Thurmond, West Virginia: The Coal Depot the Diesel Engine Killed

Thurmond was a railroad and coal town wedged onto a narrow shelf of land in the New River Gorge of southern West Virginia, built almost entirely to serve the Chesapeake & Ohio Railway as it hauled bituminous coal out of the New River and Winding Gulf coalfields. Founded around 1900 on land controlled by coal operator Thomas G. McKell — and named for Captain William Dabney Thurmond, who had patented the original tract — the town existed because steam locomotives needed a place to take on coal and water and to assemble the long trains of loaded hoppers that the gorge produced.

At its height in the 1910s and early 1920s Thurmond was one of the busiest freight points on the entire C&O system. During the first two decades of the 20th century the town reportedly produced more freight tonnage than Cincinnati and Richmond combined, and roughly fifteen passenger trains a day passed through, the depot handling about 75,000 passengers a year — all with almost no road access, the railroad tracks serving quite literally as the main street. Two banks, including the National Bank of Thurmond, two hotels, stores, and offices crowded the narrow strip between the cliff and the river.

Thurmond’s prosperity, however, was bound tightly to a single technology and a single commodity. Steam locomotives required frequent coaling and watering stops, which is precisely what gave a place like Thurmond its reason to exist; the diesel-electric locomotives that railroads adopted from the 1940s onward did not. As diesels eliminated the need for division-point servicing and the long decline of Appalachian coal cut traffic further, the town’s economic logic simply evaporated.

Today Thurmond survives as a near-empty historic district inside New River Gorge National Park and Preserve, and the entire town is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The 1904 depot has been restored by the National Park Service as a seasonal visitor center, just five residents remained as of the 2020 census — making Thurmond the least-populous municipality in West Virginia — and the town stands as one of the clearest American examples of a settlement obsoleted not by a depleted mine beneath it but by a change in the machines that passed through it.