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Grant County, West Virginia, USA

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Profiles

  • Ann Zyna Alt (1892 - 1927)
    Children: Lenzy C. Kimble 1911–1987 Maysell Janet Alt Borror 1916–1989 Glavis Alt 1920–1987 Curtis Lane Alt 1922–1993 Ann Zyna Stump Alt BIRTH 26 Feb 1892 Grant County, West Virginia, USA DEATH...
  • Susan Mahala Stump (1855 - 1941)
    Susan Mahala Yokum Stump BIRTH 7 May 1855 Grant County, West Virginia, USA DEATH 20 Jan 1941 (aged 85) Pansy, Grant County, West Virginia, USA BURIAL Stump Cemetery Landes, Grant County, West Virginia
  • Maysell Janet Borror (1916 - 1989)
    Maysell Janet Alt Borror BIRTH 30 Sep 1916 Landes, Grant County, West Virginia, USA DEATH 1 Aug 1989 (aged 72) Cumberland, Allegany County, Maryland, USA BURIAL Virgil Borror Cemetery Grant County,...
  • Ida Susan Alt (1880 - 1936)
  • Jacob Paul Getz (1860 - 1939)
    Jacob Getz BIRTH 18 Dec 1860 DEATH 21 Dec 1939 (aged 79) BURIAL Judy & Sites Cemetery Pansy, Grant County, West Virginia, USA 1st Wife: Persena Greenawalt Getz 1855–1896 2nd Wife: Ida Susan Shr...

This project is a table of contents for all projects relating to this County of West Virginia. Please feel free to add profiles of anyone who was born, lived or died in this county.

The territory that became Grant County in 1866 was originally part of Hampshire County, the oldest county formed within the present boundaries of West Virginia, in 1754. In 1786, Hardy County was formed from the southern portion of Hampshire County. The county's boundaries were relatively stable from 1788 until 1866, when Grant County was formed from the western portion of Hardy. The first counties formed in the state following the admission of West Virginia to the Union were Grant and Mineral in 1866, the latter formed from the western portion of Hampshire County, and thus adjoining Grant. They were the fifty-first and fifty-second counties in West Virginia, and only Lincoln, Summers, and Mingo were created after them.

Beginning in 1863, West Virginia's counties were divided into civil townships, with the intention of encouraging local government. This proved impractical in the heavily rural state, and in 1872 the townships were converted into magisterial districts. Between its establishment and 1870, Grant County was divided into three townships: Grant, Milroy, and Union, which became magisterial districts in 1872.

Most of the 47 people killed in the 1985 Election day floods were in Pendleton and Grant counties, according to the National Weather Service.[6] At Franklin, the Pendleton County seat, the South Branch of the Potomac River crested at 22.6 feet during the incident. Flood stage in the shallow riverbed was only 7 feet.

Cemeteries

Cemeteries of West Virginia

Links

Wikipedia