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Saturday, June 18, 2016

Jumping Branch: A Little History, A Strange True Tale

I was so intrigued by the community of Jumping Branch when we passed through there this week that we returned after my storytelling performance to learn a little bit about the community.

First, how did it get its name? I am always interested in place names, especially those that are a little odd. According to The History of Summers County West Virginia by James H. Miller, "Jumping Branch is a stream running by Jumping Branch Post Office and village on its way to Bluestone. In the days of the early settlement there was no bridge across it, and the traveler made his crossing by jumping his horse from one bank to another." Another reference in Miller's book noted that men would also jump their teams of horses over the stream. I'd like to have seen that.

 At the library I asked a staff member about the place. "Well, I live there but I don't know the history because I'm not from there, you see. We moved there a few years ago." Some of us are just born curious, I guess, while others accept things as they are.

The old buildings seemed to have stories to tell, but how to find them? On our way through the first time I saw an elderly lady getting her mail and decided that I would try knocking on her door when we returned, to see if she could tell us anything about the place.

It turned out that she was a good choice. Not only did she know about Jumping Branch, she'd lived there all her life. She went back inside her pretty home and returned with a scrapbook of old photos.

Her father, she said, operated a store in the green block building for years. He was a butcher but also sold a variety of other things, including kerosene, I noticed, judging by the old tank beside the block building. The large building across the way was once the Odie Meador Lumber Company store. I later learned that the owner of the lumber company, Mr. Meador, was elected sheriff of the county in the 1970's but died in office. The front part of this building is believed to be log.

Odie Meador Lumber Company. It was a thriving business in its day.

Was this once a coal mining community, I asked? The cluster of buildings reminded me of coal camps I'd seen in other places in our state, but she said no, this was a farming community and the stores here supplied the surrounding farms. It was easy to see this; the land lays beautifully with rolling meadows and pastures well watered by streams.


We did not get the story on this building, although it looks like a store.

There was an auto repair garage here too, the concrete base of the pumps still barely visible under encroaching grass.

I believe she told us that this was once the post office.


This house, she said, was once used as a local hospital. I did not think to ask what time period that might have been.


Not far from where we were talking to our new friend was the Bluestone Baptist Church. According to our informant, the church was established about 1782. I searched in Mr. Miller's history book and found that the church has had an interesting history. He gives its establishment as 1798, still very early days in the US. The meetings were originally held in the log house of a Mr. Meador, and people came from miles around, from as far away as Giles County, VA. Eventually they built a log church, which burned so they built another which was burned by Federal troops in the Civil War. The church managed to weather all storms and continues to serve the area to this day.

Once Jumping Branch had two grain mills, our informant told us, and people would come from everywhere to get their meal ground. Now the mills are gone, but I thought I could see the site of one of them under a tangle of growth along a stream.



Before we left, our friend told us the story of her great-grandfather, Joseph Floyd Young, who served in the Civil War as a Confederate soldier with 151st Militia, and later the 17th Virginia Cavalry.

Floyd Young CWP 3
photo from Ancestry.com shows a young Young, apparently prior to his injury.
According to the family story, Young was shot through the temple--clear through. The wound was cleaned by pulling a silk handkerchief back and forth through it. Can you imagine the pain? Mr. Young survived the wound although he was blind, she said, and felt his way around the house. He would feel for the stove by stretching out his hands to feel the warmth.

The story amazed me. How could anyone survive such a wound? I found a bit more about it in Civil War Tales, Volume 1, by Gary C. Walker. In this account, "Joseph Floyd Young of the 17th Virginia Cavalry was wounded through the eye as a bullet or shell fragment passed out through the temple. The wound was treated by pulling a silk rag through the wound channel, back and forth repeatedly to cleanse the wound in what was left of his eye socket."

Yowch. Apparently Young was unmarried at the time, marrying in 1867. Later images of him do not seem to show much damage to his eye, which seems to have healed incredibly well.

JF & Sarah Young
A later image of Mr. Young, with his wife Sarah. From Ancestry.com

We drove slowly back to Hinton, to find, at last, a late late breakfast. As we drove we passed these roses, growing rampant and wild alongside the road. Such beauty, such stories, such memories.




Copyright Susanna Holstein. All rights reserved. No Republication or Redistribution Allowed without attribution to Susanna Holstein.

25 comments:

  1. Such great stories! I love reading them.

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  2. Jenny, I am glad I can bring you a little bit of home. I will keep searching for stories from the area--I have a couple more that I will post later this week.

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  3. Thanks for the story
    The elderly lady you spoke to must have been my aunt. This is my family. Very surprised I did not hear of it! Enjoyed it very much.

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  4. She probably was your aunt :) I did not give her name to protect her privacy, but she has a deep knowledge of the history of her home. It was such a pleasure to speak with her.

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  5. Best one yet, I do believe, Susanna!

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  6. Odie Meador was my grandfather. I've never seen the buildings that you posted the picture of. Where exactly are they located?

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    1. Scott, they are the old omes down there near Broomstraw and Beagle Club....Eric Jeffries

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  7. These are between the two road signs for Jumping Branch, Scott. Right along the highway, and then a few of them along the little road that goes to the lake.

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  8. Awesome Story and a part of my family's history as the referenced J Floyd Young was my 3rd great-grandfather...as a young boy sitting on the porch at the Bower family homeplace there in Jumping Branch i was fascinated by tales of daring and one such tale was of this Rebel Cavalry soldier.

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  9. Stevenbennett@suddenlink.netTue Oct 17, 10:04:00 PM

    In my 76 years in the Jumping Branch area I never remember Odie meador using the building The building claimed to have been Odie Meadows lumber office was first a general store operated by a mr.walker. The other building you noted was Deed's store

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    1. That is correct. Meador Lumber was never here that I know of. The building was a dry goods and general store ran by Mr. A Walker until 1959 when he sold it and the brick house above it as well. He and his wife moved to Ravenswood WV to live with his daughter. The blue building was originally Jim Deeds Store but has been used for various things over the years.

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  10. The old “Blue Building” As it’s dubbed across from the church belongs to my brother and I, it has for as long as I’ve been alive contained an old wood shop in the bottom and storage in the top. I would have to ask my mother about the actual history of the building. I know what my Great Grandmother told me as s young child is a little rusty, the old grey building across the road was my Great Uncles garage until he built one up behind the Blue Building.

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  11. I have lived here my entire life!

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  12. Another interesting story involving Jumping Branch you may want to look into is the story of Shootin Bob Lilley who is buried in the Wick Lilly Cemetery in Jumping Branch. Although you need the owners permission to see the cemetery, I happen to know them personally (because it's me!)

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    1. Im a Lilly. My dad is BJ williams in jumping branch. His dad is Corbett Lilly.

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  13. Thank you all for your comments and clarifications. I tried to take good notes while talking to the lady there in Jumping Branch but apparently got some things wrong. You have a fascinating history there, and I am very glad to have seen the place and to have learned something about it. I hope to go back someday and spend more time exploring. Any suggestions as to what I might want to see in the area?

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    1. Some the old spooky graveyards are cool, Broomstraw Ridge Road also has a beautiful view of Hinton.

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  14. This is a very interesting post. Loved how the story flowed and the photos really helped bring your story to life.

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  16. You left out the old jailhouse beside the hospital and post office. My family owned Sweeney’s Market across from the elementary school a long time ago. It’s only the foundation of the building now. Great interesting read.

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  17. My great great grandfather was the Baptist minster at the old bluestone baptist church . His name was Christopher Printice Pack.

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    1. My family roots are from there. I am looking for my Great grandfather's grave. It's either on the original farm or a hidden forgotten cemetery.

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    2. Comment posted in Nov. 2024. What is your Grandfather's name? Do you know where the original farm is located? I may be able to help you find the grave. I also know some old timers who may know. Good Luck!

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  18. I love reading these stories of jumping branch because I was raised in jumping branch most of my life we lived out beagle club rd.and the building that looks like a store I remember my dad telling me it was the old jail?? I would love to find more information about this building as well

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  19. My great uncle lived there and was once one of the oldest living twins. Would live to find his grave. Loved the story! Thank you!

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