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LIFE
Don Daniel McMillian: Barboursville home once served as post office
The William Clendenin Miller home was built in 1852 on Main Street in Barboursville and once served as the post office. The house was constructed of red brick made in Barboursville. This late federal style structure has a central entrance hall.
In 1849, William Clendenin Miller, Enoch Underwood, Edmund Rece and Daniel Love were appointed County Commissioners of Cabell County to plan and to build a new courthouse. Miller was a charter member of the Guyandotte Navigation Company and built several locks on the Guyandotte River. He also assisted in building the new courthouse in Barboursville and the Miller-Thornburg Store.
The Miller family in Virginia started with Christen S. Miller who was born in Germany, came to America and served in the Revolutionary War and died at Woodstock, Va., on April 28, 1836. He married Catherine Wiseman. Their third son, John, migrated to the Kanawha Valley and married Sophia Clendenin on Jan. 26, 1806. Sophia was the daughter of William Clendenin and a niece of Colonel George Clendenin, one of the founding families of Charleston, W.Va. William and Sophia moved to Cabell County and their daughter, Margaret, married Thomas Thornburg.
Their son, William Clendenin Miller Jr., married Eliza Gardner on March 6, 1836. She was the daughter of Joseph Gardner, a Harvard Law School graduate who loved the sea. Following his graduation, he bought a ship and went to San Domingo, where he married a French girl, Marie Therese Clothilde de la Geneste. When the black insurrection started in San Domingo, Joseph Gardner and his family went to Boston, then Kentucky and later Barboursville.
Records disclose that on June 30, 1841, an order was made to enable them to obtain some property in France to which his wife was entitled.
William Clendenin Miller and his wife Eliza had the following children: Eugenia, who married professor B.H. Thackston and had seven children, Florence, who married George Frederick Miller and Joseph who was born in Barboursville on Aug. 17, 1848, and married Florence Tice of Maryland.
Joseph was appointed Circuit Clerk on Aug. 1, 1869, and served in the office for four years. He was later elected County Clerk and served four more years. He was also elected Auditor for the State of West Virginia and moved to Wheeling during his term of office.
Joseph Miller became a close friend of President Grover Cleveland, who appointed him Commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service in both of his administrations.
Joseph Miller interested President Cleveland with some of his holdings in coal lands in Wayne County, which would bring about the construction of the Norfolk & Western Railway.
Huntington author Don Daniel McMillian spent more than 14 years researching the historic homes, architecture and many of the first families in Cabell County before writing his book "On The Threshold of Splendor: Historic Homes and Families." The book is available at Amazon.com, Empire Books & News, Borders and Richard's Hallmark.
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