Cass was created in 1901 as a
company town for those who worked for West Virginia Pulp and Paper Company, logging the nearby
Cheat Mountain. The cut logs were brought by rail to the town, where they were processed for use by paper and hardwood-flooring companies throughout the United States. Cass's skilled laborers, who worked in the mill or the locomotive repair shop, lived with their families in 52 white-fenced houses, built in orderly rows on a hill south of the general store. In 1960 the mill closed. In 1963, the state bought the logging railroad and converted it into a tourist attraction, carrying passengers into the vast
Monongahela National Forest. In the late 1970s, the state bought most of the town and its buildings for the new
Cass Scenic Railroad State Park. In 1982 the mill burned down. Cass was disincorporated in 1985. == Current status ==