Lockwood House is a historic building in Harpers Ferry, West Virginia. One of the largest residences in Harpers Ferry, it is a massive stone and brick structure, [1] located on the east side of Camp Hill at 360 Fillmore St., high above the town. It has a view of the town and the two rivers that meet there, the Shenandoah and the Potomac. [1]
The house was built by the U.S. War Department in 1848 to serve as housing for the paymaster at the Harpers Ferry Armory. For three months in 1864, the house served as Union General Henry Lockwood's headquarters during the Civil War, which earned it its name. It was significantly renovated in 1858, shortly before the Civil War, and again in 1883, while a part of Storer College. During the Civil War it was first used in 1862 as a military hospital, called Clayton Hospital, and then by Army officers of both sides. In 1865, it became the first building of Storer College, which eventually added a third floor (later removed in restoration work by the National Park Service). [2]
The Lockwood House was first constructed in 1848. Maj. Henry K. Craig, served at the Armory Superintendent from 1841 to 1844. [2] Craig suggested significant improvements to both the musket and rifle factories, as well as repairs to the armory canal, and the “erection of Quarters for the Commanding Officer and Paymaster". Maj. John Symington, appointed to replace Maj. Craig at the post of Superintendent of the Armory in 1844, repeated the request for improvements and provided “plans & estimates in detail for new structures and alterations and repairs to old buildings at this Armory." [2]
The Armory was destroyed early in the Civil War.
With the outbreak of Civil War in 1861 and the destruction of the armory installation, Harpers Ferry, its people, industry, and their associated buildings, began many years of struggle to establish a new identity. Symbolic of this transition, both in politics and industry, the former armory Paymaster's Quarters was used during the Civil War as Headquarters for Union Generals, including General Sheridan and General Henry H. Lockwood whose name remained permanently associated with the house, and to house prisoners of war, wounded soldiers, and medical supplies. Additionally, the loss of the armory at the beginning of the war eventually led to development of new industry, not the least of which was tourism associated both with the scenery and the association of the town with John Brown and the Civil War.
"In future years traveler and tourist will eagerly resort [here]...and history will point out [this] as the spot where many acts in the great tragedy, not yet closed, took place." ~ John D. Smith, 19th Main Infantry, September 1862 [3]
In August 1864, the house was also used as a headquarters by Union General Philip Sheridan as he prepared for his Valley campaign . [4]
With the end of the Civil War and the Passage of the 13th Amendment, there was a national effort to educate former enslaved persons. The federal government established the Freedmen's Bureau, an agency dedicated to the assistance of integrating former slaves into society. Freedmen's Bureau activities included relocating, housing, feeding, and clothing the destitute and homeless. In addition, education became an essential element of the bureau's mission. [2] The Lockwood House in Harpers Ferry was the first building to house the newly established Storer School. Reverend Nathan Cook Brackett a member of New England's Freewill Baptist Home Mission Society, established a primary school in the war-torn building. [2] He taught basic fundamentals including reading, writing, and arithmetic to the children of former slaves and their parents.
Nathan C. Brackett, a Freewill Baptist minister from Philips Maine, was educated at the Maine State Seminary (today Bates College) and Dartmouth College. The American Missionary Association, a group working with the Freedmen's Bureau, assigned the Shenandoah Valley to the Freewill Baptists. Nathan Brackett was familiar with the territory having served in the Shenandoah Valley, even headquartered in Harpers Ferry, in 1864 with the U.S. Christian Commission:
The agent upon whom the largest share of the work, in detail, was devolved, was Rev. N.C. Brackett, of Maine. Being a strong man, and possessed of tireless energy, it was impossible to give him too much to do. He was associated with me in all the operations in the Shenandoah Valley, and won for himself the kindest wishes of many hundreds of soldiers, as well as of officers and delegates. [2]
Upon arriving at Harpers Ferry, Brackett found a desperate and tumultuous situation. He later commented that,
I found a colored population poor and helpless, surrounded by white people desperately hostile to their improvement. The task of securing school rooms and boarding places for the teachers was by no means a light one. The very few who would have been willing to furnish us were frequently prevented by the fear of their neighbors. Through the kindness of Capt. Young, we were allowed to occupy an old government house, which answered for school room and a place to live in, at Harper’s Ferry. [2]
Dedicated as they were, these few teachers could not begin to meet the educational needs of the freedmen in the area. Across the South, education of freedmen was an urgent priority within their community. By 1867, some 16 teachers struggled to educate 2,500 students in the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia. Reverend Brackett realized that he needed to train African-American teachers.
The Lockwood House would serve as the main building for Storer School until 1867, when the school came to the attention of John Storer, a philanthropist from Maine. Storer offered a $10,000 grant to Reverend Brackett's school if several conditions could be met. First, the school must become a degree-granting college. Second, the school had to be open to all applicants, regardless of race or gender. And, finally, the Freewill Baptists had to match his $10,000 donation within the year. After a year-long effort, the money was raised, and Storer College opened its doors. By March 1868 it received its state charter. Through fundraisers and state funding, Storer College expanded its buildings but retained control of Lockwood House for the purpose of dormitories.
In 1962, Harpers Ferry National Historical Park was established by Congress, an upgrade from its National Monument status of 1944. A study of the Lockwood House was begun in 1959 by historian Philip R. Smith, Jr., was completed by historian William T. Ingersoll and architect Archie W. Franzen. [2] Historic American Buildings Survey (HABS) floor plans and photographs recorded Lockwood House as it appeared in 1958. The Lockwood House would undergo extensive exterior restoration between 1965 and 1969. The third story was removed and the hipped roof was restored back to its 1858 appearance. The east portico and west double gallery porches were reconstructed and the exterior brick walls were sand blasted. [2]
In the early 1970s two of the first floor rooms were refurnished to depict the first years of Brackett school based on historical reports by Anne Coxe Toogood and David H. Wallace. [2] In the 30 years since, the building has remained relatively vacant with the basement in use currently to house part of the Harpers Ferry National Historical Park curatorial collection.
In 2020, the Historic Preservation Training Center awarded a contract to plaster conservators to.......
Harpers Ferry is a historic town in Jefferson County, West Virginia, in the lower Shenandoah Valley. The town's population was 269 at the 2020 United States census. Situated at the confluence of the Potomac and Shenandoah rivers, where Maryland, Virginia, and West Virginia meet, it is the easternmost town in West Virginia as well as its lowest point above sea level.
Storer College was a historically Black college in Harpers Ferry, West Virginia, that operated from 1867 to 1955. A national icon for Black Americans, in the town where the 'end of American slavery began', as Frederick Douglass famously put it, it was a unique institution whose focus changed several times. There is no one category of college into which it fits neatly. Sometimes white students studied alongside Black students, which at the time was prohibited by law at state-regulated schools in West Virginia and the other Southern states.
John Daniel Imboden, American lawyer, Virginia state legislator, and a Confederate army general. During the American Civil War, he commanded an irregular cavalry force. After the war, he resumed practicing law, became a writer, and was active in land development founding the town of Damascus, Virginia.
The Battle of Cool Spring, also known as Castleman's Ferry, Island Ford, Parker's Ford, and Snicker's Ferry, was a battle in the American Civil War fought July 17–18, 1864, in Clarke County, Virginia, as part of the Valley Campaigns of 1864. The battle was a Confederate victory.
Harpers Ferry National Historical Park, originally Harpers Ferry National Monument, is located at the confluence of the Potomac and Shenandoah rivers in and around Harpers Ferry, West Virginia. The park includes the historic center of Harpers Ferry, notable as a key 19th-century industrial area and as the scene of John Brown's failed abolitionist uprising. It contains the most visited historic site in the state of West Virginia, John Brown's Fort.
John Brown's Fort was initially built in 1848 for use as a guard and fire engine house by the federal Harpers Ferry Armory, in Harpers Ferry, Virginia. An 1848 military report described the building as "An engine and guard-house 35 1/2 x 24 feet, one story brick, covered with slate, and having copper gutters and down spouts…"
Virginius Island is a formerly inhabited island of some 12 acres (4.9 ha), on the Shenandoah River in Harpers Ferry, West Virginia. The island was created by the Shenandoah Canal, constructed by the Patowmack Company between 1806 and 1807, which separates it from the town of Harpers Ferry. The canal was constructed to enable boats to bypass rapids on the river, and also channel water to drive machinery. In the nineteenth century Virginius Island contained Harpers Ferry's industry and working-class housing: a boarding house and row houses. Virginius Island is part of the Harpers Ferry National Historical Park.
Rippon is an unincorporated community in Jefferson County, West Virginia, United States, located south of Charles Town and designated as a village by the Jefferson County Commission. The village of Rippon developed in the mid-19th century at the crossroads of the Berryville and Charles Town Turnpike, Withers-LaRue Road, and Myerstown Road. The town was named after nearby Ripon Lodge, although an extra "p" was added to avoid confusion with a town in Wisconsin. According to the 2000 census, the town has a population of 223.
John William Dunjee was an American missionary, educator, Baptist minister, publisher, agent of Storer College and founder of Baptist churches across the United States.
Talladega College is a private, historically black college in Talladega, Alabama. It is Alabama's oldest private historically black college and offers 17 degree programs. It is accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools.
The city of Winchester, Virginia, and the surrounding area, were the site of numerous battles during the American Civil War, as contending armies strove to control the lower Shenandoah Valley. Winchester changed hands more often than any other Confederate city.
The Harpers Ferry Armory, more formally known as the United States Armory and Arsenal at Harpers Ferry, was the second federal armory created by the United States government; the first was the Springfield Armory. It was located in Harpers Ferry, Virginia, which since 1863 has been part of West Virginia. It was both an arsenal, manufacturing firearms, and an armory, a storehouse for firearms. Along with the Springfield Armory, it was instrumental in the development of machining techniques to make interchangeable parts of precisely the same dimensions.
The B & O Railroad Potomac River Crossing is a 15-acre (6.1 ha) historic site where a set of railroad bridges, originally built by the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, span the Potomac River between Sandy Hook, Maryland and Harpers Ferry, West Virginia. The site was added to the National Register of Historic Places on February 14, 1978, for its significance in commerce, engineering, industry, invention, and transportation.
The Harpers Ferry Historic District comprises about one hundred historic structures in Harpers Ferry, West Virginia. The historic district includes the portions of the central town not included in Harpers Ferry National Historical Park, including large numbers of early 19th-century houses built by the United States Government for the workers at the Harpers Ferry Armory. Significant buildings and sites include the site of the Armory, the U.S Armory Potomac Canal, the Harpers Ferry Train Station, and Shenandoah Street, Potomac Street, and High or Washington Street. The National Historic Park essentially comprises the lower, flood-prone areas of the town, while the Historic District comprises the upper town.
John E.P. Daingerfield was Acting Paymaster at the Harpers Ferry Armory at the time of John Brown's 1859 Raid; he was taken hostage but not injured.
Built by Confederate Lieutenant Collier and Virginia militia with the aid of Federal prisoners, the Fort Collier redoubt guarded the north entrance of Winchester, Virginia on the east side of the Martinsburg Pike. During later Federal occupations, it was known as Battery No. 10. The fort was set on low ground, and generally offered little military advantage, except as a guard post for the pike. Lieutenant General Jubal Early used it as part of his defensive works in the Third Battle of Winchester.
Nathan Cook Brackett (1836–1910) was an abolitionist, Free Will Baptist pastor, first president of Storer College, and chairman and co-founder of Bluefield State College.
John Storer was a merchant and philanthropist from Sanford, Maine, who was the namesake of Storer College in Harpers Ferry, West Virginia.
Celeste Brackett Newcomer was an American educator, bank director, and clubwoman based in Harpers Ferry, West Virginia.