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Greenbrier Valley Airport covers 472 acres (191 ha) at an elevation of 2,302 feet (702 m). Its one runway, 4/22, is 7,003 by 150 feet (2,135 x 46 m) asphalt. [1]In the year ending December 31, 2019, the airport had 7,765 aircraft operations, average 21 per day: 56% general aviation, 25% air taxi, 18% airline, and 2% military. 18 aircraft were then based at this airport: 15 single-engine, 2 ...
Commercial service – primary airports: Charleston: CRW CRW KCRW Yeager Airport: P-N 164,240 Clarksburg: CKB CKB KCKB North Central West Virginia Airport (was Harrison-Marion Regional) P-N 46,508 Huntington: HTS HTS KHTS Tri-State Airport (Milton J. Ferguson Field) P-N 91,091 Lewisburg: LWB LWB KLWB Greenbrier Valley Airport: P-N 10,048
Maxwelton is an unincorporated community in Greenbrier County, West Virginia, United States. Maxwelton is located on U.S. Route 219, 5 miles (8.0 km) north-northeast of Lewisburg. Maxwelton has a post office with ZIP code 24957. [2] A former variant name was Hattie. [3] The Greenbrier Valley Airport is located in Maxwelton.
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View east along WV 3 just east of US 119 in Boone County WV 3 crosses the New River at Bellepoint. West Virginia Route 3 is a state highway in the U.S. state of West Virginia. It runs from West Virginia Route 10 in West Hamlin in a general easterly direction via Beckley to West Virginia Route 311 at Sweet Springs, most of the way across the state.
Eastern West Virginia Regional Airport has had airline service through the years into the early 1970s, including Allegheny, Lake Central, and Cumberland Airlines. The last Lake Central timetable before merging with Allegheny in 1968 showed three flights a day, with one to Elkins, WV, and two to Baltimore, using Nord 262 prop jets.
While West Virginia was once crisscrossed with commercial and passenger railroad networks, the decline of the coal and timber industries, coupled with the rise of the automobile, led to a sharp drop in track mileage in the state. Many of the former railroad grades are used as trails for hiking and biking throughout the state's numerous woodlands.