Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Notable buildings include the Waverly Municipal Hall (c. 1880), Atlantic and Danville Railroad Station (c. 1883), Masonic Lodge/Town Hall (c. 1897), Boarding House (c. 1900), Moss Hardware Building (c. 1915), Fleetwood Building (1904), Warner Grammer Store (c. 1904), Wilcox Building (c. 1904), former Waverly Post Office/ Palace Cigar and Pool ...
Waverly has supplied the most state senators and delegate members to the Virginia General Assembly of any Virginia town under 3,000 people. They are Junius Edgar West , Delegate (1910–1912) and Senator (1912–1918); Thomas H. Howerton, Delegate (1912–1914); William O. Rogers, Senator (1924–1934); Garland "Peck" Gray , Senator (1942 ...
A spur of US 60, it enters Sussex County from Disputanta in Prince George County, serves the communities of Waverly and Wakefield before leaving the county at Southampton County northwest of Ivor. SR 31 , a south–north state road that runs northeast from US 460 along East Main Street, then turns north onto Birch Island Road into Surry County ...
ref. # 95000396; there is a side picture of this house but perhaps this front picture of the house will be of some used. the address is 18260 hunting quarter road but there is no umber sign but only a sign for a farm and a dirt road which goe down a long lane
The Miles B. Carpenter House, a two-story frame dwelling built in 1890, is located at the intersection of Hunter Street and U.S. Route 460 in Waverly, Sussex County, Virginia. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places on November 13, 1989. [ 3 ]
The Tsarnaev brothers also shot and killed Massachusetts Institute of Technology Police Officer Sean Collier. Tsarnaev received a death sentence in 2015, which the U.S. Supreme Court reinstated in ...
An engine cowling on a Southwest Airlines Boeing 737-800 fell off on Sunday during takeoff in Denver and struck the wing flap, prompting the Federal Aviation Administration to open an investigation.
Waverly is a historic home and farm located near Burnt Chimney, Franklin County, Virginia.It was built beginning about 1853 for Armistead Lewis Burwell (1809-1883) and his family, who inherited it (or received it as a dowry) from the parents of his wife, Mary Hix (1811-1895).