Delinquent Notices
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Part 2 Markings Colonial -1865, Which, While Not Comprehen- Sive, Has the Advantage of Including Postal Markings As by Len Mcmaster Well As Early Postmasters6
38 Whole Number 242 Hampshire County West Virginia Post Offices Part 2 Markings Colonial -1865, which, while not comprehen- sive, has the advantage of including postal markings as By Len McMaster well as early postmasters6. Previously I discussed a little of the history of Hamp- Thus I have attempted to identify the approximate shire County, described the source of the data and the location and dates of operation of the post offices es- conventions used in the listings, and began the listing of tablished in Hampshire County, explaining, where pos- the post offices from Augusta through Green Valley sible, the discrepancies or possible confusion that ex- Depot. The introduction is repeated here. ists in the other listings. Because of the length of the material, it has been broken up into three parts. This Introduction part will include the balance of the Hampshire county Several people have previously cataloged the Hamp- post office descriptions starting with Hainesville, and shire County West Virginia post offices, generally as the third part will include descriptions of the post of- part of a larger effort to list all the post offices of West fices in Mineral County today that were established in Virginia. Examples include Helbock’s United States Post Hampshire County before Mineral County was split off, Offices1 and Small’s The Post Offices of West Vir- and tables of all the post offices established in Hamp- ginia, 1792-19772. Confusing this study is that Hamp- shire County. shire County was initially split off from Virginia with Individual Post Office Location the establishment of many early post offices appearing in studies of Virginia post offices such as Abelson’s and History of Name Changes 3 Virginia Postmasters and Post Offices, 1789-1832 Hainesville (Haines Store) and Hall’s “Virginia Post Offices, 1798-1859”4; and that Hampshire County was itself eventually split into all or Hainesville was located near the crossroads of Old parts of five West Virginia counties, including its present Martinsburg Road (County Route 45/9) and Kedron day boundaries. -
Lucan's Natural Questions: Landscape and Geography in the Bellum Civile Laura Zientek a Dissertation Submitted in Partial Fulf
Lucan’s Natural Questions: Landscape and Geography in the Bellum Civile Laura Zientek A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy University of Washington 2014 Reading Committee: Catherine Connors, Chair Alain Gowing Stephen Hinds Program Authorized to Offer Degree: Classics © Copyright 2014 Laura Zientek University of Washington Abstract Lucan’s Natural Questions: Landscape and Geography in the Bellum Civile Laura Zientek Chair of the Supervisory Committee: Professor Catherine Connors Department of Classics This dissertation is an analysis of the role of landscape and the natural world in Lucan’s Bellum Civile. I investigate digressions and excurses on mountains, rivers, and certain myths associated aetiologically with the land, and demonstrate how Stoic physics and cosmology – in particular the concepts of cosmic (dis)order, collapse, and conflagration – play a role in the way Lucan writes about the landscape in the context of a civil war poem. Building on previous analyses of the Bellum Civile that provide background on its literary context (Ahl, 1976), on Lucan’s poetic technique (Masters, 1992), and on landscape in Roman literature (Spencer, 2010), I approach Lucan’s depiction of the natural world by focusing on the mutual effect of humanity and landscape on each other. Thus, hardships posed by the land against characters like Caesar and Cato, gloomy and threatening atmospheres, and dangerous or unusual weather phenomena all have places in my study. I also explore how Lucan’s landscapes engage with the tropes of the locus amoenus or horridus (Schiesaro, 2006) and elements of the sublime (Day, 2013). -
“A People Who Have Not the Pride to Record Their History Will Not Long
STATE HISTORIC PRESERVATION OFFICE i “A people who have not the pride to record their History will not long have virtues to make History worth recording; and Introduction no people who At the rear of Old Main at Bethany College, the sun shines through are indifferent an arcade. This passageway is filled with students today, just as it was more than a hundred years ago, as shown in a c.1885 photograph. to their past During my several visits to this college, I have lingered here enjoying the light and the student activity. It reminds me that we are part of the past need hope to as well as today. People can connect to historic resources through their make their character and setting as well as the stories they tell and the memories they make. future great.” The National Register of Historic Places recognizes historic re- sources such as Old Main. In 2000, the State Historic Preservation Office Virgil A. Lewis, first published Historic West Virginia which provided brief descriptions noted historian of our state’s National Register listings. This second edition adds approx- Mason County, imately 265 new listings, including the Huntington home of Civil Rights West Virginia activist Memphis Tennessee Garrison, the New River Gorge Bridge, Camp Caesar in Webster County, Fort Mill Ridge in Hampshire County, the Ananias Pitsenbarger Farm in Pendleton County and the Nuttallburg Coal Mining Complex in Fayette County. Each reveals the richness of our past and celebrates the stories and accomplishments of our citizens. I hope you enjoy and learn from Historic West Virginia. -
Inf-1 Chapter 4
CHAPTER 4 – PUBLIC UTILITIES AND INFRASTRUCTURE Introduction Infrastructure is typically limited to those services found in an urban setting made available under finite conditions. These services include water, sewer, solid waste, electricity, communications, and other related utilities. Most of these services are regulated by the Public Service Commission for rates to the customer and by State Environmental Authorities for capacity limitations and expansion. This arrangement governs the regulated cost to the consumer as well as the physical impacts expansion of such services may have on the community and environment. This chapter provides an overview of the historic methods of provision and regulation of these services, as well as the current trends experienced by each. It also outlines existing and projected deficiencies in order to establish goals for both corrective measures and adequate realistic projections to ensure that services are extended appropriately for the foreseeable future. Water A water system is defined by the West Virginia Department of Health as any water system or supply which regularly supplies or offers to supply, piped water to the public for human consumption, if serving at least an average of 25 individuals per day for at least 60 days per year, or which has at least 15 service connections. In Morgan County, there are three distinct methods by which water is provided. They include: public systems owned and operated by a government entity, community systems typically owned by an association of users and maintained by private contract, and private wells that are owned and operated to serve a limited number of customers or larger single user that still meets the above criteria. -
Stratigraphy, Structure, and Tectonics: an East-To-West Transect of the Blue Ridge and Valley and Ridge Provinces of Northern Virginia and West Virginia
FLD016-05 2nd pgs page 103 The Geological Society of America Field Guide 16 2010 Stratigraphy, structure, and tectonics: An east-to-west transect of the Blue Ridge and Valley and Ridge provinces of northern Virginia and West Virginia Lynn S. Fichter Steven J. Whitmeyer Department of Geology and Environmental Science, James Madison University, 800 S. Main Street, Harrisonburg, Virginia 22807, USA Christopher M. Bailey Department of Geology, College of William & Mary, Williamsburg, Virginia, USA William Burton U.S. Geological Survey, Reston, Virginia 22092, USA ABSTRACT This fi eld guide covers a two-day east-to-west transect of the Blue Ridge and Valley and Ridge provinces of northwestern Virginia and eastern West Virginia, in the context of an integrated approach to teaching stratigraphy, structural analysis, and regional tectonics. Holistic, systems-based approaches to these topics incorpo- rate both deductive (stratigraphic, structural, and tectonic theoretical models) and inductive (fi eld observations and data collection) perspectives. Discussions of these pedagogic approaches are integral to this fi eld trip. Day 1 of the fi eld trip focuses on Mesoproterozoic granitoid basement (associated with the Grenville orogeny) and overlying Neoproterozoic to Early Cambrian cover rocks (Iapetan rifting) of the greater Blue Ridge province. These units collectively form a basement-cored anticlinorium that was thrust over Paleozoic strata of the Val- ley and Ridge province during Alleghanian contractional tectonics. Day 2 traverses a foreland thrust belt that consists of Cambrian to Ordovician carbonates (Iapetan divergent continental margin), Middle to Upper Ordovician immature clastics (asso- ciated with the Taconic orogeny), Silurian to Lower Devonian quartz arenites and car- bonates (inter-orogenic tectonic calm), and Upper Devonian to Lower Mississippian clastic rocks (associated with the Acadian orogeny). -
Springs, Source Water Areas, and Potential for High-Yield Aquifers Along the Cacapon Mountain Anticline, Morgan County, WV
Springs, source water areas, and potential for high-yield aquifers along the Cacapon Mountain anticline, Morgan County, WV Joseph J. Donovan Eberhard Werner Dorothy J. Vesper Lacoa Corder Hydrogeology Research Center West Virginia Water Research Institute West Viriginia University Final Report, Project HRC-3 May 2006 Abstract An investigation was made of high-yield water resources of Morgan County, focusing specifically on the Helderberg-Tonoloway-Wills Creek limestone units. These plus the associated underlying Silurian clastic rocks are thought to constitute a groundwater flow system, here referred to as the Cacapon Mountain aquifer. It lies between sandstone aquitards of the Tuscarora and Oriskany formations and flanks both sides of the Cacapon Mountain Anticline. The purpose of the investigation is to characterize the eastern side of this potential high-yield aquifer and identify its hydrogeological elements that may be critical to its development. Objectives include physical and chemical inventory/characterization of springs >10 gpm; identification of aquifer boundaries; hydrogeological mapping; chemical sampling of selected springs; and flow/chemical monitoring of 3 groundwater discharges in different portions of the aquifer. Results include location of wells in and springs discharging from the aquifer in Cold Run Valley. The aquifer may be subdivided into four compartments of groundwater movement based on inferred directions of groundwater flow. The largest of these is the Sir Johns Run catchment, which collects groundwater discharge at a nearly linear rate and discharges to the Potomac. The other three compartments discharge to tributaries of Sleepy Creek via water gaps in Warm Springs Ridge. During measurements in fall 2004, discharge via Sir Johns Run near its mouth was 6.75 cfs, suggesting that aquifer-wide, in excess of 10 cfs may be available throughout the study area for additional development. -
Wireless Tower Access Assistance Fund Grant Application
B 1 Public Service Commission of West Virginia PO Box 812, Charleston, WV 25323 WIRELESS TOWER ACCESS ASSISTANCE FUND GRANT APPLICATION This application form and all grant application requirements are pursuant to General Order No. 187.29 and the Rules and Regulations Governing Emergency Telephone Service, Series 25, Title 150 Legislative Rule, Public Service Commission 150-25-1 to 150-25-13.6.a. Grant Request (Print or type; Use additional sheets and attachments as necessary) 1. The Project Sponsor is the Morgan County Cornmission, which shall, if a Grant is awarded, be designated as the Grantee. 2. Names of other entities, if any, joining the Project Sponsor in this Application: NONE 3. Main Overall Contact Person regarding this Application: Name David A. Michael Title Director, Morgan County OES/9 11 Phone 304-258-0327 Cellular 304-676-39 11 -Fax 304-258-0304 Email address [email protected] 4. Tower type: Guide Self supporting X Monopole 5. Tower height: 260 ft. 6. Tower location: Latitude: N39’3 1’23.7’, Longitude: W78O2629.6’ 7. Tower base elevation above average mean sea level: 9 15 ft. 8. Name of tower location: Morgan-Pawpaw-260 (Paw Paw) 1571 Paw Paw Road, Paw Paw, WV 25434 Morgan County WTAAF Application Page 1 of 11 I' Provide maps, photos and preliminary design drawings, prints, etc. ATTACHMENT A: Propagation map 1:500,000 wide area scale, Field strength level of portables 4 watt talk back coverage; ATTACHMENT B: Propagation map 1:500,000 wide area scale, Field strength level of mobiles 45 watt talk back coverage; -
Panorama Overlook
Washington Heritage Trail The Washington Heritage Trail in West Virginia Panorama Overlook 68 70 P You Are otom ac 522 MARYLAND Here R i ve 81 r 70 r BERKELEY ive R SPRINGS c 9 a er m iv to R o P 9 n o MARYLAND p a c MORGANMa R PAW PAW C Po tomac COUNTYO BERKELEYB EL MARTINSBURG WEST COUNTYC OU SHEPHERDSTOWN VIRGINIA 480 81 9 230 HARPERS 51 FERRY JEFFERSONF R SONONO N River 340 51 Legend CHARLES TOWN Washington Heritage Trail er VIRGINIA iv R COUNTYhTY Historic Site a o d 9 n VIRGINIA a n e h S The Washington Heritage Trail is a 136-mile national scenic Today’s View George Washington’s View byway inspired by the prominent footsteps of George Panorama Overlook marks the end of Cacapon Mountain’s Higher on Cacapon Mountain, Prospect Rock ( also called Washington through the three historic counties of West 30-mile march. Composed of Oriskany sandstone, it plunges Cacapon Rock) offers the same spectacular view. It was a Virginia’s Eastern Panhandle. Compelling history, nearly 1000 feet into the Potomac River, which bends along the favorite daytrip for visitors on horseback from colonial times to spectacular scenery, geologic wonders, recreation and year base of Overlook as it heads downstream (to the right) toward the early 20th century. Washington often rode here, fueling his ‘round activities and festivals are highlighted by 45 historical the Chesapeake Bay. West Virginia is the near side of the vision of a way west and dreams for his Powtomack Navigation sites. -
Wild Trout Waters (Natural Reproduction) - September 2021
Pennsylvania Wild Trout Waters (Natural Reproduction) - September 2021 Length County of Mouth Water Trib To Wild Trout Limits Lower Limit Lat Lower Limit Lon (miles) Adams Birch Run Long Pine Run Reservoir Headwaters to Mouth 39.950279 -77.444443 3.82 Adams Hayes Run East Branch Antietam Creek Headwaters to Mouth 39.815808 -77.458243 2.18 Adams Hosack Run Conococheague Creek Headwaters to Mouth 39.914780 -77.467522 2.90 Adams Knob Run Birch Run Headwaters to Mouth 39.950970 -77.444183 1.82 Adams Latimore Creek Bermudian Creek Headwaters to Mouth 40.003613 -77.061386 7.00 Adams Little Marsh Creek Marsh Creek Headwaters dnst to T-315 39.842220 -77.372780 3.80 Adams Long Pine Run Conococheague Creek Headwaters to Long Pine Run Reservoir 39.942501 -77.455559 2.13 Adams Marsh Creek Out of State Headwaters dnst to SR0030 39.853802 -77.288300 11.12 Adams McDowells Run Carbaugh Run Headwaters to Mouth 39.876610 -77.448990 1.03 Adams Opossum Creek Conewago Creek Headwaters to Mouth 39.931667 -77.185555 12.10 Adams Stillhouse Run Conococheague Creek Headwaters to Mouth 39.915470 -77.467575 1.28 Adams Toms Creek Out of State Headwaters to Miney Branch 39.736532 -77.369041 8.95 Adams UNT to Little Marsh Creek (RM 4.86) Little Marsh Creek Headwaters to Orchard Road 39.876125 -77.384117 1.31 Allegheny Allegheny River Ohio River Headwater dnst to conf Reed Run 41.751389 -78.107498 21.80 Allegheny Kilbuck Run Ohio River Headwaters to UNT at RM 1.25 40.516388 -80.131668 5.17 Allegheny Little Sewickley Creek Ohio River Headwaters to Mouth 40.554253 -80.206802 -
Appendix – Priority Brook Trout Subwatersheds Within the Chesapeake Bay Watershed
Appendix – Priority Brook Trout Subwatersheds within the Chesapeake Bay Watershed Appendix Table I. Subwatersheds within the Chesapeake Bay watershed that have a priority score ≥ 0.79. HUC 12 Priority HUC 12 Code HUC 12 Name Score Classification 020501060202 Millstone Creek-Schrader Creek 0.86 Intact 020501061302 Upper Bowman Creek 0.87 Intact 020501070401 Little Nescopeck Creek-Nescopeck Creek 0.83 Intact 020501070501 Headwaters Huntington Creek 0.97 Intact 020501070502 Kitchen Creek 0.92 Intact 020501070701 East Branch Fishing Creek 0.86 Intact 020501070702 West Branch Fishing Creek 0.98 Intact 020502010504 Cold Stream 0.89 Intact 020502010505 Sixmile Run 0.94 Reduced 020502010602 Gifford Run-Mosquito Creek 0.88 Reduced 020502010702 Trout Run 0.88 Intact 020502010704 Deer Creek 0.87 Reduced 020502010710 Sterling Run 0.91 Reduced 020502010711 Birch Island Run 1.24 Intact 020502010712 Lower Three Runs-West Branch Susquehanna River 0.99 Intact 020502020102 Sinnemahoning Portage Creek-Driftwood Branch Sinnemahoning Creek 1.03 Intact 020502020203 North Creek 1.06 Reduced 020502020204 West Creek 1.19 Intact 020502020205 Hunts Run 0.99 Intact 020502020206 Sterling Run 1.15 Reduced 020502020301 Upper Bennett Branch Sinnemahoning Creek 1.07 Intact 020502020302 Kersey Run 0.84 Intact 020502020303 Laurel Run 0.93 Reduced 020502020306 Spring Run 1.13 Intact 020502020310 Hicks Run 0.94 Reduced 020502020311 Mix Run 1.19 Intact 020502020312 Lower Bennett Branch Sinnemahoning Creek 1.13 Intact 020502020403 Upper First Fork Sinnemahoning Creek 0.96 -
Memorials of a Half-Century: a Machine-Readable Transcription
Library of Congress Memorials of a half-century 2194 War Department RECEIVED July 25, 1887, LIBRARY. MEMORIALS OF A HALF-CENTURY BY BELA HUBBARD “I have been a great feast, and stolen the sraps.” Love's Labor Lost.— SHAKES. “...various, that the mind Of desultory man, studious of change, And pleased with novelty, might be indulg'd.” The Task.— COWPER. WITH ILLUSTRATIONS NEW YORK & LONDON G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS The Knickerbocker Press 1887 copy 2 F566 .-87 copy 2 COPYRIGHT BY G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS 1887 By transfer OCT 9 1915 Press of G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS New York “The notes of a single observer, even in a limited district, describing accurately its features, civil, natural and social, are of more interests, and often of more value, than the grander view and boarder generalizations of history. “In a country whose character and circumstances are constantly changing, the little facts and incidents, which are the life history, soon pass from the minds of the present generation.”— Anon v PREFACE. War Department LIBRARY. Memorials of a half-century http://www.loc.gov/resource/lhbum.21049 Library of Congress The writer came to Michigan, a youth, in the spring of 1835, and settled in the town of Springwells, two miles from the western limits of Detroit, then a city of less than 500 inhabitants. On or near the spot of his first abode, upon the banks of our noble river, he has dwelt for half a century, and until the spreading city has absorbed the intervening farms. Even a few years ago his present residence was so completely in the country, that the familiar rural sights and sounds were but little banished. -
Legal Notice
Ticket Taxpayer(s) Legal Description Sold To Amount LEGAL NOTICE List of tax liens sold in the County of HAMPSHIRE on the 10th day of November, 2015 for the nonpayment of taxes thereon for the year 2014, and purchased by individuals or certified to the Auditor of the State of West Virginia: 01-BLOOMERY 143 BAKER DONALD & N RIVER DRS 5.645 AC ROBERT & LOIS GROVES 9,400.00 HOLLIDAY DELLA MAXINE ON REDSTONE RD NEAR VA LINE PO BOX 308 ROMNEY WV 26757-0308 529 CHUN PYONG HUI 5.00 AC LOT 22 FAT KITTY PROPERTIES, LLC 2,600.00 OAK FOREST SD 709 N EDGEWOOD ST ARLINGTON VA 22201-1933 627 COWGILL DELILAH E (RAIGNER) .09 AC CAPON DRS 3700 SQ FT LAG REALTY DEVELOPMENT & HOLDING LLC 92.38 5823 CARPERS PIKE YELLOW SPRING WV 26865 774 DEWEIN CHRISTOPHER E & LOT 34 2.023 AC HARDY COUNTY HOLDINGS 600.00 JERAVEE H DEWEIN STAGECOACH STOP @ CAPON BRIDGE 145 CYPRESS POINT PKY UNIT 202 PALM COAST FL 32164-8427 794 DOLBY LAWRENCE B & COLLEEN D .856AC LOT 83-84-85 FAT KITTY PROPERTIES, LLC 2,500.00 CACAPON RIVER RECREATION AREA 709 N EDGEWOOD ST ARLINGTON VA 22201-1933 795 DOLBY LAWRENCE B & COLLEEN D .858AC LOT 86-87 FAT KITTY PROPERTIES, LLC 3,000.00 CACAPON RIVER RECREATION AREA 709 N EDGEWOOD ST ARLINGTON VA 22201-1933 903 EWING EUGENE W & ROSE M & EAGLE MOUNTAIN SD 10.50 AC FAT KITTY PROPERTIES, LLC 4,200.00 WALTER ARTHUR EWING LOT 10-B 709 N EDGEWOOD ST ARLINGTON VA 22201-1933 1040 GABRIEL WALTER C 1.14 AC OWL HOLLOW RD ROBERT & LOIS GROVES 1,100.00 CCC W/PCL 118 PO BOX 308 ROMNEY WV 26757-0308 1060 GAUG ROBERT A & JOAN SPRING GAP SD 5.09 AC HARDY COUNTY