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HomeCruiser_2025_09_Sep_Oct_Petersburg
Petersburg Races: Remembering 16 Years of CCA HistoryBy Alf CooleyThe Potomac Downriver Race is not the only notable event in CCA's acclaimed racing history on our nation's river. For 15 years from 1964 to 1978, CCA devoted major effort into organizing early springtime races along several stretches in the 22 miles of the North Fork of the Potomac's South Branch from Mouth of Seneca to Petersburg in West Virginia's Eastern Panhandle. With the cooperation of key townspeople, a group of dedicated CCA padders succeeded in establishing a wildly popular set of downriver and slalom races ultimately drawing over 500 competitive paddlers from 23 states.
These Petersburg whitewater weekends soon became a major event for the fast-growing whitewater racing community along the Eastern Seaboard. But after the all-too-well-attended 1978 race, the Petersburg authorities unexpectedly voted against continuing it. The competition was resuscitated the next year at Wardensville as the Lost River Races, which ran for but one season. The club abandoned running races at such a remove from Washington, focusing thereafter solely on the Potomac Downriver Race, by then in its 24th year. Exiting Seneca Creek - 1977 brochure Beginnings Having started with a race before it was a club, the early Canoe Cruisers Association had an outsized emphasis on racing. What is extraordinary was that in just the ninth year of running our classic Potomac Downriver Race, the club started another set of races out in West Virginia's Eastern Panhandle, then over five hours' drive from Washington. At CCA's September 1963 meeting, river-guide author and renowned gage painter Randy Carter reported the Petersburg Chamber of Commerce had written seeking to run a white-water canoeing festival with slalom, exhibits, and downriver to take place the very next year. The Smokehole on the South Branch and the Cheat were proposed as venues, though by January a far more practical one up the North Fork was chosen. Starting in April 1964, the town of Petersburg became the center of paddling activity. The CCA started the race weekend as an invitation-only event, but quickly opened up registration to all, ultimately with paddlers from 32 clubs attending. Within several years, the Petersburg Races surpassed the CCA's Potomac Downriver Race (which had only one event) in number of contestants.
The club founders who ran these races are almost all gone, but several of the paddlers who competed as teenagers are in the club and paddling yet. Hugh Hilliard spoke of driving all night up from Georgia with his Explorer post and camping out in the valley. "It was a big deal" to meet some of the legends in the nascent sport, he said. "It was like paddling in the Big Leagues," watching the good paddlers from around the country, and hoping to emulate their style and moves. Spectators aplenty (photographer thought to be Grayer Green) The Course During its long run, the Petersburg Races had many permutations, but by 1970, it had evolved into three distinct events. Primary was the ACA Middle States Division Slalom and Wildwater Championships; at Class II-IV, this was of advanced/intermediate difficulty. Racing-canoes and kayaks in multiple classes ran a 4.5-mile course from the cave at Dolly Campground down through Hopeville Canyon to the bridge at the Cabins gage near Smokehole Caverns. Meanwhile, a separate race for decked cruising and slalom boats was run from the mouth of Seneca Creek 10 miles to Dolly Campground. The following day saw the Middle States Slalom Championships run at Harmons Store Rapids just below the canyon and right along Highway 28. With higher water levels, the slalom course could be set up in the final section of Seneca Creek. The courses were set up and scored by volunteers, who brought all the paraphernalia—poles, wires, clocks, and racing bibs—into the valley and got it home again, along with the records of the races. The April Fools' Race By 1968, a locally inspired April Fools' Race had sprouted alongside the official races. The loose rules allowed contestants to participate in "anything that was not a boat." The course for these craft (supported by inner tubes or steel or plastic barrels) was run further down the North Fork, where the lesser gradient did not break up these non-boats so readily. The many original designs of these homemade craft included a Liberty Bell, a smoke-belching moonshiner operation, dragons, airplanes and a locomotive. In one year a 50-foot, 19-man "USS Aprils Spool" made of discarded wire spools with a crew from a Virginia construction company disintegrated, dropping three of them into the icy water. "Still" photo of April Fools' entrant (photographer unknown) All this activity attracted coverage by local TV and a wholly different viewership from the downriver and slalom races. A CCA Cruiser of the time reported that the Petersburg Races had "burgeoned beyond belief and now [drew] thousands of spectators and so many contestants that they have to be started in several groups."
The Weather The Petersburg Races were unusual in being on a natural flow river, so the volume was always unknown until the racers arrived. One year, 1966, the water was so low that the race had to be run downstream of Petersburg. But the prime meteorological issue was the cold—these races were run up in a mountain valley starting in late March and early April, so snow flurries and sub-freezing weather were common. And winds? One year the organizers were unable for several hours to run the slalom because the blasts across the river made the slalom poles swing way wide in the rapids. Drysuits had not yet been invented, although over the 15 years, paddlers came to more fully adopt wetsuits/farmer-johns.
CCA and Local Organizers In those days before I-66 and West Virginia's Corridor H "Highway to Nowhere," given the long drive from Washington, any visit entailed staying overnight. Setting up the course, particularly stringing the slalom poles across the river, meant coming up into the valley early. While lodging in the few local hostelries sold out quickly, contestants camped out at Mouth of Seneca and other campgrounds near and far. Cloth patches for contestants (saved by Frank Daspit) For many years CCA gave every contestant a special cloth patch created for that year's race. The CCA's race committee started with the John Berry and Bob Harrigan duo (who also cooperated in constructing early whitewater craft). The committee continued with Betty Riedel, Dick and Rosemary Bridge, and Jean Dunne (who was present at the finish all 15 years of the race). And by 1972, John Seabury Thompson appeared as CCA's race chairman, and from then for the eight years to the end of the races, this prolific chronicler left a detailed record of the events at Petersburg and up the valley. And without the cooperation of its leading citizens the races would not have been possible. Chief among them was Alma Cowherd, proprietress of the Hermitage Inn, "Smitty" Alt, who became the Petersburg Race Chairman, and Gil Miller, the final Petersburg Whitewater Coordinator. Ancillary Events While CCA performed all the technical and certifying aspects of the races, through their civic organizations the people of Petersburg and up the valley ran a myriad of events. There were the Petersburg Fire Department, the Circleville High School way up the valley, the Arts Council with the fiddle contest, the Potomac Highland Craft Show, and a bake sale by the Grant County Hospital. A major event was the fire station Sunday breakfast for contestants and other paying customers. Other activities included canoeing movies, barbeque, smorgasbord, a hootenanny, a square dance at the high school, and an exhibition of boats and boat molds with hot new designs along with camping gear, muzzle-loading rifle matches, and smorgasbord at the fire station. Crowds and Traffic Jams In the 60s, the two-lane highway through Petersburg and up the North Fork Valley had not been widened, meaning that those competing and viewing quickly brought on traffic jams throughout the lower valley. In vain the CCA's Race Committee confronted this, by 1966 separating the races into two weekends with a 10-mile Cruiser Section run from Mouth of Seneca to the top of Hopeville Canyon, the expert races through the Class III (IV) canyon, and on the following weekend a shorter slalom run below the bottom of the canyon. "Hospitality was strained by the traffic …" (photo by Keith Edmondson) That year, West Virginia's governor came to hand out the prizes. But finally growing to 500 contestants in four races, two of which were run concurrently, the effort to organize and run the competition became an increasing strain on those dedicated club members who volunteered year after year. With many thousands of friends and spectators crowding into Petersburg and the North Fork Valley, local people's hospitality was strained by the traffic, partying undergraduates, occasional trespassers knocking over fences, and the sheer mass of visitors exhausting groceries and gas supplies in local stores and filling stations.
Final Years of the Race Anyone who has participated in the CCA's Downriver Race Committee's work or observed their enormous vigor at the put-in and takeout can only imagine the challenge of running multiple races, including a slalom event, 160 miles from home. The organizers had to be 22 miles upstream of Petersburg before the race to string the gates across Seneca Creek, or along Route 28 below Hopeville Canyon, leaving precious little time during the events to focus on community relations. And contestants, timers, and gate-layers, being focused on the river itself, did not experience the traffic jams in the way the locals did. But by 1971, the Cruiser reported "mob scenes," "CCAers lost in the crowd," and crowds destroying a section of fence of a benefactor who had loaned his property for the downriver takeout. The Cruiser detailed spectators lined up four or five deep along the course—"almost too much of a good thing, given the capacity of the Valley"—and acknowledged, "We descended like a swarm of locusts in numbers no one could have anticipated."
By the tenth anniversary, Petersburg was "bursting at the seams trying to accommodate the crowds." By 1976, with the film "Deliverance" driving the popularity of whitewater activities among an uninformed public, the Cruiser estimated 35,000 people came to the North Fork Valley—close to the combined populations of our Grant and Pendleton County hosts. "Fiasco," "brinksmanship," and "courting of disaster" were the CCA's own assessment of the scene in the valley in the final years. At the same time CCA's 10 stalwart volunteer race officials were unable to attract either replacements or cooperation from other West Virginia outdoor organizations to help run the races—sometimes having to recruit contestants to assist at the finish.
In the weeks after the 1978 races, the Grant County Press was reporting 1500 "college kids" camping on private land, "motorcycle gangs," and trash left by thousands for others to pick up. In this fray a local citizen circulated a petition among several hundred valley landowners to end the races and brought it to Petersburg's Grant County Commission for action. Before the CCA in Washington became aware, the Commission had resolved to discontinue the Petersburg Race weekends, "Land Owners Vote Death to Whitewater Weekend" ran the headline, and 15 years of competitive paddlers coming en masse into the valley came to an end. On to Wardensville Deciding not to contest the matter, the club looked for a substitute venue, and by the following spring was able to resuscitate the competition at Wardensville as the Lost River Races, although purists contend it was run on the Cacapon. A one-day slalom race with 51 boats/69 competitors was followed the next week by a single downriver race with 121 boats/200 paddlers.
The race ran there for but one season, with the club avoiding crowds by soft-pedaling advertising and avoiding ancillary activities. The downriver race ran 10 miles from Wardensville down to Capon Lake Bridge. The water was very low, such that the race committee found it had to dredge parts of the channel and clip out strainers to allow the races to proceed. However, without strong local support as in Petersburg, lacking sufficient local tourist infrastructure, and with the Lost River's lower water levels (its basin having but 60 percent of the North Fork's catchment), as a racing venue Wardensville could not hold CCA's interest. After that pair of low-water events in 1979, the overstretched race organizers decided to bring 16 years of offering whitewater racing in the Mountain State to a close. Barb Brown (now CCA archivist) adorned the 1967 brochure Sources – CCA Archives: This article about 16 years of CCA history occurring 60 years ago is based in part on materials available to every CCA member: issues of the Cruiser extending back to 1962 and available online in the Members Only/Documents/Newsletters section of the CCA website. Another part is from the extensive CCA archives: boxes of letters, financial records, racing programs, minutes of CCA board meetings extending into the 1950s, and album after album of photographs. For many years Barb Brown has been the keeper of the many boxes where these records are stored. Therein lie many possibilities for future Cruiser articles such as other club races, wild-ass creeking adventures, early boat-building undertakings, river accidents, and many more activities. Antiquarians, chroniclers, and historians desirous of researching the early history of the club should take a look at the online Cruisers and contact Barb to take a look at the archives.
More Photos! See the CCA Photo Album.
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