[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 157 (2011), Part 6] [Extensions of Remarks] [Pages 7638-7639] [From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]CELEBRATING THE HISTORY OF THE TOWN OF JONESVILLE ON ITS BICENTENNIAL ______ HON. VIRGINIA FOXX of north carolina in the house of representatives Monday, May 23, 2011 Ms. FOXX. Mr. Speaker, I recently attended a celebration of the bicentennial of the community of Jonesville, NC. Not only was I impressed by the level of volunteerism that made the celebration possible, but I was also amazed by the rich history of the town of Jonesville. According to the Jonesville Historical Society, the current town of Jonesville was called Allen's Settlement in the 1700's--name after pioneer businessman David Allen. Allen's Settlement took root near the bluffs that once stood on the south bank of the Yadkin, at the junction of current-day Elm Street-- West Main Street and River Road and was surrounded by wilderness, isolated farms and occasional plantations. David Allen owned an iron ore forge on the Big Elkin Creek, which was supplied with iron ore by the surrounding mountains and foothills. Examples of these types kind of ore mines, also known as ``pits,'' are still found in Jonesville, particularly adjacent to West Main [[Page 7639]] Street, which was once called Iron Works Road. Most iron ore was transported across the Yadkin River in the shallows until a ferry was constructed near the mouth of Big Elkin Creek, according to the Historical Society. A section of the Old Ford Road is preserved today in Mineral Spring Park. In 1811, the town that is now Jonesville was initially incorporated as Martinsborough, most likely in honor of North Carolina's recent Governors, Alexander Martin and Josiah Martin. However, in 1815 the town name was changed to Jonesville in honor of Hardy Jones. Hardy Jones was the son of Samuel Jones, a settler from Virginia who fought in the American Revolution. It was Jones who established the Academy for which early Jonesville was famous. Jones' remains and a marker honoring his life can be found at Jonesville First United Methodist Church, which is also the site of the former Jonesville Male and Female Academy. The Jonesville Academy was moved from what is modern-day Bermuda Run to Jonesville by Hardy Jones in 1816. By the 1853-54 school year, 150 students attended the academy, coming from every state in the country. The town of Jonesville grew in prominence thanks to the academy and the students it attracted from around the country and the south. However, soldiers from Union General George Stoneman's cavalry ransacked the school in the spring of 1865. Fortunately, the soldiers missed the academy's prized possession, a bell made of bronze and 99 silver dollars. Today the bell resides atop the Jonesville First United Methodist Church. According to Moravian journals from the time, Jonesville also likely served as a stop for fugitive slaves trying to escape to freedom on the Underground Railroad. The town of Jonesville experienced unprecedented growth after Interstate 77 opened in 1974, and it was consequently named a ``Governor's Community of Excellence'' in 1980. In 2001, Jonesville merged with the neighboring town of Arlington, which added about 800 people to Jonesville's population and made it the town it is today. ____________________