Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Christiansburg is one of two incorporated towns within Montgomery County and is a member of the New River Valley Planning District. This District encompasses Floyd, Giles, Montgomery and Pulaski Counties, as well as the City of Radford. Montgomery County has the largest and most rapidly growing population within the Planning District.
On June 29, 2015, the Huckleberry Trail's Renva Knowles Bridge opened, crossing over Peppers Ferry Road near the New River Valley Mall, and the path was extended south to Cambria Street in Christiansburg, with a spur connecting the Huckleberry Trail to the Christiansburg Recreation Center via Cambria Street and North Franklin Street. [10]
South of the junction of VA 637 and 603 over North Fork of Roanoke River: Ironto: Bridge removed in 1995 2: Harrison-Hancock Hardware Company Building: November 13, 1989 (#89001877) March 19, 2001: 24 E. Main St: Christiansburg: Demolished in 1995 3: Montgomery White Sulphur Springs Cottage: November 13, 1989 (#89001884) March 19, 2001
Montgomery County is a county located in the Valley and Ridge area of the U.S. state of Virginia. As population in the area increased, Montgomery County was formed in 1777 from Fincastle County, which in turn had been taken from Botetourt County. As of the 2020 United States census, the population was 99,721. [1]
Christiansburg, a town which lies between Blacksburg and Radford, is the Montgomery County county seat and home to a branch of the New River Community College as well as hundreds of stores and restaurants and a historic downtown.
The facility will open on Friday, November 1 at 7 a.m. at the LewisGale Hospital Montgomery Christiansburg ER located at 1205 West Main Street in Christiansburg. “As the greater New River […]
Yellow Sulphur Springs is a historic resort complex located near Christiansburg, Montgomery County, Virginia.The complex includes the main building; proprietor's cottage (1870s); three rows of cottages formerly denominated the Petersburg, Memphis, and Spring Hill rows; a carriage house(no longer standing); and the site of a man-made lake and 19th century bowling alley (in ruins).
It is part of the Blacksburg-Christiansburg Metropolitan Statistical Area which encompasses all of Montgomery County, Virginia and the Virginia cities of Blacksburg, Christiansburg, and Radford for statistical purposes. [2] [3] [4] A post office was established at Cambria in 1890, and remained in operation until it was discontinued in 1965. [5]