Appalachian Community Histories – Wallsend, Bell County: The First Mine, the Railroad, and a Community Beside Pineville
Wallsend sits in Bell County history as more than a name on an old map. It was a mine, a railroad point, a company center, and a working community tied to the industrial rise of Pineville after the Louisville and Nashville Railroad reached the area. The Kentucky Historical Society marker for Wallsend Mine identifies it as the first mine to begin operation in Bell County, beginning in 1889, one year after the railroad extension opened the way for larger commercial development.
The name itself carried a wider industrial memory. Robert M. Rennick’s study of Bell County post offices connects Wallsend to the county’s first commercial coal mine just below Cumberland Ford and Pineville, opened in 1889 by an English financed Kentucky firm calling itself the Wallsend Coal and Coke Company. Rennick’s account also notes the company name’s English connection, which fits the larger pattern of outside capital entering the Cumberland Gap region during the coal boom.
The Railroad Comes to Pineville
Before Wallsend became a mining name, Pineville was being remade by railroads, coal land companies, sawmills, and speculation. A National Register of Historic Places nomination for the Pineville Courthouse Square Historic District describes how Pineville’s late nineteenth century growth followed the coal boom in eastern Kentucky. In 1887, J. J. Gibson sold land in the valley to the Pine Mountain Iron and Coal Company. By the following year, the company had laid out the new town of Pineville in the wider bottom lands near the old Cumberland Ford.
The same National Register document places Wallsend in the middle of that transformation. It notes that a metal bridge was built over the Cumberland River at Cumberland Ford in 1888, apparently to reach newly opened coal mines and coke ovens on Straight Creek. Soon afterward, the Louisville and Nashville Railroad completed its tracks to Pineville, a depot was built near Breastworks Hill, and the Wallsend Coal and Coke Company was established in West Pineville. Pineville’s population reportedly grew from about 300 in January 1888 to 1,200 by November of that same year.
Bell County’s First Mine
Wallsend’s strongest early description comes through Henry Harvey Fuson’s History of Bell County, Kentucky, which preserves an account connected to J. C. Tipton’s early coalfield writing. Fuson’s section on the Wallsend Coal and Coke Company states that the property was originally acquired in 1889, the year after the railroad came to Pineville, and that development began at once. That early operation, however, was not immediately a financial success.
The Kentucky historical marker and Fuson’s account agree on the basic importance of Wallsend. The mine began in 1889 and became the first mine to start operations in Bell County. That point matters because Bell County later became closely associated with coal towns, rail branches, company stores, and mining families, but Wallsend belongs near the beginning of that industrial story.
The 1904 Reorganization
The turning point in the surviving accounts came in 1904. Fuson’s history says the property became successful only after the purchase by the Wallsend Coal and Coke Company on August 1, 1904. At that point, Charles E. Hall of London, England, became president and general manager. D. B. Logan of Pineville became vice president, and E. Reno Short became secretary and superintendent. Fuson described it as a Kentucky corporation, but one whose stock was largely held in England.
Under the new management, the mine expanded in both organization and output. Fuson’s account gives the operation a capacity of about 800 tons per day and describes two mine entries, one on each side of the valley, using the same tipple. The mine used both pick and machine methods, electric motors gathered the cars, and the underground track system was described as a small railroad inside the mine. There were also fifty coke ovens near the tipple, with coal carried from the tipple to the ovens by elevators and conveyors.
Wallsend was not only a mine mouth. Fuson’s account says the central office, railroad station, telegraph office, and express office were all at Wallsend. That detail helps explain how a mining place became a community name. Coal had to be mined, weighed, loaded, shipped, ordered, paid for, and connected to the outside world. Wallsend’s railroad station and offices made it part of the business geography of Pineville as much as the mining geography of Bell County.
A Working Community in West Pineville
The records suggest a place that grew out of work. Wallsend was tied to West Pineville, but it also had a separate identity through the mine, the station, the offices, and the people who lived and labored around them. The official marker remembers the mine as an important industrial development. Rennick’s post office research and the old railroad station reference help show how the name survived in postal, railroad, and geographic records even as the community became closely tied to Pineville.
The human side of Wallsend appears most clearly in legal and mine related records. In 1914, the Kentucky Court of Appeals heard Wallsend Coal and Coke Co. v. Shields’ Administrator, a case involving Hiram Shields, a practical coal miner who had worked around mines for several years. Shields was employed in a mine owned and operated by the Wallsend Coal and Coke Company when he was struck by falling rock and later died from his injuries. The case does not tell the full story of the community, but it does show the danger that stood behind the production figures and company descriptions.
Coal, Coke, and the Pineville Landscape
Wallsend’s rise was part of a broader Pineville district. Fuson described two early centers of Bell County coal development after the railroad’s arrival in 1888. Middlesborough became one center, while Pineville became the other. From Pineville, coal development moved toward Wallsend, Straight Creek, Fourmile Creek, Greasy Creek, Big Clear Creek, and later toward the upper Cumberland River and the Harlan County line.
That setting also helps explain why Wallsend mattered. It was not an isolated hollow mine. It stood near the Cumberland River, Pineville’s town development, bridge crossings, railroad service, and the industrial ambitions that followed the arrival of outside capital. USGS mapping and geologic sources for the Pineville quadrangle remain useful for understanding the physical setting, especially the ridges, valleys, and coal bearing landscape around Pineville and Bell County.
Floodwalls, Roads, and Later Change
The later history of Wallsend also passed through Pineville’s long struggle with water, roads, and flood control. A Historic American Engineering Record report on the Pine Street Bridge, also known as the Freight Depot Bridge, discussed the Army Corps of Engineers flood control project in Pineville. The report noted that the project involved floodwall modifications and extensions in Pineville, along with levee extensions and modifications in the neighboring community of Wallsend. It also described the relocation of Highway 25E in connection with the floodwall work.
By then, Wallsend’s meaning had changed. The old mine and company story belonged to the earlier coal boom, but the place name remained attached to a lived landscape beside Pineville. Roads shifted, bridges changed, flood control reshaped the riverfront, and the industrial community became harder to read on the ground. Still, the old records preserve the outline of what was there.
Why Wallsend Still Matters
Wallsend’s story is one of beginnings. It marks Bell County’s first operating coal mine, the arrival of rail based industry around Pineville, and the way outside investment helped turn mountain land into company property, rail traffic, coke ovens, and coal shipments. It also shows how quickly a place could be transformed after the railroad reached southeastern Kentucky.
At the same time, Wallsend was not only a company success story. It was a working place where miners entered the mountain, where rail lines connected Bell County to outside markets, where company officers and local managers tried to make the operation profitable, and where danger was part of daily labor. The marker beside the road gives the short version. The deeper story runs through railroad records, local histories, court cases, mine reports, maps, and the memory of West Pineville itself.
Sources & Further Reading
Kentucky Historical Society. “Wallsend Mine.” Kentucky Historical Marker 1272. https://history.ky.gov/markers/wallsend-mine
ExploreKYHistory. “Wallsend Mine.” Kentucky Historical Society. https://explorekyhistory.ky.gov/items/show/552
Fuson, Henry Harvey. History of Bell County, Kentucky. KyGenWeb transcription, “Wallsend Coal and Coke Company.” https://kygenweb.net/bell/area/bell_history2.htm
Rennick, Robert M. “The Post Offices of Bell County, Kentucky.” Kentucky Ancestors 36, no. 2, 2000. Morehead State University ScholarWorks. https://scholarworks.moreheadstate.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1382&context=kentucky_county_histories
National Park Service. National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Pineville Courthouse Square Historic District. 1990. https://npgallery.nps.gov/pdfhost/docs/NRHP/Text/90001019.pdf
Historic American Engineering Record. Pine Street Bridge, Freight Depot Bridge, HAER No. KY-12. Library of Congress and National Park Service. https://tile.loc.gov/storage-services/master/pnp/habshaer/ky/ky0200/ky0209/data/ky0209data.pdf
Kentucky Court of Appeals. Wallsend Coal & Coke Co. v. Shields’ Administrator, 159 Ky. 644, 167 S.W. 918. 1914. https://case-law.vlex.com/vid/wallsend-coal-coke-co-901851214
Kentucky Energy and Environment Cabinet. “Annual Report of the Operation of Mines.” https://eec.ky.gov/Natural-Resources/Mining/Mine-Safety/safety-inspections-and-licensing/Pages/annual-reports.aspx
Kentucky Energy and Environment Cabinet. “Mine Mapping.” https://eec.ky.gov/Natural-Resources/Mining/Mine-Safety/safety-inspections-and-licensing/Pages/mine-mapping.aspx
Kentucky State Department of Mines. Annual Report for the State Department of Mines for the Calendar Year 1925. Kentucky Geological Survey. https://kgs.uky.edu/kgsweb/olops/pub/general/jonesminereport1925.pdf
Kentucky State Department of Mines. Annual Report for the State Department of Mines for the Calendar Year 1927. Kentucky Geological Survey. https://kgs.uky.edu/kgsweb/olops/pub/general/jonesminereport1927.pdf
Kentucky State Department of Mines. Annual Report for the State Department of Mines for the Calendar Year 1928. Kentucky Geological Survey. https://kgs.uky.edu/kgsweb/olops/pub/general/DanielReportMines1928.pdf
Kentucky Department of Mines and Minerals. Annual Report. HathiTrust catalog record. https://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/006206733
Kentucky Inspector of Mines. Annual Report. Google Books catalog record. https://books.google.com/books/about/Annual_Report.html?id=kdoKAAAAYAAJ
Froelich, A. J., and James Tazelaar. Geologic Map of the Pineville Quadrangle, Bell and Knox Counties, Kentucky. U.S. Geological Survey Geologic Quadrangle Map 1129. 1974. https://www.usgs.gov/publications/geologic-map-pineville-quadrangle-bell-and-knox-counties-kentucky
U.S. Geological Survey. “Historical Topographic Maps, Preserving the Past.” https://www.usgs.gov/programs/national-geospatial-program/historical-topographic-maps-preserving-past
U.S. Geological Survey. The National Map, Advanced Viewer. https://apps.nationalmap.gov/viewer/
U.S. Board on Geographic Names. Geographic Names Information System. U.S. Geological Survey. https://edits.nationalmap.gov/apps/gaz-domestic/public/search/names
TopoZone. “Wallsend, KY.” https://www.topozone.com/kentucky/bell-ky/city/wallsend/
TopoZone. “Wallsend Railroad Station, KY.” https://www.topozone.com/kentucky/bell-ky/locale/wallsend-railroad-station/
Bell County KYGenWeb. “Bell County, Kentucky.” https://kygenweb.net/bell/
RootsWeb. “Coal Mines in Bell County, Kentucky.” https://sites.rootsweb.com/~kybell2/CoalMines.html
Find a Grave. “Wallsend Cemetery.” https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/search?cemetery-name=Wallsend+Cemetery&cemetery-loc=Bell+County%2C+Kentucky
Author Note: I have passed through Pineville many times, and it is easy to miss how much early coal history is hidden in ordinary road, river, and railroad names. Wallsend is one of those Bell County places where a marker, a map, and a few records open up a much larger Appalachian story.