West Virginia Park System Adds Hiking Trail In New River Gorge

The West Virginia State Park system’s newest hiking and biking trail provides a link to the New River Gorge’s industrial past, while giving those who travel it a chance to explore miles of Babcock State Park’s rugged canyon terrain.

The West Virginia State Park system’s newest hiking and biking trail provides a link to the New River Gorge’s industrial past, while giving those who travel it a chance to explore miles of Babcock State Park’s rugged canyon terrain.

The new trail follows the path of an 8.5-mile narrow gauge railroad, completed in 1886, that connected the now-abandoned coke-producing town of Sewell on western shore of the New River with coal mines along Manns Creek and at Clifftop, near the rim of the Gorge.

After the rail line was abandoned, its right-of-way was converted into a road, which later became a pathway for four-wheel-drive vehicles until it was closed several years ago when it became impassible due to washouts and neglect.

In February 2022, Gov. Jim Justice directed the state Department of Transportation to rehabilitate the dilapidated road for re-use as a public hiking and biking trail connecting Babcock to its boundary with New River Gorge National Park and Preserve. The new trail has a not-so-new name — the Old Sewell Road — in recognition of its former role.

Work involved in converting the former railbed and road into an all-season, crushed rock-topped trail was completed within a year by a state Division of Highways crew, using proceeds from a $350,000 federal grant to pay for structural materials, including timber and steel for a new bridge.

The trail begins at the parking area for the oft-photographed Glade Creek gristmill. For the first half-mile or so, the trail follows the paved access road behind the mill leading to Babcock’s guest cabins 1-13. The official trailhead is found soon after the pavement ends at a gate crossing the road a short distance downhill from Cabin 13.

Spring wildflowers, towering cliffs, giant trees and the remnants of stone support piers from the old railroad are among trailside attractions along the route.

About 1.5 miles down the trail from the gristmill, Babcock’s Narrow Gauge Trail intersects with Old Sewell Road, providing access to a swinging bridge crossing of Glade Creek. About 2.5 miles beyond that intersection, a century-old boiler rests at the edge of the trail, where a new steel-supported wooden bridge crosses Flanagan’s Branch at a small waterfall. The new bridge makes use of the stone buttresses that once supported a railroad trestle at the crossing.

According to a sign posted at the site, the boiler was once used to power a locomotive that traveled the narrow gauge line. According to a 2010 article in Trains magazine, the boiler was first used to power a sawmill and later repurposed as a water tank serving the steam-powered Shay locomotives traveling the line.

A few hundred yards down the grade from the boiler and bridge, deposits of fresh bear scat began to appear in the trail tread. Soon, a young adult black bear could be seen resting on a boulder on a steep slope about 100 feet uphill. Once aware of the presence of humans, the bear abruptly scrambled up the slope and out of sight.

Not long after the bear sighting, a break in the forest canopy allowed a section of the New River to come into view, and a trestle carrying the C&O Railroad across the stream could be seen.

The Old Sewell trail ends just short of a National Park Service boundary marker posted at the edge of the former road/railbed. The grade continues on National Park Service property toward the townsite of Sewell, but an abundance of downed trees and thick brush make walking or biking on the right-of-way challenging.

About a half-mile downslope from the state park boundary, an open white gate and a sign warning visitors not to disturb cultural resources can be seen off the right side of the roadway. By following that boulder-strewn, barely discernable roadway downhill and then looking carefully, remnants Sewell come into view.

Sewell was built on a bench just above the western shore of the New River near the mouth of Manns Creek, into which Glade Creek flows about one mile upstream. The townsite lies just across the New River from the National Park Service’s Cunard River Access facility.

Sewell took shape on land once owned by Peter Bowyer, who built a cabin and began operating a small farm and ferry service here in 1798. Bowyer may have been the first person to establish a home and business in the New River Gorge.

The small settlement that sprang up at Bowyers Ferry was later named Sewell, in honor of Stephen Sewell, one of the first White settlers in the upper Greenbrier Valley.

As construction of the C&O Railroad through the New River Gorge neared completion, the Longdale Iron Co. began buying coal land in the vicinity of Sewell. In 1873, months after the rail line through the Gorge was ready for use, Longdale opened its first mine at Sewell.

The company planned to process coal mined at Sewell into coke to fuel its steel furnaces 128 miles to the east, at Longdale, Virginia.

Coke is produced by partially baking coal to burn off its impurities, creating a fuel that burns hotter and is better suited for use in the iron-making process.

One year after Longdale opened its first mine at Sewell, the company’s first coke ovens began production here. Longdale was the first of what would become more than a dozen companies to produce coke in the New River Gorge, and pioneered the use of “beehive” style coke ovens.

Within 10 years, the company was operating 196 coke ovens, making Sewell the top coke production site in the Gorge. Coke continued to be produced at Sewell until 1956, long after other New River Gorge coke ovens ceased operations.

By the mid 1880s, the mines fueling Longdale’s coke operation at Sewell began running out of coal. Company officials asked civil engineers from the C&O to see if it was financially feasible to run a new, narrow gauge branch line up Manns Creek and on to Clifftop at the top of the Gorge, to reach company coal reserves. After C&O’s experts concluded that the proposed branch line was not feasible, the company consulted Charleston engineer William G. Reynolds, who told them the job could be done, but it would cost $100,000.

Reynolds designed and oversaw construction of a 3-foot wide rail line, the Manns Creek Railroad, which was completed in 1886.

In its heyday in the early 1900s, Sewell had a population of more than 300 and supported a store, hotel and sawmill.

Today, a still-flowing springhouse, the walls and chimney of an office building and vault, and many of the town’s coke ovens are among remnants of Sewell that can still be seen.

The National Park Service urges visitors to take care to avoid injury while visiting cultural resource sites like Sewell, and to leave all artifacts in place. Visitors to Sewell are also cautioned not to trespass on the active CSX railroad right-of-way which lies between the townsite and the New River.

Round-trip hiking distance between the townsite of Sewell and Babcock’s Glade Creek gristmill is about 12 miles. The Old Sewell Trail is equipped with 12 strategically placed benches to provide comfort to weary hikers.

A recent round-trip hike to Sewell, which included a lunch break and an hour of exploration time at the townsite, took about seven hours. Those traveling the trail are urged to bring water and wear sturdy shoes or boots.

Jury Selection To Begin For Man Accused Of Killing Officer Cassie Johnson

A West Virginia judge has ruled that jury selection will begin this week for a man accused of killing a Charleston police officer.

A West Virginia judge has ruled that jury selection will begin this week for a man accused of killing a Charleston police officer.

Kanawha Circuit Court Judge Jennifer Bailey said during a pretrial hearing on Tuesday that jury selection for Joshua Phillips will begin Thursday, ahead of the trial scheduled to begin Monday, the Charleston Gazette-Mail reported.

The judge declined to rule on a motion from defense attorneys to move the trial out of Kanawha County.

“I believe the appropriate thing to do is to continue to hold the motion in abeyance to consider, as I had indicated previously, whether or not a jury could be properly selected in this case with a greater number of persons available only for this trial,” Bailey said.

Phillips is charged with fatally shooting Officer Cassie Johnson, 28, in 2020 when she responded to a parking lot complaint.

More Than 3,000 School Voucher Applications Approved

More than 3,000 applications for nonpublic school vouchers have been approved in West Virginia and more are being reviewed, officials said.

More than 3,000 applications for nonpublic school vouchers have been approved in West Virginia and more are being reviewed, officials said.

The state Treasurer’s Office had approved 3,010 applications as of Friday and had another 469 applications that were still under review, agency spokesman Jared Hunt told the Charleston Gazette-Mail in an email.

A law enacted last year creates a publicly funded savings accounts program called the Hope Scholarship. It allows state money to be put into a special account that parents could then spend on private school tuition, homeschooling and other educational needs. It would allow private and homeschooled students to participate, pushing the potential cost to the state to more than $100 million annually.

May 15 was the last day for parents to apply to receive the full voucher amount, which will be $4,300 for the 2022-23 school year, Hunt said.

The law is being challenged by three parents of children who attend public schools who contend that it violates the state Constitution and will siphon money away from public education. They filed a lawsuit this year and requested a preliminary injunction to stop the program’s implementation while the case is ongoing.

Approved W.Va. Charter School Won't Open This Fall

The four-member West Virginia Professional Charter School Board voted Wednesday to push back its contract with Nitro Preparatory Academy for one year, The Charleston Gazette-Mail reported.

A charter school approved to open in West Virginia this fall has been delayed after a suitable location couldn’t be found.

The four-member West Virginia Professional Charter School Board voted Wednesday to push back its contract with Nitro Preparatory Academy for one year, The Charleston Gazette-Mail reported.

Initial plans were for Accel Schools to open the school in a former high school building in Nitro but there were parking, plumbing and other issues.

“They are still deciding what building will best serve their students,” charter school board Chairman Adam Kissel said Wednesday.

Accel also is opening a brick-and-mortar charter school in Jefferson County as well as an online school.

Republican Gov. Jim Justice signed a bill in 2019 that allows for the creation of charter schools. Legislation approved last year created the new state-level charter board, whose members were appointed by Justice.

Other charter schools include one in the Cheat Lake area of Morgantown that will be run by West Virginia Academy, whose president, John Treu, is a West Virginia University assistant professor of accounting. The board also previously approved the statewide West Virginia Virtual Academy that will be operated by Stride Inc.

Ford Found Liable In Lawsuit In W.Va. Woman's Death

A jury in West Virginia has awarded $7 million in a product liability lawsuit against Ford Motor Co. to the family of a woman who died when her Mustang was involved in a fiery crash.

A jury in West Virginia has awarded $7 million in a product liability lawsuit against Ford Motor Co. to the family of a woman who died when her Mustang was involved in a fiery crash.

A Kanawha County jury made the award this week to the Raleigh County family of Breanna Bumgarner. The jury found Ford was 99% at fault for Bumgarner’s death, the Charleston Gazette-Mail reported.

Ford spokesman Ian Thibodeau said the company will review its options for appealing the verdict.

According to the lawsuit filed by the administrator of Bumgarner’s estate, Bumgarner’s 2014 Ford Mustang was hit by a pickup truck that had crossed the center line along U.S. Route 33 near Spencer in March 2016. The Mustang caught fire and Bumgarner was trapped in the vehicle. The lawsuit also named the driver of the other vehicle and her parents.

The plaintiff’s attorneys had argued that the Mustang’s brake fluid reservoir was not sufficiently protected from the crash and it led to the fire. The jury found the reservoir’s design was not safe enough in preventing leakage in the accident.

W.Va. Mom Who Lost Son To COVID Teaches Others About Vaccines

LaKeisha Barron-Brown, a mother whose 21-year-old son died from COVID-19 last year, is “turning sorrow to service” by using his memory to educate others on the importance of vaccination.

Jon’Tavese O’mari Brown died Oct. 26 after contracting COVID-19 while being hospitalized for kidney failure. His mother remembers him as a kind, energetic young man and a community youth leader.

“Jon was a very charismatic individual. He was — from a mother’s standpoint — he was always giving to other people and not himself,” Barron-Brown said. “He was a giver, by nature. That’s sort of who Jon was, the mission that I have now is to continue that legacy for him and educate on the importance of vaccination, especially if you have other health conditions.”

Jon was not vaccinated when he contracted the virus, his mother said. On Saturday, she joined with the Partnership of African American Churches to have a vaccination event during a screening of a documentary of Jon’s life at Bream Presbyterian Church, on Charleston’s West Side.

Barron-Brown said the goal of the event was to educate people who might not yet be vaccinated against COVID-19 on the importance of doing so.

“One thing I think we’ve seen is that, here in the African American community, there is the fear of the unknown, of history repeating itself of when, in the past, vaccinations or things like that have caused harm. I think we have to work to eliminate that fear,” Barron-Brown said. “The only way to eliminate that fear is through education. We need to change the narrative — not just in the African American community, but in the community as a whole.”

COVID-19, she continued, doesn’t discriminate against who it infects or kills.

“When COVID first happened, we heard that young people were invincible, that they could keep living their lives the way they did. Losing a legacy in the community at age 21 was eye-opening, I believe,” Barron-Brown said. “For COVID, it doesn’t really matter your age, it doesn’t matter your race, your socioeconomic background. So now we need to educate past that fear and show people the importance of getting a vaccine for themselves and those around them.”

Charleston City Councilman Larry Moore coached Jon when he attended Capitol High School. He graduated in 2018 after setting a record and earning a state title for running the 2×400 in track and field.

“Jon was an uplifter — he truly was the life of the party, and so positive. What his mom is doing in his memory — turning sorrow into service — I love that, and it’s great for the city and great for everyone,” Moore said. “A lot of these younger kids, they’re kind of stuck in their ways a little bit. She’s showing the kids to take things seriously. COVID-19 is real, everything in life is real. They can see that through someone they looked up to.”

Jon was the father of a 1-year-old son when he died.

“He was his heart,” Barron-Brown said.

Jon was also passionate about sports, his mother said. He was always looking to help and encourage other student athletes in the community. When COVID-19 started in 2020, he launched The Jungle, a three-on-three basketball tournament attended by people across the Kanawha Valley, and even the state.

“It was like nothing ever seen in the state before,” Moore said.

Jeff Biddle, who was Jon’s youth pastor and who is the current director of Midian Leadership Project, an after-school program on Charleston’s West Side, said Jon and his friends were a large part of the inspiration that started the program.

“They were a wonderful bunch of kids who made an agreement with each other to hold each other accountable, to graduate, to do great things with their lives,” Biddle said. “Jon was a really energetic guy. All I know how to say is that we really miss him. His memory is a very large presence in the minds and hearts of his friends and the people who knew him.”

Over the several months following Jon’s death, Barron-Brown put her emotions onto paper, writing a journal-style book called “Loss of Self: Turning Sorrow into Service.”

It includes quotes, self-guided questions and writing excerpts centered around recovering after such a devastating loss. Barron-Brown will have signed copies of the book available at Saturday’s event. She hopes the writings help people who have experienced any kind of loss.

“As a grieving mother, I will always grieve the loss of my son, but I know I cannot stay in that mind and be effective. This was me indulging myself, putting those thoughts down,” Barron-Brown said. “Everyone has lost themselves at some point — through a relationship, death, childhood trauma. I think everyone lost themselves a little bit in this pandemic, and we need to support each other in getting back.”

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