Joseph S. Wheat
Joseph Shaw Wheat was an American farmer, surveyor and civil engineer, who became a politician, serving in the Recalled Session of West Virginia's Constitutional Convention, as well as in the initial and several later sessions of the West Virginia House of Delegates.
Early and family life
Joseph Wheat was born in Berkeley Springs on March 31, 1803, to Englishman and local hotel owner William Wheat and his wife, Virginia-born Elizabeth Wheat. He was educated and became a civil engineer, and Morgan County was created from the area around Berkeley Springs in 1820, as the developers started planning the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal to link the Potomac River watershed with the Ohio River watershed across the Appalachian Mountains and flowing into the Mississippi River.He married Miranda Grove, the daughter of a Methodist minister in Frederick County, Virginia, on January 14, 1850. They raised seven children to adulthood: Harriet E. Wheat, Henry C. Wheat, Mary Wheat, James A. Wheat, John F. Wheat and Alfred A. Wheat.
Career
Joseph Wheat was a farmer, and did not own slaves. Although too old to serve as a soldier, his speech on behalf of the Union caused him to be taken as a prisoner to Richmond, Virginia, where he was exchanged after three months and returned home.Morgan County voters elected him to represent them at the Virginia General Assembly at Wheeling for the session from December 4, 1862 – February 5, 1863.
After West Virginia seceded from the Commonwealth in order to remain in the Union, Joseph Wheat would serve as a delegate to the West Virginia House of Delegates in 1864, 1867 and 1870. Wheat helped establish the state's first free school system.
Joseph S. Wheat, a farmer in 1860, would be listed as a surveyor in the 1879 census.