Table of Contents / Jessie Beard Powell / Transcript / Transcript 2
 
Interview with Jesse Beard. Beard, woman, owned Traveller’s Repose lodge. Characterized by its look as a boarding house. It is located along an old military marching route.
ALEX.: Then that goes back a good ways then.

BEARD: Yes.

ALEX.: So, they went there first in what year?

BEARD: Nineteen five. Nineteen five and they sawed it out in by 1912. It's pretty well done. They left there in 1912.

ALEX.: They really boomed in periods of rather short durations

BEARD: Yes, they were. They would move in and saw out the lumber in areas like that in pretty quick—pretty fast. All the timber they could acquire. Of course, in places like Cass, you know where they had thousands and thousands and thousands of acres it took them quite a while. A forty year period Cass covered or better.

ALEX.: What is this place called here? It seems to me like I stopped here years ago and talked to fellow by the name of Buck something that lived up the mouth of Seneca.

BEARD: Buck Harper.

ALEX.: Buck Harper. That was it. The fellow had a load of cattle out here in front of the house and I don't know, he pulled off and I pulled off to ask directions or something. Is this called . . . ?

BEARD: It's called Traveller's . . .

ALEX.: Traveller's . . .
BEARD: Repose.
ALEX.: Repose. That's what I thought I saw.
BEARD: Kind of a pretty name, isn't it?
ALEX.: Yes, it sure is. And it's right on the route of the old Turnpike.

BEARD: Yes, it was an overnight stagecoach stop on the Stanton to the Parkersburg Turnpike. And it was built about the time the original house was about less than a half a mile from here and then when the Crowse Pike was built in the '30's they moved the house and built it here. And of course, the house was burned in 1861 and all the family refuged to Highland and various prisons and then in 1866 Peter D. Yeager . . You see, we are related to this land through the Yeagers and not the Beards.

ALEX.: Oh yeah.

BEARD: And Peter D. Yeager came back when he was released from prison and rebuilt Traveller's Repose and reopened the inn. There has always been an inn and a tavern and what have you here since the 1700's. And reopened it and called it for a short period of time the Greenbrier Hotel.

ALEX.: I declare.

BEARD: And then it went back to Traveller's Repose and my folks said when they came here in 1912 the old sign was still out front. It's interesting that they always spelled it with two "L"s. T-R-A-V-E-L-L-E-R-S.

ALEX.: Huh.

BEARD: As they knew it then after '66, it had twenty-two rooms. When my father acquired it in 1912, he tore the back section of the house down and just put the four rooms. But this front part is 1866 vintage.
ALEX.: So in a sense this has been a place of business for travelers.

BEARD: Yes, it has. Even my folks up until as long as my mother was able, uh, for years and years had overnight guests.

ALEX.: Oh yeah.

BEARD: I think maybe if you've read Morris Brooke's book on Appalachia, the Appalachians rather, he refers to the specimens that were hung on the porch at Brown Beard's at Traveller's Repose. You know, when they were doing the Cheat Mountain Salamander Research and that sort of thing, a lot of them stayed here. He still kids mother about her biscuit and of choice of juices, country ham and biscuits and country eggs and so forth for 35 cents.

ALEX: Thirty-five cents. Well, you taught school for a while, huh?

BEARD: Yes.

ALEX.: You graduated from where--Wesleyan?

BEARD: West Virginia Wesleyan.

ALEX.: West Virginia Wesleyan. Well, you had a famous president who may be governor up there.

BEARD: Yes, I'm real fond of Jay.

ALEX.: That's our church and that's our church school, I guess, isn't it Lisa?

BEARD: Is this, is this, uh?

ALEX.: This is my daughter, Lisa. She's sixteen. I should have introduced her when I came in.

BEARD: I meant to ask.

ALEX.: She's sixteen. She just finished the 10th grade at Huntington East High School.

BEARD: Well, how nice. Well, I didn't know whether she might be somebody who was traveling with you to record or what have you.

ALEX.: No, no, I can't afford that kind of help. But she does just as good a job as that kind of help could do.

BEARD: I have three daughters so I know.

ALEX.: Well, you've been working on this pamphlet you say.

BEARD: I'm trying to do something. I haven't . . . my father's youngest sister lives in Elkins and she's in her eighties and she has been collecting family history all of her life, and she has masses of materials and still hasn't assembled them. And I don't know what she's, I think possibly she's going to make those available to some library as is, I don't know, but she had hoped to get them into book form, but they're strictly family things. I was trying to do a little historical booklet on this valley that would be interesting to anybody who had ever lived here or had folks who had lived here.

ALEX.: It just might have an interesting . . . it's a beautiful valley up through here.

BEARD: Yes, unfortunately a few things have happened to it that shouldn’t have. Uh, we're fast becoming not by my or anything that I have done, but fast becoming land of trailers, I'm afraid, which makes me most unhappy.

ALEX.: You mean permanent kind of camps?

BEARD: People selling off, people selling off a little piece of land here and their letting someone pull in a trailer. No restrictions, no . . .

ALEX.: Yeah.

BEARD: Sad really.

ALEX.: Well, the real estate that I see up and down this valley is well kept.

BEARD: Well, we try, yes.

ALEX.: You don't seem to be too proud of it. I don't see really any what we call tarpaper shacks or Ginny-Lynns.

BEARD: No, not quite like Bull-Run over the hill in Pendleton, but the Hevener's place is beautifully kept, of course half of it was sold. There used to be about 32 hundred acres in that farm. And one of the sons sold his share, be the man who bought it from Buckhannon, Mr. Tharp, does a beautiful job of upkeep on the upper half. That land that lays in that valley is beautiful.

ALEX.: Yes, it's a beautiful area. Well, what would you say is the economical life of Durbin now? I guess when your folks were living the mills were, but do you think the tourist business is . . .

BEARD: Uh huh. I think the future of this . . . now with the Observatory and the Cass Train, definitely there's still some lumber. Fence rails. There are two mills here that produce rails and they do a nice business. There are three small mills in the area who are still getting out timber.

ALEX.: Uh huh. And you've got the tannery.

BEARD: The tannery is still operating. I guess it employs about a hundred men.

ALEX.: Do you see any future in the restoration of Durbin itself?

BEARD: Well, I really would have liked to have seen that and I’ve had my heart set on the restoration of Cass, but um, I've almost given up. To me, when I came here, back here, in '62, uh, Cass was still in pretty good condition. You know, the mill was still operable and uh, eighty houses fifty of them in pretty good condition. I could see it as a Fontanna village. Something of that sort where families could come, you know.

ALEX.: Yeah. Well, we're working on restoring some area of Huntington what we call Heritage Village. We've got the old bank of Huntington, the old B&O station, in an area of urban renewal whether or not I take an active part in the Huntington Historical Association, and whether or not it's going to come to realization difficult to say. I could see some value in it. I see so many at Cass that seems to have al ready disappeared.

BEARD: Uh huh

ALEX.: But it appears to me that the front street of Durbin is still there and with the right kind of effort could be restored a great deal.

BEARD: Dodge City, Virginia City . . . something of that atmosphere. Possibly . . .

ALEX.: That would create an additional kind of attraction. I guess being here with the highways being completed as they are and being on the old turnpike and there would be a great deal of access in here for people of the east.

BEARD: Uh huh. Well, there's still remains in Cass. The old store.

ALEX.: Yes . . .

BEARD: Four stories of it.

ALEX.: Yes.

BEARD: Which, I've always been told it's the largest, that it was, and presumably still is, the largest wood structure, complete wood structure east of the Mississippi and I wouldn't be at all surprised that it's true.

ALEX.: I haven't heard that. It's rather interesting.

BEARD: And the superintendent's house, which is fabulous.

ALEX.: Would that be . . .

BEARD: Shaffer's house and two or three of the other houses, one that he built for his wife's family, uh, and maybe perhaps as many as fifty. Maybe forty would be a better number, could still be retrieved. Uh, nice old oak floors and even built and maybe something like this. I understand that if the state requires it, which seems to be, the only person that's interested in it that, I've seen the plans and it's to be just completely raised. I mean it won't be anything left there. They're just going to take all the buildings down and make parks.

ALEX.: That would be unfortunate.

BEARD: It is.

ALEX.: They're putting a lot of money into that area. I've got some figures in my research on how much the state's spending over in the county and what I don't have is some of the figures I'd like to get out of these small lumber mills and I don't know how accurate the books are and whether they consider that information confidential or not. I hadn't looked at Cass in that respect. I kind of hated it when the train station burned. Somebody had to have set that fire as well as the shops up there, you know.

BEARD: And of course, I'm so disturbed when I see these all the nice little post office buildings going and being replaced by those red, white, and blue trailers.

ALEX.: Yes, isn't that something.

BEARD: We had a nice little post office up there by the store. The original post office. And now it's just sitting there and the post office is over on the other side of the river in a trailer. It just took away from the atmosphere. The post office was an atmosphere. It had old tiffany glass over the door and just a lot of nice things.

ALEX.: Well, I'm like you. I hate to see those things go. I lead the effort as much as anybody to keep Old Main on the Marshall University campus, and I was one of those very active in collecting signatures for the petition when it became evident that Cass was going to be sold and the railroad needed to be preserved. I worked in that effort with the legislature to get the state to take it over to preserve it. I hope it doesn't go the way you say it is going to go, but I can see they're spending a tremendous amount of money there, and I guess for the most part for what I can get over at other sections of the state and adjoining counties that a fairly young group of people operating a railroad some of the residents. I remember when I first took the trip up to the top of the mountain. I believe Blackhurst was the narrator. And he did such an outstanding job as you know.
End of the the first Powell transcript