#1.
HC 64, Box 189, Hillsboro, West Virginia
The Union Army was victorious here at the site of an 1863 Civil War battle. Droop Mountain Battlefield Stat... More on Heritage
Droop Mountain was one of the largest engagements of the Civil War in West Virginia and the state has prese... More on TripAdvisor

#2.
Route 219, Hillsboro, WV 24946
Inscription. Pearl Sydenstricker Buck, author of 85 books, one of them "The Good Earth, " for which she was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Literature (1932), was born here at Stulting Place, June 2... More on HMDB
Born on this farm in 1892, Pearl S. Buck grew up to become the first American woman to receive both the Nobel and the Pullitzer Prize for Literature. This house was built by the Stulting family who... More on Heritage

#3.
PO Box 110, Hillsboro, WV 24946
Inscription. The Cranberry Glades are the naturalist's paradise. In a great natural bowl in nearby mountain... More on HMDB
Nothing to dislike about WV unless you like crowds, condos and fun parks. More on Yahoo! Travel

#4.
Hillsboro, WV
'Calvin Price State Forest' is a state forest in eastern Pocahontas and Greenbrier counties, West Virginia. The forest is the newest in West Virginia's system, having been mostly purchased in 1953 from New River Lumber Company. ... More on Wikipedia

#5.
Hillsboro WV 24946, United States of America
Inscription. Nearly five months after West Virginia was admitted into the Union, the Confederate army of Brigadier General John Echols still occupied the prosperous Greenbrier Valley region of the ... More on HMDB
Inscription. Nearly five months after West Virginia was admitted into the Union, the Confederate army of Brigadier General John Echols still occupied the prosperous Greenbrier Valley region of the ... More on HMDB

#6.
Hillsboro WV 24946, United States of America
Inscription. Killed here while waving the Confederate battle flag in a last, vain attempt to rally his men. , Location. 38° 6.555′ N, 80° 16.136′ W. Marker is near Hillsboro, West Virginia, in Pocahontas County. ... More on HMDB

#7.
Hillsboro WV 24946, United States of America
Inscription. John D. Sutton, 10th West Virginia Infantry, wrote, "The army went into camp in the levels between Mill Point and Hillsboro." These fields were later owned by 2nd Lt. Matthew John McNeel, Company F, 19th Virginia Cavalry, ... More on HMDB

#8.
Hillsboro WV 24946, United States of America
Inscription. With help from the Federal artillery, the 8th WV attacked the Confederate center by climbing up the cleared face of this ridge. There they were joined by the 2nd WV, overran the the breastworks and forced the defending ... More on HMDB

#9.
Hillsboro WV 24946, United States of America
Inscription. Originally placed behind a hill to the rear, the 22nd Va. was moved here, in front of the Confederate artillery, where they overlooked the highway. Companies A, E, and I were later detached and sent to reinforce Col. ... More on HMDB

#10.
Hillsboro WV 24946, United States of America
Inscription. William L. "Mudwall" Jackson and the main body of the 19th Virginia Cavalry were in camp near Mill Point on November 3, 1863, when they received a message from Lt. George W. Siple, a Pocahontas County native in Capt. ... More on HMDB
