Gwinn Brothers Store Ledger: Meadow Creek, West Virginia, 1901-1913
Access and use
- Location of collection:
-
University ArchivesMcConnell LibraryRadford UniversityP.O. Box 6881801 East Main StreetRadford, VA 24142
- Contact for questions and access:
- POC: Bud BennettEmail: brbennet@radford.eduPhone: (540) 831-5694Email: archives@radford.eduPhone: (540) 831-5701
Collection context
Summary
- Extent:
- 3.0 Linear feet
- Abstract:
- This ledger from 1901-1909 appears to have been the property of Gwinn Bros., General Merchandise and Lumber in Meadow Creek, West Virginia, owned by J.E. and William Abraham Gwinn. The full collection can be found here.
- Language:
- English
Background
- Scope and content:
-
This ledger from 1901-1909 appears to have been the property of Gwinn Bros., General Merchandise and Lumber in Meadow Creek, West Virginia, owned by J.E. and William Abraham Gwinn. Besides the individual customers listed, the ledger also includes pages for the First National Bank of Alderson, the C and O Railroad, the Alaska Coal Co., the Meadow River Lumber Co, and other businesses. There is also a page from 14 March 1903 for the United Mine Workers of America that lists the names of thirty-three people, and a subsequent page for a Union Supply Company.
Among the products listed in the ledger are groceries such as flour, yeast, sugar, eggs, and candy; personal items such as shaving brushes, boots, and overcoats; farming supplies and hardware, including horseshoe nails, harness leather, feed, and stove pipes; large quantities of railroad ties; and a few odd items, including guitar strings, a telescope, and a coffin. Frequent customers include W. H. Bowles, Charley Bowles, W. A. Gwinn, J. E. Gwinn, C. B. Gwinn, Cosby Jimisin, Walter Kalor, Will Matthews, Robert Pankey, and James Roy.
- Biographical / historical:
-
The following information about Meadow Creek and the Gwinns was published by the Summers County Historical Society:
The King of England gave a Land Grant to the Gwinn Family that included the Meadow Creek Valley in the State of West Virginia. This document is recorded in the Monroe Co. Court House. Moses Gwinn was the original owner and later, William Gwinn bought the Western half of the Meadow Creek Valley. With the building of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad in 1875, the town of Meadow Creek became a railroad Terminal. J. M. Raines was responsible in building the Sewell Valley Railroad to supply the largest hardwood lumber mill. As the town grew, a general store was built and owned by J. E. and William Abraham Gwinn. Later, the passenger trains and local freight trains made schedule stops and the Sewell Valley passenger train also had a regular, daily schedule stop at Meadow Creek. New businesses such as the Sewell Valley Bank, Withrow Furniture and Funeral Parlor, Tom Mosley's Restaurant, and the United States Post Office served the growing town of Meadow Creek. On the South side of New River in Raleigh County, which was across the river from Meadow Creek, small settlements that were named New, Pear, and Abraham sprang up. The sawmill and mining towns were located along the Sewell Valley Railroad.
Source: Summers Co. Historical Society, The History of Summers County West Virginia 1984, (Marceline, M.O.: 1984), 33.
- Acquisition information:
- Donated by Lorne Bair, Fall 2012.
- Arrangement:
-
Box 1. Gwinn Brothers Store Ledger
- Physical location:
- Locked in compact shelving, Level 1, shelf 30F
- Physical description:
- .