West Liberty State College
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named West Liberty. Since that time, West Liberty State College has been organized and reorganized as a normal school, a state teacher s college, and, finally, a state college. It has maintained its stated mission to launch our graduates into community, work, and academic environments ready to
be viable contributors with skills and knowledge needed to meet future opportunities and challenges. West Liberty State College celebrates the history and traditions of the school, spotlighting academic, social, and athletic events over the past 163 years.
Robert W. Schramm
Author Robert W. Schramm has been associated with West Liberty State College as a student, professor, senior lecturer, staff photographer, and archivist for a total of 46 years. Examining literally thousands of photographs, he has chosen more than 200 vintage images to represent the college from the 1850s through the present day. Students, faculty, staff, and alumni will be delighted with each turn of the page as they view their beloved institution, its changes and growth, through the decades.
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West Liberty State College - Robert W. Schramm
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INTRODUCTION
The modern campus of West Liberty State College sits on land that was, at one time, claimed by both the British and French governments, as well as by local Native Americans. The Treaty of Paris of 1763, which ended the French and Indian War, and Pontiac’s War, 1763–1764, left the British in control of the region. By 1774, settlers had come to the area from Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Virginia. In 1769, a Virginia planter by the name of Abraham Van Meter sent his apprentice, a Mr. Black, to the western part of the Virginia colony to locate and claim a suitable piece of farmland. Black found a good section of land near a spring in a valley adjacent to the Ohio River, staked a claim, built a small cabin, and began to clear the land. Around 1772, he was joined by another man, James Curtis, who staked out another claim. Other settlers, attracted by the fertility of the soil, moved into the region, which became a community known as Black’s Cabin. But in 1776, inspired perhaps by the American Revolution, the name of this western outpost was changed to West Liberty.
After the formal Declaration of Independence from Great Britain, frontiersmen began to move west in ever increasing numbers, and soon a sizable community was established at West Liberty. The Virginia General Assembly, being concerned with the organization of its western frontiers, passed an act that required landowners of the region to meet for the purpose of locating and organizing a county court. In December 1776, a committee of landowners decided upon Black’s Cabin in West Liberty as a suitable location for the court, which then held its first session on January 6, 1777. West Liberty grew and developed around the court, and lots and streets were laid out around the courthouse. On November 20, 1787, the Virginia General Assembly passed an act that stated that a 60-acre plot of land around the courthouse was to be established as the town of West Liberty.
As the town grew in population, it also grew in area. It is reported that on court days as many as 1,500 to 2,000 people would come to West Liberty for business and pleasure. Taverns and stores were built and a new courthouse and jail were constructed in 1778. West Liberty was the county seat and the approximate geographical center of the County of Ohio, one of three counties comprising the territory of West Augusta, which was created by the State of Virginia in 1776. This county of 1,432 square miles included parts of the present counties of Brooke, Doddridge, and Pleasants, all of the present Ohio, Wetzel, and Tyler Counties, and parts of southwestern Pennsylvania. According to local lore, Wheeling was described as a small settlement south of West Liberty.
In spite of all of this, West Liberty needed both churches and schools to become an important town. The Reverend Wilson Lee organized a Methodist congregation in the town in 1785, and while people came from miles around to attend open-air meetings, a church was not built until 1815. Rev. John MacMillan preached the first Presbyterian sermon in 1782, but it was not until 1788 that a Presbyterian Church was organized. The Episcopal Church was first established in 1792 by Dr. Joseph Doddridge.
One thing that these early preachers had in common was their interest in education. After all, a man who was educated could read his Bible in the absence of a preacher. In one way or another, these ministers imparted the idea of establishing schools. West Liberty established its first school in 1800. It was most likely the first in western Virginia. Classes were taught by Thomas Ewing and met in the log-cabin home of one of the school’s patrons. It was a subscription school; the parents of the children enrolled paid in proportion to the number of their children attending. The first schoolhouse was built between 1816 and 1830 and was a crude log structure 20 feet square. By this time, West Liberty had grown considerably, and the town boasted two tanneries, a brick yard, and several hotels.
With the establishment of the University of Virginia, local residents realized the need for better education facilities than the elementary-level education provided by the subscription schools. In 1836, the General Assembly of the State of Virginia made funds available that could be used for colleges, academies, and intermediate schools. West Liberty Academy was the direct result of this.
One
THE ACADEMY
West Liberty Academy was primarily the result of the efforts of the Reverend Nathan Shotwell, a Presbyterian minister and educator who came to West Liberty in 1837 as pastor of the West Liberty Presbyterian Church. Reverend Shotwell was described by one of his contemporaries as a man of decided intellectual force, of earnest piety and deep convictions of truth and duty.
This being the case, one can easily see why he would be led to organize an academy of higher education. West Liberty Academy was chartered by the Legislature of Virginia on March 30, 1837. This is the same year that Victoria became Queen of England thus inaugurating the Victorian Era
with its strict moral code, and two important inventions that would significantly change society were perfected. In America, Samuel F.B. Morse exhibited his electric telegraph and the special code of dots and dashes to be used with it, while in France, Louis J.M. Daguerre developed the first practical photographic process. The charter named a group of local citizens as trustees and empowered them to collect subscriptions and carry out the academy’s business.
THE REVEREND DR. NATHAN SHOTWELL AND THE CHARTER. The original charter was destroyed in a fire. A photocopy is all that remains.
THE SHOTWELL RESIDENCE, 1912. The academy opened the following year in the