A Peerless Beers Panhandle Map


We are head over heels in love with this West Virginia Panhandle map!

Names. History. Quirkiness. This is a map full of eye-catching detail. 
 
Many of the homesteads have names. We don't know whether the many "sightly home" listings are the result of the homeowners' ego or the consensus of their neighbors. 
Lutes's sightly home is west of Rosbby's Rock -- a little more enticing than "Bear Wallow Farm" northeast of his home.

 
Hervey also had a sightly home.
 
 
And J.E. Dowler had a sightly home as well:

 
That's all we came across as we created town maps from the larger Panhandle map, but you could well find even more if you were to study the whole map.
 
Speaking of stumbling across interesting map notations, we also came across not one, but two "killed accidentally" sites.
 
John Rosenberger was accidentally killed in 1856. 

 
And William Butler was accidentally killed in 1855.

 
We did notice that both deaths were in a relatively small geographic area, so perhaps their deaths were the result of steep and rough roads in that area. Or if you enjoy mystery novels, perhaps you think something more nefarious was going on...?

 
There is a good chance that you could find other instances where the location of a death has been noted on the map.

In case sightly homes and accidental deaths aren't enough to catch your interest, how would you have liked to go to school in the Rough & Ready School District in the town of Liberty?

No foot-dragging on a Monday morning for those lucky kids! We do wonder how the teachers fared, though.


 The Map of the "Panhandle" offers: 

19 towns

26 villages, including a knockout of a map of Wheeling

Extensive business directories

Census data from 1870

All with incredible detail and all available at www.old-maps.com.



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