The History Project
Wallis Simpson and Meghan Markle are famous for their marriages into European royalty, but before them West Virginian Katherine Elkins found herself at the center of a romance with an Italian duke that captured the world’s attention.
info_outline The History Project: The Trans-Allegheny Lunatic AsylumThe History Project
The facility’s very name informs us that the hospital was both built in antebellum Virginia and in an era when views about mental health were much less sophisticated. But there’s even more to the story than meets the eye in this landmark structure and its long history.
info_outline The History Project: A Clash in the Wilderness – The Battle of Point Pleasant, Part 2The History Project
Lord Dunmore’s war comes to a violent conclusion as Colonel Lewis & The Virginia Militia clashes with Chief Cornstalk and his Shawnee warriors in Pt. Pleasant, which would increase hostility between settlers and settlers, and severe American loyalty to England.
info_outline The History Project: A Prelude to War – The Battle of Point Pleasant, Part 1The History Project
Colonial America was a cauldron of imperialism and territorial disputes, which set in motion Lord Dunmore’s War, one of the continent’s most significant skirmishes which would help to launch the American Revolution.
info_outline The History Project: The Alderson Federal Women’s PrisonThe History Project
It is said that “Well-behaved women seldom make history,” and when Martha Stewart was sentenced to serve five months in FPC, Alderson, the world learned more about American history-makers both well-regarded or social pariahs.
info_outline The History Project: The Four Points of West VirginiaThe History Project
With two jutting panhandles and western and southern extremes, West Virginia’s unusual shape gives it four points like a compass rose, placing the Mountain State into the cross section of the Eastern United States.
info_outline The History Project: The River IndustryThe History Project
West Virginia is the watershed of some of the nation’s most storied rivers, some scenic and others industrial, they first used for exploration but later used for commercial development, as they are still used today.
info_outline The History Project: Hank Williams & The Lost HighwayThe History Project
In December 1952, country music legend Hank Williams released his last song, “I’ll Never Make it Out of this World Alive.” A few weeks later, on New Year’s Day, he was found dead in the backseat of his car in Oak Hill, West Virginia, with an unfinished song in his hand.
info_outline The History Project: The Western Theater The Revolutionary War in West Virginia, Part 2The History Project
While the American Revolution battles in the coastal states were fought between America’s Continental Army and England’s Redcoats, the battles of the interior became extensions of skirmishes with Native Americans, spurred by the British that outlasted the Revolution itself.
info_outline The History Project: The 8th Virginia Regiment The Revolutionary War in West Virginia, Part 2The History Project
After his great success recruiting from the Shenandoah Valley, George Washington reached further into Western Virginia to draw its riflemen to serve in the American Revolution, whom he turned into a vast arm of the Continental Army. The 8th Virginia Regiment for alongside Washington in battle and suffered the winter with him in Valley Forge.
info_outlineWallis Simpson and Meghan Markle are famous for their marriages into European royalty, but before them West Virginian Katherine Elkins found herself at the center of a romance with an Italian duke that captured the world’s attention.