SHEPHERDSTOWN


Meaning of SHEPHERDSTOWN in English

town, Jefferson county, in the eastern panhandle of West Virginia, U.S., near the Potomac River, about 10 miles (16 km) northwest of Harpers Ferry. One of the state's oldest towns, it was first settled in the early 18th century by Germans from Pennsylvania. In the 1730s Thomas Shepherd laid out the town, and it was chartered as Mecklenburg in 1762. It was renamed Shepherdstown in 1798 (the name was officially recognized by the state in 1867). In 1787 inventor James Rumsey successfully demonstrated his first steamboat there on the Potomac. The state's first newspaper, The Potomac Guardian, was published by Nathaniel Willis in the town in 1790. President George Washington reportedly considered it as a possible site for the national capital. During the American Civil War, Union and Confederate troops skirmished near Shepherdstown (September 1920, 1862) following the Battle of Antietam (September 17). The skirmish was a minor Confederate victory, and it culminated in Union general George B. McClellan's eventual dismissal from command for failing to pursue the retreating Confederate army. Shepherdstown became the county seat after the war and remained so until 1871, when the seat was moved to Charles Town. The courthouse that had housed the county government was then used by Shepherd College (1871); the college now houses the George Tyler Moore Center for the Study of the Civil War (1993). Shepherdstown's economy is based on tourism and Shepherd College. Pop. (1990) 1,287; (1998 est.) 1,697.

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