Waynesboro, Virginia Waynesboro, Virginia Downtown Waynesboro showing Main Street, as well as a scar on the mountain before to being reseeded.

Downtown Waynesboro showing Main Street, as well as a scar on the mountain before to being reseeded.

Location of Waynesboro, Virginia Location of Waynesboro, Virginia Waynesboro (formerly Flack), is an autonomous town/city in the U.S.

The town/city is surrounded by Augusta County and is titled for General Anthony Wayne.

Waynesboro is positioned in the Shenandoah Valley, near many meaningful historical markers of the Civil War and Shenandoah National Park.

A portion of Interstate 64 falls inside the town/city limits of Waynesboro, and the Blue Ridge Parkway, Skyline Drive, and the Appalachian Trail are less than 5 miles (8.0 km) away.

Waynesboro was home to the corporate command posts of n - Telos (a county-wide wireless and telecommunications business serving Virginia, West Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, Kentucky, and Ohio) before that company's consolidation with Shentel.

Waynesboro is a principal town/city of the Staunton-Waynesboro Metropolitan Statistical Area, which contains all of Augusta County and the autonomous metros/cities of Staunton and Waynesboro.

Located in the British Colony of Virginia, even after the American Revolution and independence and statehood for the Commonwealth of Virginia, the areas west of the Appalachian and Blue Ridge Mountains were known as the frontier.

Until after the Civil War, Jarmans Gap, only some six miles northeast of Waynesboro, was the primary crossing of the Blue Ridge Mountains in that area, making Waynesboro a convenient locale for a stop for many who wished to venture west.

Sometime after, it was called Waynesboro.

On January 8, 1801, the town Waynesborough was officially recognized by the state of Virginia, and was incorporated by 1834.

It crossed the Blue Ridge through Jarman's Gap, but a barns tunnel assembled through Rockfish Gap just before the Civil War began to establish Rockfish Gap as the primary crossing through the mountain peaks between Waynesboro and Charlottesville.

On March 2, 1865, Waynesboro was the site of the last battle of the Civil War for the Confederate Lt.

The Battle of Waynesboro lasted only 20 minutes, and was a final blow for the Confederate Army in the Shenandoah Valley.

The Waynesboro Confederate Monument in the center of the cemetery lists and memorializes their names and states.

After the war, the Waynesboro region became the junction of two barns lines.

The lines met near Waynesboro, giving the town the nickname of the "Iron Cross".

In 1890, territory to the east of Waynesboro, mostly on the east side of South River, was plotted and sold.

One meaningful difference between the two was that Waynesboro had been a "dry" region since before the Civil War.

Due to the duplicitous actions of some of Waynesboro's town leaders, namely Guy Branaman, the petition given to the state alluded to the new town as merely Waynesboro. This became official in 1924, to the great outrage of the citizens of Basic City.

Since 1924, Waynesboro has made various territorial acquisitions from areas of Augusta County through annexation and officially became an autonomous town/city in 1948.

In 2005, Waynesboro established a new charter, repealing one in place since 1948.

Waynesboro is positioned at 38 4 11 N 78 53 40 W (38.069874, -78.894517).

According to the United States Enumeration Bureau, the town/city has a total region of 15.2 square miles (39.4 km2), of which 15.0 square miles (38.8 km2) is territory and 0.2 square miles (0.52 km2) (1.0%) is water. In the city, the populace was spread out with 23.3% under the age of 18, 8.2% from 18 to 24, 25.8% from 25 to 44, 25.7% from 45 to 64, and 17.0% who were 65 years of age or older.

The Waynesboro City Public Schools fitness serves the area.

Waynesboro's small-town journal is The News Virginian.

National Register of Historic Places listings in Waynesboro, Virginia United States Enumeration Bureau.

"Waynesboro Downtown Historic District, Virginia Main Street Communities: A National Register of Historic Places Travel Itinerary".

Hawke, George, A History of Waynesboro to 1900, Waynesboro Historical Commission, 1997 Bowman, Curtis, Waynesboro Days of Yore: Volumes I and II, Mc - Clung Companies, Inc, Waynesboro, 1992 Waynesboro town/city government Administrative divisions Climate Colleges and universities Colony Congressional Districts Delegations Environment Furniture Geography Government History Historic Landmarks Law Homes Music People Rights Rivers Scouting Slogan Sports squads State Fair State parks Symbols Tourist attractions Transportation Tribes Allegheny Mountains Atlantic Coastal Plain Blue Ridge Chesapeake Bay Cumberland Mountains Delmarva Peninsula Eastern Shore Hampton Roads Middle Peninsula Northern Neck Northern Virginia Piedmont Ridge-and-Valley Appalachians Shenandoah Valley South Hampton Roads Southside Southwest Virginia Tennessee Valley Tidewater Tri-Cities Virginia Peninsula Accomack Albemarle Alleghany Amelia Amherst Appomattox Arlington Augusta Bath Bedford Bland Botetourt Brunswick Buchanan Buckingham Campbell Caroline Carroll Charles City Charlotte Chesterfield Clarke Craig Culpeper Cumberland Dickenson Dinwiddie Essex Fairfax Fauquier Floyd Fluvanna Franklin Frederick Giles Gloucester Goochland Grayson Greene Greensville Halifax Hanover Henrico Henry Highland Isle of Wight James City King and Queen King George King William Lancaster Lee Loudoun Louisa Lunenburg Madison Mathews Mecklenburg Middlesex Montgomery Nelson New Kent Northampton Northumberland Nottoway Orange Page Patrick Pittsylvania Powhatan Prince Edward Prince George Prince William Pulaski Rappahannock Richmond Roanoke Rockbridge Rockingham Russell Scott Shenandoah Smyth Southampton Spotsylvania Stafford Surry Sussex Tazewell Warren Washington Westmoreland Wise Wythe York Alexandria Bristol Buena Vista Charlottesville Chesapeake Colonial Heights Covington Danville Emporia Fairfax Falls Church Franklin Fredericksburg Galax Hampton Harrisonburg Hopewell Lexington Lynchburg Manassas Manassas Park Martinsville Newport News Norfolk Norton Petersburg Poquoson Portsmouth Radford Richmond Roanoke Salem Staunton Suffolk Virginia Beach Waynesboro Williamsburg Winchester

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