Marker Logo HMdb.org THE HISTORICAL
MARKER DATABASE
“Bite-Size Bits of Local, National, and Global History”
“Bite-Size Bits of Local, National, and Global History”
 
 
 
 
 
 
31 entries match your criteria.  

 
 

Historical Markers and War Memorials in Wayne County, West Virginia

 
Clickable Map of Wayne County, West Virginia and Immediately Adjacent Jurisdictions image/svg+xml 2019-10-06 U.S. Census Bureau, Abe.suleiman; Lokal_Profil; HMdb.org; J.J.Prats/dc:title> https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Usa_counties_large.svg Wayne County, WV (31) Cabell County, WV (73) Lincoln County, WV (9) Mingo County, WV (25) Boyd County, KY (41) Lawrence County, KY (12) Martin County, KY (7) Lawrence County, OH (23)  WayneCounty(31) Wayne County (31)  CabellCounty(73) Cabell County (73)  LincolnCounty(9) Lincoln County (9)  MingoCounty(25) Mingo County (25)  BoydCountyKentucky(41) Boyd County (41)  LawrenceCounty(12) Lawrence County (12)  MartinCounty(7) Martin County (7)  LawrenceCountyOhio(23) Lawrence County (23)
Wayne is the county seat for Wayne County
Adjacent to Wayne County, West Virginia
      Cabell County (73)  
      Lincoln County (9)  
      Mingo County (25)  
      Boyd County, Kentucky (41)  
      Lawrence County, Kentucky (12)  
      Martin County, Kentucky (7)  
      Lawrence County, Ohio (23)  
 
Touch name on this list to highlight map location.
Touch blue arrow, or on map, to go there.
1 West Virginia, Wayne County, Ceredo — Camp Pierpont
On B Street east of Main Street, on the right when traveling west.
Created as a base of operations for the 5th WV Infantry, it was named for Francis Pierpont, governor of Loyal Virginia in the Civil War. Also called Camp Lightburn, it was the only Civil War fort in Wayne County and consisted of breastworks and a . . . Map (db m139232) HM
2 West Virginia, Wayne County, Dunlow — Revolutionary War Soldier’s GraveJames Maynard
On Twelve Pole Road (County Route 35) at Route 152, on the left when traveling east on Twelve Pole Road.
James Maynard (1750-1852) and his wife, Chaney Smith, are buried nearby, along with son, Jesse, and his wife, Sarah. A resident of Wilkes County, NC, James served during the American Revolution as a private under Captain Jesse Franklin and Colonel . . . Map (db m178329) HM
3 West Virginia, Wayne County, Fort Gay — Fort Gay
On Court Street (West Virginia Route 37) east of Vancouver Street, on the right when traveling east.
Named during the War between the States. At the junction of the Tug and Big Sandy rivers, in 1789, Charles Vancouver and 10 companions built a log fort and attempted a settlement on land surveyed in 1770 by John Fry for George Washington.Map (db m136675) HM
4 West Virginia, Wayne County, Fort Gay — Fort Gay Toll Bridge1905
On Court Street (West Virginia Route 37) east of Vancouver Street, on the right when traveling east.
Since the founding of Fort Gay and Louisa in the first half of the 19th century, the only way to travel between the towns was by ferry. In 1904, the Louisa and Fort Gay Bridge company was created to build a toll bridge across the Tug and Levisa . . . Map (db m137334) HM
5 West Virginia, Wayne County, Fort Gay — Revolutionary War Soldier’s GraveMicajah Frasher/Frazier
On U.S. 52, on the right when traveling north.
Micajah Frasher/Frazier (1753-1843) and wife Susan Hamilton are buried nearby. Enlisted in 1780; served 18 months in Va. Line under Pope. Was at Hood's Fort, Williamsburg and under Washington against Cornwallis at Yorktown. Progenitor of the area's . . . Map (db m136709) HM
6 West Virginia, Wayne County, Fort Gay — The Fort Gay Lock and Dam1880
On Court Street (West Virginia Route 37) east of Vancouver Street, on the right when traveling east.
Steam Boat traffic reached Fort Gay in the 1830s but relied on a sufficient water level. During dry periods, boats could not run. Throughout the 19th century, efforts were made to build a system of locks and dams to allow year-round boat traffic and . . . Map (db m137332) HM
7 West Virginia, Wayne County, Glanhayes — Polley Freedom Case / William Ratliff (Ratcliff)
On U.S. 52, on the left when traveling south.
Polley Freedom Case. In 1850, eight freed slaves of the Polley family were kidnapped from Ohio and sold back into slavery. William Ratliff of Wayne County bought four of the children. A suit for freedom brought on their behalf was not . . . Map (db m178274) HM
8 West Virginia, Wayne County, Huntington — Marshall Plane Crash Site
On Old US 2.
On Nov 14, 1970, 75 people died in the worst sports related air tragedy in U.S. history, when a Southern Airways DC-9 crashed into the hillside nearby. The victims included 36 Marshall University football players, 9 coaches and administrators, 25 . . . Map (db m73743) HM
Paid Advertisement
9 West Virginia, Wayne County, Kenova — Ceredo - Kenova
On Chestnut Street (U.S. 60) at Virginia Point Drive, on the right on Chestnut Street.
Ceredo - Founded in 1857 by Eli Thayer of Massachusetts, an Abolition leader, in his plan to create sentiment against slavery in western states. Kenova - named for the meeting place of three states, Kentucky, Ohio, and West Virginia.Map (db m35202) HM
10 West Virginia, Wayne County, Kenova — Dreamland Pool
On 23rd Street at Chestnut Street (U.S. 60), on the left when traveling north on 23rd Street.
Welcome to Dreamland Pool. Dreamland Pool was first opened in 1926, and the original construction included a three story pavilion. The top floor of the pavilion included a dance floor, where many notable Big Bands played through the 1930s and . . . Map (db m126082) HM
11 West Virginia, Wayne County, Kenova — Revolutionary War Soldier’s GraveDr. Cary Henry Hampton
On Docks Creek Road at Docks Creek Cemetery Road, on the right when traveling south on Docks Creek Road.
Remains of Dr. Cary Henry Hampton (1754-1840), his son, Dr. Anthony G. Hampton, and daughter-in-law Susannah, are buried in Maple Hill Cemetery. The elder Hampton was born in Buckland, VA, the son of a French and Indian War veteran. In the American . . . Map (db m175170) HM
12 West Virginia, Wayne County, Kenova — Veterans Administration Hospital
On Waverly Road (U.S. 60) at Burlington Road, on the left when traveling west on Waverly Road.
Located one and a half mile south on Spring Valley Drive. Established, 1932, for the care and rehabilitation of American war veterans. A one hundred eighty bed General Medical and Surgical Hospital with dental and outpatient treatment.Map (db m126064) HM
13 West Virginia, Wayne County, Kenova — Wayne County / Cabell County
On Thundering Herd Drive (U.S. 60) east of Camden Road, on the right when traveling west.
Wayne County. Formed in 1842 from Cabell. Named for General Anthony Wayne, whose victory over the Native Americans in 1794 at Fallen Timbers broke the Western Confederacy and removed the threat of further attacks into western . . . Map (db m126062) HM
14 West Virginia, Wayne County, Kenova — West Virginia (Wayne County) / Kentucky                     
On Chestnut Street (U.S. 60) at 23rd Street, on the right when traveling west on Chestnut Street.
West Virginia. “The Mountain State” — western part of the Commonwealth of Virginia until June 20, 1863. Settled by the Germans and Scotch Irish. It became a line of defense between the English and French during the . . . Map (db m126080) HM
15 West Virginia, Wayne County, Kermit — Revolutionary War Soldier’s GraveJosiah Marcum
On Jennies Creek Road (Route 52/31) 1.2 miles east of U.S. 52, on the right when traveling east.
Nearby is the grave of Josiah Marcum (1759-1846?). Enlisting from Bedford County, he served: in Colonel Campbell’s Virginia Militia Regiment, 1780-81, as a wagon guard at General Gates’s retreat, and as a drummer at the Battle of Guilford . . . Map (db m178333) HM
16 West Virginia, Wayne County, Pritchard — Revolutionary War Soldier’s GraveSamuel Hatton
On U.S. 52 near Burke Hollow Road (Local Route 252/15), on the right when traveling south.
Samuel Hatton (1759-1839) is buried nearby. From March 1, 1777, to September 6, 1780, he served in the 1st Virginia State Regiment and was at Yorktown with General Washington. Received grant of 100 acres at Round Bottom (Prichard). Came here circa . . . Map (db m178271) HM
17 West Virginia, Wayne County, Wayne — Amanda Smith1829 - 1927
On Cleveland Street, on the left when traveling north.
Amanda Smith was born in 1829 in eastern Virginia before moving to Wayne County as a young girl. She married prominent lawyer, Joseph Jefferson Mansfield, in 1850, and the couple started a family in the village of Trout's Hill (now Wayne). Joseph . . . Map (db m204485) HM
Paid Advertisement
18 West Virginia, Wayne County, Wayne — Cool Hand Luke1966
On Hendricks Street, on the right when traveling north.
As part of his research of the Appalachian dialect for the film Cool Hand Luke, Paul Newman arrived at Tri-State Airport in September of 1966. Newman's friend Sargent Shriver, who had worked with his brother-in-law John F. Kennedy's campaign in . . . Map (db m204065) HM
19 West Virginia, Wayne County, Wayne — Hendricks Street1884
On Hendricks Street at N. Court Street, on the right when traveling east on Hendricks Street.
Hendricks Street was one of the first streets laid out in Wayne when the town was first established in 1842 and may have been first called "Main Street.” In the election of 1884, the people of Wayne supported President Grover Cleveland and . . . Map (db m204062) HM
20 West Virginia, Wayne County, Wayne — Milton J. Ferguson
On Cleveland Street (West Virginia Route 152) at North Court Street, on the left when traveling south on Cleveland Street.
An attorney born in Wayne County (1833), Ferguson was colonel of the 167th VA Militia when war began in 1861. Captured in July, he formed a Confederate cavalry company upon release and became colonel of the 16th VA Cavalry. He was captured in . . . Map (db m178264) HM
21 West Virginia, Wayne County, Wayne — Revolutionary War Soldier’s GraveSamuel Ferguson
On Central Avenue, also known as 5th Street Road (West Virginia Route 152) just north of 7th Street, on the right when traveling south.
Samuel Ferguson (1744-1825) and wife Mary Jameson (1746-1827) are buried nearby. Served in Montgomery County, Virginia, militia at battles of Alamance and King’s Mountain. An early sttler on Bluestone Creek, he gave land for Tazewell courthouse in . . . Map (db m178258) HM
22 West Virginia, Wayne County, Wayne — The Grist Mill at Wayne — 1828 —
On Central Avenue (West Virginia Route 152) at Mose Asbury Road, on the left when traveling south on Central Avenue.
The Grist Mill at Wayne was originally built in 1828 by Abraham Trout who owned a large farm at the location. A natural waterfall powered the mill until Trout built a dam to provide more water power. In 1842, Wayne County was established, and the . . . Map (db m178260) HM
23 West Virginia, Wayne County, Wayne — Wayne
On Hendricks Street (West Virginia Route 152) at South Court Street, on the right when traveling south on Hendricks Street.
First called Trout’s Hill for Abraham Trout, who established a mill here in 1828, which ran for a century. Large areas of this county were included in the land granted to John Savage and other veterans of the French and Indian War.Map (db m178265) HM
24 West Virginia, Wayne County, Wayne — Wayne
On 5th Street Road (West Virginia Route 152) north of McGinnis Drive, on the right when traveling north.
First called Trout’s Hill for Abraham Trout, who established a mill here in 1828, which ran for a century. Large areas of this county were included in the land granted to John Savage and other veterans of the French and Indian War.Map (db m178269) HM
25 West Virginia, Wayne County, Wayne — Wayne County Courthouse1842
On Hendricks Street, on the right when traveling east.
The current Wayne County Courthouse is the fifth building to serve that function. The first log courthouse was built on the present courthouse site in 1842. It was replaced by a brick building in the 1850s which lasted until it dilapidated in . . . Map (db m204060) HM
26 West Virginia, Wayne County, Wayne — Wayne County High School1922
On West Virginia 152 (West Virginia Route 152), on the right when traveling east.
Wayne County High School opened on September 11, 1922 in a two-story frame house where the Community Center sits. The brick school building shown here was completed in 1925. In the 1940s. concrete bleachers were built overlooking the football . . . Map (db m204071) HM
Paid Advertisement
27 West Virginia, Wayne County, Wayne — Wayne County Veteran's Association, Inc. Memorial
On West Virginia 152, on the right when traveling north.
This memorial is dedicated to honor all veteran's of Wayne County WW I KIA-MIA John Bartram • Henry Bellomy • Enoch Blankenship • Oscar Elkins • Lee Hooser • Ottus Jackson • Walter Perry • Charle A. Stone • Allen . . . Map (db m204077) WM
28 West Virginia, Wayne County, Wayne — Wayne County Veterans Memorial
On East Lynn Road, on the right when traveling east.
In honor of all veterans who have served our country in both peace and war for the cause of freedomMap (db m204078) WM
29 West Virginia, Wayne County, Wayne — Wayne Was Home to Two Confederate ColonelsFour Day Skirmish Erupted Around the Courthouse — 1861 —
On Hendricks Street (West Virginia Route 152) at South Court Street, on the right when traveling south on Hendricks Street.
The Town of Wayne was home to two Confederate colonels in the Civil War — Colonel James Corns of the 8th VA Cavalry and Colonel Milton J. Ferguson of the 16th VA Cavalry. Both are shown above. In August of 1861, a four day skirmish . . . Map (db m178266) HM
30 West Virginia, Wayne County, Wayne — World War Memorial
On North Court Street (West Virginia Route 152) at Hendricks Street (West Virginia Route 152), on the right when traveling east on North Court Street.
Erected in honor of the men of Wayne County who served the nation during the World War, 1917–1919. Harry Adkins • Linza Adkins •William T Asbury • John B Bartram • Henry Bellomy •Enoch Blankenship • Van Bradshaw • William Crum, Jr. • William H . . . Map (db m178268) WM
31 West Virginia, Wayne County, Winslow — Revolutionary War Soldier’s GraveHezekiah Adkins
On Beech Fork Road (Local Route 17/8) just west of Grassy Lick Rd (Local Route 13/4), on the right when traveling west.
Hezekiah Adkins (1759-1842) and his wife Mary Levon (1768- 1855) buried nearby. He served under Captain John Lucas as a private in Montgomery County militia. Claimed service on New River against Native Americans and in guarding wagons of . . . Map (db m178252) HM
 
 
CeraNet Cloud Computing sponsors the Historical Marker Database.
This website earns income from purchases you make after using our links to Amazon.com. We appreciate your support.
Paid Advertisement
Apr. 24, 2024