.  Within months we had the right 501c3 documentation that we got from someone we knew who was going to close down their nonprofit.  That was a miracle because that process can take a long time.  We raised a lot of money in those early days too.

I remember my first trip down there.  I went to take pictures for the new website we built but spent most of my time getting up close to little ones, looking in their eyes, and smiling.  There was a little guy that was about 8 months old.  His name was Lester.  Lester didn’t smile.  The Special Mothers (that’s what we call our care takers) told me that he never smiled no matter what.  I made it my mission while I was down there that first time to get that boy to smile.

I just loved on him and gave him attention and acted silly.  I remember the Special Mothers watching me.  I know they thought I was a little crazy.  Little by little Lester began to crack.  Before I left, I snapped the first picture of him smiling.

Today I’m on the Board of Directors of the organization we started.  It is called Forever Changed International.  Our goal for our children is to always have one special mother for four children.  We want our children always surrounded by love, to know they are loved, and to know that God loves them.  That’s starting to pay off too.  Our children in Guatemala are growing up and thriving.  They have self-esteem and confidence like you wouldn’t imagine.

I see the smiling pictures every month of Lester at school and playing with the other children.  His special mom tells me that he has come so far since he was a little guy.

I always thought I would be the mother and have a lot of children in my home.  I had no idea God put that desire in my heart so that we could help start and run an orphanage in Guatemala.  A lot of our families time, energy, and resources go to helping run Dorie’s Promise.  I help make the decisions about private schools, remodeling bedrooms, hiring chefs who understand nutrition and coordinating care with our physician.

In many ways, I feel like the mother of the 40 children we care for.  I don’t get to hug on them and love on them face-to-face like I want but I know they are getting everything they need to grow, thrive, and have the chance to be exactly who God created them to be in this world.  My dream is that some of these children will grow up and solve the Orphan problem in Guatemala.

My friend Michelle DeMonnin who owns DeMonnin Art Studio in Washington, helped take my idea for this train and bring it to life.  She did the poster and designed the decals for the train.  She is the co-artists for this project and I want to make sure she gets credit for that.  She’s an adoptive mother of the most beautiful little girl from India name Chloe.  To say there is not a little bit of Chloe in this project just wouldn’t be true.

A lot of people came along side us and helped.  My Father-in-Law Don Burck and my friend Frank Schuler spent time trying to figure out what we could do with the base.  One of my favorite ideas from them was covering it with rocks.

My friend Mike Emerson at Huntington Steel figured out how to make the springs on the top of the train come to life.  He also consulted on different ideas for the base.  Without him, I think I would still be trying to apply coats of fiberglass to the base.  Mike finally said, just wrap the original wood base in metal and paint it.  Credit also needs to be given to the guys at Paris Signs for their work.  Tony Wheeler there is a friend and really helped take Mike’s concept for the springs to the next level. Paris also did the decals of the children and made the metal base for us.  The painting on the base is for good or bad is all mine and is based on Michelle’s concept.

When people see my train, I want them to feel love for children.

I want them to be reminded that there are children everywhere who need them – especially in our region.  There are so many ways to help.  Adoption is the ultimate way to help but not everybody can do that.  Foster Care is another way to really change lives.  There are local kids that need you!  I know adoption and foster care overwhelm people.  That’s okay.  Not everybody can do that but everybody can do a monthly sponsorship or give a gift to an organization that cares for orphans.

That’s my message with this train – look around you and jump on the opportunities to change life for children who don’t have parents.

Tuesday, May 12, 2015

Rodney and Ashley Elliot







Patrick Wagner



Patrick, a 16 year old high school student at the time of the project beginning, had heard about the Artisan's Express project through his mother who works at CHH. He chose a design that reflects his love for baseball as he played the sport since he was 8 years old as a left fielder. His favorite team is the Cincinnati Reds. The title of his piece is "Long Ball Express". He is also an accomplished track and tennis player.

As a middle school student, he was selected by a teacher to be a part of a leadership team of students to make changes to help the fight against drug and alcohol usage with the partnership of Cabell County Substance and Abuse Prevention. This leadership continues in high school.

His art accomplishments include winning a contest as a 7th grader for "Stomp Out Drugs" with the CCSAPP.


Diane K Smallwood Arthur



Diane's work has been displayed at the capital in Frankfort, KY. At Kentucky the Market in Lexington, KY. She has had several one woman shows and several two person shows at the Highland Museum and the Ashland area art gallery. Awards and honors include from the Carter Caves Art Show, Best of Shows from Grayson Memory Days, Merit Awards and first and second place awards from local art shows including the Greenbo Ar Show, Carter Caves, Ashland's Art in the Park, the Grayson Art Gallery, and other venues.

Her work can be found in many private and public collections throughout the USA and abroad.

Diane has taught art classes for:
 adult education for ACC in Ashland, KY.
Private art lessons in acrylic, watercolors, and pastels
Workshops in batik and pastels
She also teaches Upward Bound High School students Batik, drawing, mixed media, and acrylics.

She is mostly self taught and has taken workshops with internationally known artists in watercolors and oils.

Her experience as a registered nurse has increased her awareness of the human resolve, the ability of the body to be repaired and a love for others. Her design for Artisan's Express, "Believe", was inspired by her desire to do something to help raise funds for the Hoops Family and Children's Hospital in hopes of inspiring those that feel that their situation is hopeless. As one looks at the images one becomes aware of the animals that have obvious differences from the norm and one or two that appear lethargic yet they improvise to enjoy life. The cause ribbons are used to allude to childhood issues such as cancer, aids, autism, and abuse.







https://www.facebook.com/cricklewoodartstudio

Bob Garrett





By Barry Tourigny

I was greeted at the front gate by a hand painted Frosty the Snowman attached to his front gate. Robert and his friend Brenda told me he had made about fifty of them over the years for friends. It would prove to be a peak into Robert’s world.
As I entered the backyard it was quickly apparent this man had some serious woodworking skills. He and Brenda shared storied of various projects he had created over the years, there were a lot of projects! You couldn’t help but hear how proud Brenda was of Robert’s accomplishments.

Down a set of stairs and we entered his wood shop…a man’s man cave, his domain. His partially completed engine sat front and center of the shop floor. Robert’s career and hobbies lined the walls of the structure. On a second floor loft floor were a number of barrels with names like Honey Nut and White House ale, home brew craft beer in various stages of the fermentation process. He would promise me a taste later, but I digress.

What caught my eye was hand painted ad signs in miniature size something that you would take to sell the project to a perspective client, they were everywhere. Much of his career has been spent hand painting signs for the advertising industry, billboards that seemed to defy the elements and remained in place for years. You could see the skill set applied to the half-done entry in the Express.
Robert began sharing with me how he had to remove the door and frame to even get the pedestal into the man cave. Since then his entry has been highly modified including a custom cow catcher he has hand crafted and bolted to the front, this would now mean he would have to remove part of the wall the door is housed in to get out.

He had also customized the pedestal the train engine rests on including a set of steel like rails the train seemingly glides along as it crosses over a wooden railroad trestle. The miniature railroad ties had come from a camping trip where they were being burned as firewood. Robert said “Whoa, way to nice for that” and scooped them up. Robert’s sense of humor shows through his design, I could see the beginnings of an outline he would tell me he had planned a free hand painted Bigfoot peeking out og the wooden trestle structure. The engine was further customized to include sound and lights, an engineering challenge since there would be no power available to the artists at their locations downtown.
Like other artists Robert read about the Artisan’s Express in the Herald Dispatch Sunday paper and was immediately interested in the project. His boyhood love of trains, woodworking skills and free hand painting skills would all come into play with this sure to be crowd pleasing entry.

Nancy Muth



Nancy is a professional illustrator originally from Huntington. Working from home, she illustrates for Hit Record and is preparing to release a line of printed fabrics from Spoonflower. She shared her vision and inspiration for the Dream Big entry. The balloons represented Cabell Huntington Hospital and their care for their patients. The different elements on the balloons represent the phases of a patients treatment. Some days are bright and cheerful and some days are darker. The fish represent the patients.

When we met with her, she had spent about 50 hours on the base and another 50 on the train engine itself. She expects the stippling, the use of small dots to create shading, will take another 100 hours.

Monday, May 11, 2015

Railroad History #19

Today, CSX, after taking on 43% of Conrail, is one of four major railroad systems left in the country. It is still an innovative leader, true to its roots in Robert Young and "For Progress," the Van Sweringens and their quest for efficiency and standardization, to George Stevens and his dedication to operating efficiency and safety awareness, back to Collis Huntington and his dreams of a transportation empire, and even back to those long forgotten Virginians who started it all to carry their farm produce to market in the 1830's in a different world, the world before the Railroad.

http://www.cohs.org/history/

Railroad History #18

Under Watkins' careful and visionary leadership Chessie System then merged with Seaboard System, itself a combination of great railroads of the Southeast including Seaboard Air Line Railway, Atlantic Coast Line, Louisville & Nashville, Clinchfield, and others, to form a new mega-railroad: CSX.

http://www.cohs.org/history/

Railroad History #17

C&O continued to be one of the most profitable and financially sound railways in America, and in 1963 started the modern merger era by "affiliating" with the ancient modern of railroads, the hoary Baltimore & Ohio. Avoiding a mistake that would become endemic to later mergers among other lines, a gradual amalgamation of the two lines' services, personnel, motive power and rolling stock, and facilities built a new and stronger system, which was ready for a new name in 1972. Under the leadership of the visionary Hays T. Watkins, the C&O, B&O and Western Maryland became Chessie System, taking on the name officially that had been used colloquially for so long for the C&O, after the mascot kitten used in ads since 1934.

http://www.cohs.org/history/

Railroad History #16

From 1900 to 1920 most of the C&O's line tapping the rich bituminous coal fields of southern West Virginia and eastern Kentucky were built, and the C&O as it was known throughout the rest of the 20th Century was essentially in place.

http://www.cohs.org/history/

Railroad History #15

In 1888 the C&O built the Cincinnati Division from Huntington down the South bank of the Ohio River and across the river at Cincinnati, connecting with the "Big Four" and other Midwestern Railroads.

http://www.cohs.org/history/

Railroad History #14

In 1889 the Richmond & Alleghany Railroad, which had been built along the tow-path of the defunct James River & Kanawha Canal, was merged into the C&O, giving it a down grade "water level" line from Clifton Forge to Richmond, avoiding the heavy grades of North Mountain and the Blue Ridge on the original Virginia Central route. This "James River Line" remains the principal artery of coal transportation to the present day.

Ingalls and Stevens completely rebuilt the C&O to "modern" standards with ballasted roadbed, enlarged and lined tunnels, steel bridges, and heavier steel rails, as well as new, larger cars and locomotives.

http://www.cohs.org/history/

Railroad History #13

In 1888 Huntington lost control of the C&O. A reorganization without foreclosure resulted in his losing his majority interest to the Morgan and Vanderbilt interests, which installed Melville E. Ingalls as President. Ingalls was, at the time, President of the Vanderbilt's Chicago, Cleveland, Cincinnati & Louisville, The "Big Four System", and held both presidencies concurrently for the next decade. Ingalls installed George W. Stevens as general manager and effective head of the C&O.

http://www.cohs.org/history/

Railroad History #12

During the ten years 1878-1888 C&O's coal resources began to be developed and shipped eastward. In 1881 the Peninsula Subdivision was completed from Richmond to the new city of Newport News located on Hampton Roads, the East's largest ice-free port. Transportation of coal to Newport News where it was loaded on coast wise shipping and transported to the Northeast became a staple of the C&O's business at this time.

http://www.cohs.org/history/

Railroad History #11

Collis Huntington intended to connect the C&O with his Western and Mid-Western holdings, but had much other railroad construction to finance and he stopped the line at the Ohio River. Over the next few years he did little to improve its rough construction or develop traffic. The only connection to the West was by packet boats operating on the Ohio River. Because the great mineral resources of the region hadn't been fully realized yet, the C&O suffered through the bad times brought on by the financial panic Depression of 1873, and went into receivership in 1878. When reorganized it was renamed The Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Company.

http://www.cohs.org/history/

Railroad History #10

During 1869-1873 the hard work of building through West Virginia was done with large crews working from the new city of Huntington on the Ohio River and White Sulphur much as the Union Pacific and Collis P. Huntington had done in the transcontinental work.

http://www.cohs.org/history/

Railroad History #9

On July 1, 1867 the C&O was completed nine miles from Jackson's River Station to the town of Covington, seat of Alleghany County, Virginia. By 1869, it had crossed Alleghany Mountain, using much of the tunneling and roadway work done by the Covington & Ohio before the war, and was running to the great mineral springs resort at White Sulphur Springs, now in Greenbrier County, West Virginia. Here stagecoach connections were made for Charleston and the navigation on the Kanawha River and thus water transportation on the whole Ohio/Mississippi system.

http://www.cohs.org/history/

Railroad History #8



Huntington supplied the Virginians with the money needed to complete the line to the Ohio River, through what was now the new state of West Virginia. The old Covington & Ohio's properties were conveyed to the Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad in keeping with its new mission of linking the Tidewater coast of Virginia with the "Western Waters" of the Ohio River. This was the old dream of the "Great Connection" which had been current in Virginia since Colonial times.

http://www.cohs.org/history/

Railroad History #7

Allegheny

Following the war, Virginia Central officials realized that they would have to get capital to rebuild from outside the economically devastated South and attempted to attract British interests, without success. Finally, they succeeded in getting Collis P. Huntington of New York interested in the line. He is, of course, the same Huntington that was one of the "big Four" involved in building the Central Pacific portion of the Transcontinental Railroad, which was at this time just reaching completion. Huntington had a vision of a true transcontinental that would go from sea to sea under one operating management, and decided that the Virginia Central might be the eastern link to this system.

http://www.cohs.org/history/

Railroad History #6

Construction challenges were daunting to say the least. The
Chesapeake & Ohio (C&O) line, which connected Richmond, Virginia and Huntington, West Virginia, faced enormous barriers. Tunnels were blasted and drilled through the mountains, giving birth not only to a rail line, but to legends as well. One such legend concerns the Great Bend Tunnel at Talcott and John Henry, the “Steel Drivin’ Man” made popular by ballads. A statue near the site of the epic contest, man versus machine, commemorates the story of John Henry’s competition with a steam drill.

http://www.wvcommerce.org/app_media/assets/publications/travelrec/railheritage.pdf

Railroad History #5

Many of West Virginia’s most renowned and colorful
historical figures are associated with the rail industry. Collis P.
Huntington, H. H. Rogers, Henry Gassaway Davis and Stephen
Benton Elkins all built and expanded the railroad system and
brought prosperity and development to the state.

http://www.wvcommerce.org/app_media/assets/publications/travelrec/railheritage.pdf

Railroad History #4

The completion of the line in 1873 opened the southern half of West Virginia, most notably the Kanawha River Valley, to industrialization. The railroad also made possible the intensive mining operations that fueled the state's economy for over 80 years and continues to do so today.

www.wamonline.com/summer2003/railroad.htm

Railroad History #3

Several of the major battles, skirmishes and troop movements during the Civil War in what is now West Virginia were due to the struggle to control the region's railroads. For the most part, however, major damage was averted. The period after the war can truly be called West Virginia's railroad era.

http://www.wamonline.com/summer2003/railroad.htm

Railroad History #2

One of the first trunk lines built in West Virginia after the Civil War, the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway was begun in 1868 and the rails were connected to Hawks Nest on January 29th, 1873. Following the pathways of Native Americans and stagecoach routes, the C & O line entered the state east of White Sulpher Springs in Greenbrier County and traveled through the canton of the New River, followed the Kanawha River for several miles and cut across the Ohio River.

Collis P. Huntington was responsible for extending the line on to Louisville, New Orleans, and points west, thus further opening the trade to the South, the West, and broadening the city of Huntington's prominence.

www.wamonline.com/summer2003/railroad.htm

Railroad History #1

The B & O is the oldest railroad in the US, and more than 210 of its 379 miles lie in West Virginia. Constructed by Baltimore and the state of Maryland as a link to the agricultural Midwest, to commerce offered by the Ohio River and to increase the city's competitive edge, the Baltimore and Ohio was completed to Wheeling on Christmas Eve 1852.

Sunday, May 10, 2015

Railroad #40


City of Huntington.com. The official website of Huntington, WV


http://www.cityofhuntington.com/

Joe Murphy


Mayor Williams enjoying Joe's Train Engine Video Installation
on May 9th, 2015 "Artisan's Express Day"

Joe Murphy of Trifecta Productions has gone from Hollywood to Bollywood and now, back home to "Hollerwood." Murphy is president of Trifecta Productions, a company he co-founded with Jack Reynolds in 2007.

"From an early age I fell in love with the creative process. I began writing at a very early age. I got my first hand-me-down camera at 7. I didn't put it down until my brother gave me my first guitar at 11."

Once he graduated from Huntington East High School he spent time trying out an assortment of careers — corporate sales trainer and marketing director for a fishing lure company.

In Manhattan, Murphy worked with Night Train Films on projects such as The Amazing Race, The Biggest Loser and American Justice. He also worked with clients such as Sony, Pfizer and Fannie Mae.

Closer to home, Murphy got a job working on "We Are Marshall," where he learned that Huntington was as good a place as any to start a production company.

Murphy said he is inspired by the "ingenuity and spirit of the Appalachian man and woman."

"I've traveled the world and lived in many places only to find that everything I wanted or needed was always right here in West Virginia," Murphy said. "I have learned from mentors like A. Michael Perry that our ancestors were some of the most ingenious men and women in American history. He showed me that West Virginians are gifted with much more than strong backs. Our spirit, pride and creativity may be one of the United States' best-kept secrets."

Trifecta produced the documentary that accompanied the "Hatfields and McCoys" miniseries on the History Channel. The documentary premiered to more than two million viewers.

Murphy was recently honored by The US Department of Justice, The WV Division of Tourism, and The City of Huntington for his Creative Excellence. He is also the Vocalist/Guitarist for the West Virginian Band Mystic Mountain Blueberry.

https://vimeo.com/127370500

Railroad #39

Local Author David Lavender:



The Great Persuader: The Biography of Collis P. Huntington Paperback – January 15, 1999
by David Lavender  (Author)

The Great Persuader is the biography of a robber baron, the greatest railroad mogul of them all-Collis P. Huntington, the Sacramento, California, storekeeper who, along with Leland Stanford and Mark Hopkins, parlayed $1,500 into America's first continental railroad. It is an almost unbelievable story of a high dream of fortune realized through highhanded practices-an adventure which left the national treasury poorer by millions of swindled dollars, and America itself richer by a national railroad system which contributed greatly to the country's westward expansion.

How did Huntington operate? What were his methods? Was he corrupt? These are questions that were previously unanswered but thanks to the cooperation of the Huntington family who supplied Mr. Lavender with material that had never before been made public, Lavender shows just how Collis P. Huntington operated-and it was defintely outside the law, although well inside the prevailing morality of his time. It shows his complicated dealings with Sanford Hopkins, how he bested such tycoons as Thomas A. Scott, John C. Durrant, Oliver Ames and Jay Gould, how Huntington accumulated the great fortune which was the legacy to his family, and how his great railroad network was to prove an unparalleled legacy to all Americans. The Great Persuader is a powerful story of a remarkable man whose singleness of purpose and ruthless manipulation of men and money propelled the great enterprise forward against all odds.

http://www.amazon.com/The-Great-Persuader-Biography-Huntington/dp/0870814761

Railroad #38

Local Author James E. Casto



The Chesapeake and Ohio Railway (VA) (Images of Rail) Paperback – October 9, 2006
by James E. Casto  (Author)

In the late 1860s, the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway (C&O) pushed its first tracks westward from Virginia's Tidewater region across the mountains into what was then the new state of West Virginia. Ultimately its tracks stretched across a half-dozen states and even into Canada. Appalachian coal was the C&O's primary cargo, but its fast freights carried shipments of all kinds, and its crack passenger trains were marvels of their day. In 1963, the C&O merged with the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad in the first of what would become a wave of railroad mergers. Today the old C&O is part of giant CSX Transportation. Images of Rail: The Chesapeake and Ohio Railway gathers 200 photographs that chronicle the C&O story. Here is a fond look back at its mammoth steam locomotives and the diesels that replaced them, its bustling passenger stations, and much more, including the legendary John Henry, who beat that steam drill, and Chessie, the sleeping kitten that was the C&O's much-loved trademark.

http://www.amazon.com/Chesapeake-Ohio-Railway-Images-Rail/dp/0738543349

Railroad History #37

Collis Potter Huntington

The following is a list of books and articles about Collis P. Huntington which can be found at the West Virginia State Archives Library:

BOOKS
Ames, Charles Edgar. Pioneering the Union Pacific; A Reappraisal of the Builders of the Railroad. New York, Appleton-Century-Crofts, 1969.
338.47 Am3.

Cabell County Heritage, 1809-1996. Huntington, West Virginia, KYOWVA Genealogical Society, 1996.
975.442 C114

Evans, Cerinda W. Collis P. Huntington. Newport News, Virginia, The Mariners Museum, 1954.
B H92e

Lavendar, David Sievert. The Great Persuader. Garden City, New York, Doubleday, 1970.
385 L38.

Miles, George E. Collis P. Huntington. s. l., n. p., n. d.

Miller, Doris C. A Centennial History of Huntington, West Virginia, 1871-1971. Huntington, West Virginia, Huntington Centennial Commission, 1971.
975.442 M647.

Rouse, Parke. Belle Huntington, Her Men and Her Muse. Richmond, Virginia, Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, 1980.
975.505 V81 V.88.

Wallace, George Selden. Cabell County Annals and Families. Richmond, Virginia, Garrett and Massie Publishers, 1935.
975.442 W189.

___________________. Huntington Through Seventy-Five Years. Huntington, West Virginia, George S. Wallace, 1947.
975.442 W189h.

VERTICAL NEWSPAPER CLIPPING FILE
"Ambrose Bierce and Collis P. Huntington," Huntington Advertiser, 10-20-1977.
"City and Railway Pay Tribute to C. P. Huntington," Chesapeake and Ohio and Hocking Valley Employees' Magazine, 12-1924.
"Collis Potter Huntington," Weekly Market Bulletin, WV Department of Agriculture, 11-3-1924.
The Henry Edwards Huntington Home," St. Albans Advertiser, 2-8-1973.
"There Was A Mr. Huntington," WV Hillbilly, 2-27-1965.

Notable Individuals in West Virginia History

West Virginia Division of Culture and History
Copyright 2015. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Notice

http://www.wvculture.org/history/notewv/huntington.html

Railroad History #36

The Legend of C.P. Huntington and the Mayor of Guyandotte



Circa 1911

From the Cabell County History Page:

http://www.cabellcounty.org/History/history.htm

Legend has it that when Collis Huntington visited the county to decide where to place his railroad that he was initially interested in using Guyandotte as the railroad's end-point. However, when he arrived there, he tied his horse to the hitching post in front of the local hotel and it somehow reversed its position and ended up on the sidewalk. The town's mayor, seeing the horse, entered the hotel and demanded to know who the owner of the horse was. After identifying himself as the horse's owner, Mr. Huntington was fined by the mayor. Not liking his reception, Mr. Huntington announced the next day that he would not locate the railroad in Guyandotte but would, instead, build a new town (later called Huntington) just west of Guyandotte and make it the western terminus for his railroad. Ironically, Guyandotte was later merged into Huntington.


Railroad #35




Boarding Location for the New River Train Only!

BOARDING LOCATION FOR HUNTINGTON, WV

The New River Train Excursions boarding location is at the old C&O railroad station on 7th Avenue & 9th Street in Huntington, WV. The address of the station is 935 7th Ave, Huntington, WV 25701. There is NO parking at the station. The station does not belong to our organization and we are not permitted to park at the station. There is street parking available for free on the weekends and there is one parking lot, free of charge 1 block away from the station.
Please be advised that when boarding the train, your whole party must be together in order to sit together. Also, the platform has some uneven places in it, so please watch you step. Coach passengers will board to the left hand (east end) side of the platform, while premium & dome passenger will board on the right hand (west side) end of the platform.
There will be walking involved while boarding the train. Since there is no parking at the station, you are required to park on the street or one block away at a free parking lot. This will require you to walk form your car to the station platform. On the platform there will be signs, and volunteers guiding you to where you need to to go to board the train. Please read the signs carefully. There is NO handicap parking available at the station!
**This trip will not be handicap accessible. Historic and antiquated rail passenger equipment, like that used on this excursion, is exempt from ADA regulations under U.S. Code: Title 42: Section 12184. The passenger cars and station facilities used on this excursion were constructed before disability accessibility laws were adopted. Platforms, boarding areas, stairs, step-stools, seating, and especially doorways, passageways, aisles, and on board restrooms may not accommodate all passengers. We will make all reasonable efforts to accommodate differently abled passengers who desire to ride this train.
Due to the length of our passenger train, we board from several locations. The coach location will be on the left side of the platform and will board from one location. You will then walk through other railroad cars to get to sit down at a seat. Please follow the volunteers instructions. If you have any difficulty walking, please let us know and we will try to accommodate you accordingly. The premium and dome boarding location will be on the west end, right side of the platform. Premium will board form one location, and passengers will be required to walk through other cars to get to their assigned car. If you have difficulty walking, you must contact us when you make your reservations and tell us, so we can accommodate you accordingly. If you do not let us know, we cannot accommodate you and you may be required to walk a longer distance than necessary. Dome service will require passengers to climb up 10 stairs to get into the dome car. Stairways and passageways on antiquated railroad equipment, cannot accommodate walkers or wheelchairs. Please advise us of any walking disabilities so we can accommodate you properly and so everyone has an enjoyable experience.

http://www.newrivertrain.com/boarding.shtml

station

The old C&O railroad depot is a very beautiful building. Here it is seen during the winter after the New River Train Excursions.
© Chris Lockwood 2010

Railroad History #34

CSX History and Evolution:

A leader in freight rail transportation for more than 180 years, CSX’s roots date back to the early nineteenth century when the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company (B&O) – the nation’s first common carrier – was chartered in 1827. Since that time, CSX has built on the foundation laid by early pioneers who had a vision to create a railroad that could safely and reliably serve the ever-increasing demands of a growing nation.
Since its founding, numerous railroads have combined through merger and consolidation to create what has become CSX. Each was a welcome addition to the CSX family, bringing unique and valuable geographical reach to new markets, gateways, cities, ports and transportation corridors. We're proud to share with you some of the many logos of our heritage railroads.

http://www.csx.com/index.cfm/about-csx/our-evolution-and-history/

Railroad History #33

Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Depot (Huntington,West Virginia)  Heritage Station Huntington WV.jpg

Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Depot is a historic railroad depot located at Huntington, Cabell County, West Virginia. It was built in 1887, by the Huntington and Big Sandy Railroad, later the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. The former passenger station is two stories and constructed of brick with a slate roof and two chimneys. The former baggage section to the east is one story. The front facade of the former passenger station features a bay window extending from the basement to the roof and dividing it into two sections. At the rear of the passenger station is the former freight house. The freight house is a brick building with a slate roof completed in 1890, and expanded in 1897, 1911, and 1916.[2] The buildings have been renovated and are open as Heritage Station.

It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973.[1]

References:
 a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. 2010-07-09.
Edward R. Bleau (October 1972). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form: Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Depot" (PDF). State of West Virginia, West Virginia Division of Culture and History, Historic Preservation. Archived (PDF) from the original on 29 June 2011. Retrieved 2011-07-23.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baltimore_and_Ohio_Railroad_Depot_%28Huntington,_West_Virginia%29

Railroad History #32

Go to the this website to see an amazing railroad survey map from 1852.


Map of the Virginia Central Rail Road showing the connection between tide water Virginia, and the Ohio River at Big Sandy, Guyandotte and Point Pleasant; made by W. Vaisz Top. Eng.


Railroad #31

Visit the CVB at Heritage Station
Kids can receive their Artisan's Express coin here after visiting each train and logging it into their Geocache app.

http://www.wvvisit.org/

Railroad History #30

Three Railroads

Railroads formed the foundation for the rise of King Coal.

When West Virginia became a state in 1863, 90 percent of its population lived on
farms. In 1870, only 85 coal mines were in operation. Most of the state, particularly
Southern West Virginia, was still rural and isolated from industy.          


Just before the Civil War, the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad shifted the fortunes of what
would become northern West Virginia—even shaping the new state’s boundaries. In 1873,
the arrival of the Chesapeake & Ohio (C&O) Railway would have a similar impact on southern West Virginia.

 Chesapeake & Ohio

Early attempts to connect the Atlantic Ocean and the Ohio River by rail failed. However,
after the Civil War, railroad magnate Collis P. Huntington took control of the Covington
& Ohio Railroad, renamed it the Chesapeake & Ohio (C&O), and extended the line from
Clifton Forge, Virginia, to the luxurious resort at White Sulphur Springs. Between 1869
and 1873, crews laid rails west from White Sulphur Springs and east from the Ohio River.
The strenuous work was extremely dangerous and paid very little. The crews consisted
principally of recent immigrants to the country and African Americans, many of whom
had been freed from slavery only a few years before.

The crew’s greatest engineering feat was the Great Bend (sometimes referred to as
Big Bend) Tunnel at Talcott in what soon would become Summers County, where the
C&O engaged the latest steam-powered machinery to assist with the construction.
The Great Bend possibly was the birthplace of the “John Henry” folk song, in which the
legendary steel driver defeated a steam shovel in a digging contest. The song foreshadowed
an age in which machines would take the places of workers.

C&O officials drove the final spike on a frigid day at Hawks Nest in Fayette County on
January 28, 1873. The new railroad finally connected the nation’s East Coast with southern
West Virginia, via the towns of White Sulphur Springs, Hinton, Charleston and the newly
created city of Huntington—named in honor of the railroad’s president.

The C&O—along with two competitors waiting in the wings—served two main purposes:
 importing miners and exporting coal.

Norfolk & Western

Southern West Virginia’s second major railroad, the Norfolk & Western (N&W), traces its
roots to three Virginia railroads that played significant roles during the Civil War and were
merged in 1870. In 1881, the bankrupt railroad was sold to E. W. Clarke & Co. and
renamed the N&W.

With infusion of money from the Philadelphia area, the N&W was completed through
southern West Virginia to Pocahontas, Virginia. It quickly became the leading hauler of
Pocahontas coal. The Pocahontas Coalfield boasted the thickest bituminous coal seam in
the world—as high as 14 feet in some places. In addition, Pocahontas coal burned cleaner
than other bituminous coals, or, as an inspired marketing executive dubbed it, “smokeless
coal.” Overnight, the Pocahontas Coalfield—located primarily in McDowell and Mercer
counties—became the most valuable coal-producing region in the world.

By 1892, the N&W had been extended to the Ohio River at Kenova, sparking the rapid
growth of towns along the way, including Welch and Williamson. Bluefield’s population
grew from 600 to 11,188 people in just 20 years. One small Mercer County town became
a banking center for leading coal operators; Bramwell became known as the “home of
millionaires.”

Virginian

By 1900, the C&O and N&W had snaked branch lines into most valleys and hollows in
southern West Virginia. All that was left were the rugged mountains in between. By the
first decade of the 20th century, new machinery and engineering techniques allowed two
entrepreneurs to construct a railroad where few believed it could be built—along the crests
of narrow mountaintops and ridges.

The third major southern West Virginia railroad was the Virginian, the brainchild of coal
operator William Nelson Page of Ansted and Standard Oil executive Henry H. Rogers of
New York. In 1907 and 1908, crews were challenged to connect the former Tidewater
Railway in Virginia with West Virginia’s Deepwater Railway. The 443-mile-long railroad
was completed in 1909, linking southern West Virginia’s Winding Gulf Coalfield with the
 Chesapeake Bay ports at Hampton Roads, Virginia.

The Virginian tapped previously unreachable coal reserves—namely in Raleigh, Fayette
and Wyoming counties—by employing the heaviest locomotives and longest lines of cars.
The ingenious railroad was an immediate boon to the towns of Princeton, Mullens, Glen
Rogers and Glen Jean.

 By the early 20th century, branches of the C&O, N&W and Virginian extended into every
 coal-producing hollow in southern West Virginia. Coal from the most remote valleys of
southern West Virginia could be shipped to the Atlantic Ocean, Great Lakes and every
major eastern market in a matter of days. These three railroads formed the foundation for
the rise of King Coal.

http://coalheritage.org/page.aspx?id=15



© 2015 Coal Heritage. All Rights Reserved.

Railroad #29

The Huntington Railroad Museum

The Huntington Railroad Museum is located at Memorial Boulevard and 14th Street West, in Huntington's Ritter Park, this outdoor museum, owned and operated entirely by the local chapter of the Collis P. Huntington Railroad Historical Society, is open free every Sunday from 2-5 P.M., from Memorial Day to September 30th. Call 304-523-0364 to schedule special visits; Otherwise by appointment. Chapter members, as your hosts, are happy to explain everything on display.