Wyoming County, with its rugged terrain bisected by the Guyandotte River, is located in the heart of West Virginia’s southern coal and natural gas producing region.
Pineville became county seat in 1907. Pineville is home to Castle Rock, a towering sandstone formation for which Rockcastle Creek is named.
A methane gas explosion November 6, 1923, inside the ill-fated Glen Rogers coal mine killed 27 men, the worst accident of any kind in Wyoming County history.
Oceana, established in 1797 by early settler and Revolutionary War veteran John Cooke, was the first seat of government in Wyoming County.
The company town of Itmann was built in 1916. The huge Pocahontas Fuel Company store at Itmann displays perhaps West Virginia’s most spectacular surviving coalfields architecture.
Mullens is the county’s most populated town.
Twin Falls Resort State Park is named for the two waterfalls, Foley Falls and Black Fork Falls, located in the park and within a quarter mile of each other.
The Guyandotte River is formed by the junction of Winding Gulf and Stonecoal creeks in Raleigh County and flows in a northwesterly direction to its confluence with the Ohio River at Huntington.
R.D. Bailey Lake provides flood protection for the lower Guyandotte River basin, including the city of Huntington. The dam was the first rock-fill dam developed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers with a concrete face, a complex and difficult job.
Southern West Virginia Community and Technical College has a campus in Saulsville.