NoD: Fort Vancouver was Short-Lived Settlement at what is present day Louisa

Vancouver’s Fort Monument – Louisa, Ky.

Seven hundred feet east of the Lawrence County courthouse lawn was established in 1789 the “first settlement in this section.” Called Vancouver’s Fort (or the Big Sandy Blockhouse), the establishment survived only a year. It would take two more attempts before the lands could be permanently settled in what would become Louisa.

One of Vancouver’s Land Grants

Charles Vancouver, originally of London, England, acquired two land grants for a combined 15,000 acres along the Big Big Sandy River where the Tug and Levisa forks meet. At the time, this “section” was the easternmost reaches of Fayette County, Virginia – part of Virginia’s Kentucky District.  The lands are reputed to have been surveyed by George Washington himself. With his grants, Vancouver sought to secure the men necessary to establish a fort through advertisements in the Kentucky Gazette. Little record of Fort Vancouver existed for several years after the advertisements ceased.

Then in 1838, the sworn story of John Hanks was taken and recorded for posterity providing a record for what happened to Vancouver’s Fort. As quoted in Judge Charles Kerr’s History of Kentucky:

I was employed by Charles Vancouver in the month of February, 1789, along with several other men, to go to the forks of Big Sandy River, for the purpose of settling, clearing and improving the Vancouver tract, situated on the point formed by the junction of the Tug and Levisa Forks, and near where the town of Louisa now stands. In March, 1789, shortly after Vancouver and his men settled on said point, the Indians stole all their horses but one, which they killed. We all, about ten in number, except three or four of Vancouver’s men, remained there during the year, and left the next March, except three or four men to hold possession. But they were driven off in April, 1790, by the Indians. Vancouver went East in May, 1789, for a stock of goods, and returned in the fall of the same year. We had to go to the mouth of the Kanawha River, a distance of eightyseven miles, for corn, and no one was settled near us, probably the nearest was a fort about thirty or forty miles away, and this was built maybe early in 1790. The fort we built consisted of three cabins and some pens made of logs, like corn cribs, and reaching from one cabin to the other.

We raised some vegetables and deadened several acres of ground, say about eighteen, on the point, but the horses being stolen, we were unable to raise a crop.

(Signed) John Hanks.

Survey of Vancouver Land Grant

The Fort Vancouver blockhouse survived but a year, suffering from both Indian raids and the difficulties of farming. The settlement was replaced a few years later by another short-lived settlement called Balclutha. A Philadelphian, Frederick Moore, laid out a town at the confluence of the Tug and Levisa forks in 1815. By 1818, the community was deemed “substantial”and would become the seat of the newly formed Lawrence County in 1822.

Sources: Kentucky EncyclopediaKentucky’s Last FrontierKerr’s History of Kentucky; KY Secretary of State

NoD: Louisa’s Wellman Hardware Epitomizes Victorian Architecture of Small Kentucky County Seat

Commercial District - Louisa, Ky.
Wellman Hardware – Louisa, Ky.

“Since 1879 because of you” reads the sign in front of the Wellman Hardware Store in the Louisa Commercial Historic District, though the Lawrence County business has been in different hands over its 130-plus year history.

The store was established by Augustus and Thomas Snyder. Thomas had arrived in Louisa in 1872 earning his keep primarily blacksmith shop but also engaging in general merchandise. The younger Augustus followed in 1876 from the family home in Barboursville, West Virginia and began to learn the blacksmithing trade from his elder brother. In 1879, they began to operate a hardware store which was finally incorporated some twenty years later. Both of the Snyder brothers became active in local civic and business activities, with Augustus Snyder spending a number of years as Louisa’s progressive mayor. During his term, Louisa was much improved with the paving of its streets and other public improvements.

Commercial District - Louisa, Ky.
Wellman Hardware – Louisa, Ky.

The hardware store, sold to E.E. Shannon around the turn of the century, remains in one of Louisa’s oldest commercial buildings and remains its oldest operating business. In 1919, Shannon sold the store to Lafe Wellman who renamed the now-Wellman Hardware Store. The exterior of this National Register-building has remained the same (sans a couple of additions not affecting the Main Street frontage), its original trim still present; the interior, however, assumed that of a modern hardware-store in the late 1980s.

The National Register form describes the building’s “salient features of original wood-framed storefronts, prominent ornamental metal molds at the second-story windows, and a pressed metal modillion cornice” to aptly conclude that “the building epitomizes the Victorian commercial architecture of a small county seat in Kentucky.”

Sources: Connelley’s History of KentuckyDaily Independent; NRHP