George Washington National Forest

George Washington National Forest, Virginia, United States
category: boundary — type: protected area — OSM: relation 3560724

Items with no match found in OSM

503 items

Elizabeth Furnace (Q5362810)
item type: blast furnace
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Elizabeth Furnace was a blast furnace in the Shenandoah Valley that was used to create pig iron from 1836 to 1888 using Passage Creek for water power. Iron ore was mined nearby, purified in the furnace, and then pig iron was transported over the Massanutten Mountain to the South Fork of the Shenandoah River for forging in Harpers Ferry, West Virginia. The road used to transport this iron is still used today by hikers climbing to the top of the Massanutten Mountain via the Massanutten Trail. Much of the original stone structure still exists, as well as a restored cabin, and an outdoor recreation area.

This item might be defunct. The English Wikipedia article is in these categories: 1886 disestablishments in the United States
Fort Valley (Q5472210)
item type: valley
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Fort Valley is a mountain valley located primarily in Shenandoah County, Virginia. It is often called "valley within a valley" as it lies between the two arms of the northern part of the Blue Ridge mountain range in the Shenandoah Valley in the Ridge-and-Valley Appalachians geological zone.

USGS GNIS ID: 1483500

Daniel Munch House (Q15212732)
item type: house
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Daniel Munch House is a historic home and farm located near Fort Valley, Shenandoah County, Virginia. It was built in 1834, and is a two-story, five-bay, brick I-house dwelling in a vernacular late-Federal style. It has a 1+12-story two-room brick rear ell, with a partially exposed basement and a wraparound porch. Also on the property are the contributing bank barn (c. 1929), frame tool shed, equipment or vehicle shed with attached corn crib, livestock shed, and the Ridenour family cemetery.

NRHP reference number: 02000181

Shenandoah Valley Battlefields National Historic District (Q7494178)
item type: historic district
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

The Shenanandoah Valley Battlefields National Historic District is a National Heritage Area in Virginia. The district comprises eight counties in the Shenandoah Valley, including the scene of Jackson's Valley Campaign of 1862, Lee's Gettysburg Campaign of 1863 and Sheridan's Shenandoah Campaign of 1864.

Mount Joy Pond Natural Area Preserve (Q6921534)
item type: protected area
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Mount Joy Pond Natural Area Preserve is a 359-acre (1.45 km2) Natural Area Preserve located in Augusta County, Virginia in the United States. Located on the western side of the Blue Ridge Mountains, it supports a large population of the rare Virginia sneezeweed (Helenium virginicum). This and other plants are associated with a large sinkhole pond, the centerpiece of the property; fewer than two dozen such ponds remain in Augusta and neighboring Rockingham County. Much of the surrounding landscape consists of hardwoods and pines.

Macedonia Methodist Church (Q14712766)
item type: Protestant church building
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Macedonia Methodist Church is a historic Methodist church located at Coffeytown, near Vesuvius, Amherst County, Virginia. It was built in 1896, and is a one-story, frame church building with vernacular Gothic Revival style influences. It sits on a random rubble stone foundation and has a gable roof with front bell tower. The interior features original unpainted American chestnut beaded board paneling on the walls and ceiling.

NRHP reference number: 12000017

Bedford Hydropower Project (Q21196850)
item type: hydroelectric power station
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

The Bedford Hydropower Project (Snowden) is a hydroelectric generation facility on the James River near the community of Big Island, Virginia. The project includes a low head structure completely spanning the river; river flow is split into a concrete canal leading to the hydroelectric generation facility and the natural river course.

Mount Pleasant National Scenic Area (Q6922941)
item type: National Scenic Area
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Mount Pleasant National Scenic Area is a federally designated National Scenic Area within George Washington National Forest in Virginia, USA, to the north of Lynchburg. The 7,580-acre (3,070 ha) scenic area is administered by the U.S. Forest Service. The scenic area includes a portion of the Appalachian Trail, which crosses Cole Mountain (3,920 feet (1,190 m)) and Bald Knob (4,040 feet (1,230 m)). The area also includes Mount Pleasant (4,071 feet (1,241 m)) and Pompey Mountain (4,032 feet (1,229 m)). The area was designated a scenic area as an alternative to federal wilderness designation.

Echols Farm (Q15216036)
item type: barn
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Echols Farm is an historic farm property at the junction of United States Route 501 and Virginia State Route 130, just east of Glasgow, Virginia. The more than 250-acre (100 ha) property includes a vernacular frame farmhouse dating to circa 1855 (enlarged about 1914), and a number of 20th-century outbuildings. The property, which abuts the Maury River, also includes surviving traces of the James River and Kanawha Canal, including the remains of two locks.

NRHP reference number: 98001312

Cushaw Hydroelectric Project (Q21196922)
item type: hydroelectric power station
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

The Cushaw Hydroelectric Project is a 7.5 megawatt (MW) dam and power house facility owned and operated by Cushaw Hydro LLC.

James River Gorge (Q6142154)
item type: valley
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

The James River Gorge is a water gap created by the James River in Central Virginia. The Gorge is 2,433 feet (742 m) deep as measured from Highcock Knob 3,073 feet (937 m) to the James River 640 feet (200 m) and is approximately 9.3 miles (15.0 km) long. The James River forms in western Virginia near the border of West Virginia and initially flows south through the ridge and valley province of the Allegheny Mountains, turning northeast when it comes to the western edge of the Blue Ridge Mountains near Buchanan, Virginia. From Buchanan the river flows along the base of the Blue Ridge Mountains until it joins the Maury River near the town of Glasgow and then it turns southeast and begins its descent over the Balcony Falls rapids and through the James River Gorge. The rocks of the gorge are metamorphic in nature with the oldest exposed outcrops being from the Proterozoic Era. To the south of the river the peaks of the James River Face Wilderness dominate and to the north the peaks of Big Rocky Row and Little Rocky Row Mountains form a dramatic backdrop to the river far below. Multiple trails, including the Appalachian Trail go through the gorge and provide spectacular vistas of the scenery both at river level and from the peaks to the north and the south.

WWZW (Q7957549)
item type: radio station
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

WWZW (96.7 MHz) is a commercial FM radio station licensed to Buena Vista, Virginia, and serving the Lexington area and part of the Lynchburg metropolitan area. WWZW is owned and operated by First Media Radio, LLC. It broadcasts a classic hits radio format. The studios and offices are on Main Street in Lexington.

website: http://3wzfm.webs.com/

Buffalo Creek (Q4985710)
item type: river
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Buffalo Creek is a 16.0-mile-long (25.7 km) tributary of the Maury River in Rockbridge County in the U.S. state of Virginia. It is part of the James River watershed.

USGS GNIS ID: 1482148

Hidden Valley (Q14712531)
item type: building
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Hidden Valley, also known as Warwickton, is a historic home located near Bacova, Bath County, Virginia. It was built in 1858, and is a two-story, five-bay, brick structure with a hipped roof in a Greek Revival / Late Victorian style. It has a rear ell. The front facade features a pedimented tetra-style portico with Ionic order columns, placed over the central three bays of the five-bay facade. The entrance is styled upon a design on Plate 28 in Asher Benjamin's stylebook, The Practical Carpenter (1835).

NRHP reference number: 70000784

Big End (Q49680960)
item type: hill

USGS GNIS ID: 1481724

Shenandoah Valley Music Festival (Q7494182)
item type: music festival
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Shenandoah Valley Music Festival is the longest running music festival in Virginia. It presents a concert series each summer that takes place mid-July through Labor Day weekend at Shrine Mont in Orkney Springs, Virginia. The Festival started in 1963 as a way of bringing symphonic music to the rural Shenandoah Valley. Symphonic music is still included in the series; other genres including bluegrass, country, folk, pop-rock, roots, and Americana are also presented. Past artists have included Bruce Hornsby, The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, Home Free, The Temptations, Mary Chapin Carpenter, Kenny G, LeAnn Rimes, Ricky Skaggs, Kris Kristofferson, Pure Prairie League, Poco, and The Beach Boys.

Shrine Mont (Q25006815)
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Shrine Mont is a retreat and conference center owned by the Episcopal Diocese of Virginia in the town of Orkney Springs, Virginia, United States which is located at the foot of Great North Mountain in the Shenandoah Valley and at the edge of the George Washington National Forest. It includes about 1,100 acres of forest.

Orkney Springs Hotel (Q15264328)
item type: hotel
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Orkney Springs Hotel is a historic resort spa complex located at Orkney Springs, Shenandoah County, Virginia. The oldest building, known as Maryland House, was built in 1853, and is a two-story, rectangular stuccoed frame building. It is faced on all sides by double galleries. The main hotel building, known as Virginia House, was built between 1873 and 1876. It is a four-story, stuccoed frame, H-shaped building measuring 100 feet by 165 feet and features a three-story verandah. The hotel contains 175 bedrooms. The remaining contributing resources are the three-story Pennsylvania House (1867), seven identical two-story, six-room, hipped roof cottages, and a small columned pavilion located next to the mineral springs.

NRHP reference number: 76002119

Furnace (Q5509605)
item type: unincorporated community in the United States
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Furnace was an unincorporated community in Hardy County, West Virginia, United States.

USGS GNIS ID: 1556839

Great North Mountain (Q5599630)
item type: mountain
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Great North Mountain is a 50-mile (80 km) long mountain ridge within the Ridge-and-valley Appalachians in the U.S. states of Virginia and West Virginia. The ridge is located west of the Shenandoah Valley and Massanutten Mountain in Virginia, and east of the Allegheny Mountains and Cacapon River in West Virginia.

Lost River (Q6684206)
item type: unincorporated community in the United States
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Lost River is an unincorporated community on the Lost River in eastern Hardy County, West Virginia, United States. Lost River lies along West Virginia Route 259.

USGS GNIS ID: 1551943

Cold Spring River (Q5142365)
item type: river
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

The Cold Spring River is a 3.9-mile-long (6.3 km) mountain stream in Rockingham County in the U.S. state of Virginia. It is a tributary of the German River, the principal source of the North Fork Shenandoah River. Via the Shenandoah River, the Cold Spring River is part of the Potomac River watershed.

USGS GNIS ID: 1482630

Orkney Springs (Q7102961)
item type: unincorporated community in the United States
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Orkney Springs is a CDP in western Shenandoah County, Virginia, United States. The reason for the name "Orkney" is unknown, but believed to be tied to either the Orkney Islands off the coast of Scotland or to the Earl of Orkney, since one of the earliest European landowners was Dr. John McDonald, a Scottish physician. The "Springs" part of the name comes from the numerous underground mineral springs in the area.

USGS GNIS ID: 1485992

Sweedlin (Q7655072)
item type: unincorporated community in the United States
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Sweedlin is an unincorporated community located in the north-east of Pendleton County, West Virginia, United States.

USGS GNIS ID: 2702473

WSIG (Q7955670)
item type: radio station
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

WSIG (96.9 FM) is a classic country formatted broadcast radio station licensed to Mount Jackson, Virginia, serving the Central and Northern Shenandoah Valley. WSIG is owned and operated by Saga Communications, through licensee Tidewater Communications, LLC.

website: http://www.969wsig.com/

WJDV (Q7951134)
item type: radio station
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

WMQR (96.1 FM) is a hot adult contemporary formatted broadcast radio station licensed to Broadway, Virginia, serving the Harrisonburg–Staunton area. WMQR is owned and operated by Saga Communications, through licensee Tidewater Communications, LLC.

website: http://www.more961.com

WMRA (Q7953023)
item type: radio station
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

WMRA is a public-radio formatted broadcast radio station licensed to Harrisonburg, Virginia. It is the NPR member station for the central Shenandoah Valley. Combined with its full-power repeaters and low-power translators, it serves much of west-central Virginia from Winchester to Lexington as well as the Charlottesville area. WMRA is owned and operated by James Madison University.

website: http://www.wmra.org/

WLTK (Q7952499)
item type: radio station
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

WLTK (102.9 FM) is a Contemporary Christian formatted broadcast radio station licensed to New Market, Virginia, serving the Harrisonburg/Staunton area. WLTK is owned and operated by Educational Media Foundation.

website: http://www.klove.com/

Bowers House (Q4950899)
item type: house
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Bowers House is a historic home located in Sugar Grove, West Virginia. It was built in 1898 and is a large, 2+12-story Queen Anne style frame dwelling. It features two asymmetrical polygonal towers, contrasting wood siding in a herringbone pattern, projecting gables and bays, and large brackets with contrasting color schemes.

NRHP reference number: 85001593

Brushy Fork Lake (Q4979749)
item type: reservoir
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Brushy Fork Lake is an 18-acre (7 ha) impoundment on the South Branch South Fork Potomac River located three miles (5 km) south of Sugar Grove in southeastern Pendleton County, West Virginia, United States. Brushy Fork Lake lies in the Dry River District of the George Washington National Forest.

Brandywine (Q4406631)
item type: census-designated place in the United States
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Brandywine is a census-designated place (CDP) located on U.S. Highway 33 in Pendleton County, West Virginia, United States. The town lies along the South Fork South Branch Potomac River at its confluence with Hawes Run. At the 2019 United States census, its population was 147.

USGS GNIS ID: 2586770, 1550444

Fort Edward Johnson (Q18151007)
item type: fort
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Fort Edward Johnson was a series of Confederate States of America (CSA) military breastworks constructed in April 1862 by the four-thousand member brigade known as the "Army of the Northwest". The Army of the Northwest was a remnant of the Confederate Army of the Northwest which had been disbanded in February 1862. The Army of the Northwest was commanded by Colonel Edward "Alleghany" Johnson and had been ordered to secure a major roadway through the Appalachian Mountains known as the Staunton and Parkersburg Turnpike. Johnson ordered the construction of fortifications and breastworks at a high point along the turnpike on top of Shenandoah Mountain, which is in the U.S. state of Virginia, 26 miles (42 km) west of Staunton.

USGS GNIS ID: 1488971

Sugar Grove, West Virginia (Q7634818)
item type: radio communication station
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Sugar Grove Station is a National Security Agency (NSA) communications site located near Sugar Grove in Pendleton County, West Virginia. According to a 2005 article in The New York Times, the site intercepts all international communications entering the Eastern United States. Activities at the site previously involved the Navy Information Operations Command (NAVIOCOM). In April 2013, the Chief of Naval Operations ordered that the NAVIOCOM support base be closed by September 30, 2015, as "a result of the determination by the resource sponsor National Security Agency to relocate the command's mission." The naval base is being repurposed as a privately owned healthcare facility for veterans, while the NSA listening station, to the south, continues to operate.

Shenandoah Mountain (Q7494169)
item type: mountain
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Shenandoah Mountain is a mountain ridge approximately 73 miles (117 km) long in Virginia and West Virginia. The steep, narrow, sandstone-capped ridge extends from northern Bath County, Virginia to southern Hardy County, West Virginia. Along the way, its crest defines the borders between Highland and Augusta counties, Virginia, and between Pendleton County, West Virginia, and Rockingham County, Virginia. Its high point is 4397’/1340 m Reddish Knob along the Virginia/West Virginia border.

WTON-FM (Q7956339)
item type: radio station
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

WTON-FM (94.3 MHz) is an adult album alternative formatted broadcast radio station licensed to Staunton, Virginia, serving Staunton and Augusta County, Virginia. WTON is owned and operated by Stu-Comm, Inc, and relays Charlottesville-based WNRN-FM full-time.

website: http://www.star94radio.com/; USGS GNIS ID: 1499008

Old Probst Church (Q7084787)
item type: church building
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Old Probst Church, also known as Propst Lutheran Church, is a historic Lutheran church located near Brandywine, Pendleton County, West Virginia. It was built about 1887, and is a rectangular frame building with clapboard siding on a cut stone foundation. The church was in use until 1920, then renovated starting in 1968 for use as a community center. The surrounding property includes the site of the first church, built about 1769. A second log church building was removed from the site in 1885, and used as a house, and later a barn.

NRHP reference number: 86000779

WKCY-FM (Q7951574)
item type: radio station
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

WKCY-FM is a country formatted broadcast radio station licensed to Harrisonburg, Virginia, serving the Central Shenandoah Valley. WKCY-FM is owned and operated by iHeartMedia, Inc.

website: http://www.kcycountry.com/

Sugar Grove, West Virginia (Q14120999)
item type: town
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Sugar Grove is a community located in Pendleton County, West Virginia, United States. Its ZIP Code is 26815. It is located within the United States National Radio Quiet Zone.

USGS GNIS ID: 1553116

Deerfield School (Q14712231)
item type: school building
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Deerfield School is a historic public school building located at Deerfield, Augusta County, Virginia. The original section was built in 1937, and is a frame building consisting of an auditorium/gymnasium as the core of the building with rectangular gabled blocks on either side containing two rooms with the projecting gable ends. A cinder block cafeteria / kitchen addition was built in 1948–1949, and a cinder block gymnasium / play room was added in 1979.

NRHP reference number: 86001402

Deerfield Library Station (Q69766461)
item type: public library / library branch

Street address: 59 Marble Valley Rd., Fishersville, VA 24432 (from Wikidata)

Clifton Forge Commercial Historic District (Q14712186)
item type: historic district
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Clifton Forge Commercial Historic District is a national historic district located at Clifton Forge, Alleghany County, Virginia. The district encompasses 77 contributing buildings in the central business district of Clifton Forge. It primarily includes frame, brick, and concrete block commercial buildings dating to the late-19th and early-20th centuries. The buildings are in a variety of popular architectural styles including Classical Revival, Mission/Spanish Revival, and Italianate. Notable buildings include the Hawkins Brothers Store (c. 1886), Wiley House (1891), Chesapeake and Ohio Office Building (1906), Masonic Theatre (1905), Alleghany Building (1905), Clifton Forge City Hall (1910-1911), U.S. Post Office (1910), Ridge Theatre (1929), the Farrar Building (1930), and the Pure Oil Company Service Station (1932).

NRHP reference number: 91002015

Jefferson School (Q14712626)
item type: school building
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Jefferson School, also known as East Elementary and Clifton Forge Elementary East, is a historic school building located at Clifton Forge, Alleghany County, Virginia. It was built in 1926, as a rectangular two-story building is clad in running-bond brick in the Colonial Revival style. It sits on a raised concrete foundation and has ribbons of small-paned double-hung windows and a recessed front entrance.

NRHP reference number: 10001061

Rosedale Historic District (Q14713157)
item type: historic district
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Rosedale Historic District is a national historic district located at Covington, Alleghany County, Virginia. The district encompasses 76 contributing buildings, 1 contributing site, and 2 contributing structures in a predominantly residential section of Alleghany County. The buildings represent a variety of popular architectural styles including the Queen Anne, Greek Revival, and Classical Revival styles. The most notable residence is Rose Dale, constructed in the late-1850s as a plantation house. The Rosedale neighborhood was in established in 1899–1900. In addition to the dwellings a former hospital is situated in the district.

NRHP reference number: 98000738

Sweet Chalybeate Springs (Q14713278)
item type: hotel
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Sweet Chalybeate Springs, also known as the Red Sweet Springs, Sweet Chalybeate Hotel and Sweet Chalybeate Springs Lodge, is a historic resort hotel complex located at Sweet Chalybeate, Alleghany County, Virginia. It dates to the 1850s, and consists of a main building, guest ranges, and cottages all fronted with two-level porches. There are a total of eight contributing buildings and one contributing structure. The main building is a gable roof, weatherboarded, frame structure 12 bays long and 2 bays deep. The resort developed around springs flowing undisturbed from the bottom of a small rock bluff. Sweet Chalybeate suffered decline and finally closed its doors in 1918.

NRHP reference number: 74002103

Clifton Furnace (Q14712188)
item type: blast furnace
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Clifton Furnace is a historic cold blast charcoal furnace located near Clifton Forge, Alleghany County, Virginia. It was built in 1846 of large, rough-hewn, rectangular stones. It measures 34 feet square at the base and the sides and face taper towards the top. The furnace went out of blast in 1854 and was revamped in 1874. It was abandoned in 1877.

NRHP reference number: 77001485

Fairview (Q14712304)
item type: building
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Fairview is a historic home located near Amherst, Amherst County, Virginia. It was built in 1867, and is a 2+12-story Italian Villa style brick dwelling. It has a three-story tower set at a 45-degree angle to the primary elevation. The house features a low-pitched roof with overhanging eaves, wide frieze with decorative brackets, arched windows, and a bay window. Also on the property are the contributing late-19th century smokehouse and tenant house (c. 1920).

NRHP reference number: 09000391

Massie House (Q14712800)
item type: house
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Massie House, also known as Oak Grove, was a historic home located at Falling Spring, Alleghany County, Virginia. It was built in two phases in 1825–1826, and was a double-pile, two-story, five-bay, wood-frame house on a brick foundation in the Federal style. The main entrance featured the original paneled double-doors ornamented with small Chinese and Gothic motifs, flanked by sidelights and topped by a segmental fanlight.

NRHP reference number: 82004669

WKEY (Q7951626)
item type: radio station
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

WKEY (1340 kHz) is an American AM radio station licensed to serve the community of Covington, Virginia. The station, which began broadcasting in 1941, is owned and operated by Todd P. Robinson, Inc. The WKEY broadcast license is held by WVJT, LLC.

website: http://www.highlandsmediagroup.com/stations/big-country-103-5/

WXCF (Q7957588)
item type: radio station
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

WXCF is a classic hits and oldies broadcast radio station licensed to Clifton Forge, Virginia. WXCF serves Clifton Forge and Covington. WXCF is owned and operated by WVJT, LLC.

website: http://www.highlandsmediagroup.com/stations/am1230-wxcf/

West Clifton Forge, Virginia (Q7984751)
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

West Clifton Forge was an incorporated town located in Alleghany County, Virginia, United States. In 1906 the towns of Clifton Forge and West Clifton Forge merged to form the independent city of Clifton Forge.

This item might be defunct. The English Wikipedia article is in these categories: Former municipalities in Virginia
Luke Mountain Historic District (Q14712756)
item type: historic district
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Luke Mountain Historic District is a national historic district located near Covington, Alleghany County, Virginia. The district encompasses 12 contributing buildings, 4 contributing sites, 6 contributing structures, and 1 contributing object on Luke Mountain overlooking the city of Covington. It includes three high style dwellings all built for members of the Luke family, the earliest of which was built in 1919. Other contributing resources include the former farm manager's house; agricultural barns, shelters, greenhouses, and storage buildings; and domestic structures such as swimming pools and garages. Other landscape features include a winding entrance drive, a pair of gateposts, stone-lined drainage ditches, a concrete bridge/culvert over Lindsay Glen Run, a reservoir and private water system, terraced fields, pastureland, formal garden spaces, and walking/hiking paths.

NRHP reference number: 98000737

Persinger House (Q14713054)
item type: house
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Persinger House is a historic home located at Covington, Alleghany County, Virginia. The original section was built about 1757, and enlarged in 1888. It is a two-story, six-bay, single-pile log-and-frame house with weatherboard siding and a gable roof. A 20th-century kitchen is connected to the house by a hyphen. It features a two-story, porch supported by chamfered posts, simple cut-out friezes, and a Chinese lattice railing. Also on the property is a contributing late 19th-century barn.

NRHP reference number: 82004668

WVRI (Q7956989)
item type: radio station
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

WVRI (90.9 MHz) is a non-commercial FM radio station licensed to Clifton Forge, Virginia, and serving Alleghany County, Virginia. It is owned by Liberty University and it simulcasts a Christian Contemporary radio format, known as "The Journey," from parent station WRVL Lynchburg.

website: http://www.liberty.edu/thejourney/

Clifton Forge Residential Historic District (Q14712187)
item type: historic district
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Clifton Forge Residential Historic District is a national historic district located at Clifton Forge, Alleghany County, Virginia. The district encompasses 728 contributing buildings and two contributing sites in a predominantly residential section of Clifton Forge. It primarily includes single-family frame vernacular dwellings dating to the turn-of-the 20th century. They are vernacular interpretations of a variety of popular architectural styles including Queen Anne, Colonial Revival, and Bungalow. Notable non-residential buildings include the Clifton Forge High School (1928), First Baptist Church (c. 1892), Main Street Baptist Church (1921), First Christian Church (1906), Presbyterian Church (1907), Methodist Church (1908–1910), Clifton Forge Baptist Church (1912), Clifton Forge Woman's Club (1939), and Clifton Forge Armory (1940–1941). Memorial Park and Crown Hill Cemetery are contributing sites. Located in the district and separately listed is the Jefferson School.

NRHP reference number: 12000517

Rich Patch Mines (Q7323411)
item type: unincorporated community in the United States
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Rich Patch Mines is an unincorporated community in Alleghany County, Virginia, United States.

USGS GNIS ID: 1493481

WJVR (Q7951434)
item type: radio station
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

WJVR (101.9 FM, "The River") is a commercial radio station licensed to Iron Gate, Virginia, serving Covington and Clifton Forge in Virginia. It has a classic rock radio format and is owned and operated by Todd P. Robinson. It also carries Alleghany High School sports. The studios and offices are on Oak Street in Covington.

website: http://www.1019theriver.com/

Carpenter Creek (Q5045708)
item type: stream
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Carpenter Creek in western Virginia, now known as Potts Creek, was shown on a map of the area drawn by Joshua Fry and Peter Jefferson in 1751 and printed in 1755, and so called in the text of Thomas Jefferson's "Notes on the State of Virginia" that he prepared in the 1780s. Carpenter's Creek is also shown as such on John Ballendine's map of the James River published c1772 and Thomas Hutchins' map of the western regions of Virginia published in 1778.

Fort Carpenter, Virginia (Q5470899)
item type: geographical feature
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Fort Carpenter, Alleghany County, Virginia, was built about 1755-1756 by Joseph Carpenter, who migrated from the Province of New York to "the big bend" of the Jackson River on the Virginia frontier about 1745-1746. It was actually a fortified house, or blockhouse. Located on a low bluff near the mouth of Carpenter Creek, it was later known as Cedar Hill. Logs and stones from the original structure were used in the later dwelling now on the site. A young George Washington visited the string of frontier forts during the French and Indian War in 1756, inspecting Fort Young on the north side of the Jackson River, and Fort Carpenter, described as a fortified house, on the south side. In 1856, Joseph Hannah Carpenter graduated from the Virginia Military Institute as a civil engineer, and later went on to serve as an artillery cadet under the command of Stonewall Jackson.

Mountain Gateway Community College (Q5207513)
item type: community college / public educational institution of the United States
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Mountain Gateway Community College (MGCC, formerly Dabney S. Lancaster Community College) is a public community college in Clifton Forge, Virginia. It is part the Virginia Community College System.

Street address: 1000 Dabney Drive, Clifton Forge, VA, 24422-1000 (from Wikidata)

website: http://www.dslcc.edu

Johnsons Creek Natural Area Preserve (Q6268531)
item type: protected area
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Johnsons Creek Natural Area Preserve is a 99-acre (40 ha) Natural Area Preserve located in Alleghany County, Virginia. It contains a variety of trees, including ancient red cedars, oaks, and pines, all of which stand on steep shale bluffs overlooking Johnsons Creek.

Wood Hall (Q14713552)
item type: building
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Wood Hall, also known as Milton Hall and Oak Hall, is a historic home located at Callaghan, Alleghany County, Virginia. It was built in 1874, and is a double-pile, two-story, brick house on a stuccoed brick foundation in the Gothic Revival style. It features a two-story, gable roof entrance tower with clasping buttresses and pointed-arch openings. Also on the property is a former caretaker's cottage. It was built for William Wentworth-FitzWilliam, Viscount Milton, whose wife, Lady Laura Milton, brought him from Britain to Alleghany County for his health.

NRHP reference number: 82004667

Fudge House (Q15221164)
item type: house
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

The Fudge House is a historic residence in the city of Covington, Virginia, United States. The earliest log section dates to about 1798, with additions and modifications made about 1826, 1897, and 1910. The resultant house is a two-story, weatherboarded structure of log, frame, and brick construction with a hipped roof, and four exterior chimneys. Also on the property is a contributing smokehouse and the ruins of a slave cabin and a third house.

NRHP reference number: 93000348

Park Drive-In (Q43301082)
item type: movie theater / drive-in theater / destroyed building or structure

Street address: I-64 at Main Street, Clifton Forge, VA 24422 (from Wikidata)

Alleghany Highlands Regional Library (Q69766569)
item type: public library / main library

Street address: 406 W. Riverside Street, Covington, VA 24426 (from Wikidata)

Masonic Theatre (Q43299640)
item type: movie theater

Street address: 508 Main Street, Clifton Forge, VA 24422 (from Wikidata)

website: http://www.cliftonforge.org/get_page.pl?page=3

Ridge Theatre (Q43301341)
item type: movie theater

Street address: 418 E. Ridgeway Street, Clifton Forge, VA 24422 (from Wikidata)

Collins Theater (Q43301348)
item type: movie theater

Street address: Maple Avenue, Covington, VA 24426 (from Wikidata)

R/C Covington Movies 3 (Q43301349)
item type: movie theater

Street address: 139 N. Maple Avenue, Covington, VA 24426 (from Wikidata)

website: http://www.rctheatres.com

Strand Theater (Q43301351)
item type: movie theater

Street address: Main Street, Covington, VA 24426 (from Wikidata)

Fort Valley Library (Q69767261)
item type: public library / library branch

Street address: 6190 Woodstock Tower Road, Fort Valley, VA 22652 (from Wikidata)

Massanutten Mountain (Q6784529)
item type: mountain
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Massanutten Mountain is a synclinal ridge in the Ridge-and-Valley Appalachians, located in the U.S. state of Virginia.

WMXH-FM (Q7953171)
item type: radio station
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

WMXH-FM (105.7 FM) is a Christian Adult Contemporary formatted broadcast radio station licensed to Luray, Virginia, serving Page County, Southern Shenandoah County and Northern Rockingham County, all in Virginia. WMXH-FM is owned and operated by Baker Family Stations, through licensee Positive Alternative Radio, Inc.

New Market Gap (Q7010017)
item type: mountain pass
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

New Market Gap is a wind gap in the Massanutten Mountain in Virginia. The 1,804 feet (550 m) gap is located approximately in the middle of the range, dividing it into north and south sections.

USGS GNIS ID: 1485851

Intersections (Q6056740)
item type: unincorporated community in the United States
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Intersections is an unincorporated community in Page County, in the U.S. state of Virginia.

USGS GNIS ID: 1500388

WHSV-TV (Q55279)
item type: television station
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

WHSV-TV (channel 3) is a television station in Harrisonburg, Virginia, United States, affiliated with ABC. It is owned by Gray Television alongside two low-power stations: Class A dual Fox/CBS affiliate WSVF-CD (channel 43) and dual NBC/CW+ affiliate WSVW-LD (channel 30). The three stations share studios on North Main Street (US 11) in downtown Harrisonburg, and operate a newsroom in Fishersville, serving Staunton, Waynesboro, and Augusta County. WHSV-TV's transmitter is located at Elliott Knob west of Staunton.

website: http://www.whsv.com/, http://whsv.com

River Bluff (Q14713137)
item type: building
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

River Bluff is a historic home located near Wintergreen, Nelson County, Virginia. It is sited on a steep bank overlooking the South Fork of the Rockfish River. It is a three-part Flemish bond brick house consisting of a two-story central pavilion with one-story flanking wings. The main block was constructed about 1785, and the house achieved its final form by about 1805.

NRHP reference number: 80004205

Elk Hill (Q5364020)
item type: plantation
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Elk Hill is a historic house and farm complex located near Nellysford, Nelson County, Virginia. Operated for more than 250 years, it is one of the earliest extant farms in Nelson County. The 173-acre (0.70 km2) rural farm bounded in part by the South Fork of the Rockfish River and Reid's Creek. The main house is a substantial two-story, three-bay wide frame dwelling with a central hall plan, with the original portion built between 1790 and 1810. Since Samuel Reid sold the farm in 1805 to Hawes Coleman (whose descendants owned it until 1977, it is unclear which family constructed the current house, particularly since the property contained the ruins of a smaller structure which was occupied into the 20th century. The house underwent a series of 19th-century additions and a major remodeling in 1902 in the neoclassical style. The property includes structures showing the succession of major crops in the area, from tobacco in the 18th and 19th centuries, to apples in the early 20th centuries. The current owner began a vineyard and winery late in the 20th century, partly on land once operated as High View Farm (ca. 1830s), as well as issued in 2005 a conservation easement to the Virginia Outdoors Foundation to protect its natural habitat and rural character. The contributing outbuildings include: smokehouse, built in the last quarter of the 18th century; tobacco barn, built circa 1790–1810; 19th century chicken house, two seat outhouse, and double crib barn; garages built in 1902 and in 1955; and a stone boundary/retaining wall, built in the last quarter of the 18th century.

NRHP reference number: 07000220

Wintergreen (Q8026460)
item type: census-designated place in the United States
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Wintergreen is a census-designated place (CDP) in Augusta and Nelson counties, Virginia, United States, located near Wintergreen Resort. The population as of the 2010 Census was 165.

USGS GNIS ID: 1488428, 2584937

Beech Grove (Q4879582)
item type: unincorporated community in the United States
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Beech Grove is an unincorporated community in Nelson County, Virginia, United States.

USGS GNIS ID: 1481590

Mt. Torry Furnace (Q14712931)
item type: bloomery
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Mt. Torry Furnace, also known as Virginia Furnace, is a historic iron furnace located at Sherando, Augusta County, Virginia. It was built in 1804, and is a stone square trapezoid measuring 30 feet at the base and 40 feet tall. The original cold-blast charcoal stack was converted for hot blast in 1853. It shut down in 1855, then was reactivated in 1863 to support the Confederate States Army. The furnace was destroyed in June 1864 during the American Civil War by Brigadier General Alfred N. Duffié, then rebuilt in January 1865. It operated until 1884.

NRHP reference number: 74002231

South Rockfish Valley Rural Historic District (Q42377195)
item type: historic district
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

The South Rockfish Valley Rural Historic District encompasses a large rural landscape in northern Nelson County, Virginia. It includes more than 1,600 acres (650 ha) of rolling bottomlands of the South Fork Rockfish River, with Virginia State Route 151 as its principal transportation route. This area has been farmed since the 18th century, and many of its early land use patterns persist to this day.

NRHP reference number: 16000534

Shenandoah Acres (Q7494159)
item type: campground
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Shenandoah Acres is a campground/resort in Stuarts Draft, Virginia. It was previously known as Shenandoah Acres Resort, but after decades of operation, 'The Acres' closed in 2004. Then, following a couple of ownership changes, it reopened in 2014 as Shenandoah Acres Family Campground.

This item might be defunct. The English Wikipedia article is in these categories: 2004 disestablishments in Virginia, Defunct companies based in Virginia
Crabtree Falls (Q38081)
item type: waterfall
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Crabtree Falls is one of the tallest sets of waterfalls in the United States east of the Mississippi River. It is located in the George Washington National Forest in Nelson County, Virginia, off of Virginia State Route 56. The name of the falls is thought to have come from William Crabtree, who settled in this part of Virginia in 1777. L.A. Snead, former US Assistant Fuel Administrator (WWI), environmentalist and notable Nelsonian, spearheaded negotiations to secure land surrounding Crabtree Falls after it was almost developed as a resort area in the late 1960s. Using personal and Congressional funds, the land deals were completed and the deeds transferred by LA Snead on June 3, 1968, to the National Forest System.

2023 Virginia plane crash (Q119104342)
item type: aircraft crash
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

On June 4, 2023, a privately operated Cessna 560 Citation V carrying three passengers and a pilot crashed at approximately 3:23 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time (EDT) in the George Washington National Forest, Virginia, killing the occupants, after the crew had been found unresponsive.: 2  The plane had previously entered the no-fly zone over Washington, D.C., and was intercepted by F-16 fighter jets before it crashed. A preliminary report was released by the National Transportation Safety Board on June 21, 2023, and the investigation into the crash is ongoing as of August 2023.