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Local News & Events in Jefferson County WV

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Latest Stories

County Commission Makes Early Revision to FY26 Budget

County Commission Plans To Change Impact Fees Again

City & County Struggle To Align On Downtown Charles Town Plans

Governor Celebrates Building Rehabilitation In Charles Town

Shepherdstown Banner Program Honors Veterans

Shepherd University Breaks Ground For Multi-Purpose Facility

County Commission Plans To Finance New HQ With $16 Million Bond

AmeriCorps Funding Cuts Hit Jefferson County

County Commission Seeks Impact Fees To Help Cover Costs of New Offices

West Virginia Humanities Council Suspends All Grants

Birdhill Subdivison Stormwater Management Plan Reviewed by WV DEP

WVU Medicine Will Invest In Berkeley and Jefferson Counties

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civil war

Nash Farm Hike at Harpers Ferry National Park – NOV 6

October 27, 2021 Tagged With: bolivar, Certified Guide Tours, civil war, harpers ferry national park, Harpers Ferry Park Association, hiking, nash farm

A scenic view of the mountains in harpers ferry national park.

he Harpers Ferry Park Association’s upcoming “Trails Less Traveled” hike features a 2.5 mile walk from Bolivar Heights to the Nash Farm inside Harpers Ferry National Park. Read the Full Story >>

Harpers Ferry Park Association Celebrates with Hikes in 2021

January 4, 2021 Tagged With: Certified Guide Tours, civil war, Harpers Ferry Park Association, hiking

The Harpers Ferry Park Association (HFPA) is organizing monthly hikes led by experienced guides to walk, explore and learn about the park.  Read the Full Story >>

Uncovering History & Reconnecting a Community

September 1, 2020 Tagged With: Boyd Carter, Cemetery, civil war, Hartstown, Kearneysville Methodist Cemetery, Mountaineer Gas

Sunrays shining into the Methodist Episcopal Cemetery.

Following the abolition of slavery, African American communities were rapidly established throughout Jefferson County. Churches were cornerstones of these communities — serving as houses of worship, schools, and community centers. The African American community in Kearneysville was known as Hartstown. Read the Full Story >>

Remembering Hartstown

August 1, 2020 Tagged With: Boyd Carter, Cemetery, civil war, Hartstown, Kearneysville Methodist Cemetery, rockwool, SIGHTLINE INTRODUCES

St. Paul’s Church — paid for and built by the members of the congregation.

Appalachia is often viewed through a narrow lens. The stories of Black communities throughout the region are often left untold or simply overlooked. Acknowledging these communities and preserving their stories helps us to truly understand the broad patterns of the cultural landscape in which we live today. Read the Full Story >>

African-American Cultural and Heritage Festival Leaves Lasting Mark on Panhandle

September 2, 2019 Tagged With: civil war, Jefferson County African-American Cultural and Heritage Festival, Jefferson County Convention & Visitors Bureau, Jefferson County NAACP

If you walked down the 300th block of South Lawrence Street in downtown Charles Town during a recent late August weekend, you might have seen a little bit of the past, present, and future of the Jefferson County African-American community. Read the Full Story >>

Orphan of the Confederacy—Illegitimate Step-Sister of the Union

February 25, 2019 Tagged With: Belle Boyd House, civil war, Historical Museum and Visitors Center

The repurposed house of Belle Boyd, as a historical exhibit, is the rare hybrid representation of someone who lived on the Confederate side of the Civil War. And because it acknowledges those Americans who were at the mercy of Our Peculiar Institution, it really does “teach us about our history.” Read the Full Story >>

Confronting the Confederacy, Again. And Again.

November 10, 2018 Tagged With: civil war, confederate monuments, Heyward Shepherd Memorial, Jefferson County Commission, Make It Right project, United Daughters of the Confederacy

Over a year ago, four local women contacted the Jefferson County Commission to request the removal of a plaque by the front door of the Jefferson County Courthouse honoring Confederate soldiers (read more here). Placed by the United Daughters of the Confederacy in 1986 to commemorate their ancestors, the plaque reads: 1861-1865 In honor and memory of the Confederate soldiers of Jefferson County, who served in the War Between the States. Erected by the Leetown Chapter #231 United Daughters of the Confederacy. Erected May 25, 1986. Read the Full Story >>

The Jefferson County Plaque Problem

December 6, 2017 Tagged With: civil war, confederate monuments, Jefferson County Commission

On Thursday, October 26, the Jefferson County Commission confirmed a September vote that denied a request to remove a plaque from the front of the county courthouse honoring residents who fought for the Confederacy in the Civil War. Read the Full Story >>

Harpers Ferry’s Iconic Historic Chapel of St. Peter

September 10, 2017 Tagged With: civil war, historic churches, St. Peter’s Catholic Church

One of the most prominent and beautiful landmarks in Harpers Ferry (WV) is historic St. Peter’s Catholic Church, perched atop the highest point in Lower Town. For many visitors driving on U.S. Rt. 340 across the Shenandoah River, the spire atop St. Peter’s seems to beckon them to the special village. Read the Full Story >>

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