Nobel Prize-winning economist and mathematician John Forbes Nash was born in Bluefield in 1928. In 1924, nearby Graham, Virginia decided to rename itself as Bluefield to try to unite the two towns, which had been feuding since the civil war. It has been adapted and in the 21st century is operated as the West Virginia Manor and Retirement Home. 20th century The Upper Oakhurst Historic District was primarily developed during the 1920sĭuring the 1920s, the twelve-story West Virginian Hotel was built. It is known as "The Whitest Historically Black College in America". It developed as today's Bluefield State University. With a strong Black community, Bluefield was the site of the 1895 founding of the Bluefield Colored Institute, an historically black college. In 1889, the city of Bluefield was officially incorporated. The city also had more automobiles per capita than any other city in the country. Nearby Bramwell, incorporated in 1888, boasted that it was the "Millionaires' Town" because more millionaires per capita lived there than anywhere in the nation. The coal boom generated a flood of money in the area. A bustling metropolis, it had a nightlife and a personality that was "a little bit Chicago, a little bit New York, and a whole lot of Pittsburgh" -rugged and with steel and coal embedded in its soul. When coal tonnage was good and the market for coal was booming, Bluefield was essentially a "Little New York," as it was called in the day. The growth and decay of the city depended almost entirely upon Norfolk and Western Railroad. Urban sprawl and blight were common complaints in the early days, as workers crowded into aging housing. As with the extremely accelerated growth of San Francisco during the gold rush, Bluefield became a city that seemed to spring up "overnight." Growth far outpaced the existing infrastructure. In the one-year period from 1887 to 1888, passenger travel along the railroad increased 317%. In the late 19th century, the Norfolk and Western Railway Company selected Bluefield as the site for a repair center and a major division point, which greatly stimulated the town's growth. The development of the coal industry in this area created a boom in the local and national economy and attracted immigrant European workers and migrant African Americans from the Deep South to the mountains in search of industrial work. They helped support the Industrial Revolution in the United States. Around that time, coal mines were developed in the area around Harman, Bluefield, War, and Pocahontas, which together were known as the Pocahontas Coal Fields. President Frederick Kimball of the Norfolk and Western Railway described this as the "most spectacular find on the continent and indeed perhaps of the entire planet." The coal seam had been mentioned much earlier in Thomas Jefferson's Notes on the State of Virginia, but it was not mined until 1882. The first seam was discovered in nearby Pocahontas, Virginia in the backyard of Jordan Nelson. Coal rush īeneath the land of the Davidsons and Baileys lay the largest and richest deposit of bituminous coal in the world. Research has shown that this settlement, also known as Higginbotham's Summit in the 1880s, was probably named for the coal fields that were developed in the area of the Bluestone River. The city is traditionally thought to be named after the chicory flowers in the area, which give the fields a purplish blue hue during the summer. In 1882, the descendants of the Davidson and Bailey family sold a portion of their land, when Captain John Fields of the Norfolk and Western Railway pioneered the area and began building a new railroad through the hills of Bluefield. Others joined them and they built a small village with a mill, a church, a one-room schoolhouse, and a fort for defending the settlement against invasions by the Shawnee tribe, which had a village on the banks of the Bluestone River. The European-American history of Bluefield began in the 18th century, when the Davidson and Bailey families settled in a rugged and remote part of what is now southern West Virginia. It is the principal city of the Bluefield micropolitan area extending into Virginia, which had a population of 106,363 in 2020. The population was 9,658 at the 2020 census. Bluefield is a city in Mercer County, West Virginia, United States.
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