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Guyandotte, West Virginia


Guyandotte is a historic neighborhood in the city of Huntington, West Virginia, that previously existed as a separate town before annexation was completed by the latter. The neighborhood is home to many historic properties and was first settled by natives of France in the early 17th century. Later, in the 18th century it became a town in the colony of, and later in the Commonwealth of Virginia immediately after statehood. When the state of West Virginia was formed from part of Virginia, it was already an established town. Located at the confluence of the Guyandotte River and the Ohio River, it was already a regional trade center with several industries of its own when the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway (C&O) reached its western terminus nearby there just across the Guyandotte River in 1873. This event was soon followed by the formation and quick development of the present city of Huntington which was named in honor of the C&O Railway's founder and then principal owner Collis P. Huntington.

Although first settled many years before it in 1609, Guyandotte as well as the city of Huntington are both situated on land which was included as part of the 28,628-acre (115.85 km2) French and Indian War veteran's Savage Grant.

Guyandotte is by far the oldest known European settlement in entire surrounding region in which it is located. Before it was annexed by Huntington, it was an old Federal Era town and has homes dating back to 1820. Also, a graveyard containing 18th-century French and Colonial-era settlers with surnames such as LeTulle, Holderby, and Buffington, exists in the neighborhood. Huntington was known as Holderby's Landing prior to 1871, and members of the Buffington family held tracts of land that later became the Huntington Land Company. The Buffingtons were the only revolutionary-era Savage Grant claimants to continuously reside within the area, and later generations of Buffingtons were associated with Marshall College (now a university) and were business partners of Collis P. Huntington. Albert Gallatin Jenkins, a Confederate Army general, had his plantation home, Green Bottom in nearby Lesage, which was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978.


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