SPRING 2009:
Blair Mountain Added to
National Register of
Historic Places!
Press Release
For Immediate Release: March
31, 2009
Contact: Oliver Bernstein, Sierra Club, 512.477.2152
Blair Mountain Added to National Register of Historic Places;
Local Residents Applaud Designation of West Virginia Battle Site
CHARLESTON, WV - Blair Mountain in Logan County, West Virginia, was
named Monday to the National Register of Historic Places by the
National Park Service. The announcement comes after decades of
campaigning by local residents, historians and conservationists, as
well as a legal challenge by the Sierra Club.
"West Virginians share a rich and proud history," said Regina
Hendrix, a Charleston resident and member of Friends of the
Mountains. "We chose justice during the Civil War and claimed our
independence of thought and action. Now thanks to five long years of
effort by Friends of the Mountains and our many supporters and super
volunteers, we can pause to commemorate our history and honor our
heritage. The site of this battle is of national labor history
significance, and we can all rejoice and applaud the National Park
Service's decision to place this site on the National Register."
Blair Mountain is one of the most important labor historic sites in
the nation. In 1921 on Blair Mountain, 10,000 people clashed as coal
miners rose up against coal barons in defense of their right to
unionize. The undeclared civil war that followed lasted ten days and
became known as the Battle of Blair Mountain. This legendary event
is now characterized as America's largest-ever labor struggle. The
shooting war pitted union and anti-union forces against one another
in the mountains of Logan, West Virginia, and culminated in the
arrival of federal troops at the governor's request.
"National Register designation is a vitally important step in the
preservation of Blair Mountain, a site we listed as one of America's
11 Most Endangered Historic Places in 2006," said Richard Moe,
president of the National Trust for Historic Preservation.
"Nevertheless, the threat of coal mining activity at Blair Mountain
remains present and we will continue to vigorously oppose mining
efforts at the site."
Preservation Alliance of West Virginia Vice President Jeremy Morris
said the National Register listing recognizes the site's cultural
and historical significance. "Blair Mountain is a place of
significant meaning to the American labor movement, and Preservation
Alliance is proud to have helped nominate this endangered property
to the National Register," he said. "This is a victory for West
Virginia's heritage."
The Sierra Club has worked for years with local residents on a
successful campaign aimed at convincing the state of West Virginia
to nominate the Blair Mountain site for inclusion on the National
Register of Historic Places. "This is a testament of what can happen
when people from all over come together to protect the history that
is in the hills of Appalachia," said Bill Price, Environmental
Justice organizer for the Sierra Club in Charleston.
Local residents celebrated Monday's announcement of the listing.
"I'm so happy to see the culture and history of Logan County being
honored," said Kenny King, a Logan County resident and long-time
proponent of the historic listing for Blair Mountain. "The next step
is to get local officials to realize the value of putting a local
tourism center on Blair Mountain."
Archaeologist Dr. Harvard Ayers and historian Dr. Barbara Rasmussen
collaborated on the most recent, successful nomination of Blair
Mountain to the National Register of Historic Places. "It was an
honor and a pleasure to lead the first professional research team to
uncover some of the rich archeological record of the Battle of Blair
Mountain," said Dr. Ayers, Professor Emeritus of Anthropology at
Appalachian State University in Boone, North Carolina. "In our all
too brief field investigations in the summer of 2006, we were only
able to literally scratch the surface of this world-class
archeological and historic resource. The National Register listing
of the Blair Mountain Battlefield will hopefully give us the time
and resources to flesh out the full picture of this important
historical event."
Dr. Rasmussen, who served as Preservation Alliance of West
Virginia's chair of the Blair Mountain Task Force, added, "I am very
gratified to see that after 25 years of concerted efforts, this
important national landmark has finally achieved the recognition it
so deeply deserves. This battlefield memorializes the beginning of a
long struggle to bring the benefits of unionization to America's
working people. The miners' actions of 1921 constituted the largest
civil uprising since the American Civil War, but it focused national
attention on the plight of coal miners and the egregious excesses of
the coal industry. While the battle itself was lost, the successful
push for better working conditions soon followed and by 1950,
working people were so politically and economically strong that no
one could be President of the United States without the blessings of
organized labor. The Battle of Blair Mountain began the drive for
civil rights and social justice for millions of working Americans."
For more information visit:
http://www.friendsofthemountains.org/
http://www.ohvec.org/
http://www.wvhighlands.org/
http://www.mountainkeepers.org/
________________________________________
Oliver Bernstein
Sierra Club
Deputy Press Secretary
1202 San Antonio St.
Austin, Texas 78701
Phone: 512.477.2152
Fax: 512.477.8526
Cell: 512.289.8618
Email: Oliver.Bernstein@sierraclub.org
www.sierraclub.org
Send mail to
webster@pawv.org with questions or comments about this
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