On October 24, 1861, voters from the thirty-nine counties of the proposed state of Kanawha (plus
the voters of Hampshire and Hardy) went to the polls to determine the fate of the new state.
Considering the importance of the vote, turnout was surprisingly low, only 34%. When the
ballots were counted, they showed that 18,408 had voted in favor of the new state, while only
781 opposed. At this election, voters also elected delegates to represent them in a constitutional
convention, held to design the framework of government for the new state of Kanawha.
|
1862 Map Showing the Proposed State of Kanawha
Frank Leslie's Pictorial History of the American Civil War, 1862 (Ma61-
25)
|