Stonega, Virginia
Stonega is an unincorporated community and coal town located in Wise County, Virginia, United States.[2] The community was founded in 1895 to provide housing and coking facilities for the Virginia Coal and Iron Company before being leased to the Stonega Coke and Coal Company in 1902.[3] The community was owned and operated as a company town until after World War II.[4] Their post office closed in 2002.[5]
Stonega, Virginia | |
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Unincorporated community | |
Stonega, Virginia Stonega, Virginia | |
Coordinates: 36°57′11″N 82°47′29″W | |
Country | United States |
State | Virginia |
County | Wise |
Founded | July 15, 1895 |
Elevation | 1,818 ft (554 m) |
Time zone | UTC−5 (Eastern (EST)) |
• Summer (DST) | UTC−4 (EDT) |
ZIP codes | 24285 |
GNIS feature ID | 1487603[1] |
History
Stonega was founded by J.K. Taggart in 1895 as "Pioneer," a name chosen because it was the first commercial mine and coking plant in Wise County.[6] The name was changed in 1896 to reflect the town's proximity to Stone Gap, a pass through the mountains between Virginia and Kentucky. That same year, Taggart was killed during a mining accident.[7] The town was owned and maintained by the Virginia Coal and Iron Company until 1902, when the Stonega Coke and Coal Company assumed control of the operation and leased the land. There were no major strikes at Stonega or the surrounding camps until 1937.[8]
"After being slowed by the depression of 1893, Virginia Coal and Iron Company began building Pioneer, its first and model Coal town, in 1895, around the mine opening at the headwaters of Callahan Creek. Built using local timber, Pioneer straddled the flat bottom land of the creek between Bluff Spur and Nine Mile Spur Mountains, which offered narrow, winding land on which to construct the upper coke ovens, railroad tracks, homes and service buildings needed by such a remote community. By 1896, the new colliery or coal mine opened and was renamed Stonega, a contraction of Stone and Gap. The company owned Interstate Railroad connected the mine with the Louisville and Nashville Railroad, six miles away at Appalachia, Virginia."[9]
References
- U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Stonega, Virginia
- Wolfe, Margaret Ripley (October 1979). "Aliens in Southern Appalachia, 1900-1920: The Italian Experience in Wise County, Virginia". The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography. 87 (4): 455–472. JSTOR 4248343.
- Prescott, E.J. (1946). The Story of the Virginia Coal and Iron Company, 1882-1945. Big Stone Gap, VA: Virginia Coal and Iron Company. pp. 66, 95.
- Wolfe, Margaret Ripley (July 1, 1981). "Changing the Face of Southern Appalachia: Urban Planning in Southwest Virginia and East Tennessee, 1890-1929". Journal of the American Planning Association. 47 (3): 252–265. doi:10.1080/01944368108976508.
- "Postmaster Finder - Who We Are - USPS".
- Prescott, E.J. (1946). The Story of the Virginia Coal and Iron Company, 1882-1945. Big Stone Gap, VA: The Virginia Coal and Iron Company. p. 55.
- "Virginia News". Alexandria Gazette and Virginia Advertiser. May 25, 1896.
- "1,500 Miners in Wise County Go On Strike". Kingsport Times. April 21, 1937.
- Fisher, Terri L., and Kirsten Sparenborg. "Stonega, Wise County" In: Lost Communities of Virginia. Earlysville, Va: Albemarle Books, 2011. Page 213.