The Necessary Ingredient-Malden's Salt Works - Malden WV
Posted by: Groundspeak Regular Member Don.Morfe
N 38° 17.931 W 081° 33.462
17S E 451234 N 4239120
Marker is in Malden, West Virginia, in Kanawha County at the intersection of Malden Drive (County Route 60/6) and Cypress Drive, 4200 Malden Drive, Charleston WV 25306.
Waymark Code: WM18D1X
Location: West Virginia, United States
Date Posted: 07/09/2023
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member Turtle3863
Views: 0

The Necessary Ingredient-Malden's Salt Works

In the decades before the Civil War, this region, called the Kanawha Salines, had a booming salt industry. Salt extraction created vast wealth here, and by 1846, this area had led the nation with 3.2 million bushels produced. During the Civil War, salt was a necessary ingredient for the preservation of meat for the armies. The salt works here at Malden were especially important to the Confederacy.

Salt businesses relied on slaves, owned or leased, and the workers face difficult conditions. Many jobs were dangerous…mining the coal to boil the brine was especially so. Slaves toiled at the 52 furnaces that lined the Kanawha River for ten miles above Charleston. By 1850, 3,140 slaves lived among the 12,001 white inhabitants, and more than half of the slaves worked in the salt operations.

Many salt-works owners lived here in Malden, while others built large estates along the Kanawha River in Charleston to escape the heat and pollution of the furnaces. Several of the houses still stand on Kanawha Boulevard. By 1861, the salt industry here was in decline because of the development of salt fields farther west, as well as
the westward shift of the meatpacking industry. The Civil War and a record flood on the Kanawha River hastened its collapse.

[Sidebars:]
In 1853, saltmaker Richard Lovell estimated the employment of hands at his two salt furnaces as: 14 coal diggers; 5 wheelers [moved coal to mine mouth]; 4 haulers [moved coal by team on rail tramway to furnace]; 3 kettle tenders [boiled brine to recover salt]; 1 or 2 cat hole [coal ash repository] cleaners; 6 engineers [ran steam engines to pump brine from well]; 2 salt lifters and wheelers [moved salt to packing shed]; 7 "jim arounds" and packers [general laborers, firemen packed salt into barrels]; 2 blacksmiths; 1 "negro man sort of manager."

Born into slavery on a Virginia farm, nine-year old Booker T. Washington moved to Malden with his family in 1865 after the war ended. He packed salt, mined coal, and worked for the wealthy Ruffner family. His labors spurred his thirst for an education. Washington became a prominent educator and leading spokesman for African Americans from 1895 until his death in 1915. Booker returned here often to visit his sister, Amanda Johnson. The nearby site of her brick house is now West Virginia State University Park.
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Don.Morfe visited The Necessary Ingredient-Malden's Salt Works - Malden WV 07/10/2023 Don.Morfe visited it