Jump to content
Main menu
Main menu
move to sidebar
hide
Navigation
Main page
Recent changes
Random page
Help about MediaWiki
Special pages
Niidae Wiki
Search
Search
Appearance
Create account
Log in
Personal tools
Create account
Log in
Pages for logged out editors
learn more
Contributions
Talk
Editing
Rocky Mount, Virginia
(section)
Page
Discussion
English
Read
Edit
View history
Tools
Tools
move to sidebar
hide
Actions
Read
Edit
View history
General
What links here
Related changes
Page information
Appearance
move to sidebar
hide
Warning:
You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you
log in
or
create an account
, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
Anti-spam check. Do
not
fill this in!
==History== Robert Hill built a block house (fortified residence and trading post) in the 1740s, for trading with Native Americans. English settlers did not arrive until 1760. They named Rocky Mount for a steep cliff near the town. The area originally consisted of two adjacent villages, Rocky Mount and Mount Pleasant. [[Washington Iron Furnace]] was built by James Callaway and Jeremiah Early; its site was on what is now Main Street. It was operated by Callaway's heirs and Peter Saunders until 1850, when it was damaged by a flood. Repairs and rebuilding were stopped by the breakout of [[American Civil War|Civil War]]. The first court session was held at Rocky Mount in 1786 following the [[American Revolutionary War|Revolutionary War]]. It was held in Callaway's home until he deeded land to the town on which to build the courthouse. The first was made of logs. Rocky Mount was assigned a post office in 1795. The town was divided into lots in 1804. Jeremiah's son John Early represented the county (part-time) in the Virginia House of Delegates and served as sheriff. He operated a plantation nearby. The courthouse was replaced in 1831. By 1836 the iron furnace employed 100 people. The town had about 275 residents; it had 30 houses and several businesses, including three grocery stores and a newspaper/printing office. The oldest dwelling is "Mount Pleasant", built overlooking the courthouse in 1829 for Caleb Tate (the court clerk for nearly 40 years, from 1797-1835). Its detached brick kitchen, built circa 1820, is the oldest building in town. The Rocky Mount Turnpike Company incorporated in 1846 and a bank was founded shortly afterward, but neither prospered.<ref>Rocky Mount NRIS Section 7, pp. 3-4, 54-56</ref> During the Civil War, numerous [[Planter (American South)|planter]] families from the [[Tidewater region]] sought refuge in Rocky Mount. Many brought numerous black American [[slavery in the United States|slaves]] with them, in part trying to ensure they did not escape to Union forces. Among these were the immediate past governor, [[Henry A. Wise]], who settled his family here from his plantation on the Elizabeth River before he started serving as a Confederate general. [[Jubal Anderson Early]], who became a Confederate general during the war, was born on a plantation nearby. Before the war, he served one term representing Franklin County in the Virginia House of Delegates and more than a decade as Commonwealth's attorney (prosecutor). After the war, he resumed his legal practice here and in [[Lynchburg, Virginia]]. His office building in Rocky Mount was demolished in 1937. One of the oldest buildings constructed in that era that still survives was built for Dr. Thomas Greer in 1861. Despite this, there are two older buildings constructed between 1850-1854, which are both still used as law offices to this day. The town's clerk, Robert A. Scott, issued scrip to assist families of Confederate soldiers during the Civil War. The Confederate government requisitioned slaves from various planters in the county to work on Richmond's defenses. Rocky Mount had no battles, although Union Gen. [[George Stoneman]] and troops passed through the county in the war's final days. In 1867, the [[Freedmen's Bureau]] under William F. DeKnight opened a Sunday school in Rocky Mount; about a third of the residents were black American freedmen. No day school was established for freedmen's children until much later. [[Booker Taliaferro Washington]] was born enslaved in Franklin County. After the war, his mother moved with him to the free state of West Virginia for his education. He later studied at the [[Hampton Institute]], established in eastern Virginia for the education of blacks.<ref>NRIS pp. 57-58</ref> The area's major cash crop both before and after the Civil War was [[tobacco]]. In 1873, Rocky Mount incorporated as a town and absorbed the smaller village of Mount Pleasant, establishing its present boundaries.<ref>{{cite book |editor=Frank H. Gille |title=The Encyclopedia of Virginia 1999; Volume One |publisher=Somerset Publishers |pages=329 |isbn=0-403-09753-3}}</ref> Former court clerk Robert Scott was elected as the first mayor. Rocky Mount's population was about 400 people in 1870, 600 in 1897, and about 1100 in 1920. In 1880, the [[Franklin and Pittsylvania Railroad]] connected Rocky Mount to [[Danville, Virginia|Danville]] and Lynchburg via [[Pittsylvania County, Virginia]]. Most of the buildings in town burned in a destructive fire in 1889. Another railroad was constructed through town about 1892, and stimulated industrial and commercial development. The railroad (known as the Norfolk and Western Railway) was nicknamed the "Pumpkin Vine" because of its route between [[Roanoke, Virginia]] and [[Winston-Salem, North Carolina]]. Canadawas y Mills (a gristmill and box factory) was built in 1898. Nathanial V. Angle, a former schoolteacher who became an entrepreneur, built the Bald Knob furniture factory in 1903. (It became the [[Lane Furniture Company]] in 1957 and is known as the MW Manufacturing Company in the 21st century). By World War I, N.V. Angle owned a furniture and grocery stores, a lumberyard, tobacco house, agricultural implement store, and the area's first [[Ford Motor Company|Ford]] automobile dealership. Much of the town's historic architecture, both residential and commercial, dates from the first decades of the 20th century. Only the Lodge Rooms (Colored), built in 1900, remains of the former thriving black American community on West Court Street. The furniture and textile workers needed housing, and contractors also built more elaborate (including Victorian-style) dwellings for managers and professionals. Rocky Mount is roughly halfway between Roanoke and [[Martinsville, Virginia]], which likewise developed furniture manufacturing and textile industries early in the 20th century. The present Franklin County courthouse was constructed in 1909 (two years after the Norfolk and Western freight and passenger station). It was modeled on the Roanoke County courthouse in [[Salem, Virginia]]. The town's growth was reflected in construction of new churches. Trinity Episcopal Church and its Rectory were both built in 1874 and survived the 1889 fire. The church was moved back from Main Street in 1906. The [[African Methodist Episcopal Church]], built before the fire, no longer exists. The Presbyterian Church (built by 1880) reopened shortly after the fire. The Methodists rebuilt their church of brick; they replace Scott Memorial Church again in 1925. The Baptist Church (colored) built in 1907 was later deconsecrated and became a business. The Bethel [[African Methodist Episcopal Church|AME]] church, built before World War I, continues to be in active use. A Coca-Cola bottling plant opened in town circa 1920. The area's oldest car dealership (Chevrolet) dates from 1926 (although housed in a building from 1916). Ryland Goode also established a car dealership for Dodges and Hudsons that year. The building for the [[International Harvester]] dealership dates from 1946; the [[John Deere]] dealership (built 1940) has been adapted for use as the county's Developmental Center. New industries continued to be established before World War II. Around 1940 [[Sealtest]] established a dairy bottling plant and Exchange Milling opened an animal feed processing plant.<ref>NRIS section 7 pp. 9-14, 18, 23, 33, 37-39, 51, 59-60</ref> The Art Deco-style People's National Bank was built in 1928. Public schools were segregated, and those for black students were underfunded. In 1915, Rocky Mount appropriated $2,200 to build an eight-room brick school for white students, complete with central heating and indoor plumbing. The same year black residents built [[Rocky Mount Colored School]] and dormitory, at their own expense, on Bald Knob outside the town limits. The town became a school district and in 1924 built a high school for white students. By 1940 the town's white students had 16 teachers. Only seven black American teachers "struggled with the problems of their race in their own schools."<ref>NRIS p. 62, quoting [[Works Progress Administration|WPA]] writer Essie Smith</ref> Around that time, a foundation was established to mark Booker T. Washington's birthplace. In 1952 it donated 6 acres of land on which to build a modern, four-room school for black students. That opened shortly before the start of [[Massive Resistance]] to school desegregation in Virginia. It was operated until 1966, when the U.S. Supreme Court found subsidies for segregated schools (much used by the county's white schoolchildren) to be unconstitutional. This structure has been adapted for use as an administrative building of the [[National Park Service]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.nps.gov/parkhistory/online_books/bowa/hrs.pdf|title=Booker T. Washington Memorial NRIS, at p. ix, available at www.nps.gov}}</ref> Rocky Mount's brick Municipal Building was built in 1929. The [[Works Progress Administration]] of the President Franklin D. Roosevelt administration built the United States Post Office in 1936, during the Great Depression. The county jail was built in the Art Moderne style in 1938, also a depression project. Investment in infrastructure was increased by the federal government. The town applied for funds to upgrade its sewer system. The [[New Deal]] project with most effects may have been work on [[U.S. Route 220]] and [[Virginia State Route 40|state route 40]] near the town. The WPA and prominent local businessman N. V. Angle drained a swamp and developed the land for Mary Elizabeth Park, named for Angle's wife. It is now maintained by the local Presbyterian church (although Angle was a Methodist). Before World War II, Rocky Mount's industries included a silk mill and a door and sash window factory, in addition to Angle's furniture company. The library, constructed in 1940, was one of ten funded by an anonymous donor in rural Virginia counties in that era. It now serves as an administration building. The county's administration building, built in 1967, is along the same street and is named for [[Virgil Goode Sr.]], former Virginia House delegate and Commonwealth's attorney. In 1990, local residents saved the former Norfolk and Western station. It has been redeveloped as a tourist information center.<ref>Rocky Mount NRIS section 7 pp. 16-17, 28-32, 49, 52, 61-62</ref> The [[Booker T. Washington National Monument]], [[Evergreen-Callaway-Deyerle House]], [[The Farm (Rocky Mount, Virginia)|The Farm]], [[Greer House]], [[Rocky Mount Historic District]], [[Washington Iron Furnace]], and [[Woods-Meade House]] are listed on the [[National Register of Historic Places]].<ref name="nris">{{NRISref|version=2010a}}</ref>
Summary:
Please note that all contributions to Niidae Wiki may be edited, altered, or removed by other contributors. If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly, then do not submit it here.
You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource (see
Encyclopedia:Copyrights
for details).
Do not submit copyrighted work without permission!
Cancel
Editing help
(opens in new window)
Search
Search
Editing
Rocky Mount, Virginia
(section)
Add topic