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Page, West Virginia

Page, West Virginia
Census-designated place (CDP)
Page is located in West Virginia
Page
Page
Page is located in the US
Page
Page
Location within the state of West Virginia
Coordinates: 38°3′10″N 81°16′11″W / 38.05278°N 81.26972°W / 38.05278; -81.26972Coordinates: 38°3′10″N 81°16′11″W / 38.05278°N 81.26972°W / 38.05278; -81.26972
Country United States
State West Virginia
County Fayette
Area
 • Total 0.444 sq mi (1.15 km2)
 • Land 0.438 sq mi (1.13 km2)
 • Water 0.006 sq mi (0.02 km2)
Population (2010)
 • Total 224
 • Density 500/sq mi (190/km2)
Time zone Eastern (EST) (UTC-5)
 • Summer (DST) EDT (UTC-4)

Page is a census-designated place (CDP) and coal town in Fayette County, West Virginia, United States. As of the 2010 census, its population was 224. It was named for William Nelson Page (1854-1932), a civil engineer and industrialist who lived in nearby Ansted, where he managed Gauley Mountain Coal Company and many iron, coal, and railroad enterprises.

Page owned a coal and coking company at Page and was the first president of The Virginian Railway Company (now a part of Norfolk Southern).

In 1896, Page founded the Loup Creek and Deepwater Railway, a logging railroad connecting a sawmill at Robson with the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway (C&O) at Deepwater on the Kanawha River. In 1898, it was rechartered as the Deepwater Railway, with plans to extend to nearby coal mines at Glen Jean. The town of Page became one of the earliest stations on the expanding Deepwater Railway. Around 1903, it also became the location of Page Coal and Coke Company.

In 1902, Page enlisted the support of millionaire industrialist Henry Huttleston Rogers as a silent partner to finance the expansion of the Deepwater Railway much further, about 80 miles through Mullens to reach the Norfolk and Western Railway (N&W) at Matoaka to open up new territory with untapped deposits of high volatile bituminous coal.


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