News
February 10, 2008
Frozen in time: Groups want to bring more recognition to some of Civil War's first battlefields

We are anxious to meet the foe, for we have them to whip, and the sooner we do it, the sooner we will be able to return to the dear loved ones at home.

- A letter home from Laurel Hill by John B. Pendleton, 23rd Virginia Infantry, C.S.A.

BELINGTON - Four gravestones stand sentry at the head of a sunken mass grave. A whitewashed rail fence surrounds it and a Confederate flag flutters over it.

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Kenny Kemp
A tattered “Bonnie Blue Flag,” the unofficial banner of the Confederacy, hangs over a wall carved with the names of the Laurel Hill dead.
It's a short hike through a hayfield to get here, although somebody has close-clipped a grassy walking trail through the waving seedheads. There's nothing but mountains, and woods, and quiet.

It's as if time stopped here in 1861, right after these dead Confederates lost one of the very first land battles of the Civil War.

That makes Laurel Hill - a low knob overlooking the cattle farms of Barbour County - a very rare jewel indeed: a Civil War battlefield unspoiled by tourism.

"It's like stepping back in time," said Hunter Lesser, an Elkins archaeologist and historic consultant who served as technical adviser for The Conservation Fund's "The Civil War Battlefield Guide."

Lesser wrote the book on the battle of Laurel Hill. His "Rebels at the Gate" became a History Book Club main selection in 2004. He has been involved with several nationwide historical groups, including the Civil War Preservation Trust and the National Park Service.

Now, he's supporting local groups in their effort to get greater recognition - and possibly more tourist traffic - for a string of battlefields across rural West Virginia, starting with the very first land battle of the Civil War: the famed "Philippi Races."

"People are really impressed by how well preserved some of these sites are," Lesser said. "Last fall, I spent a couple of days with a fellow who's doing a survey for the American Battlefield Protection Program," an arm of the National Park Service.

"He'd never seen these battlefields before. He was just amazed at the preservation of the sites we have here, and the outstanding scenic quality."

The Smithsonian Institution's Smithsonian Associates tours have already come more than once, Lesser said.

"The whole 'First Campaign' tour starts at Philippi and goes southeast to the Virginia line, at Camp Allegheny," he said. "That's only 400 feet lower than Spruce Knob, the highest point in the state. So you go from this scenic, pastoral farmland, eventually up into the high Alleghenies. People seem to really like it."

Civil War buffs have seen all the other sites, Lesser said. Laurel Hill and its sister battlefields are something new.

"You can only go to Antietam or Gettysburg or Shiloh so many times," he said.

'The gates to the northwestern country'

Every West Virginia schoolchild learns about the "Philippi Races," so named because that's how fast the rebels ran away from that first land battle of the war.

But present-day West Virginia was Virginia back then. It was Confederate country, and the rebels didn't give it up without at least a little bit more of a fight.

Confederate Gen. Robert Garnett had 5,000 troops, trying to hold back 20,000 Union soldiers, Lesser said.

"He identified two key passes - one at Rich Mountain," about 20 miles south of Philippi, "and one at Laurel Hill.

"He called them 'the gates to the northwestern country.'"

Union Gen. George McClellan did indeed attack Laurel Hill - but it was just a diversion. He sent a brigade to skirmish with the rebels for five days while he took the bulk of his army and captured Rich Mountain.

Garnett realized he would soon be cut off, because his supply line ran through Beverly, just five miles west of the Rich Mountain pass.

"General Garnett tried to flee south," Lesser said. "He believed he was cut off. Actually, he could have made it. ... He circled north and got into the Cheat River valley in Tucker County.

"He ended up being killed on a riverbank, right in present-day Parsons, at a place called Corrick's Ford."

Garnett was the first general killed in the Civil War.

[Fendall] Whitlock of our company died a few days since. We buried him on the side of a mountain ...

- Last letter home by John B. Pendleton, killed in action at Laurel Hill

It is believed that fewer than a dozen Confederate soldiers died at Laurel Hill. They were buried in a common grave. But only four of them have headstones, courtesy of the federal government: John H. Blake, 19; Charles H. Goff, 19; Robert Oney, 21; and Fendall C. Whitlock, 20.

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