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Founders of Dungannon - OU05F9
Hagan Family Cemetery ~ Dungannon, Virginia.
Owner: KnowsOpie
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Altitude: m. ASL.
 Region: United States > Virginia
Cache type: Traditional
Size: Regular
Status: Archived
Date hidden: 2013-02-27
Date created: 2013-02-27
Date published: 2013-02-27
Last modification: 2016-04-06
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Cache attributes

Snakes  Ticks  Thorns  In the Woods  Historic Site 

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Description EN
The geocache is located in the West corner of the wall around the Hagan cemetery, just a few yards past the National Forest boundry marker, and not on NFS property. This cache was placed on Saint Patricks day, in honor of the Hagan family that settled in this area and founded the town of Dungannon. The Hagan's were one of the more prominent familys in Scott County, Virginia in the 1800's. They were Irish Catholics. Joseph was born in 1787 in Tyrone County, Ireland and his wife Catharine was born December 3, 1802 in Tippernary County, Ireland. Patrick Hagan (Joseph's nephew) was born in Dungannon, Ireland on February 28, 1828. He came to America when he was 16 years old. This area where the Hagans settled was known as Hunter's crossing or Osborne's Ford. There is a Native American village in the area that is listed on the National Registery of Historic places, the Flanary Archeological Site (44SC13). Patrick built a large mansion near the Sulpher Spring on Stanton Creek that was known as Hagan Hall. He also named the local town Dungannon, after his home in Ireland which means "Fort on the River Gannon". One of Southwest Virginia's most wealthy and scholarly residents was an Irish Catholic who followed his uncle into Scott County and/became a legendary land opportunist when the industrial developers of coal and ore deposits cast their eyes on the Virginia hinterlands. Patrick Hagan has been dead for almost 100 years; and the country style, family graveyard at Hagan Hall has been taken over by the wild briars and hornets nesting. But tales of this fabulous and interesting man and his vast estate still go the rounds. People still find their way to the old, dilapidated house that was his "mansion" at Sulphur Springs, and there are many Virginians nearing the name Hagan, after his idealistic man. Hagan is said to have inherited his uncle Joseph Hagan's vast tracts and during his lifetime owned thousands of acres which folks say covered most of the Jefferson National Forest area, the Stonega Coke and Coal Co., and the Clinchfield Coal Corp., boundaries that crossed counties into Wise, Russell and Dickenson as well as Scott. The town of Dungannon was named by Patrick Hagan, after his home in Ireland, where he was born Feb. 2, 1828. He came to America at 16, stopping at New York, Philadelphia, Norfolk and Richmond before following Joseph Hagan into the western lands of Virginia. Storytellers say Joseph Hagan had walked down a Richmond street during a land sale for delinquent taxes and heard the auctioneer ask for bids on 35,000 acres. Without asking its location, he allegedly entered a high bid of $25 and walked away a Southwest Virginia landowner. This tale may bear some truth from the following records in the Scott County circuit court clerk's office. In 1841, Thomas G. Martin, commissioner of delinquent and forfeited lands, deeded to Joseph Hagan of Scott County, 50,000 acres on Stock Creek under the Western Lands title Law. The high bid of $28 was reduced to $26.32 for prompt payment, and the money was to be turned over to the Virginia Literary Fund, the taxes being delinquent from 1815 (date of Scott County's organization) to 1833. The first deed recorded to Joseph Hagan was August 30, 1833, when William Thompson and Bernard Hagan of Richmond, executors of the will of William Lamb, sold to Joseph and Sarah Purcell of Richmond 200,000 and 100,000 acres in Russell County, 12,328 acres and 3,155 acres in Monongalia County (now West Virginia), a number of small lots and tracts in the city of Richmond and Henrico County and any other tracts found to belong to William Lamb." On Dec. 29, 1839, a power of attorney is recorded by Joseph Hagan of the city of Richmond, empowering William Richmond of Scott County to act for him in land negotiations to the quantity of 2,000 acres, and in the county's sixth deed book, William Neal of Giles County deeded to Joseph Hagan a tract in Hunters Valley below Buckner's Ridge in 1838. Joseph Hagan built a log house on a plateau behind the present Hagan Hall, and Patrick built the present structure in 1860, adding to the back part about four years later. Hagan Hall had steam heat, two or more bathrooms and several up-to-date features for that day of rural living. The site of the house is said to have been selected there in Hunters Valley because of the fine spring of sulphur water that bubbles up by the side of Stanton Creek. No record of Patrick Hagan's inheritance from his uncle was noticed in the long listings of deeds to and from the nephew and his uncle or from the early will books in the county. A small tract of 200 acres was bought by Patrick Hagan from his uncle for $400 in·1868. At least seven deeds are on file showing Patrick Hagan's sales of tracts to the S & W Railroad Co., tracts to Cranes Nest Coal and Coke Co., to the Unaka Corp., and the Clinchfield Improvement Co. Old deeds still in his home at Hagan Hall show that in 1890, he was engaged in a $39,000 transaction with a Philadelphia group of businessmen, seeking to buy the iron ore mining privileges in a 10,000-acre tract around his Hunters Valley home. Within this acreage, the exceptions of property sold to other persons were so many that the net acreage amounted only to 7, 977½, computed at $5 per acre. Patrick Hagan had been taught by his uncle the fundamentals of philosophy, Latin, and English, and he went to Tazewell, Va., to study law in the office of Col. Joseph Strass. He began law practice in Estillville (Gate City), where he was admitted to the bar in 1854, four years after receiving his citizenship at 22. He was admitted to practice law in Wise County's. first county court in 1856. Said to have possessed the most thorough legal education of any man in his section, he made land law a specialty and became known as one of the foremost land lawyers in Virginia. Through his practice, he added to his inherited wealth and invested in other coal and timber lands. He became a resident of Lee County and was twice elected Commonwealth's attorney there before moving back to Scott County to continue law practice. He was the leading defense counselor in the long-talked of Daniel Dean case, tried in Scott County in 1878-9. In one of these trials, Hagan's argument consumed eight hours, 'and it is said' he was so disappointed in the verdict for hanging in this case that he carried out a promise made in the trial that an unfavorable verdict to the defendant would cause him to never again participate in a criminal case. Probably the reason respect and admiration for Patrick Hagan has been carried down through the years is that he was a bona fide gentleman. He lived when a good man's word was as good as his bond. He loved the humble man, and Scott Countians have said that "Pat Hagan was always good for a dollar-bill handout, if you told him you had named your baby after him." Hagan had a large colony of Negroes on his farm and provided a school and church for them, and many are buried in the West end of the Hagan family cemetery. His older neighbors remembered when he would celebrate the Christmas holidays with his most talented slaves making music for the occasion with their fiddles and banjos. In the heyday of Hagan Hall, many social functions took place there, and Hagan, receptive to the wishes of his children, often entered into the spirit as spry as a youngster. A master of Montesque, Coke and Blackstone, Hagan knew them almost by heart, and he contended no man knew the law who did not know the reason of the law. He was well-grounded in Roman and Grecian history, and the literary classics had a strong appeal to him. One of his favorite books was "Telemaque", which he said, "teaches how to attain the greatest happiness and how afflictions may be mitigated and reconciles man to his lot in life." "Reward You Eternally" Hagan's devotion to his Catholic duties was very real, and the Bishop of Wheeling was known to ride down to Wood station, where he was met and driven over the bumpity country lanes to Hagan Hall for a visit with Hagan. Still among the musty , papers in his library is the letter from the Convent of the Good Shepherd, Wheeling, where Mother M. de Sales wrote: "Although I know our Sisters expressed their deep gratitude to you for your generous donation, also your warm hospitality, allow me in the name of our community and children to thank you again. You will be prayed for by 140 of our children and will have a communion offered by each of the Sisters once every week. Again thanking you and praying God to surround you and yours with His choicest blessing and reward you eternally." The Catholic Church has established "Christ the King Mission" on a two-acre plot given by the Hagan family in recent years from the remains of the Hunters Valley tract. A large picture of a bishop or pope used to hang in the sitting room of Hagan Hall. Among the dusty papers in the library was a page from the Irish World of Nov. 29, 1884, wrapped in a sheet of paper, penned by Hagan as follows: "Transatlantic on the English way of dealing with Ireland." The Transatlantic is by an Irish distaff correspondent who gives a lengthy dissertation , on the then-new "Book of English Kings," giving a complete indictment against England, including a sitting of Parliament in Trim, when a law was enacted making it "no sin to kill an Irishman." Patrick Hagan married Mrs. Elizabeth Young Grubb to whom were born four sons and four daughters. Hagan Hall, once was one of the most beautiful residences in rural Scott County, Va. Master of this large estate was Patrick Hagan. Bricks for the mansion were molded and fired at the building site about 1860. The original painter and paperer, Harry Smith, left his name on the bared, plastered wall in the top, front bedroom in 1864.
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