When Jefferson County's effort to be restored to Virginia after the Civil War failed, Joe was heartbroken and left, saying; “I’ll be damned if I’m going to live in West Virginia”. He moved to Luray and married Lavinia Lionberger. In time they moved east across the Blue Ridge, to Rappahannock County, where he had built an extravagant mansion, named Glen Lavinia, near Sperryville. In post-war Reconstruction, the farmer was unable to keep Glen Lavinia, and they moved to Roanoke, where he wrote for the local newspaper, while Lavinia ran a boarding house. In the full circle of life, he and his family did finally return to Charles Town.
When Jefferson County's effort to be restored to Virginia after the Civil War failed, Joe was heartbroken and left, saying; “I’ll be damned if I’m going to live in West Virginia”. He moved to Luray and married Lavinia Lionberger. In time they moved east across the Blue Ridge, to Rappahannock County, where he had built an extravagant mansion, named Glen Lavinia, near Sperryville. In post-war Reconstruction, the farmer was unable to keep Glen Lavinia, and they moved to Roanoke, where he wrote for the local newspaper, while Lavinia ran a boarding house. In the full circle of life, he and his family did finally return to Charles Town.
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