Carlisle

 

Carlisle Company Store
Photo 1994   By Connie Smith Osteen

 

Store Manager  O. W. (Ollie) Dixon & Family 

Photo taken in 1940s - Contributed by Ted Jefferies

   

 

 

Congressional Medal of Honor

STANLEY BENDER

 

Rank and organization: U.S Army Staff Sergeant,  Company E, 7th Infantry, 3d Infantry Division.

Place and date: Near La Lande, France
August 17, 1944

Born: 31 October 1909, Carlisle, West Virginia.
G.O. No.:
7, 1 February 1945.

 

S/Sgt. Bender climbed on top of a knocked-out tank, in the face of withering machinegun fire which had halted the advance of his company, in an effort to locate the source of this fire. Although bullets ricocheted off the turret at his feet, he nevertheless remained standing upright in full view of the enemy for over two minutes.

Locating the enemy machineguns on a knoll 200 yards away, he ordered two squads to cover him and led his men down an irrigation ditch, running a gauntlet of intense machinegun fire, which completely blanketed 50 yards of his advance and wounded four of his men. While the Germans hurled hand grenades at the ditch, he stood his ground until his squad caught up with him, then advanced alone, in a wide flanking approach, to the rear of the knoll. He walked deliberately a distance of 40 yards, without cover, in full view of the Germans and under a hail of both enemy and friendly fire, to the first machinegun and knocked it out with a single short burst.

Then he made his way through the strong point, despite bursting hand grenades, toward the second machinegun, 25 yards distant, whose two-man crew swung the machinegun around and fired two bursts at him, but he walked calmly through the fire and, reaching the edge of the emplacement, dispatched the crew.

Signaling his men to rush the rifle pits, he then walked 35 yards further to kill an enemy rifleman and returned to lead his squad in the destruction of the eight remaining Germans in the strong point. His audacity so inspired the remainder of the assault company that the men charged out of their positions, shouting and yelling, to overpower the enemy roadblock and sweep into town, knocking out two antitank guns, killing 37 Germans and capturing 26 others. He had sparked and led the assault company in an attack which overwhelmed the enemy, destroying a roadblock, taking a town, seizing intact three bridges over the Maravenne River, and capturing commanding terrain which dominated the area.

 NORFOLK SOUTHERN Railroad - To abandon a 2.8-mile line of railroad between milepost OH-0.0 at Oak Hill and milepost OH-2.8 at Carlisle, in Fayette County, WV. Effective on January 31, 2002. (STB Docket No. AB-290 (Sub-No. 232X, decided December 18, served December 31, 2001)

 

Wingrove Hill

 


Wingrove Hill was named for John Wingrove, the first known pioneer in this area.  He settled a tract of land high on a hill immediately back of  the Wingrove shaft mine.  He built his log cabin and settled down to hunting, fishing, and stock raising.  About 1892, farmers of this section sold their mineral rights to the White Oak Fuel Company.  John Wingrove's son, John, became a medical doctor.  He was murdered in his home approximately 1 l/2 miles from here about 1961. [Webmaster's Note: John Wingrove's grandson Archer A Wingrove was a medical doctor, not John's son John Wingrove Jr.]

Courtesy Ellen Strader

For some great pictures of Carlisle & Whipple .......... click on the link below.

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http://www.coalcampusa.com/sowv/river/carlisle/carlisle.htm

 
 
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