WV-FOOTSTEPS-D Digest Volume 00 : Issue 170 Today's Topics: #1 BIO: SALATHIEL LEE O'NEAL, Barbour [Valerie & Tommy Crook To: WV-FOOTSTEPS-L@rootsweb.com Message-Id: <4.3.1.0.20000712061956.00b9a100@mail.earthlink.net> Subject: BIO: SALATHIEL LEE O'NEAL, Barbour Co. WV Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"; format=flowed The History of West Virginia, Old and New Published 1923, The American Historical Society, Inc., Chicago and New York, Volume III, pg. 499-501 Barbour SALATHIEL LEE O'NEAL. School teacher, farmer and horticulturist, lumberman, civil and mining engineer, in- ventor-only the exceptional man deserves recognition for definite accomplishments in such a broad range of activities. Nevertheless these occupations, carried on jointly or suc- cessively, have been the medium through which Mr. O'Neal of Philippi has expressed his talents in service to himself and the world. An English genealogist writes: "The O'Neill family and name, according to all standard antiquaries, descended from King Heremon (seventh son of Milessus, the first of the Milesian race who conquered and settled Ireland). Niall The Great (his direct lineal descendant), Monarch of Ireland A. D. 388, subdued the Picts and ancient Kings of his name (O'Neill). " 'The O'Neill' has always stood for a fighting and representative titled line, the last of whom, George Owen O'Neill, 'The O'Neill', County of Tyrone, was formerly a Peer of Portugal and an officer of the Royal household of the late King of Portugal." For the most part the O'Neals have been rural and agricultural people, and Mr. O'Neal himself has never for any great length of time been entirely divorced from agricultural enterprise. The founder of the family in America was his great-grandfather, a native of Ireland, who went from that country to England, where he married a Miss Anglin, and shortly afterward they came to America and established their home about two miles west of Philippi, on what is now the Clarksburg Pike. In this country locality, then little improved above pioneer conditions, they spent the rest of their days. Among their children were three sons, John, David and Joseph. John, was the grand- father, and his career is noted in the following paragraph: Joseph was a farmer living near his brother John, on part of his father's land. He had three children, Daniel, Ellen and Edith. Edith became the wife of William Shaw, and their son, David Shaw, became a distinguished educator, advocating in advance of his prime denominational schools, and was at the head of the State Reform School and later president of the Norris-Harvey College at Barboursville. He served in the Legislature of the state for five terms, was a democrat and a member of the Southern Methodist Church. Joseph O'Neal, the youngest of the three brothers men- tioned, lived about a mile and a half west of Philippi, on the Clarksburg Pike, where he was a farmer, but is per- haps best remembered in the locality for his skill with the violin, and was one of the old-time fiddlers of that section of the state. John O'Neal became a farmer on Elk Creek. He was one of the very successful men of his time, and left a large amount of real property when he died. He was a demo- crat, but could not be persuaded to take office, and was a member of the Methodist Church. Like his father, he mar- ried a Miss Anglin, and they were the parents of ten children. The record of the children is as follows: Samuel, mentioned below;. Thomas, a farmer who before the Civil war went to Kansas and established himself at old Grass- hopper Falls near Kansas City, where he lived out his life; George went to Kansas with his brother Thomas, and was also a farmer there; Joel, who followed farming in Bar- bour County; Lemuel, who was a farmer and successful in accumulating property in Barbour County, where he died; David, who spent his life in the rural community of his ancestors; Abigail, who married George Alexander, of Buckhannon, where she died; Prudence, who married John Zinn, and they spent their lives just south of Philippi; Rebecca, who married Absolom Roberts, a. farmer in Bar- bour and Ritchie counties; Mary, who is now ninety-four years of age, the wife of Abram Wells and living near Tannersville, West Virginia. None of the sons entered the military struggle between the states, though all were op- posed to slavery. All but one of them were democrats and all were Methodists. Samuel O'Neal, representing the third generation of the family in West Virginia, grew up in a home where school advantages were primitive. He became good in reading, writing and arithmetic, had a good voice, and was very popular in the singing schools of his day. The busi- ness of his life was farming. He was a very active member of the Methodist Episcopal Church, serving as class reader, and was a member of the Patrons of Husbandry. Samuel O'Neal married Mary Crites. Her father, it is believed, was killed while away from home for the purpose of paying for some land that he had pur- chased. He was robbed of his money and buried not more than twenty miles from his home without the family being advised. Samuel O'Neal died January 3, 1899, and his wife died on the 28th of the same month. Of their nine children they reared seven: Joab, a farmer and carpenter contractor at Buckhannon, where he died; John, who was a farmer, died at Lebanon, Missouri, March 24, 1922; Rahame, who married Elam Anglin and lives in Barbour County; Martha, wife of David Hall, a fanner and stock man in Barbour County; Prudence, who lives in Taylor County, widow of A. B. Green, who is a farmer of that county; Ollie, a resident of St. Louis, Missouri, the widow of Calvin Corder, who represented another pioneer family of Barbour County, and was a carpenter and contractor in St. Louis, where he died; and Salathiel Lee. Salathiel Lee O'Neal was born three miles south of Philippi, May 24, 1864. He grew up in the place of his birth, and he had better educational opportunities than were presented to his father. He attended country schools school at Philippi, and Hillsdale College in Michigan. For six years he taught in country districts of Barbour County. He then began the manufacture and sale of lumber, but con- tinued farming in connection with the operation of his mill. While in School Mr. O 'Neal studied surveying, and has done a great deal of work in civil engineering. He was elected county engineer of Barbour County in 1896, and by rcelection served another term of four years. For twenty years he has carried on an extensive practice as a consult- ing and mining engineer, being engaged by various corpo- rations to make geological sketches and reports on prop- erties in West Virginia and other states. He was general superintendent and consulting engineer of several coal com- panies, and was superintendent of the Berryburg Mine nine years and receiver for the Philippi Collieries Company. Probably his reputation would be secure from his work as an inventor alone. He invented the caterpillar tread, which he originally called "a ship propeller." This idea came to him thirty-eight years ago, and the same idea is that now exhibited in the caterpillar tread used on all war tanks and tractors. And a wireless, Electrical Steering device, by which, torpedoes and ships can be steered or guided by a person a long distance from the same. Other prod- ucts of his genius are a telemeter or range finder for computing distances between objects; a civil engineer's transit; and O'Neal's platting, drafting and self-com- puting device. This last invention was patented March 6, 1895, and provides a rapid and accurate method of platting land surveys and drawings of any kind. The self-computing feature computes the area of a tract of land at the same time the map or plat is being made, enabling the user to do his worn quickly and in one-tenth the time required by the old method. He copyrighted O'Neal's Handbook on Surveying and Architecture, De- cember 4, 1895. Mr. O'Neal invented a rapid-firing gun just before the World war, and it passed such favorable inspection as to attract the attention of the English, and he was offered a large sum of money for the invention, but declined out of conscientious scruples against being instru- mental in any improved device that would make the de- struction of human life more easy. From the general practice of farming Mr. O'Neal for a number of years has been putting his thought, energy and experiment into horticulture. In 1911 he started an orchard, and now has fifty acres planted. The orchard lies so that all exposures are found. The business has been profitable, though up to the present time peaches have constituted his chief profitable crop, since other fruit is just coming into bearing. He carries on his experiments constantly, and the fruit of his experience may possibly be more valuable to the horticulture of West Virginia than the actual output of his efforts. On his place is a tree with a remarkable history. When this tree was 112 years old Mr. O'Neal per- formed some "tree surgery" by filling a cavity in the trunk with thirty-two bushels of crushed stone, twenty-two bushels of sand and eleven bushels of cement. It is be- lieved this is the largest filling ever given a fruit tree in the United States or world. The tree has been known to bear 100 bushels of apples in one season, and the year it was 120 years old it bore eighty-five bushels of measured apples. Mr. O'Neal named it the "Century Mammoth Sweet." He is identified with the state's effort to improve horticulture and fruit growing, and for two years was president of the Farm Bureau of Barbour County. In Barbour County, July 24, 1901, Mr. O'Neal married Lucy Knapp, who was born at Philippi, February 5, 1883, was educated in schools of her native city and for two years was a teacher in a country district. Her parents were John B. and Sallie A. (Smith) Knapp. Her father, a native of Barbour County, spent the greater part of his life as a farmer. He was a son of Henry Knapp, who came to the United States from Germany and lived on a farm a few miles from Philippi, where he carried on his trade as chair- maker. John B. Knapp died in November, 1920, at the age of eighty-seven, and is survived by his widow. Of their ten children seven grew to mature years: Jacob H.; Nancy, wife of John Weaver; Miss Lettie; John Letcher; Charles H.; Mrs. O'Neal; and Hugh Smith Knapp. Mr. O'Neal and wife have some children who have already shown the quality of their inheritance and training. Their oldest child is Harry Lee, who spent two years in the United States Navy, first as a fireman and then as phar- macist's mate in the Hospital Corps, was on duty on the Pacific Coast and received his honorable discharge De- cember 29, 1921. The second child, Camden Cleon, is a graduate of the Philippi High School, and attended the Naval Training School at Hampton Roads, now a student in Broaddus College. The third child, Frederick Earl, is a student in Philippi High School. John Samuel, died in infancy. The two youngest children are Aubrey Wayne and James Morris. Mr. O'Neal in politics is a democrat. While he was county engineer he made a district map of Barbour County which has been accented as authority. The O'Neals are church people, Mr. O'Neal was brought up a Meth- odist, but any of the orthodox churches satisfy him. He has been a member of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows for a third of a century, and his wife's father was a member of that order for almost fifty years. ______________________________ X-Message: #2 Date: Wed, 12 Jul 2000 22:03:29 -0400 From: Valerie & Tommy Crook To: WV-FOOTSTEPS-L@rootsweb.com Message-Id: <4.3.1.0.20000712220329.00c7b1c0@mail.earthlink.net> Subject: BIO: HAROLD P. TOMPKINS, Kanawha Co. WV Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"; format=flowed The History of West Virginia, Old and New Published 1923, The American Historical Society, Inc., Chicago and New York, Volume III, pg. 498-499 Kanawha HAROLD P. TOMPKINS. The family represented by this prominent coal and gas operator and land owner near Charleston has been one of historical distinction in the Kanawha Valley for three generations. The old Tompkins home at Cedar Grove in Kanawha County, where Harold P. Tompins [sic] and his father were both born, has been oc- cupied by the family since 1844, and during the Civil war it was used as a base hospital. The pioneer of the family and a prominent character of his day in West Virginia was William Tompkins, the first to develop the salt resources of the Kanawha Valley. His- tory gives him credit as being the first man in the world to utilize natural gas for industrial or other purposes. He had started in the salt industry at Burning Springs in 1832. Burning Springs it will be recalled was the scene of the first commercial oil development in the state. While there he noted gas escaping from the ground, and conceived the idea of using this gas for heating the kettles in his salt works. In carrying out this idea he invented the present system of drilling gas and oil wells by devising a drill with a jar surface. He ran the gas under his kettles with wooden pipes. In 1844 William Tompkins removed to Cedar Grove, where he continued his salt making operations. He was a man of great force of character and indomitable energy. As a boy he was bound out to a farmer, but with a broader ambition for his future he ran away at the age of sixteen and came to Kanawha County. He became an extensive land owner, accumulating 27,000 acres of land in the Steele Survey, this being purchased at $2 an acre. William Tompkins married a sister of Jesse Grant, father of Gen. U. S. Grant. General Grant while a student at West Point spent his vacations at the Tompkins estate. Another prominent member of the family was Col. C. C. Tompkins, great uncle of Harold P. Tompkins. Colonel Tompkins was the first commander of Confederate troops in the Kanawha Valley, being succeeded in that command by Governor Wise of Virginia. Harold P. Tompkins was born at Cedar Grove in 1888, oldest son of H. Preston and Addie L. (Elswick) Tomp- kins, both of Scotch-Irish descent. His mother is still living at Cedar Grove. H. Preston Tompkins, who died in 1907, was a life-long resident of Kanawha County and a very substantial business man. Harold P. Tompkins graduated from Marshall College in Huntington in 1908, and then spent two years in the Uni- versity of West Virginia at Morgantown. Leaving school in 1910, he entered the coal and gas business, and has been one of the leading coal and gas operators and developers of these natural resources in the Kanawha Valley, with head- quarters in the Charleston National Bank Building. His mining and land interests are near Cedar Grove and vicinity. Mr. Tompkins built both towns of Cedar Grove and Glas- gow, secured the location of various industries there, and his influence with capital and business men and his personal enterprise have had much to do with the develop- ment of that rich section. Mr. Tompkins, a progressive republican in politics, is one of the very active members of the Charleston Kiwanis Club, belongs to the Chamber of Commerce, and to the various coal and gas associations, is a Mason and a member of the First Methodist Episcopal Church, South. On November 14, 1913, he married Miss Mary Midkiff, a native of Charles- ton. Their three children are Harold Preston, Jr., William Grant and Betty Lee. Mr. Tompkins is a brother of Mrs. Rachel Tompkins Set- tle, of Pineville, Kentucky, and of Roger W., Grant C. and Helen A. Tompkins, all of whom live in the old home place at Cedar Grove.