(Preface): On April 20, 1863, Confederate Gens. William E. "Grumble" Jones and John D. Imboden began a raid from Virginia through present-day West Virginia on the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. Taking separate routes, they later reported that . . . — — Map (db m50353) HM
Named for Thomas Harris. His nephew, Gen. Thomas Harris, distinguished himself in the Union Army in Petersburg and Cedar Creek. He was one of the commissioners who tried those charged with plotting assassination of Lincoln. — — Map (db m64098) HM
On East Main Street (West Virginia Route 16) at Ferguson Lane, on the right when traveling west on East Main Street.
Harrisville. Laid out on lands owned by Thomas
Harris, uncle of Gen. Thomas Maley
Harris, in 1822. Originally part of
Wood County, it was chartered in
1832 and incorporated in 1869. The
town has been called Solus. Ritchie
Court House, and . . . — — Map (db m173702) HM
On East Main Street (West Virginia Route 16) at Ferguson Lane, on the right when traveling west on East Main Street.
Born in Ohio, Freer served in the Union army during the Civil War. He moved to WV in 1866; served as prosecuting attorney for Kanawha, Fayette, and Boone counties; and helped get the state capital moved to Charleston. Moved to Ritchie County, where . . . — — Map (db m173708) HM