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The Logan County Courthouse is a historic Second Empire building located on the southeastern corner of Main Street and Columbus Avenue in downtown Bellefontaine, Ohio, United States. [3] Built in 1870 at a cost of $105,398.08, the courthouse was constructed primarily of locally mined sandstone, [4] and it is covered with a mansard roof. [5]
This list of museums in West Virginia encompasses museums defined for this context as institutions (including nonprofit organizations, government entities, and private businesses) that collect and care for objects of cultural, artistic, scientific, or historical interest and make their collections or related exhibits available for public viewing.
Logan: Delisted December 30, 2009; reinstated June 27, 2018 [5] 2: Chafin House: Chafin House: March 28, 1994 : 581 Main St. Logan: 3: Chesapeake and Ohio 2755 Steam Locomotive: Chesapeake and Ohio 2755 Steam Locomotive
Mid-Ohio Valley 44 Roane: 6 Mid-Ohio Valley 45 Summers: 8 New River/Greenbrier Valley 46 Taylor: 6 Mountaineer Country 47 Tucker: 11 Potomac Highlands 48 Tyler: 10 Northern Panhandle 49 Upshur: 7 Mountain Lakes 50 Wayne: 9 Metro Valley 51 Webster: 7 Mountain Lakes 52 Wetzel: 4 Northern Panhandle 53 Wirt: 6 Mid-Ohio Valley 54 Wood: 48 Mid-Ohio ...
Logan County is a county in the west central portion of the U.S. state of Ohio.As of the 2020 census, the population was 46,150. [2] The county seat is Bellefontaine. [3] The county is named for Benjamin Logan, who fought Native Americans in the area. [4]
The Monongalia Arts Center, or MAC, is located in Morgantown, West Virginia near the campus of West Virginia University. The MAC opened to the public in 1978 as a non-profit arts and culture center, which it remains today. The MAC's mission is "to provide a home for the arts where the work of visual and performing artists is showcased and ...
Roughly bounded by the Kanawha River, Bradford, Quarrier, and Greenbriar Sts., Charleston, West Virginia Coordinates 38°20′16″N 81°36′53″W / 38.33778°N 81.61472°W / 38.33778; -81
History [ edit ] Colonel Moses Shepherd (1763–1832), son of David Shepherd and Rachel (née Teague) Shepherd and first husband of Lydia (née Boggs) Shepherd Cruger (1766–1867), moved to Wheeling with his parents and siblings from Shepherdstown, West Virginia about 1771 and built his prominent home, Shepherd Hall , in 1798.