Industrialist and the Mountaineer
by
English

About The Book

In 1897 a small landholder named Robert Eastham shot and killed timber magnate Frank Thompson in Tucker County West Virginia leading to a sensational trial that highlighted a clash between local traditions and modernizing forces. Ronald L. Lewiss book uses this largely forgotten episode as a window into contests over political environmental and legal change in turn-of-the-century Appalachia. The Eastham-Thompson feud pitted a former Confederate against a member of the new business elite who was as a northern Republican his cultural and political opposite. For Lewis their clash was one flashpoint in a larger phenomenon central to US history in the second half of the nineteenth century: the often violent imposition of new commercial and legal regimes over holdout areas stretching from Appalachia to the trans-Missouri West. Taking a ground-level view of these so-called wars of incorporation Lewiss powerful microhistory shows just how strongly local communities guarded traditional relationships to natural resources. Modernizers sought to convict Eastham of murder but juries drawn from the traditionalist population refused to comply. Although the resisters won the courtroom battle the modernizers eventually won the war for control of the states timber frontier.
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