The area was first settled in 1732 by
John Lewis and family. In 1736,
William Beverley, a wealthy planter and
merchant from
Essex County, was granted by the
Crown over in what would become Augusta County.
Surveyor Thomas Lewis in 1746 laid out the first town
plat for Beverley of what was originally called Beverley's Mill Place. Founded in 1747, it was renamed in honor of
Lady Rebecca Staunton, wife to Royal Lieutenant-Governor
Sir William Gooch. Because the town was located at the geographical center of the colony (which then included
West Virginia), Staunton served between 1738 and 1771 as regional capital for much of what was later known as the Northwest Territory, with the westernmost
courthouse in
British North America prior to the
Revolution. By 1760, Staunton was one of the major "remote trading centers in the backcountry" which coordinated the transportation of the vast amounts of grain and tobacco then being produced in response to the change of
Britain from a net exporter of produce to an importer. Staunton thus played a crucial role in the mid 18th century expansion of the economies of the
American Colonies which, in turn, contributed to the success of the
American Revolution. It served as capital of Virginia in June 1781, when state
legislators fled
Richmond and then
Charlottesville to avoid capture by the
British. Like most of colonial Virginia,
slavery was present in Staunton. For instance, in 1815, a slave named Henry ran away from John G. Wright's Staunton plantation. Wright placed an ad in the
Daily National Intelligencer in
Washington, D.C. seeking Henry's return. It notes that Henry was an excellent cook and was widely travelled, having been as far as the
West Indies.
The Civil War and immediately prior In August 1855, President
Franklin Pierce visited Staunton. He gave a speech at the
Virginia Hotel, in which he stated that his "feelings revolted from the idea of a dissolution of the union." He said that "[i]t would be the Iliad of innumerable woes, from the contemplation of which he shrank." Located along the
Valley Pike, Staunton developed as a
trade, transportation and industrial center, particularly after the
Virginia Central Railroad arrived in 1854.
Factories made
carriages,
wagons,
boots and
shoes,
clothing and
blankets. (the
Staunton Spectator) and at least one pro-secession, pro-slavery newspaper (the
Staunton Vindicator). The
Spectator ran editorials before the war urging its citizens to vote for union, while the
Vindicator ran, e.g., stories reporting on "unruly" slaves mutilating themselves to escape being sold. On May 23, 1861, shortly after the firing on Fort Sumter began the
American Civil War, Virginians voted on whether to ratify
articles of secession from the Union and join the
Confederate States. The articles were overwhelmingly approved throughout the Commonwealth, even in the majority of the counties that would later become West Virginia. The vote in Staunton was 3,300 in favor of secession, with only 6 opposed. During the war, the town became an important
Shenandoah Valley manufacturing center, a staging area, and a supply depot for the
Confederacy. On June 6, 1864,
Union Major General
David Hunter arrived with 10,000 troops to cut supply, communication and railway lines useful to the Confederacy. The next day, they destroyed the railroad station,
warehouses, houses, factories and mills. Union soldiers
looted the stores and warehouses and confiscated supplies.
Postbellum Staunton On July 10, 1902, Staunton became an independent city. In 1908, Staunton adopted the
city manager form of government. Charles E. Ashburner was hired by Staunton as the nation's first city manager. On January 26, 1926, Staunton adopted Lady Rebecca Staunton's
coat of arms for use as the city's official coat of arms and its flag.
Western State Hospital Staunton is also home to the former
Western State Asylum, a hospital for the mentally ill, which originally began operations in 1828. The hospital was renamed Western State Hospital in 1894. In its early days, the facility was a resort-style asylum. It had terraced gardens where patients could plant flowers and take walks, roof walks to provide mountain views, and many architectural details to create an atmosphere that would aid in the healing process. However, by the mid 19th Century, this utopian model of care had vanished, replaced by overcrowding in the facility and the warehousing of patients. Techniques such as "ankle and wrist restraints, physical coercion, and straitjackets" were used. patients were forcibly sterilized at Western State until the law authorizing the practice was repealed in the 1970s. Later,
electroshock therapy and
lobotomies were practiced at the facility. It is now a condominium complex called The Villages at Staunton. A separate complex, The DeJarnette State Sanatoruim, was constructed in 1932 and acted as a location for patients with the ability to pay for their treatment. Dr. DeJarnette was the superintendent of the sanatorium from its opening until his retirement in 1947. ==Geography==