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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 . . . — — Map (db m73467) HM
On May 9, 1863. a large force of
Jones-Imboden raiders rode into
Burning Springs and destroyed the
local oil industry by setting fire
to at least 80 wells and damaging
other necessities of the trade.
Staying until the morning of the
10th, the . . . — — Map (db m174380) HM
The population center of the
United States was in present
West Virginia four times as
it moved westward across the
nation: near Wardensville in
1820; at Smoke Hole in 1830;
west of Buckhannon in 1840;
near Burning Springs in 1850. — — Map (db m174387) HM
The first well in West Virginia drilled solely for petroleum was located near the mouth of Burning Springs Run. The well was drilled with a “spring pole” by the Rathbones and others from Parkersburg, begun in 1859 completed May 1860. Produced at the . . . — — Map (db m73463) HM WM
One of the oldest “still attended” churches in the state, it was built in 1835 of hand-hewed logs. Much effort has been expended on the preservation of church's original appearance. It is heated by a pot-bellied stove and lighted by kerosene . . . — — Map (db m73491) HM