Owners serving as both editors and publishers: A. S. Trowbridge (1850–1852) A. S. Trowbridge and Drinkard (1852–1853) A. S. Trowbridge (1853–1857) Samuel R. Smith and John G. Combs (1857–1858) James Parsons (1858–1859) William Miller Parsons (1859–1861) Job N. Cookus and Alexander W. Monroe (1861)
The Virginia Argus and Hampshire Advertiser, often referred to simply as the Virginia Argus, was a weekly newspaper published between July 1850 and August 1861 in Romney, Virginia (now West Virginia). The paper's circulation of 800 copies was the second-highest in Hampshire County, after the South Branch Intelligencer's. The Virginia Argus ceased publication following its closure by the Union Army during the American Civil War, after which it was not revived.
A. S. Trowbridge founded the Virginia Argus and Hampshire Advertiser as a Democratic[1][2] weekly newspaper[3][4][5] in Romney in July 1850.[1][2][6][7][8][9] Trowbridge had been an educator in New Orleans, Louisiana, before moving to Romney.[1][2][9] The Virginia Argus and Hampshire Advertiser newspaper billed itself as "A Family Newspaper—Devoted to Politics, Agriculture, Education, General News, and Amusement."[10] By October 7, 1852, the Virginia Argus was being published by Trowbridge & Drinkard; on May 26, 1853, it reverted to being published by Trowbridge alone.[7][8] After Trowbridge had edited and published the newspaper for seven years, its limited success did not meet his expectations, and in 1857 he sold the operation to Samuel R. Smith and John Joseph Combs.[1][2][6][7][8][9]
Smith and Combs operated the newspaper until 1858, when they sold it to James Parsons; he in turn sold it to his younger brother William Miller Parsons in 1859.[1][8][9][11] After a few months of ownership and experience,[1] Parsons sold the newspaper to Alexander W. Monroe, a prominent Romney lawyer and onetime member of the Virginia House of Delegates, and Job N. Cookus in 1861.[1][8][9][12][13] Monroe and Cookus continued serving as the proprietors, editors, and publishers until the outbreak of the American Civil War, when they joined the Confederate States Army.[1][9] The newspaper was closed by the Union Army in August 1861, and was not revived after the war.[1][2][8][12][13]
The Virginia Argus and Hampshire Advertiser had a circulation of 800 copies distributed per week,[3][5][20] which was the second largest of the three newspapers published in Hampshire County; the other two were the South Branch Intelligencer of Romney, with a weekly circulation of 960 copies, and the Piedmont Independent of Piedmont (now in Mineral County, West Virginia), with a weekly circulation of 600 copies.[3][5][20] The offices of the Virginia Argus were housed in an old stone edifice north of the Hampshire County Courthouse that had previously served as the home of the Romney Academy before its 1846 disestablishment.[18]
Jacob Green affair
In a series of articles published in the May 14 and 21, 1857 issues of the Virginia Argus, Romney resident Col. Isaac Parsons chronicled the 1855 arrest of his nephew, James Parsons, for attempting to capture Col. Parsons' fugitive slave, Jacob Green, and the resulting dispute between the Parsons family and Charles James Faulkner over legal fees in 1857.[10][21][22]
In August 1855, Green escaped from Parsons' Wappocomo plantation with four other slaves from neighboring plantations.[21][22] In October of that year, he returned to Col. Parsons' plantation in Romney, and persuaded four or five slaves from neighboring farms owned by Parsons family relatives to escape with him to Pennsylvania.[21][22]
A party of eight to ten men, including Col. Parsons and two of his nephews, James Parsons and a Mr. Stump, went north in pursuit of the escapees. In the course of the pursuit, they captured two of Stump's escaped slaves, who were sent back to Hampshire County.[21][22] With information obtained from the two recaptured slaves, Col. Parsons went to Johnstown, James Parsons to Hollidaysburg, and Stump to Altoona, where they hoped to intercept Green as he headed west on the Allegheny Portage Railroad and Main Line Canal toward Pittsburgh.[22] James Parsons intercepted Green at Hollidaysburg, but local abolitionists thwarted his attempt to capture Green, and he was arrested and arraigned for kidnapping.[21][22]
Col. Parsons, Faulkner, and Tucker traveled to Hollidaysburg for James Parsons' trial.[21] Faulkner provided for Parsons' legal defense, leading to his acquittal as having acted legally under the provisions of the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850.[22]
In September 1856, Faulkner billed Col. Parsons $150 (~$5,087 in 2023) for his legal services. Parsons disputed the charge. In a series of articles in the Virginia Argus, he declared that Faulkner had originally offered his services at no cost; that he had been lauded publicly for his generosity in doing so without ever denying that he had been working pro bono; and that he was practicing "duplicity and deception" in trying to win a reputation in his district through "specious acts of munificence".[21]
^"Miscellaneous Boxed Newspapers". West Virginia State Archives website. West Virginia Division of Culture and History. Archived from the original on December 12, 2013. Retrieved December 6, 2013.
West Virginia Department of Archives and History (1944). West Virginia History, Volume 6. West Virginia Department of Archives and History. Archived from the original on November 4, 2013. Retrieved December 6, 2013.