 |
The
Historic Madie Carroll House
ca.
1810
As
legend goes, the Madie Carroll House arrived in Guyandotte by flatboat
in 1810. James Gallaher, a river tradesman, had obtained the house
in Gallipolis, Ohio and placed the house on lot number 34 in Guyandotte.
At one time, Mr. Gallaher owned over 20 lots in Guyandotte. He later
became a prominent business man in the area, and he was a trustee
for Marshall Academy in 1838 which is now Marshall University. By
1836, he had moved out of Guyandotte and onto the old Russell farm
then located along the Ohio River between 14th street and 11th street,
Huntington, West Virginia. Mr. Gallaher and his descendants continued
to prosper in this area. One son, John Gallaher, founded Gallahersville;
one daughter, Ann, married Robert Poage, a prominent business man
of Ashland, Kentucky; another daughter, Sarah, married J. Harvey
Poage and inherited the family farm and another son, James, married
Mary, daughter of Samuel W. Johnson.
Thomas
Carroll arrived in Guyandotte, VA. in 1852. Thomas, his wife, Anne
Burnes, and their children - Thomas, Michael, Austin, Margaret -
moved into their new home, November 2, 1852. The home, at the time
belonged to Lucian M. Wolcott, and he later sold Mr. Carroll the
home in 1855.
Thomas
Carroll operated his home as an inn on the James River and Kanawha
Turnpike. He obtained his first license to operate an "ordinary"
(inn), December 1853. In 1854, along with others in Cabell County,
Mr. Carroll
was declined a license for an ordinary, but was given a license to
operate a "house of private entertainment." After Thomas died, Mary
Carroll continued to obtain licenses to operate an inn. The inn
was know as the "Carroll House." According to other sources, Thomas
also made his living as a carpenter and a stonesman.
Mary
Carroll saved the house from destruction, November 11, 1861,
when the Federal Troops burned most of the town of Guyandotte.
She barricaded herself and children in the brick kitchen of the
house. However, the Carroll family did lose property during the
burning of the town. In 1892, Mary Carroll requested that the Federal
Government pay her for the loss of a second dwelling and two story
frame storage building/barn. J.H. Write bore witness to the loss
in an affidavit he signed May 2, 1892, and he stated that the "claimant
was and is loyal to the US Government."
The Carroll family members were the first Catholics
in Cabell County. the Carroll home served as a house of worship
before a Catholic Church, St. Peters in Guyandotte, could be built
in the are in 1873. The first parish priest, Father Thomas A. Quirk,
lived in the Carroll house from 1872 to 1884. Father Quirk, at
that time, was transferred to Lewis County, West Virginia, where
he worked diligently with the poor. Because of his good works,
he became know as "the Padre of the Mountains."
Collis
P. Huntington stop by the Carroll house in 1869. Legend relates
that Mr. Huntington became angry with Guyandotte
for fining him when his horse became un-tethered and ran lose in
town. For this reason or another, Collis P. Huntington did not
build his railroad terminus at Guyandotte.
The
Carroll family continued to live and prosper in the Carroll house.
They owned several other pieces of property
throughout the county. The only two children of Thomas Carroll
to marry were Michael Henry Carroll who married Elizabeth W. Downy
and Caroline "Ellen" who married James McLaughlin. Michael and
Elizabeth had six children: Thomas, Stephen M. Annie, Mary E.
Madie Carroll,
Ellen and Lawrence Leo. Michael and his sons Stephen and Thomas
worked for the railroad. Madie lived in her step-grandmother Mary's
home after her mother died. Also, Madie's uncle Charles (graduate
of St. Francis College, Loretta, Penn.;partner in McLaughlin
and Carroll grocery as well as a timber measurer for Cole and
Crane; member of Guyandotte Council and other civic and religious
organizations), her maiden aunt, Mayme (graduate of Marshall
College, 1886; school teacher), and tow other aunts, Catherine
and Margaret, lived in the Carroll house.
Madie
inherited the home from her aunt Mayme who had inherited the
home from her mother, Mary. Madie taught piano for many years.
In the 1924 Polk City Directory, she listed as teaching music
at St. Edward's College. She had immense pride in her heritage,
especially her home. She often passed time with neighbors and
friends talking about the house and its history. She was still
living in her home when the house was listed on The National
Register of Historic Places, June 1973. Madie died in 1975 and
left her nephew, Lewis Carroll, the historic home. Mr. Carroll
rented the house to several occupants.
The
home was deeded to the Greater Huntington Parks and Recreation
District
on October 10, 1984 by Lewis and Helena Carroll "to consummate
a gift of certain real property for the
use and benefit of the people served by the Greater Huntington
Parks and Recreation District." The Madie Carroll House Preservation
Society, Inc. received permission form the Greater Huntington
Parks and Recreation District in 1988 to restore the house for
use as
an historic house museum and cultural community center. The Madie
Carroll House Preservation Society, Inc. incorporated and received
tax exempt status in 1989.
|