|


| |
A
Place Called Blair
Originally published in the "Blair
Family Magazine"
10th Anniversary Edition, Spring 1993
Editor (1993): Mona Mattingly
Updated and Prepared for Web Publishing by:
Edward P. Blair |
|
|
CANADA
|
Blair- A post-village in Waterloo Co.,
Ontario, now an urban center in the city of Cambridge, located on the west side of the
Grand River. It was named Blair in 1858 in honor of Adam Johnston Fergusson Blair, who
served in the Canadian Legislature and was President of the Privy Council under Prime
Minister John MacDonald. Blair Township in Parry Sound District was also named for him.Blairmore
- Mountain town in Crow's Nest Pass, Alberta, about 10 miles East of the border of British
Columbia and fifty miles North of the U.S. border. Named for Andrew George Blair,
Minister of Railways, population of 2,000 (est.).
Blairton - A post-village in Peterborough Co., Ontario,
located on Marmora Lake, thirty-five miles from Peterborough, population of 350 (1893).
|
INDIA
|
Port Blair- The territorial capital of
the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, a Union Territory of India, consisting of two island
groups in the Bay of Bengal. Port Blair, population 240,089 [1991], is situated on
the east coast of South Andaman Island.
In 1789, Captain Archibald Blair of the Bombay Marine (the East India Company's Navy),
acting under orders from the government of Bengal, established a penal colony on this
site, naming it Port Cornwallis in honor of his commander, Admiral Sir William Cornwallis.
In 1858, the first European
settlement on the islands was established near the site of the old penal colony, and was
named Port Blair in honor of Captain Blair. |
SCOTLAND
|
| Ardblair Castle - Located one mile West of
Blairgowrie, Perthshire. The estate was originally granted to Thomas Blair, a son of
Balthayock Blairs, by King David II in 1399. The earliest part of the castle is a
tall fortalice, grafted onto the foundations of an earlier tower or keep, said to date
from 1688. Through marriage, the property passed into the hands of the Oliphants of
Gask in 1791. It is currently owned by Laurence and Jennifer Blair Oliphant.
The castle is filled with Jacobite relics. Blair Castle - Located at
Blair-Atholl, Perthshire, between Perth and Inverness. Built in the 13th century and
restored in the late 18th century, it is the ancestral home of Lord Murray, Duke of
Atholl. The castle is apparently named for its location, for no Blair has ever lived
there. Situated on 135,000 acres and containing an exceptional collection of
antiques, Blair Castle is the premier tourist attraction in Perthshire.
Blairadam A village in
Fifeshire, was originally named Maryburgh, but renamed after the family of famous Scottish
architects and interior designers, most famous of which was Robert Adam (1728-1792), a
designer of furniture, whose father was born in this village.
Blairadam Forest An
area ten kilometers North of Dunfermline, Fifeshire, Blairadam means level clearing
(blar) of Adam (surname).
Blair-Atholl A
parish in Perthshire, located twenty miles North of Dunkeld. It is the site of Blair
Castle, seat of the Duke of Atholl, the only citizen in Britain with the right to maintain
a private army, the Atholl Highlanders.
Blair House Located
on the West coast of Scotland, a mile and a half from Dalry, Ayrshire, on the banks of the
stream Garnock. The Barony of Blair was the ancestral home of the Blairs of Blair for
nearly 800 years. Blair House, once called Blair Castle, is the oldest inhabited baronial
mansion in Scotland that has not been rebuilt. The oldest part of the house is the
guardroom tower, which
was probably built before 1200. The pole tower or the Keep was built on or about 1202. It
has seen many additions and renovations since that time. Local people say that Blair House
now has 99 rooms, just one room short of being a castle. It does indeed look like a
castle. The first inhabitant of Blair House was probably William de Blair, who lived
during the reign of William the Lion. He is mentioned in a contract between Ralph de
Elington and the town of Irvine, dated 1205. The Eastern entrance has the date 1668 carved
on the door lintel, with the Blair Arms quartered with Hamilton above. This likely refers
to William Blair of Blair, who married Lady Margaret Hamilton, daughter of William, second
Duke of Hamilton. Alongside this entrance there is a more ancient door with the date 1617,
with the initials BB superimposed on the Blair Arms on the left and initials A W
superimposed on the Arms of Wallace of Craigie on the right. This likely refers to Bryce
Blair of Blair, who married Annabell Wallace. The Blair of Blair male blood line ended
with William Blair, who died sometime after 1689, leaving his daughter, Magdalene, as sole
heiress to the estate. She married William Scott, second son of John Scott of
Malleny. When Magdalene Blair died in childbirth, probably before 1715, William
Scott assumed the surname Blair in order to inherit the estate. After 1730, the Arms
of Blair of Blair have been quartered with Scott. The last Blair to inhabit Blair House
was Cecily Madeline Blair, who died in 1978. Colonel Michael Borwick, a cousin of Miss
Blair, and his wife, Veronica, then inherited the estate. In 1996 Veronica Borwick sold
the title of "Barony of Blair" and a small section of land required to retain
the title to Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Glenn of London, England. Mr. Glenns
great-grandfather, William Glenn, was born at Dalry in 1806. Veronica retains the
"Estate" which will be inheritated by her nephew, Luke Borwick. The Blair House
is presently managed by the Blair Trust Company, Dalry, Scotland, and is open by
appointment only. (Click
here for more information on Blair House)
Blairburn A village
in the parish of Culross, Perthshire.
Blairdaff Is in the
Chapel of Garioch parish, Aberdeen, and is located 5 miles Northwest of Inverury.
Blair-Drummond Is
located in Perthshire, 6 kilometers Northwest of Stirling and 48 kilometers Southwest of
Perth. Drummond means at the ridge, thus Blair-Drummond is a level
clearing (blar) at the ridge. Lord Drummond was created the Earl of Perth in 1605 by
King James IV. Drummond Castle is located at Concraig.
Blair-Gowrie A
burgh and parish in Perthshire, located 16 miles by rail North Northeast of Perth, and 58
miles North of Edinburgh. It was erected into a burgh of Barony by charter from King
Charles I, dated 9 July 1634, in favor of George Drummond, then proprietor of the estate.
The ruins of Glasclune Castle, former home of a cadet branch of the Balthayock Blairs, is
located in the hamlet of Kinloch, just 3 miles Northwest of Blair-Gowrie.
Blair Hall Is
located 10 miles West Northwest of Dunfermline in Fifeshire.
Blairingone Is
located in the parish of Fossoway & Tulliebole in Perthshire, 10 miles West of
Kinross.
Blair-Logie A small
village in Perthshire, located 3 miles Northeast of Sterling in the fertile Forth valley.
This is a favorite resort area because of its climate.
Blairmore A hamlet
in Kenmore parish, Perthshire.
Blairs College Is a
Catholic school located near Aberdeen. Held most of the post-reformation Roman Catholic
records in Scotland until 1958, when the collection was transferred to Columbia House in
Edinburgh.
Blairquhan
Pronounced Blair-wan, this story-book castle is located 10 miles South Southeast of Ayr,
near Straiton in Ayrshire. Four families have lived at Blairquhan. The McWhirters built
the first tower house about 1346. The Kennedys then inherited the estate through
marriage and built the remainder of the old castle about 1573. In the early 17th
century the Whitefords took over, but in 1798, suffering the effects of a bank crash, they sold
Blairquhan to Sir David Hunter-Blair, second son of James Hunter, who married, in 1770,
Jean Blair, the daughter and heiress of John Blair of Dunskey in Wigtonshire. When Jean
Blair inherited her fathers estate in 1777, the family added Blair to their name. In
1820, David Hunter-Blair commissioned Scottish architect William Burn to design a new
house on Blairquhan. The old castle, having become ruinous, was torn down to make room for
the new; however, some of the decorative mouldings and sculpted stones from the old castle
were incorporated into the kitchen courtyard of the new house. The new Tudor style mansion
was completed in 1824, and contains many antiques and an important collection of paintings
by Scottish artists. Perhaps the best achievement of Blairquhan is the 3 mile approach to
the castle along the river Girvan and the beautiful walled gardens. Sir Hunter-Blair, 7th
Baronet, is the current owner. Blairquhan is open to visitors by appointment only.
Blair of Balthayock Castle - Is
located in the Parish of Kinnoul, Perthshire, about 4 miles East of Perth on the North
side of Tay River. Balthayock Castle dates back to the 15th Century, or perhaps
earlier, and is now in ruins. All that remains is a massive square tower, or keep,
with 5 foot thick
walls, and part foundation. Balthayock Castle was the chief seat of the Perthshire
Blairs for nearly 500 years. This Blair family and its Cadet branches once held
lands that stretched over an area reaching from the Castle North to Blairgowrie, then over
to the North Sea and down to Dundee and the river Tay. The progenitor of the
Perthshire Blairs was Alexander de Blair, who married Ela, daughter of Hugo de Neyden of
that Ilk, and received a charter of lands in Fifeshire before 1229. His descendant,
Patrick de Blair, became the first Baron of Balthayock when he received a charter for the
lands from Nicholas de Erskine, Lord of the Kinnoul, in 1370. The original blood
line of this family ran out in the 18th Century, when John Blair of Balthayock died
leaving only a daughter, Margaret, as sole heiress to the estate. In 1728, Margaret
married David Drummond, who assumed the name and Arms of Blair of Balthayock. His
descendant, Jemima Johnston-Blair, married Adam Fergusson. Their eldest son, Neil
Fergusson-Blair, adopted the name and Arms of Blair of Balthayock in order to inherit the
estate. He died in 1862, and the second son, Adam Johnston Fergusson-Blair, who had
immigrated to Canada, sold the Balthayock estate.
|
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA |
|
ALABAMA
|
Blairsville - Located in St.
Claire County, Northeast of Birmingham. Blairsville was residence of Levi Cowan
Blair and his second wife, Preschia Turner, in the 1860 census.
|
CALIFORNIA
|
Blair - Located in Shasta
County, West of Redding. Founded in 1856, it was in the heart of Gold Rush country and was
originally known as Whisky Creek because a barrel of whiskey dropped off a mule's back,
burst and wasted its heartening contents in the flowing stream. Later
postal authorities rejected the convivial title and substituted the name of
"Blair", named after James
Drummond Blair's wife, Eunice (Crocker) Blair, who was the postmistress at the
time. That name did not stick and after being called "Stella" and
Schilling" it eventually regained its original title of
"Whiskeytown". Today the town rests under the waters of Shasta Lake which
was formed when Shasta Dam was built. The area around the lake is now known as the
Whiskeytown Shasta Trinity National Recreation Area.
Blairsden - Located in Plumas County, about 40
miles Northwest of Reno, Nevada. Plumas County was formed from Butte County in 1854.
It was named for the country home of James A. Blair, who was prominent in the early
financing of the Western Pacific Railway.
|
COLORADO
|
Blair Mesa - Located in Rio
Blanco County, about 30 miles West of Meeker, Colorado. It was named for Duncan
Blair, an early rancher and Indian agent in the area. Blair Mountain and Blair
Ditch, in the same vicinity, were also named for Duncan Blair.
|
DISTRICT
OF COLUMBIA |
Blair House - Located at 1651
Pennsylvania Avenue, Washington, D.C., across the street from the White House. Blair
House was built around 1824 by Dr. Joseph Lovell, the first Surgeon General of the
U.S.A.. The
house was purchased in 1836 by Francis Preston Blair, who had moved to Washington D.C. to
be Editor of The Globe, a pro-Jackson newspaper. The Blair House was passed
down through the family. Montgomery Blair, Postmaster General in Lincoln's Cabinet,
inherited it in 1852. Woodbury Blair became owner in 1883, and Gist Blair in 1937.
The Blair House was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1937. After
the death of Laura Ellis Blair, wife of Gist, in 1941, the Blair House was purchased by
the U.S. Government (October, 1942) as the President's Guest House for visiting foreign
dignitaries. The Lee House, built around 1859 next door to the Blair House by
Francis Preston Blair as a wedding gift to his daughter, Elizabeth, and Samuel Phillips
Lee, was purchased by the government in 1943 and linked together with the Blair House.
Many Blair family furnishings and heirlooms still grace the house. The Blair
House has been the scene of many historic events: the marriage of General William Tecumseh
Sherman; Francis Preston Blairs offer, at the request of President Lincoln, of command of
the Union forces to General Robert E. Lee; President Lincoln signed the Emancipation
Proclamation, freeing the slaves. President Truman lived in the Blair House,
1949-1952, while the White House was being renovated. It was here that he made the
decision to send American troops to Korea, and signed the Truman Doctrine and Marshall
Plan, and, on 1 November 1950, an assassination attempt was made on his life. Queen
Elizabeth II of Great Britain stayed at the Blair House in 1957, and the room she stayed
in has been known as the Queen's Suite ever since. Hundreds of Monarchs, Presidents and
Heads of State from countries all over the world have stayed at the Blair House since
1942.
|
GEORGIA
|
Blairsville - Located in
Union County in the beautiful Blue Ridge mountains of Northeastern Georgia. It was
incorporated and named the county seat in 1835. Their are two versions of the naming
of Blairsville. According to Georgia Place Names, by Kenneth Krokow, it
was named after Francis Preston Blair. An article written by Margaret Vance Webb (Blair
Family Magazine, Vol. VIII, No.3, Fall 1990) states that it was named for Capt. James
Blair, who was involved in the settlement of land claims and Cherokee removal from
Georgia.
Blair Line - Was surveyed in the early 1800's
by James Blair as a boundary between Georgia and the Cherokee Nation. A marker in
Habersham County at the junction of Georgia Highways 115 and 105, states, "The
historic Blair Line between the State of Georgia and the Cherokee Nation crossed this
highway at this point. This line was surveyed by James Blair in the early 1800's.
It ran from the forks of the Soque and the Chattahoochee rivers in a direct
Northerly line to the Tallulah River. It was the boundary line in 1817 for the
purchase of all the lands East of the Chattahoochee River by the State of Georgia from the
Cherokee Nation by the Treaty of 1818."
|
ILLINOIS
|
Blair Township - Is located
in Clay County, population 37 (1893).
Blair - A post-village in Randolph County,
about 12 miles North of Chester and 6 miles South of Sparta. It has 2 churches
(1893).
Blairsville - A post office in Williamson
County (1893).
|
INDIANA
|
Blair - A post-village of
DeKalb County, on the St. Joseph river at St. Joe Station on the B & O Railroad.
It is located 11 miles East of Auburn and 23 miles NE of Fort Wayne. It has a grain
elevator and population of about 200 (1893). It was named for early settler John Blair.
Blairs Cave - A large cave in Monroe County,
also known as Buckners Cave and Saltpeter Cave. It is located about 2 1/2 miles
Northeast of Stanford. This cave has an extensive network of tunnels, 2 large rooms,
and the name "L. V. Cushing" and date "Nov. 23, 1775" scratched on a
rock.
Blairsville - A post-village in Posey County,
located 12 miles Northwest of Evansville. It was laid out in 1837 by Ebenezer
Phillips and Stephen Blair, and named for Blair. It has a flour mill and wagon
factory (1893).
|
IOWA
|
Blairsburg - A post-hamlet in
Blairsburg Township, Hamilton County, on the Illinois Central R.R., about 32 miles East of
Fort Dodge. It has a church, and, in 1893, a township population of 453. It
was probably named after railroad tycoon John Insley Blair.
Blairstown - A post-village of Benton County,
24 miles by rail West Southwest of Cedar Rapids, and 10 miles North of Marengo. It
has a ladies seminary, 4 steam elevators, a flour mill, 5 churches, a bank, a newspaper
office, an academy, and a cheese factory. Population 714 (1893). It was
named after John Insley Blair. Other Blair locations in the Cedar Rapids area include
Blair House, Blair Building, Blair's Ferry Road and Blair Inn.
|
KANSAS
|
Blairs - A station in
Washington Township, Doniphan County, on the St. Joseph & Denver City Railroad,
located 9 miles West of St. Joseph, Missouri (1893).
Fort Blair - Was located at Fort Scott,
Bourbon County, on Locust street between Main Street and Scott Avenue, and was erected to
protect Kansas residents against attacks from Confederate and guerilla forces. It
was named for Brigadier General C. W. Blair.
|
|
KENTUCKY
|
Blair - A town in Letcher
County, formerly Knox County, where Charles and Easter (Robertson) Blair moved to from
Virginia prior to 1810. The town may have been named for them.
Blair Station - A settlement founded in 1784
by Alexander Blair to protect his wife, Elizabeth (Cochran) family and neighbors from the
Indians. This settlement, at the junction of Licking River and Stoney Creek, in what
is now Bourbon County, near Ruddles Mill, was known as Blairs Station. It survived
until Alexanders death in 1798. An 1810 map of the area does not mention it, so the
exact location is not known.
Blair Town - A hamlet in Pike County on US
23/460 and the Levisa Fork of the Big Sandy River, about 3 miles Northwest of Pikeville.
It was named for Rev. Whetzel Blair, who owned the site in the early 20th century.
Blairs Mills - A post office in Morgan County,
located in Perry's Grocery on KY 711, 10 miles North of West Liberty. It was
established on Elam Branch of Devil's Fork of the North fork of the Licking River on 18
August 1876, with Cyrus Perry, Jr. as Postmaster and was named for the Blair family's
waterpowered gristmill on Devil's Fork. (Source: "Kentucky Place Names",
by Robert M. Rennick.)
Blairs Chapel - A United Brethren Church in
Adair County, organized by Rev. John Marshall Blair, a former Methodist, who became
dissatisfied with the pro-slavery leanings of his Methodist congregation. As the
agitation mounted in Adair Co., Rev. Blair, with a group of fellow abolitionists, moved to
Madison Co., Iowa, where his brother, Alexander Blair, resided.
|
LOUISIANNA |
Blair's Landing - Also called Pleasant Hill
Landing, it is located in Sabine Parish, 18 miles north of Many on LA175. It was the site
of a Civil War battle on 12 April 1864.
|
|
MARYLAND
|
Blair Station - A post office
in Silver Spring, located near the site of the Francis Preston Blair mansion from which
the city took its name. A series of commemorative stamps honoring Montgomery Blair,
U. S. Postmaster General (1861-1864) were first issued here in 1989. Montgomery
Blair High School in Silver Spring was named for him.
Blair Mansion Inn - Located in Silver Spring,
was built about 1890 by Charles and Abigail Newman, who were neighbors of the Francis
Preston Blair family at Silver Spring. This home has no other connection to the
Blairs. It is presently being used as a dinner theater.
Blair Valley - Is located several miles
Northeast of Hagerstown in Washington Township, and runs North across the Pennsylvania
line. This part of the beautiful Cumberland Valley lies between the North and South
mountains of the Blue Ridge range. Blair Valley was divided between 2 states in
1764-67 when Mason & Dixon laid out a line of milestones which bore the letters M for
Maryland and P for Pennsylvania. A sign on the Maryland side of stone 114 marks the
beginning of Blair Valley. Andrew Blair was one of the earliest settlers (1749) in
the Maryland part of this valley, in what was then Frederick County (now Washington
County). From here many of his descendants moved North into Pennsylvania and West to Ohio.
Blair Mansion - A 3 story, 14 room house,
located about 1 1/2 miles from the Pennsylvania line on the East bank of the Conococheage
Creek, where James Blair constructed his combination grist and saw mill.
|
MICHIGAN
|
Blair - A Township in Grand
Traverse County, population 371 (1893).
Blairville - A town in Chippewa County,
founded in 1880 by George H. Wise, who named it after his father-in-law, George Blair.
|
MISSOURI
|
Blairstown - A post-hamlet in
Henry County, 69 miles, by rail, Southeast of Kansas City.
|
NEBRASKA
|
Blair - Located on the Omaha &
Northwestern Railroad at its junction with the Sioux City & Pacific Railroad, 30 miles
North Northwest of Omaha and 3 miles West of the Missouri River. The population in
1980 was 6,418. It was named for the railroad tycoon John Insley Blair. Blair
won the county seat of Washington County from Fort Calhoun in 1869. It is the home
of Dana College, originally Trinity Seminary, which was founded by the Danish Evangelical
Lutheran Church in 1884.
|
NEVADA |
Blair - A ghost town in Esmeralda Co., 3
miles north of Silver Peak. It was established in 1906 by the Pittsburg Silver Peak Mining
Company, and was named after John Insley Blair, who was an investor in area gold mines.
Blair was virtually abandoned by 1916. Only the mill foundations and part of one building
remain today.
Blair Junction - Another ghost town in Esmeralda Co., located
17 miles north of Blair, and also named for John Insley Blair. It was developed when the
Tonopah & Goldfield Railroad built a spur line to Blair. Blair Junction had a post
office from 1920-23.
|
NEW HAMPSHIRE
|
Blair - A post-hamlet in
Grafton County, 4 1/2 miles by rail North of Plymouth (1893).
Blair Bridge - Located in Campton, it is the
only covered bridge still spanning the Pemegewasset River, and, at 300 feet, it is the longest
two-span covered bridge in New Hampshire. It was originally built in 1828 and named
in memory of Henry W. Blair, a former United States Senator. The bridge was burned
in 1868 by a religious zealot and rebuilt the same year. With the exception of
renovations in 1977, the Blair Bridge has withstood man and mother nature for well over
100 years, a graceful reminder of days gone by.
|
NEW JERSEY
|
Blair Academy - Located at Blairstown in Warren
County. The beautiful campus, set among 315 acres of rolling hills, majestic trees
and grand old buildings was recently named a National Historic Landmark. It was
founded in 1848 by John Insley Blair, and is an independent, co-educational, secondary
boarding school with a current enrollment of about 400 students and 71 faculty
members. Blair Academy celebrated its sesquicentennial in 1998.
Blairstown - A post-village in Warren County
in the Northwestern corner of New Jersey, located on the Paulinskill River, 9 miles by
rail Northeast of Columbia. It was named for John Insley Blair, who gave generously
to many projects in his town, especially Blair Academy, which was built across the valley
from his home.

Blair Hall - On the campus of Princeton
University, it was built in 1897 with funds donated by John Insley Blair, who was a
Trustee of Princeton from 1866 until his death in 1899 at age 97. It was designed by
architects Walter Cope and John Stewardson, who were among the first to apply the Tudor
Gothic style to American college dormitories. Blair Hall is considered their
masterpiece.
Blairsden - A mansion located in
Peapack-Gladstone, Somerset County, is a monument to the Victorian age of opulence.
It was built in the late 1800's by Clinton Ledyard Blair (1869-1949), second son of John
Insley Blair, who was an investment banker and a governor of the New York Stock
Exchange. He was one of the founders of Blair & Company, 1 Wall Street, New
York, NY. Blairsden took 3 years to build at a cost of 2 million dollars. It
has 38 rooms, 25 fireplaces, a sunken pool, squash courts and Turkish baths. The
Sisters of St. John the Baptist, a religious order of nuns, currently own the mansion,
having purchased it from the Blair family in 1949 for $60,000.
|
NEW YORK
|
| Blair's Bay - A bay on Lake George, New York.
It is near the town of Putnam where Col. John Blair's wife, Sarah Kelso Blair, is buried.
The bay is still known as Blair's Bay and shows up on current maps of Lake George. After
the death of Col. John Blair, Sr. in 1789, his wife, Sarah went to live with ther son,
John, Jr., at Blairs Bay, now Glen Burnie NY. Glenn Burnie is located in Washington
County, New York near Putnam and Putnam Station, New York. |
NORTH
CAROLINA |
| Blair's Fork - Caldwell Co., NC, One source
has it named for Dr. John C. Blair,a confederate officer in the civil war and a member of
the "Immortal Six-Hundred". One year before the end of the war he was captured
by the northern army and sent to a union prison in Delaware. Later when one of the union
armies was trying to capture Charleston, SC, he was taken from the prison with a crowd of
600 other confederate officers, who were also held as prisoners of war, and carried to
Charlesmont to be marched in front of the ranks of the union army in their attack on that
city. This incident in history is known as the "Immoral Six Hundred". Dr.
Blair was descended from one of the pioneer families of this region for whom Blair's Fork
was named. His ancestor was Colbert Blair, who married Sarah Morgan, is thought to have
been the son of James Blair, who was found, in old records, to have been with him in old
Orange County, VA., and then in Augusta County, VA.
Another source (Allan L. Poe) says that Blair's Fork was named for James Blair, brother
of Colbert.
|
OKLAHOMA
|
Blair - A town in Jackson
County, in the extreme Southwest corner of Oklahoma, about 15 miles North of the Texas
border, Its population was 1,142 in 1886. The name honors John Blair, a local railroad
official.
|
|
PENNSYLVANIA
|
Blair Company - The Blair
Company of Warren, Pennsylvania in one of the leading catalog mail order companies in the
United States. It was founded as the Blair New Process Company by John L. Blair
(1888-1962), who started by selling black raincoats to undertakers. The company now
operates 2 retail stores in Delaware and Pennsylvania and 2 outlet stores in Pennsylvania,
but the bulk of its sales remains direct mail merchandising to customers in all 50
states. In 1994, The Blair Corp. had 2,200 employees, $560,304,000 in Total Revenues
and a Net Income of $37,679,000.
Blair City - Lippincott lists this as being a
post-office in Clearfield County in 1893. In the 1983 "Pennsylvania Line",
a research guide of SW PA Genealogical Services, there is a Blaine City Station in
Beccaria Township of Clearfield County, with a population of 534. It has a railroad
station and an express office.
Blairs Corner - A post-hamlet in Beaver
Township, Clarion County, on the railroad between Emienton and Shippenville. It has
a church, 2 hotels and oil is produced here (1893). In 1983 it had a population of
50.
Blair
County - Is the only county in the USA named Blair, and it is the only
county in Pennsylvania named for a purely local celebrity. It is located near the
center of the state and was formed in 1846 from Bedford and Huntingdon Counties. The
county seat is Hollidaysburg and the chief city is Altoona. Population in 1970 was
135,356. It was named for the Hon. John Blair of Blairs Gap, PA, the son of Capt.
Thomas Blair, a native of Scotland. Pictured on the right is the home of John Blair,
located about 2 miles West of Duncansville in Blair County. The front part was built
in 1785, and the stone part was built by John Blair in 1827.
Blair Furnace Station - A station on the
Pennsylvania Railroad, in Logan Township, Blair County, about 3 miles Northeast of
Altoona.
Blairs Gap - Located in Frankstown, Huntingdon
County, where Capt. Thomas Blair was a resident taxpayer and owned a grist mill and saw
mill. His wife was Jane McClelland, daughter of John and Ruth McClelland of Peters
Township, Franklin Co., PA. Blair County was named for their son, the Honorable John
Blair of Blairs Gap.
Blairs Mills - Is the location of the Blairs
Gristmill and Blacksmith shop in Tell Township, Huntingdon County. It had a
population of 51 in 1893. One of the early settlers here, Alexander Blair and his
wife Rachel Carson built a log cabin in 1784. In time the old Blair house became a
center of travel and trade. Wagons going to and from Baltimore made it their
stopping place. The first store was built here and the first tavern. Many
other buildings there today were built by Blairs; J. M. Blair Co. store, Blairs Mills Post
Office, Taucarora Valley Railroad workers houses, Hotel Blair and numerous Blair
residences.
Blairs Station - In Jefferson Township,
Allegheny County, on the Pittsburgh, Virginia and Charleston Railroad. Located about
20 miles South of Pittsburgh, it had a population of 600 in 1983.
Blairs Station - In Beaver Township, Clarion
County. It has a railroad station and, in 1983, a population of 50.
Blairsville - A post-borough in Indiana County
on the Conewaugh River, Pennsylvania Canal and the Western Pennsylvania Railroad, 64 miles
by rail East of Pittsburgh and 66 miles West of Altoona. In 1893 it had a
Blairsville Ladies Seminary, a foundry, 2 flour mills, 2 tanneries, a woolen mill and a
population of 3,126 (1983 pop. 3,915). Being a coal producing area, Blairsville had
a coke works and the workshops of the railroad were locate there. It was named for John
Blair, of Blair's Gap, who was among the first promoters of the turnpike and canal-portage
system.
Blairsville Intersection - A village in Derby
Township, Westmoreland County, on the Pennsylvania Railroad main line at the junction of
the Western Pennsylvania Railroad division. It is located 3 miles Southeast of
Blairsville and 63 miles West of Altoona. In 1983 it had a railroad station, a
telegraph statioon and a population of 125.
Blair Valley - The Northern part of the valley
separated by the Mason-Dixon Line and lying in Montgomery County between Claylick and Two
Top mountains [see Blair Valley, Maryland]. One of the earliest settlers here was
Phillip Davis, founder of Fort Davis and father of Elizabeth, who married Andrew
Blair. In 1844, the Blair Valley Log Church was built on Blair Valley Road. It
was 24 by 26 feet, could seat 110 people and was affiliated with the Methodist Church.
|
SOUTH
CAROLINA |
Blair - In Fairfield County,
on the Broad River, it is about 20 miles North of Columbia.
Blairsville - A post-village in York County, 9
miles from Yorkville. In 1893 it had a population of 487.
|
TENNESSEE
|
Blair School of Music - Is
located at Vanderbilt University, Nashville. It was established in 1964 as Blair
Academy, a division of George Peabody College, by the Justin and Valere Potter Foundation
through a bequest of Valere Blair Potter in memory of her mother, Myra Jackson
Blair. Blair School became a private, independent institution in 1977, then was
merged with Vanderbilt University in 1981. Blair is now recognized as one of the
foremost schools of music in the United States, and is a vital part of Nashville's musical
life.
Blairs Ferry - Is located on the Tennessee
River in Loudon County. It was established by John Blair and his sons, Hugh,
William, James and Samuel, who came from Guilford County, North Carolina. John's
daughter, Jean, came with them to serve as housekeeper. The settlement that sprang
up at the site of the ferry was first called Blairsville, but was changed to Loudon when
the East Tennessee, Virginia & Georgia Railroad was built. The ferry was
operated by the Blair family from 1838 until 1930, when it was replaced by a bridge.
It ferried people, horses and wagons in the beginning, then autos and trucks across
the Tennessee River. Sam Blair operated the ferry in 1927, and it was rumored that
$100,000 was netted from the boarding fees that year.
|
TEXAS
|
Blair - A town in Shelby
County in East Texas on the Louisiana border. Population 200 (est. 1990).
Blair - A town in Taylor County in West Texas
just below the panhandle. Population 23 (est. 1990).
Fort Blair - Located in Desdemona, Eastland
County, was established in 1857 by Charles Culpepper Blair. Several families lived
here during the Civil War, cooperating to defend themselves and their belongings from the
frequent Indian raids. The settlement consisted of 12 log cabins, 14 square feet in
size and spaced 14 feet apart with intervening pickets.
|
VIRGINIA
|
Archibald Blair House - Is
located on Market Street in Colonial Williamsburg. It was built about 1720 by Dr.
Archibald Blair (ca. 1665-1733), a physician and apothecary, emigrated from Scotland to
Virginia in 1690. His brother, Commissary James Blair, founder of William &
Mary College, had arrived in Virginia 5 years earlier. Peter Hay purchased the home
around 1760, then after his death, his widow, Grissel, used it as a lodging or boarding
house. It is today known as the Grissell Hay Lodging House.
John
Blair House - Also referred to as the "Old Blair Homestead," is
located on Duke of Gloucester Street in Colonial Williamsburg. It is one of the
oldest houses in Williamsburg, the original part being built ca. 1740 by John Blair, Sr.
(1687-1771), son of Dr. Archibald Blair. John Blair, Sr. was twice named acting
Governor of Virginia, and was the father of John Blair, Jr. (1732-1800), a signer of the
U.S. Constitution and one of the first Justices of the U.S. Supreme Court. The house
fell into disrepair until 1922, when the "Society for the Preservation of the Old
Blair Homestead" was formed to save and preserve this historic Blair home. Dr.
Eleanor M. Hiestand-Moore and other prominent Blair descendants were active in this
endeavor. Many of these same people helped form the original Blair Society for
Genealogical Research in 1925.
Blairs - Located in Pittsylvania County, 4
miles North of Danville. In the 1780's, William and Sarah (Sutor) Blair emigrated to
Pittsylvania Co., where he died in 1790. He and Sarah had 9 children. The town
is probably named for him. Click here (Beavers
Tavern) for additional information.
Blairs Wharf - A post-office of Prince George
County, on Marmora Lake, 35 miles from Peterborough. In 1893 the population was 350.
|
WEST VIRGINIA
|
Blair - Is located in Logan
County, in the Southwestern part of the state.
Blair Mountain - In Logan County, was the site
of the "Battle of Blair Mountain" in 1921, between a group that was trying to
unionize coal mine workers and local authorities. An "army" of 3,000 men
organized in Kanawha County marched toward Logan, where they were met by about 1,200 men
who opposed them. The worst fighting took place on Blair Mountain, where 3 deputy
sheriffs were killed and 40 defenders were wounded. The number of miners killed or
wounded is not known. The miners surrendered when President Warren G. Harding sent
federal troops into the region and the miners wouldn't fight the troops. A trial was
held in Jefferson County and many miners were convicted. As a result, feelings about
unions and mine operators run strongly throughout Logan County even today.
Blairs Ridge - Is one of the first settlements
in Marshall County, containing 22,323 acres of fine farmland. The Blairs, who gave
the ridge its name, emigrated from Maryland and settled here in 1824. In 1835, the
Blairs Ridge Methodist Episcopal Church was erected on land donated by Mr. Blair.
Blairton - Is located in Berkeley County, in
the panhandle area of the state.
Fort Blair - Located at Point Pleasant in
Mason County, where the Kanawha River flows iinto the Ohio. Fort Blair was
established in 1774 by Lord Dunmore, Colonial Governor of Virginia, during his campaign
against the Shawnee Indians. The great Shawnee Chief, Cornstalk, was murdered there.
Capt. William Russell was named commander of the fort, and some historians believe
he named it in honor of Commissary James Blair of Williamsburg, who had just recently
died. Another theory is, Lord Dunmore being a Murray, it was named after Blair
Castle in Scotland. Yet another possibility is that is was named after William
Blair, a prominent settler in the area who was wounded at the Battle of Point Pleasant.
Fort Blair was abandoned by the British in 1776, and, on the site of the burned
fort, Fort Randolph was built by the Continental Army, and named in honor of Peyton
Randolph, a member of the Continental Congress, who had died the year before.
|
WISCONSIN
|
Blair - A post-hamlet located
in Trempealeau County, on the Green Bay & Minnesota Railroad, 43 miles Northeast of
Winona, Minnesota. In 1893 it had 2 churches and a planning mill. It was platted as
Porterville, but was renamed Blair in 1873 in honor of John Insley Blair, the railroad
tycoon.

Blair House - Is located at 434 Madison Street
in Waukesha. The stately brick home was built about 1876 by William Blair, a native
of Dundonald, Ayrshire, Scotland, who emigrated to Wisconsin in 1845, and was a prominent
banker and manufacturer. His son Henry, who was a former mayor of Waukesha, was the
last Blair to live in the home.
|
|
|
Perhaps it would be fitting to conclude A Place
Called Blair with a bit of home-spun humor about how places are named, from the
book, Corn Country by Homer Croy
JOHN INSLEY BLAIR: Railroad Builder and Town Namer
And now I come to the town-namingest person who ever swept across the corn
lands, John I. Blair. He was from Blairstown, New Jersey, which was named for one of
his family, and came to the Middle West where he left a trail of towns behind him as a
Daniel Boone might leave a trail of blazed trees. He was the richest man who ever
had anything to do with the business affairs of Iowa and was chief promoter and builder of
the Chicago & Northwestern, and a couple of other railroads. In fact, when time came
for him to go to his heavenly reward he was a director in seventeen railroads...I hope
this was considered an asset. His railroads were flowing across the country like
water over the kitchen linoleum, and new towns had to have names. He took care of
that...
He had a son-in-law back in New York; this son-in-law was Charles
Scribner, founder of the publishing house of Charles Scribner's Sons. So he named a
town for him - Scribner, Nebraska. But there's no publishing, it's all hogs and pure
bred cattle....He had a friend, Oakes Ames, so he named a town for him; and there it is
today - Ames, Iowa, home of the Iowa State Agriculture College. With a fine family
feeling, he named a town for his daughter, Alta, and was very proud of his good deed.
But a family is a complicated affair with many currents and cross-currents sweeping
through it, so it was, even in rich Mr. Blair's, for Alta's sister, Aurelia, became
jealous. Father Blair took care of this, as only a railroad builder could, by naming
a town for her - Aurelia, Iowa. It is now the home of a large Cement Blocks Works.
He had a dog he was exceedingly fond of; the dog followed him around. One day
the dog was killed by a construction train. Mr. Blair was so upset that he named the
town for the dog, and there it is today - Colo, Iowa.
It seems that in the course of his railroad building, that Mr. Blair
suddenly realized he didn't have a town named for himself, it must have been a distressing
moment. He promptly took care of this by naming a post office in Pottawattamie
County - Blair. Later it curled up and died, so he named a new place, in Benton
County - Blairstown. He was now in his stride, so he named a village, in Hamilton
County - Blairsburg. He flowed over into Nebraska, and named, curiously enough -
Blair, Nebraska for himself. Now comes a twist. A town in Cherokee County,
Iowa wanted to get the new railroad he was flinging across the state; so the people got
together and named the place in honor of Mr. Blair - Blair City, they called it. But
it didn't work, he shunted the railroad past the town.
So, two daughters, a son-in-law, a friend, a dog, and himself all had
towns named after them. No town, however, was named for Mrs. Blair. She seems
to have been the family martyr. Becoming fascinated by this town naming gentleman, I
looked up his later history and found that he lived and died in Blairstown, New Jersey,
founded Blair Academy, and was buried in Blairstown Cemetery, no doubt just the way he
wanted it. Maybe his little part of Heaven is called Blair Heights.
|
|
Entries for "A Place Called Blair"
were submitted by members of the Blair Society for Genealogical Research
and from the Blair Magazine, 1925-31, the Blair Family Magazine, A
Touring Atlas of Britain, Lippincott's Gazetteer of the World, 1893, and various
other sources. This list of Blair places is far from complete. We would
welcome the submission of additional Blair places from around the world. We would
also welcome additional information on Blair places already mentioned and photographs of
these places. When submitting entries for "A Place Called Blair,"
please include all known information about the place, including who or what it was named
after and, most importantly, be sure to cite sources. Entries may be submitted to:
John A. Blair, 12 Snow Road, Goffstown, NH 03045. E-mail: webmaster
|
|
|
This Page Last Updated
07/23/06
| |

|