History

      The first European settlers arrived in the Sideling Hill Creek watershed in the 1730’s, which was at the time occupied by the Shawnee Indians. The European settlers moved into the region to set up trading posts and hunt the abundant game that lived in the forested ridges and valleys of southeastern Bedford County. Although a trivial matter at the time, many of the area’s earliest European settlers believed they were in either Maryland or Virginia as they moved into what was largely uncharted territory until the 1764 when Mason and Dixon surveyed the Maryland and Pennsylvania line. Little did they know that they ended up cutting the Sideling Hill Creek watershed almost in half! Throughout the late 1700’s and into the mid-1800’s the valleys in the Sideling Hill Creek watershed were slowly cleared to make room for agriculture, while the ridges were logged to provide local building materials and household fuel.

By the time the area was “accessible” by mass transport systems, including the B&O railroad in the 1830’s and the C&O canal in the 1840’s, the watershed had already defined itself as a self-sufficient region dependent on small-scale and primarily subsistence agriculture and forestry. Although in many regions the arrival of major transport systems have historically led to an instant rise in the export of raw materials, the arrival of mass transport in the Sideling Hill Creek watershed seems to have had little such impact, with the possible exception of the timber industry. Transporting agricultural and forest products from the watershed to major hubs of commerce such as Cumberland, MD or Washington, D.C. was certainly made easier, however the lack of historically important raw materials in the region, such as coal, led to the preservation of an almost pre-industrial landscape.

Church Historically, there were approximately twelve small communities in the Sideling Hill Creek watershed, all of which had a post office, a general store, and most had a schoolhouse and church. However, as transportation routs became more reliable and people began moving to the cities, these small communities began to disappear. Although many of the communities that once existed in the watershed are now no more than a small cluster of homes, at best, the names of these communities can still be found on most maps. In many cases only remnants of the once thriving community remains such as the Fairview church at Ingelsmith; the mill foundations at Silver Mills; and the general store building at Purcell. From old farm houses to roads that bare the name of the first families to settle the area, the Sideling Hill Creek landscape is dotted with historical reminders that tell the story of place changed by time, but conscious of its historical identity.



 

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