

Moderator: Gil R.
ORIGINAL: elmo3
I kanawah see what the big deal is...
I currently live in the Kanawha Valley and I assure you it is pronounced KA-NA-WHA.
I guess in some of the hollows it may be pronounced Kan-aw, or if spoken quickly.
< Message edited by regularbird -- 1/2/2007 3:05:44 PM >
ORIGINAL: chris0827
West Virginia wasn't an enemy state. They formed a government in June 1861 and officially became a state in june 1863. At least 25,000 West Virginians fought in the Union army.
ORIGINAL: regularbird
The federal court, forget the date, ruled that WV owed Virginia x amount million dollars. I think it took until 1924 to pay it off.
ORIGINAL: Twotribes
As to maryland it was not "Constitutional" to secede but more to the point, as I recall the State voted and voted to remain IN the Union.
ORIGINAL: bountyhunter
ORIGINAL: Twotribes
As to maryland it was not "Constitutional" to secede but more to the point, as I recall the State voted and voted to remain IN the Union.
Correct, but only after half of the state government was "imprisoned."
The counties that broke away were eventually considered the legitimate government of Virginia (eventhough they didn't represent even half of the state). What of the Virginia government in "exile" in Alexandria?
There is an article out there by a Minnesota law professor but I can't get access to the whole article... just the abstract.
Abstract:
When the Commonwealth of Virginia announced it was seceding from the Union, the northwestern corner of Virginia formed a rump government-in-exile, declared itself the lawful government of Virginia, and gave "Virginia's" consent to the creation of a new State of West Virginia consisting of essentially the same northwestern corner of old Virginia. Congress and the Lincoln administration recognized the northwestern rump as the legitimate government of Virginia, and voted to admit West Virginia as a State.
Could they do that? This article takes on the odd but amazingly complicated (and occasionally interesting) constitutional question of whether West Virginia is legitimately a State of the Union or is instead an illegal, breakaway province of Virginia. While scarcely a burning legal issue in the twenty-first century, the question of West Virginia's constitutionality turns out to be more than of just quaint historical interest, but also to say a great deal about textualism and formalism as legitimate modes of constitutional interpretation today.
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm? ... _id=371340
ORIGINAL: regularbird
As a native West Virginian should I now consider myself an OUTLAW, or at least an UN-Costitutionalist.