Slanesville, West Virginia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Slanesville is an unincorporated community in northeastern Hampshire County, West Virginia, USA. Slanesville is located at the crossroads of Bloomery Pike (West Virginia Route 29) with Slanesville Pike (West Virginia Secondary Route 3) and Cold Stream Road (West Virginia Secondary Route 45/20). Slanesville Pike and Cold Stream Road formerly made up the Springfield Grade Road that ran from Capon Bridge to Springfield. According to the 2000 census, the Slanesville community has a population of 691 [1].

[edit] History

The community of Slanesville was earliest inhabited by generations of the Slain family in the late 18th century and upon its settlement it was known as Cross Roads because of its prime location at the meeting of the Martinsburg (old West Virginia Route 45) and Springfield (West Virginia Secondary Route 3) Grade Roads. Slanesville then took the name of Slain's Cross Roads after the prominence of the Slain family in the vicinity of the community. It was also misspelled as Slane's Cross Roads which would later influence its current name. Slanesville was then referred to as Dog Town because of the Slain family’s large number of dogs. Finally, the community was referred to as Slainsville and then Slanesville after Thomas Slain in the 1857 when a post office was established here. Slanes Knob (1,588 feet), located near Capon Bridge, is also named for the prominent Slain family in the area.

Slanesville differed from its neighboring communities of Bloomery and North River Mills early on because it never became the center of major industry. Bloomery to its northeast was a center for iron smelting and blooming, while North River Mills, like its name suggests, was a center for mill production on North River. Slanesville was predominantly a farming community throughout most of its history and served as a popular stagecoach stop in the early 1800s along the Martinsburg and Springfield Grade Roads. The only signs of limited industry in Slanesville were two blacksmith shops run by the Hockman family and a cider mill.

A fire in the summer of 1955 cost the community three buildings and this led to the formation of the Slanesville Volunteer Fire Department in August of that same year. The Slanesville VFD is currently located in "downtown" Slanesville adjacent to the Slanesville General Store and its post office on the crossroads. The Slanesville Presbyterian Church is also located in "downtown" across Slanesville Pike from the general store.

The community’s Slanesville Elementary School along WV 29 south of town was host to President George H. W. Bush in April 1991 when he landed by helicopter in a field adjacent to the school to award Rae Ellen McKee the National Teacher of the Year award for 1991. A fifth grade remedial reading teacher, McKee was chosen from among the nation's more than 2.5 million elementary and secondary public school teachers.

[edit] Churches

  • Christian
    • Mount Union Christian Church, Bloomery Pike (WV Route 29)
  • Mennonite
    • Slanesville Community Mennonite Church, Slanesville Pike (CR 3)
  • Presbyterian
    • Slanesville Presbyterian Church, Slanesville Pike (CR 3)

[edit] External links


Flag of West Virginia Hampshire County, West Virginia
Municipalities

Capon Bridge | Romney

Unincorporated communities

Augusta | Barnes Mill | Bloomery | Blues Beach | Bubbling Spring | Capon Lake | Capon Springs | Cold Stream | Creekvale | Davis Ford | Delray | Dillons Run | Donaldson | Forks of Cacapon | Frenchburg | Glebe | Good | Grace | Green Spring | Hainesville | Hanging Rock | Higginsville | High View | Hooks Mills | Hoy | Intermont | Jericho | Junction | Kirby | Lehew | Levels | Little Cacapon | Loom | Mechanicsburg | Millbrook | Millen | Millesons Mill | Neals Run | Nero | North River Mills | Okonoko | Pin Oak | Pleasant Dale | Points | Purgitsville | Rada | Raven Rocks | Ridgedale | Ruckman | Sector | Sedan | Shanks | Shiloh | Slanesville | Springfield | Three Churches | Vance | Vanderlip | Wappocomo | Yellow Spring

Rivers and streams

Bearwallow Creek | Big Run | Cacapon River | Capon Springs Run | Dillons Run | Edwards Run | Grassy Lick Run | Green Spring Run | Little Cacapon River | Mill Branch | Mill Creek | Mill Run | North Branch Potomac River | North River | Potomac River | South Branch Potomac River | Tearcoat Creek

Eastern Panhandle of West Virginia The Eastern Panhandle of West Virginia
Counties

Berkeley | Grant | Hampshire | Hardy | Jefferson | Mineral | Morgan | Pendleton

Communities

Bayard | Berkeley Springs | Bolivar | Capon Bridge | Carpendale | Charles Town | Elk Garden | Franklin | Harpers Ferry | Hedgesville | Keyser | Martinsburg | Moorefield | Paw Paw | Petersburg | Piedmont | Ridgeley | Romney | Shepherdstown | Wardensville

Attractions

Appalachian National Scenic Trail | Berkeley Springs State Park | Cacapon Resort State Park | Cacapon River | Capon Springs | Charles Town Races & Slots | Chesapeake and Ohio Canal National Historical Park | Fort Ashby | Fort Mill Ridge Civil War Trenches | George Washington National Forest | Harpers Ferry National Historical Park | Indian Mound Cemetery | Jennings Randolph Lake | Lost River | Lost River State Park | Monongahela National Forest | Mount Storm Lake | Northwestern Turnpike | Potomac River | Potomac State College | Seneca Rocks | Shenandoah River | Shepherdstown National Historic District | Shepherd University | Sleepy Creek Lake | Smoke Hole Caverns | South Branch Potomac River | Spruce Knob | Summit Point Motorsports Park | The Trough | Trout Pond | Tuscarora Trail | Washington Heritage Trail