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Cabell County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. As of 2000, the population is 96,784. It was organized in 1809 and named for William H. Cabell, Virginia Governor, 1805-1808. Its county seat is Huntington6. Public domain map courtesy of The General Libraries, The University of Texas at Austin, modified to show counties. ...
1809 was a common year starting on Sunday (see link for calendar). ...
A county seat is an administrative centre for a county. ...
Huntington is a city located in the U.S. state of West Virginia, along the Ohio River. ...
This article explains the meaning of area as a physical quantity. ...
Square kilometre (US spelling: Square kilometer), symbol km², is an SI unit of surface area. ...
A square mile is the area equal to a square with sides each 1 mile long. ...
The United States Census of year 2000, conducted by the Census Bureau, determined the resident population of the United States on April 1, 2000, to be 281,421,906, an increase of 13. ...
Density (symbol: Ï - Greek: rho) is a measure of mass per unit of volume. ...
Originally, in continental Europe, a county was the land under the jurisdiction of a count. ...
A U.S. state is any one of the fifty states (four of which officially favor the term commonwealth) which, together with the District of Columbia and Palmyra Atoll (an uninhabited incorporated unorganized territory), form the United States of America. ...
State nickname: Mountain State Other U.S. States Capital Charleston Largest city Charleston Governor Joe Manchin (D) Senators Robert Byrd (D) Jay Rockefeller (D) Official languages English Area 62,809 km² (41st) - Land 62,436 km² - Water 376 km² (0. ...
This article is about the year 2000. ...
William H. Cabell (December 16, 1772-January 12, 1853) a Virginia politician and Democratic-Republican. ...
A county seat is an administrative centre for a county. ...
Huntington is a city located in the U.S. state of West Virginia, along the Ohio River. ...
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Huntington is a city located in the U.S. state of West Virginia, along the Ohio River. Most of the city is in Cabell County, with a small part in Wayne County. As of the 2000 census, the city had a total population of 51,475 (47,341 in Cabell County, 4,134 in Wayne County). This city was named for Collis P. Huntington, who founded it in 1870. It was incorporated in 1871. It is the county seat of Cabell CountyGR6. Located in Southwestern West Virginia along the Ohio River, Cabell County was created by an act of the Virginia General Assembly on January 2, 1809 from part of Kanawha County. It was named in honor of William H. Cabell (1772-1853), who served as Governor of Virginia from 1805 to 1808. He was born on December 16, 1772 in Cumberland County Virginia, graduated from William and Mary College in 1793 and began practicing law in Richmond the following year. He was chosen as a representative to the Virginia General Assembly from Amherst County in 1796 and was re-selected six times until his election as Governor. After serving for three years as Governor, he served as a Judge of the General Court until 1811 and then a Judge of the Virginia Court of Appeals until his retirement in 1841. He served as the President of the Court from 1822 until his retirement in 1841. He died on January 12, 1853 in Richmond. The First Settlers The first native settlers along the Ohio River in the area of present-day Cabell County were the Mound Builders, also known as the Adena people. Remnants of the Mound Builder's civilization have been found throughout the Ohio River Valley, with a high concentration of artifacts located at Moundsville, West Virginia, just north of the county (in Marshall County). The Grave Creek Indian Mound, located in the center of Moundsville, is one of West Virginia's most famous historic landmarks. More than 2,000 years old, it stands 69 feet high and 295 feet in diameter. According to missionary reports, several thousand Hurons occupied present-day West Virginia during the late 1500s and early 1600s. They were driven out of the state during the 1600s by members of the powerful Iroquois Confederacy (consisting of the Mohawk, Onondaga, Cayuga, Oneida and Seneca tribes, and joined later by the Tuscaroras tribe). The Iroquois Confederacy was headquartered in New York and was not interested in occupying present-day West Virginia. Instead, they used it as a hunting ground during the spring and summer months. During the early 1700s, the Ohio River valley, including present-day Cabell County, was primarily used as hunting grounds by the Ohio-based Shawnee, the Mingo, who lived in both the Tygart Valley and along the Ohio River north of Cabell County, and the Seneca, one of the largest and most powerful members of the Iroquois Confederacy. The Shawnee settled in villages along the Ohio River, primarily in the area between present-day Wood and Cabell counties. Following the construction of Fort Pitt in 1758 by the British, the Shawnee moved further in-land and built a series of villages along the Scioto River in southern Ohio. These villages were collectively known as Chillicothe and served as their base camp for hunting and fishing in present-day West Virginia. The Mingo were not actually an Indian tribe, but a multi-cultural group of Indians that established several communities within present-day West Virginia. They lacked a central government and, like all other Indians within the region at that time, were subject to the control of the Iroquois Confederacy. The Mingo originally lived closer to the Atlantic Coast, but European settlement pushed them into western Virginia and eastern Ohio. The Seneca, headquartered in western New York, was the closest member of the Iroquois Confederacy to West Virginia, and took great interest in the state. In 1744, the Seneca boasted to Virginia officials that they had conquered the several nations living on the back of the great mountains of Virginia. Among the conquered nations were the last of the Canawese or Conoy people who became incorporated into some of the Iroquois communities in New York. The Conoy continue to be remembered today through the naming of two of West Virginia's largest rivers after them, the Little Kanawha and the Great Kanawha. The Seneca, and other members of the Iroquois Confederacy, claimed all of present-day West Virginia as their own, using it primarily as a hunting ground. Also, war parties from the Seneca and other members of the Iroquois Confederacy often traveled through the state to protect its claim to southern West Virginia from the Cherokee. The Cherokee were headquartered in western North Carolina and eastern Tennessee and rivaled the Iroquois nation in both size and influence. The Cherokee claimed present-day southern West Virginia as their own, setting the stage for conflict with the Iroquois Confederacy. In 1744, Virginia officials purchased the Iroquois title of ownership to West Virginia in the Treaty of Lancaster. The treaty reduced the Iroquois Confederacy's presence in the Ohio River Valley. During the mid-1700s, the English had made it clear to the various Indian tribes that they intended to settle the frontier. The French, on the other hand, were more interested in trade. This influenced the Delaware, Mingo, and Shawnee to side with the French during the French and Indian War (1755-1763). Although the Iroquois Confederacy officially remained neutral, many in the Iroquois Confederacy also allied with the French. Unfortunately for them, the French lost the war and ceded all of its North American possessions to the British. The Mingo retreated to their homes along the banks of the Ohio River, and the Shawnee retreated to their homes at Chillicothe. Although the war was officially over, many Indians continued to see the British as a threat to their sovereignty and continued to fight them. In the summer of 1763, Pontiac, an Ottawa chief, led raids on key British forts. Shawnee chief Keigh-tugh-qua, or Cornstalk, led similar attacks on western Virginia settlements in present-day Greenbrier County. By the end of July, Indians had captured all British forts west of the Alleghenies except Detroit, Fort Pitt, and Fort Niagara. Then, on August 6, 1763, British forces under the command of Colonel Henry Bouquet retaliated and destroyed Delaware and Shawnee forces at Bushy Run in western Pennsylvania, ending the hostilities. Fearing more tension between Native Americans and settlers, England's King George III issued the Proclamation of 1763, prohibiting settlement west of the Allegheny Mountains. However, many land speculators, including George Washington, violated the proclamation by claiming vast acreage in western Virginia. The next five years were relatively peaceful on the frontier. In 1768, the Iroquois Confederacy (often called the Six Nations) and the Cherokee signed the Treaty of Hard Labour and the Treaty of Fort Stanwix, relinquishing their claims on the territory between the Ohio River and the Alleghenies to the British. With the frontier now open, settlers, once again, began to enter into present-day West Virginia. In 1772, a series of incidents between settlers and Indians in West Virginia ended what had been nearly eight years of peace. During the spring of that year, several Indians were murdered on the South Branch of the Potomac River by Nicholas Harpold and his companions. About the same time, Bald Eagle, an Indian chief of some notoriety, was murdered while on a hunting trip on the Monongahela River. In the meantime, Captain Bull, a Delaware Indian Chief and five other Indian families were living in Braxton County in an area known as Bulltown, near the falls of the Little Kanawha River, about fourteen miles from present day Sutton. Captain Bull was regarded by most of the settlers in the region as friendly. But some settlers suspected him of providing information to and harboring unfriendly Indians. While away from home in June 1772, the family of a German immigrant named Peter Stroud was murdered, presumably by Indians. The trail left by the murderers led in the general direction of Bulltown. Peter's brother, Adam Stroud, had a cabin nearby and seeing smoke rising into the sky, raced to his brother's cabin. He gathered up what was left of the bodies and buried them. He then headed for Hacker's Creek where he met with several other settlers who agreed to join him in an attack on Bulltown. They killed all of the Indians in the village, including Captain Bull, and threw their bodies into a nearby river. News of Captain Bull's murder quickly spread across the western frontier. Following what the Indians referred to as the Bulltown massacre, Shawnee Chief Cornstalk, who had led numerous raids against West Virginia settlers in the past, began to organize the Indians in a concerted effort to drive the whites from their territory. In 1773, land speculator Michael Cresap led a group of volunteers from Fort Fincastle (later renamed Fort Henry) at present-day Wheeling, murdering several Shawnee at Captain Creek. Among other atrocities, on April 30, 1774, colonists murdered the family of Mingo chieftain Tah-gah-jute, who had been baptized under the English name of Logan. Although Logan had previously lived peacefully with whites, he killed at least thirteen settlers that summer in revenge. Virginia Governor John Murray, Earl of Dunmore, worried about the escalating violence in western Virginia, decided to end the conflict by force. He formed two armies, one marching from the North, consisting of 1,700 men led by himself and the other marching from the South, comprised of 800 troops led by western Virginia resident and land speculator Captain Andrew Lewis. Shawnee chieftain Keigh-tugh-qua, or Cornstalk, along with approximately 1,200 Shawnee, Delaware, Mingo, Wyandotte and Cayuga warriors, decided to attack the southern regiment before they had a chance to unite with Lord Dunmore's forces. On October 10, 1774, the Indians attacked Lewis' forces at the confluence of the Kanawha and Ohio Rivers, at present-day Point Pleasant, in Mason County. During the battle, both sides suffered significant losses. Although nearly half of Lewis' commissioned officers were killed during the battle, including his brother, Colonel Charles Lewis, and seventy-five of his non-commissioned officers, the Indians were finally forced to retreat back to their settlements in Ohio's Scioto Valley, with Lewis' men in pursuit. In the meanwhile, Lord Dunmore arrived and joined forces with Lewis. Seeing that they were now outnumbered, Cornstalk sued for peace. Although western Virginia's settlers continued to experience isolated Indian attacks for several years, Cornstalk's defeat at Point Pleasant was the beginning of the end of the Indian presence in western Virginia. The Indians agreed to give up all of their white prisoners, restore all captured horses and other property, and not to hunt south of the Ohio River. Also, they were to allow boats on the Ohio River and promised not to harass them. This opened up present-day West Virginia and Kentucky for settlement. Cornstalk was later killed at Fort Randolph near Point Pleasant in 1777 in retaliation for the death of a militiaman who was killed by an Indian. During the American Revolution (1776-1783), the Mingo and Shawnee, headquartered at Chillicothe, Ohio, allied themselves with the British. In 1777, a party of 350 Wyandots, Shawnees, and Mingos, armed by the British, attacked Fort Henry, near present-day Wheeling. Nearly half of the Americans manning the fort were killed in the three-day assault. The Indians then left the Fort celebrating their victory. For the remainder of the war, smaller raiding parties of Mingo, Shawnee, and other Indian tribes terrorized settlers throughout West Virginia. As a result, European settlement in the state came to a virtual standstill until the war's conclusion. Following the war, the Mingo and Shawnee, once again allied with the losing side, returned to their homes. However, as the number of settlers in the region began to grow, and with their numbers depleted by the war, both the Mingo and the Shawnee moved further inland.
European Pioneers and Settlers Robert Cavelier de La Salle was probably the first European to set foot in present-day Cabell County. He sailed down the Ohio River in 1669. The earliest English explorers to enter Cabell County were probably Thomas Batts and Robert Fallam. They explored the area in September 1671. When Batts and Fallam explored the county they found trees marked in coal with the letters MANI and M.A., signifying that other Englishmen had been there before them. In 1749, Louis Bienville de Celeron explored the Ohio River and may have landed in Cabell County. He claimed all of the lands drained by the Ohio River for King Louis XV of France. He met several English fur traders on his journey and ordered them off French soil and wrote strong letters of reprimand to the colonial governors protesting the English's presence on land claimed for France. Mary Ingles was probably the first English women to pass through what would later be Cabell County. She, and Betty Draper, were captured by Indians at Drapper Meadows, Virginia (now Blacksburg) on July 8, 1755 and taken by the Indians through the county as they made their way to the Shawnee Village at Chillicothe, Ohio. Mary Ingles escaped four months later and may have passed through the county on her return to Virginia. In 1772, a grant of 28,628 acres, including much of the current county, was made to John Savage and 60 other persons for military service during the French and Indian Wars (1754-1763). William Buffington of Hampshire County purchased lot 42 of the Savage Grant from John Savage and willed it to his two sons, Thomas and William Buffington. Thomas Buffington and his brother, Jonathan, came to present-day Cabell County in 1796 and found Thomas Hannon, who had settled along the Little Guyan River. Hannon is regarded as the first, permanent English settler in Cabell County. Soon after building his cabin, Jonathan was out hunting and returned to find it burnt to the ground by Indians and all of his family, except for one daughter, murdered and scalped. The daughter was captured by the Indians. He chased the Indians, but was captured and forced to run the gauntlet. He survived the gauntlet and was allowed to return home, but he never found his daughter. However, in 1901, at the Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo, New York, an Indian Chief named Jonathan Buffington was in attendance, suggesting that the captured girl may have named her Indian children in honor of her father.
Important Events During the 1800s Throughout the 1800s, Cabell County's location along the Ohio River made it a natural resting place for settlers headed to the frontier lands in the west. Prior to the Civil War (1861-1865), many settlers followed primitive Indian trails to the west. Several of these trails passed through the county. On the advice of George Washington, Virginia commissioned the James River Company to upgrade these trails into roads. One of the company's largest and most important road project was the James River and Kanawha Turnpike. The turnpike traversed the frontier from Lexington, Kentucky to Charleston, Virginia. In 1814, the road was extended to Barboursville in present-day Cabell County. In 1837, Marshall Academy, predecessor of Marshall University, was formed. One of the Academy's founders, local lawyer John Laidley, recommended that the school be named in honor of his friend, John Marshall, the late Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court. Marshall Academy was a "subscription school" serving the wealthier families in the Cabell County vicinity. It was incorporated in 1838 by the Virginia State Legislature. In 1867, the new state of West Virginia created the State Normal School of Marshall College to train teachers. Marshall College continued to increased in size and, in 1961, achieved the status of University. Although most of the state's residents sided with the Union during the Civil War, the residents of present-day Cabell County were divided. Trouble began when, Eli Thayer, an abolitionist congressman from Massachusetts, spoke to some citizens in the county in 1857. Thayer supported the creation of colonies of northern workers in southern states. He hoped this would change the social makeup of the state, and turn the tide against slavery. The newspapers in Richmond chided the residents of Cabell County for allowing a Yankee abolitionist to meddle in the affairs of the state of Virginia. After the Thayer controversy, many Cabell County citizens organized to pledge their allegiance to the state of Virginia. As the country moved closer to war, tensions in the county began to rise. After the election of President Lincoln in 1860, some of the county's citizens organized a militia loyal to the South known as the Border Rangers. William McComas, Cabell County's representative to the Virginia secession convention of 1861, voted for Virginia to remain in the Union. Although McComas voted as a unionist, the area's congressman, Albert Gallatin Jenkins, who owned a farm in the county, was a staunch secessionist. He was the leader of the Border Rangers. Jenkins later became a General in the Confederate Army, and was wounded in battle at Gettysburg. While Virginia, as a whole, voted to secede from the Union, Cabell County's citizens voted to remain in the Union. However, the town of Guyandotte, located within the county, voted to secede. The first engagement during the Civil War in Cabell County was the Battle at Barboursville on Fortification Hill in 1861. The 2nd Kentucky regiment entered the town and, after some minor fighting, dispersed the local militia. Later that year, a Confederate force attacked a Union recruitment station at Guyandotte. The Confederacy won the day with the assistance of several local residents who distracted the Union recruiters while the Confederates launched their surprise attack. The Union Army later recaptured the town and set it on fire to punish its citizens for aiding the Confederacy. Two-thirds of the town was burnt to the ground. After the town's destruction, the Unionist Newspaper the Wheeling Intelligencer declared Guyandotte "the worst secession nest in that whole country. It ought to have been burned two or three years ago." The county's economy become stagnant during the Civil War, and the burning of Guyandotte, one of the county's major population centers, was a major blow to the local economy. However, the county's proximity to the Ohio River and the building of the railroad by Collis Huntington, played a major role in the region's economic recovery and its future success. Legend has it that when Collis Huntington visited the county to decide where to place his railroad that he was initially interested in using Guyandotte as the railroad's end-point. However, when he arrived there, he tied his horse to the hitching post in front of the local hotel and it somehow reversed its position and ended up on the sidewalk. The town's mayor, seeing the horse, entered the hotel and demanded to know who the owner of the horse was. After identifying himself as the horse's owner, Mr. Huntington was fined by the mayor. Not liking his reception, Mr. Huntington announced the next day that he would not locate the railroad in Guyandotte but would, instead, build a new town (later called Huntington) just west of Guyandotte and make it the western terminus for his railroad. Ironically, Guyandotte was later merged into Huntington.
Important Events During the 1900s In the early 1900s, industrial development occurred throughout Cabell County and in the fledgling city of Huntington. The glass industry, a flour mill, furniture manufacturers, and, in 1921, the International Nickel Company opened a plant near Guyandotte. The new industry brought economic success and population growth to the county. In 1923, Huntington became home to the state's first radio station and, in 1949, the state's first television station. The construction of Interstate 64 through the county during the 1960s strengthened the local economy by providing ready access to Charleston and the rest of the state.
County Seat The first meeting of the Cabell County court took place in 1809 the home of William Merritt who was living in or near the present town of Barboursville. The county seat was then located at Guyandotte and remained there until 1814, when it was moved to Barboursville. In 1863, the county seat was returned to Guyandotte for two years because Barboursville was controlled by the Confederate Army. Following the Civil War, Barboursville was, once again, named the county seat (in 1865). It continued to be the county seat until 1887 when the county voters moved it to Huntington. Huntington was settled in the early 1800s. James Holderby was one of the first settlers in present-day Huntington. He purchased a farm on lands within the city in 1821. At about that same time, Richard and Benjamin Brown established a river landing for boats nearby, then known as Brownsville. Huntington, currently the second most populated city in the state, was incorporated by an act of the West Virginia State legislature on February 27, 1871 and named in honor of Collis P. Huntington, President of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad. One of the first orders of business following Huntington's selection as the new county seat of government was where to build the new county courthouse. A site between Fourth and Fifth Avenues and Seventh and Eighth Streets was selected and purchased for $24,757. On May 8, 1895, the County Court, then composed of B. H. Thackston, President, and C.H. Morris and C.C. Dickey entered an order that the court would receive plans and specifications for a courthouse that would: "to be of stone and brick or of stone or brick, two stories, high slate or clay roof, lighted with gas and electricity, heated by steam or air, it must have three fronts and four entrances and must contain rooms for Circuit Court, for County Court and for clerk's offices of each court, with fire-proof clerk's offices or vaults attached and must range in cost from $60,000 to $100,000." The building was subsequently built of Berea sandstone with a copper roof. On July 21, 1896, the contract for the construction was let to Charles A. Moses. The first corner stone was laid on November 11, 1899. There was a large parade and a grand ceremony to mark the event. The Courthouse was completed on December 4, 1901. In 1923, construction was undertaken on the west wing. The contract was awarded to King Lumber Company at a cost of $133,900, paid for a three year levy. Then, on August 22, 1938, Frampton & Bowers, architects, were hired to prepare the plans for the new jail and for an east wing to the Courthouse. On December 28, 1938, the contract was awarded to Engstrom and Wynn of Wheeling, West Virginia, for this construction and remodeling in parts of the old building. It was completed March 16, 1940. The cost of the east wing was $208,000 and the cost of the jail was $246,000 for a total cost of $454,000. A well-planned and well laid-out small city, Huntington, West Virginia fills the three-mile wide Flood Plain of the Ohio River in Cabell County for sixty blocks, from 30th Street East to 30th Street West and from 1st Avenue (at the River) to 13th Avenue (in Ritter Park). Ritter Park runs from the dramatic WWI Memorial Arch at 6th Street West through the beautiful "Whitaker Boulevard" area to the open fields and tennis courts at 12th Street East. A multi-terraced Rose Garden and a stone Reflecting Pond were built by the WPA in Ritter Park in the late 1930s, making Ritter Park a beautiful and popular gathering area for the entire community. Visitors admire - and residents enjoy - the quaint brick streets, mature hardwood trees and Edwardian architecture that characterize the old South Side. A natural bird sanctuary called Four Pole Creek runs the entire length of Ritter Park and the creek is crossed by numerous picturesque wooden and stone foot bridges. Architect Jack Keiffer designed the very popular gravel walking paths placed in Ritter Park (circa 1980). The Huntington Galleries (or Huntington Museum of Art) stand above Ritter Park on 8th Street Hill on McCoy Road. There is a rustic frontier museum and also a radio technology museum near the west end of the park. The County Courthouse and Carnegie Library downtown also have historical interest, and Old Main on the Marshall University campus dates to the 1840s. Because of the "rust belt" experience of losing industrial jobs (INCO, AMC, Owens-Illinois) in the the 1970s, real estate remains very affordable in Huntington. Unemployment dropped below five percent for the first time in recent memory in 2005. A regional metropolitan center for over twenty counties in the Tri-State Area of West Virginia, Ohio and Kentucky; Huntington WV is structurally positioned to prosper in the 21st century. The hospitals, health industries, communications, banking, hospitality and University institutions should support moderate growth and a cosmopolitan - if unhurried - lifestyle in the next decades. In the 1970s federal urban renewal programs destroyed part of the downtown (from 6th to 12th Street between 1st and 3rd Avenue, along the river) but in 2005 the Pullman Square retail and entertainment center revived this blighted downtown "superblock" area, leading to rising downtown values and usages. A riverfront park promenade is now well-attended along the Ohio River downtown, although the post- 1937 flood 'City Floodwall' tends to obscure the view of the Ohio River. Today condominiums and lofts are beginning to be developed in downtown Huntington, including the old Frederick Hotel and Bank Arcade, and although only one percent of the population resides now within the commercial downtown, the Victorian downtown is growing in popularity among young urban professionals today. The Keith Albee Theater, a Vaudeville palace from the 1920s is still the architectural masterpiece of the downtown area, and 5th Avenue is noted for its many impressive church buildings. Restaurants like Chili Willies and Roccos make downtown Huntington easily one of the very best dining areas in West Virginia. Meanwhile, new home building in the suburban areas also help to keep Huntington's desirable South Side (the area from 8th to 13th Avenue) real estate and home prices very affordable. While US Interstate Freeway I-64 only skirts the city, three modern bridges cross over the Ohio River, and wide boulevards make transit easy from the University to the Downtown. Traditional "drive-in" hot dog stands like Midway, Stewart's and Frostop are still very popular and they add a 'retrospective' aspect to the city. Camden Park, a small theme park with a wooden rollercoaster is just west of town, and Camden Park is also the site of an Adena Native American burial mound. The old Federal Era town of Guyandotte, now within the Huntington city limits, has homes dating back to 1820 and a graveyard containing 18th century French and Colonial Revolutionary era settlers, including the Holderby and Buffington family markers. Albert Gallatin Jenkins, a Confederate General, had his plantation home in nearby Lesage (it is still standing). Air Force Test Pilot Chuck Yeager is a favorite local native, as is comedian Soupy Sales and the late vaudeville performer Dagmar. Oscar-winning actor Brad Dourif and game show announcers Chuck Woolery and 'Hollywood Squares' Peter Marshall are also from the Huntington area. A commerce and communications center for the Tri-State Area, Huntington has enjoyed television since 1948 with WSAZ-NBC, and later, WGNT/WOWK. A Gannett newspaper, the Herald Dispatch, is of unusually good quality for a city of this size, and the Herald Dispatch has an excellent website. Huntingtonnews.net, published by Matthew Pinson, is a powerful online news source as well, and adds even more detail and veracity to the available internet news coming out of Huntington. The Huntington Quarterly, a glossy magazine, is also well written and growing in popularity. On November 14, 1970 the entire Marshall University football team and many of its civic supporters (seventy five people in all) were killed in a plane crash near Tri-State Airport while flying back to Huntington from a football game. Community leaders Michael Prestera, Dr. Pete Proctor, Dr. Ray Hagley, Parker Ward Sr. and many others died that night and they are still mourned today by their survivors in and around Huntington. St. Mary's Hospital and The Cabell-Huntington Hospital provide health care for the larger region. The life-saving kidney Dialysis Unit at Cabell-Huntington Hospital was inaugurated in 1960 by Dr. David Sheffer Clark, a World War Two veteran officer and an associate of Dr. Proctor, Dr.Hagley and Michael Prestera. Dr. Clark served as chief of staff at both Cabell Huntington Hospital and St. Mary's Hospital in the 1970s and 1980s -- and Dr. Clark was an early proponent and professor of Medicine for the new Marshall University Medical School when it opened. Dr. David Sheffer Clark's son, David Shanet Clark, was a Hearst Senate Scholar at Marshall University before being named the Woodruff Fellow of History at Georgia State, Shanet Clark is a colleague of noted West Virginia historian Joseph Geiger Jr. The late West Virginia historians Jim Comstock and Mrs. Doris Miller were also Huntington natives. A volunteer organization, the Huntington Foundation, has also been active in restoring historical sites and recognizing local leaders. Mr. Hercil Gartin, Bob Bailey, Ted Barr and Ottie Adkins have recently served as County Sheriff, while Jim Tweel, Michael Prestera, William Neal, Clyde Pinson, Olin C. Nutter and Harold Frankel are remembered in Huntington as important 20th century political leaders. Today, William Smith is recognized as an excellent Superintendent of Cabell County Schools, and David Felinton is the Mayor of Huntington, replacing Jean Dean. Bosworth Johnson, the local news anchor at WSAZ TV, served as President of the National Broadcast Journalists' Association in the 1970s and is well known to city residents, as is his wife, Dr. Dottie Johnson, the former Chair of the Marshall University Speech Department--and a television personality in her own right. Bos and Dottie's son Rob Johnson is now a popular WSAZ anchorman. Marshall University's Simon Perry, Ph.D., is one of the nation's leading political scientists and the former Truman White House aide, U.S. Congressman and Secretary of State for W.Va., Ken Hechler is also affiliated with Marshall University's Political Science Department. Mrs. Betty Barrett is another widely respected community leader, her years of leadership include the Presidency of the League of Women Voters, membership on both Huntington City Council and the Cabell County School Board, as well as her untiring and thankless work for the homeless. Her sons Kevin and Edgar are both educators, and her youngest son John is a noted class-action environmental protection lawyer working against illegal strip mine pollution in the city of Charleston, the state Capitol, forty-five miles east of Huntington. Huntington grew to nearly 100,000 in population by the 1950s thanks to a successful coal and chemical industry; as coal has since lost some of its prominence as a fuel and the city has lost much of its industrial base - including glassworks, steel, and manufacturing train parts - Huntington is now effectively a medical community (the two hospitals are the largest employers) and a university town. About 17,000 students are currently enrolled at Marshall University. Enforcement of the Clean Air Act of 1970 has substantially improved the air and water quality of the industrial corridor here. The regional cities of Charleston, Nitro, Hurricane, Huntington, Kenova (WV), South Point, Ironton (Ohio), Ashland and Catlettsburg (KY) have all seen dramatic improvements in air and water quality since the pivotal 1970 federal legislation outlawed indiscriminate and wasteful chemical emissions. At the same time roads have been improved, services have been expanded and civil suits enjoined against the worst local corporate polluters. Mountain top removal, rural stream preservation and coal strip-mining policy are still hotly contested issues here. Corporate attorneys in Huntington work hard to defeat any grass-roots plaintiffs who challenge large industrial polluters in civil court. A thriving regional center, Huntington is a "university town" on the Ohio River, and it is now being discovered by more and more people. Its economic development, new sense of historic preservation, promotion of tourism and rapid road improvements are due to the efforts of local community leaders assisted by the vision and efforts of noted United States Senators for West Virginia the Honorable John D. Rockefeller IV and his senior colleague, the Honorable Robert C. Byrd.
Geography
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the county has a total area of 746 km² (288 mi²). 729 km² (282 mi²) of it is land and 17 km² (6 mi²) of it is water. The total area is 2.23% water. The United States Census Bureau (officially Bureau of the Census) is a part of the United States Department of Commerce. ...
Square kilometre (US spelling: Square kilometer), symbol km², is an SI unit of surface area. ...
A square mile is the area equal to a square with sides each 1 mile long. ...
The county is bounded in the northeast by Mason County, West Virginia, in the east by Putnam County, West Virginia, in the southeast by Lincoln County, West Virginia, in the southwest by Wayne County, West Virginia, in the west by Lawrence County, Ohio and in the north by Gallia County, Ohio. Mason County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Putnam County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Lincoln County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Wayne County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Lawrence County is a county located in the state of Ohio. ...
Gallia County is a county located in the state of Ohio. ...
Demographics As of the census2 of 2000, there are 96,784 people, 41,180 households, and 25,490 families residing in the county. The population density is 133/km² (344/mi²). There are 45,615 housing units at an average density of 63/km² (162/mi²). The racial makeup of the county is 93.37% White, 4.29% Black or African American, 0.18% Native American, 0.77% Asian, 0.04% Pacific Islander, 0.20% from other races, and 1.14% from two or more races. 0.68% of the population are Hispanic or Latino of any race. A census is the process of obtaining information about every member of a population (not necessarily a human population). ...
The following is a list of sources used in the creation of Wikipedia articles on various geographic topics and locations, such as cities, counties, states, and countries. ...
This article is about the year 2000. ...
The United States Census Bureau uses the federal governments definitions of race when performing a census. ...
The United States Census Bureau uses the federal governments definitions of race when performing a census. ...
The United States Census Bureau uses the federal governments definitions of race when performing a census. ...
The United States Census Bureau uses the federal governments definitions of race when performing a census. ...
The United States Census Bureau uses the federal governments definitions of race when performing a census. ...
The United States Census Bureau uses the federal governments definitions of race when performing a census. ...
The United States Census Bureau uses the federal governments definitions of race when performing a census. ...
The United States Census Bureau uses the federal governments definitions of race when performing a census. ...
The United States Census Bureau uses the federal governments definitions of race when performing a census. ...
There are 41,180 households out of which 25.20% have children under the age of 18 living with them, 47.10% are married couples living together, 11.60% have a female householder with no husband present, and 38.10% are non-families. 31.30% of all households are made up of individuals and 12.50% have someone living alone who is 65 years of age or older. The average household size is 2.27 and the average family size is 2.85. Marriage is a relationship between individuals which has formed the foundation of the family for most societies. ...
In the county, the population is spread out with 20.00% under the age of 18, 13.50% from 18 to 24, 26.80% from 25 to 44, 23.60% from 45 to 64, and 16.00% who are 65 years of age or older. The median age is 38 years. For every 100 females there are 91.40 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there are 88.50 males. The median income for a household in the county is $28,479, and the median income for a family is $37,691. Males have a median income of $31,780 versus $22,243 for females. The per capita income for the county is $17,638. 19.20% of the population and 13.70% of families are below the poverty line. Out of the total population, 24.60% of those under the age of 18 and 10.80% of those 65 and older are living below the poverty line. The per capita income for a group of people may be defined as their total personal income, divided by the total population. ...
The poverty line is the level of income below which one cannot afford to purchase all the resources one requires to live. ...
Cities, towns, and villages Barboursville is a village located in Cabell County, West Virginia. ...
Huntington is a city located in the U.S. state of West Virginia, along the Ohio River. ...
Wayne County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Milton is a town located in Cabell County, West Virginia. ...
Unincorporated communities - Culloden (part in Putnam County)
- This community was named by L. R. White who had lost a leg in the service of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad. He suggested this name to the Railroad because there were so few places with this name in the United States.
- Lesage
- Ona
- Pea Ridge
- Salt Rock
Culloden is a census-designated place located in West Virginia. ...
Putnam County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Ona is a small unincorporated community along US 60 (the old Midland Trail) in Cabell County, West Virginia. ...
Pea Ridge is a census-designated place located in Cabell County, West Virginia. ...
External links
 | State of West Virginia Cities | Governors | Colleges and Universities File links The following pages link to this file: Robert Byrd West Virginia Putnam County, West Virginia Clay County, West Virginia Charleston, West Virginia Ohio County, West Virginia Barbour County, West Virginia Braxton County, West Virginia Wyoming County, West Virginia Wood County, West Virginia Wirt County, West Virginia Wetzel County...
State nickname: Mountain State Other U.S. States Capital Charleston Largest city Charleston Governor Joe Manchin (D) Senators Robert Byrd (D) Jay Rockefeller (D) Official languages English Area 62,809 km² (41st) - Land 62,436 km² - Water 376 km² (0. ...
List of cities in West Virginia, arranged in alphabetical order. ...
This is a list of Governors of West Virginia Categories: Lists of United States governors | Governors of West Virginia ...
Colleges and Universities ...
| | State Capital: | Charleston Charleston, WV Capitol Building Charleston is the capital of West Virginia, a state of the United States of America. ...
| | Regions: | Potomac Higlands | Eastern Panhandle | Northern Panhandle | Allegheny Plateau | Cumberland Plateau | Ridge-and-valley Appalachians | Baltimore-Washington Metropolitan Area Potomac Highlands The Potomac Highlands of West Virginia is the root of the Eastern Panhandle, bordering Maryland and Virginia. ...
Eastern panhandle The Eastern Panhandle of West Virginia is a narrow stretch of territory in the northeast of the state, bordering Maryland and Virginia. ...
Northern panhandle The Northern Panhandle is a region in the U.S. state of West Virginia. ...
The Allegheny Plateau is a large, dissected plateau area in southern New York, western Pennsylvania, West Virginia, and eastern Ohio. ...
The Cumberland Plateau includes much of eastern Kentucky and western West Virginia in the United States. ...
The Ridge-and-valley Appalachians are a belt within the Appalachian Mountains extending from northern New Jersey westward into Pennsylvania and southward into Maryland, West Virginia, and Virginia. ...
The official U.S. Census Bureau-designated Washington-Baltimore-Northern Virginia, DC-MD-VA-WV Combined Statistical Area. ...
| | Major Cities: | Charleston | Huntington | Wheeling Charleston, WV Capitol Building Charleston is the capital of West Virginia, a state of the United States of America. ...
Huntington is a city located in the U.S. state of West Virginia, along the Ohio River. ...
Wheeling is a city located in West Virginia, in the United States. ...
| | Smaller Cities: | Beckley | Bluefield | Charles Town | Clarksburg | Elkins | Fairmont | Keyser | Martinsburg | Morgantown | Oak Hill | Parkersburg | Romney | Weirton Alfred Beckley Beckley is a city located in Raleigh County, West Virginia, USA and founded on April 4, 1838. ...
Bluefield is a city located in Mercer County, West Virginia. ...
Charles Town is a city located in Jefferson County, West Virginia, USA. As of the 2000 census, the city had a total population of 2,907. ...
Clarksburg is a city located in Harrison County, West Virginia. ...
Elkins is a city located in Randolph County, West Virginia. ...
Fairmont is a city located in Marion County, West Virginia, USA. As of the 2000 census, the city had a total population of 19,097. ...
Keyser is a city located in Mineral County, West Virginia. ...
Martinsburg is a city located in Berkeley County, West Virginia. ...
The Monongahela River at Morgantown in 1999 Morgantown is a city located in Monongalia County, West Virginia on the banks of the Monongahela River. ...
Oak Hill is a city located in Fayette County, West Virginia. ...
Parkersburg is the county seat of Wood County6. ...
Early 20th Century view of Romney The Old Hampshire County Courthouse (c. ...
Weirton is a city located in the Northern Panhandle of West Virginia. ...
| | Counties: | Barbour | Berkeley | Boone | Braxton | Brooke | Cabell | Calhoun | Clay | Doddridge | Fayette | Gilmer | Grant | Greenbrier | Hampshire | Hancock | Hardy | Harrison | Jackson | Jefferson | Kanawha | Lewis | Lincoln | Logan | Marion | Marshall | Mason | McDowell | Mercer | Mineral | Mingo | Monongalia | Monroe | Morgan | Nicholas | Ohio | Pendleton | Pleasants | Pocahontas | Preston | Putnam | Raleigh | Randolph | Ritchie | Roane | Summers | Taylor | Tucker | Tyler | Upshur | Wayne | Webster | Wetzel | Wirt | Wood | Wyoming Barbour County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Berkeley County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Boone County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Braxton County is a county located in the central part of the state of West Virginia. ...
Brooke County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Calhoun County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Clay County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Doddridge County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Fayette County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Gilmer County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Grant County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Greenbrier County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Hampshire County is a county located in the U.S. state of West Virginia. ...
Hancock County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Hardy County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Harrison County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Jackson County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Jefferson County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Kanawha County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Lewis County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Lincoln County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Logan County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Marion County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Marshall County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Mason County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
McDowell County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Mercer County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Mineral County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Mingo County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Monongalia County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Monroe County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Morgan County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Nicholas County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Ohio County is a county located in the northern panhandle of the state of West Virginia. ...
Pendleton County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Pleasants County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Pocahontas County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Preston County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Putnam County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Raleigh County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Randolph County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Ritchie County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Roane County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Summers County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Taylor County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Tucker County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Tyler County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Upshur County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Wayne County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Webster County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Wetzel County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Wirt County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Wood County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
Wyoming County is a county located in the state of West Virginia. ...
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