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Located at the confluence of the Ohio and Guyandotte Rivers, Guyandotte's first industries were logging and steamboat travel. In 1911, after the Civil War's Battle of Guyandotte resulted in most of the town being burned, Guyandotte's residents officially voted to become a part of the newer and larger city of Huntington. Today, Guyandotte is a historic neighborhood with several antebellum homes and landmarks that still stand proudly. Despite floods that ravaged the area in 1907, 1913, and 1937, the community hosts two major industries--Special Metals Corporation, maker of nickel alloys, and…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Located at the confluence of the Ohio and Guyandotte Rivers, Guyandotte's first industries were logging and steamboat travel. In 1911, after the Civil War's Battle of Guyandotte resulted in most of the town being burned, Guyandotte's residents officially voted to become a part of the newer and larger city of Huntington. Today, Guyandotte is a historic neighborhood with several antebellum homes and landmarks that still stand proudly. Despite floods that ravaged the area in 1907, 1913, and 1937, the community hosts two major industries--Special Metals Corporation, maker of nickel alloys, and Grief Brothers Corporation, a producer of shipping containers. Along with images of the Guyandotte United Methodist Church congregation and the ever-popular Moore's Hardware, which dates from 1947, Guyandotte shares stories of the people and places that have shaped this historic Huntington neighborhood.
Autorenporträt
Bob Withers, 72, has written, co-written, edited or contributed to 27 books, dozens of free-lance magazine articles, and hwidreds of newspaper articles about railroads, steamboats, and historical subjects. His first book, The President Travels by Train, was published in 1996 and he has kept it up to date with a supplement that can be inserted into lhe book. He retired from The Herald-Dispatch on April I, 2007, after a 3 8-year career as a reporter and copy editor. He became a member of Guyandotte Methodist Church when he was l l, and has been a pastor for more than 45 years, 34 of which has been at Seventh Avenue ·aaptist Church in Huntington. He bolds bachelor's and master's degrees iti journalism from Marshall University in Huntington. He is a 58-year charter member of the Collis P. Huntington Railroad Historical Society Inc., and also belongs to the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Historical Society Inc. He worked i:IS a brakeman and f1agn:ian for the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company during his college-era summers, and he is a veteran of the U.S. Anny and the West Virginia Anny National Guard - in which he attained the rank of captain. He has been married to the former Sue Ann Sawidcrs for 47 years. They have three daughters and four grandchildren.