West Virginia
Counties with the most farmland in West Virginia
WEST VIRGINIA – Farmland across the U.S. is disappearing by the millions of acres each decade by some estimates as sprawling urban development driven by rising housing costs pushes further into rural pastures.
The farmland that still exists in the U.S. is heavily dedicated to growing plants that Americans can’t consume—grass.
That grass, accounting for more than 300 million acres now, feeds our livestock, provides sod for new development, and serves as a cover crop to protect soil health between harvests.
Demand for major crops like corn and soybeans to feed Americans is only forecast by the USDA to grow in the coming decade, and demand for U.S. agricultural exports is expected to grow similarly.
To illustrate where American farms still persevere, Stacker compiled a list of counties with the most farmland in West Virginia using data from the Agriculture Department’s Farm Service Agency.
Farmers reported the data as mandated by participation in USDA income support programs, including Agriculture Risk Coverage and Price Loss Coverage as well as loan assistance. Counties are ranked by total acres of farmland.
In West Virginia, there are 533,370 acres of farmland, with native grass being the most common crop.
#25. Marion
– Farmland: 7,108 acres (1.3% of state total)
– Farms: 206
– Most common crop: Native grass (4,041 acres, 56.8% of county farmland)
#24. Raleigh
– Farmland: 7,332 acres (1.4% of state total)
– Farms: 274
– Most common crop: Legume/grass mixture mixed forage (3,085 acres, 42.1% of county farmland)
#23. Taylor
– Farmland: 7,728 acres (1.4% of state total)
– Farms: 154
– Most common crop: Native grass (4,810 acres, 62.2% of county farmland)
#22. Marshall
– Farmland: 8,390 acres (1.6% of state total)
– Farms: 216
– Most common crop: 2+ interseeded grass mix mixed forage (5,211 acres, 62.1% of county farmland)
#21. Lincoln
– Farmland: 8,611 acres (1.6% of state total)
– Farms: 214
– Most common crop: Legume/grass mixture mixed forage (6,852 acres, 79.6% of county farmland)
#20. Monongalia
– Farmland: 9,057 acres (1.7% of state total)
– Farms: 190
– Most common crop: Native grass (5,421 acres, 59.9% of county farmland)
#19. Nicholas
– Farmland: 9,259 acres (1.7% of state total)
– Farms: 244
– Most common crop: Legume/grass mixture mixed forage (4,669 acres, 50.4% of county farmland)
#18. Braxton
– Farmland: 9,999 acres (1.9% of state total)
– Farms: 207
– Most common crop: Legume/grass mixture mixed forage (5,032 acres, 50.3% of county farmland)
#17. Summers
– Farmland: 10,606 acres (2.0% of state total)
– Farms: 269
– Most common crop: Native grass interseeded mixed forage (4,745 acres, 44.7% of county farmland)
#16. Grant
– Farmland: 11,405 acres (2.1% of state total)
– Farms: 139
– Most common crop: 2+ interseeded grass mix mixed forage (5,479 acres, 48.0% of county farmland)
#15. Putnam
– Farmland: 12,248 acres (2.3% of state total)
– Farms: 324
– Most common crop: Legume/grass mixture mixed forage (7,595 acres, 62.0% of county farmland)
#14. Roane
– Farmland: 13,299 acres (2.5% of state total)
– Farms: 286
– Most common crop: Legume/grass mixture mixed forage (5,857 acres, 44.0% of county farmland)
#13. Randolph
– Farmland: 14,515 acres (2.7% of state total)
– Farms: 257
– Most common crop: Native grass interseeded mixed forage (8,068 acres, 55.6% of county farmland)
#12. Hampshire
– Farmland: 18,729 acres (3.5% of state total)
– Farms: 523
– Most common crop: Native grass interseeded mixed forage (8,888 acres, 47.5% of county farmland)
#11. Harrison
– Farmland: 19,823 acres (3.7% of state total)
– Farms: 248
– Most common crop: Native grass (16,328 acres, 82.4% of county farmland)
#10. Jackson
– Farmland: 20,071 acres (3.8% of state total)
– Farms: 499
– Most common crop: Native grass (4,672 acres, 23.3% of county farmland)
#9. Preston
– Farmland: 20,847 acres (3.9% of state total)
– Farms: 563
– Most common crop: Native grass interseeded mixed forage (6,654 acres, 31.9% of county farmland)
#8. Monroe
– Farmland: 21,626 acres (4.1% of state total)
– Farms: 660
– Most common crop: 2+ interseeded grass mix mixed forage (11,446 acres, 52.9% of county farmland)
#7. Hardy
– Farmland: 23,412 acres (4.4% of state total)
– Farms: 577
– Most common crop: Native grass (11,451 acres, 48.9% of county farmland)
#6. Berkeley
– Farmland: 25,668 acres (4.8% of state total)
– Farms: 372
– Most common crop: 2+ interseeded grass mix mixed forage (8,508 acres, 33.1% of county farmland)
#5. Mason
– Farmland: 28,410 acres (5.3% of state total)
– Farms: 367
– Most common crop: Common soybeans (8,164 acres, 28.7% of county farmland)
#4. Greenbrier
– Farmland: 28,702 acres (5.4% of state total)
– Farms: 892
– Most common crop: 2+ interseeded grass mix mixed forage (9,709 acres, 33.8% of county farmland)
#3. Pocahontas
– Farmland: 30,772 acres (5.8% of state total)
– Farms: 538
– Most common crop: Native grass (10,699 acres, 34.8% of county farmland)
#2. Pendleton
– Farmland: 45,296 acres (8.5% of state total)
– Farms: 575
– Most common crop: Native grass (31,795 acres, 70.2% of county farmland)
#1. Jefferson
– Farmland: 46,055 acres (8.6% of state total)
– Farms: 342
– Most common crop: Common soybeans (12,881 acres, 28.0% of county farmland)
West Virginia
West Virginia Celtic Festival draws thousands to Randolph County
BEVERLY, W.Va (WDTV) – The West Virginia Celtic Festival took place Saturday at Camp Pioneer in Randolph County.
People from around the country came to celebrate their Scottish and Irish heritage at the fourth annual event.
The festival included Irish dancing, Highland games and live Celtic music. Participants set up tents around the park for the public. Artifacts from Celtic heritage and history were on display.
The event was expected to reach up to 5,000 attendants.
“Today we’re hosting the fourth annual West Virginia Wild and Wonderful Celtic Festival and Highland Games. It’s a celebration of Celtic culture and heritage and history,” said David Ferguson, a participant. “We have Highland Games, heavy athletics. We have the athletes throwing the cabers, throwing the heavy stones. A lot of fun athletics to watch. We have Highland dancers. We have musical entertainment. We have something for everybody. We have a lot of fun activities for the kids.”
A Kirkin’ o’ the Tartan service will take place Sunday at the Beverly Presbyterian Church.
Copyright 2026 WDTV. All rights reserved.
West Virginia
Notebook: MCWS as good as advertised; West Virginia no overnight success story – WV MetroNews
Ahead of a June 10th trip to Omaha, I’d only heard positive reviews of the Men’s College World Series and the city that hosts it.
After an eight-night stay in Nebraska’s biggest city, it’s easy to see why.
The event at Charles Schwab Field was well-run and organized starting with Thursday practice for each of the eight participants.
The ballpark, which opened in 2011, is a state of the art, clean venue with a wide variety of concession offerings and a spacious press box that easily accommodated media members while all eight teams played two games over the first four days.
Crowds were strong and made their presence felt, particularly over the first several days.
There are fan-friendly activities just outside the stadium and no shortage of restaurants and bars within walking distance to partake in pregame or postgame festivities.
Perhaps Troy coach Skylar Meade summed it up best after the Trojans were eliminated Tuesday with a 12-0 loss to West Virginia that marked their second setback to the Mountaineers over a 96-hour stretch.
“Every person who came here now knows what this place is,” Meade said. “It’s the most unique place in the world. It’s the best college sporting event bar none. No offense to the others. Rose Bowl is awesome. It ain’t this.”
— — — — —
This was the third straight year I was present for West Virginia’s last game of the season after being on hand for the 2024 Super Regional series at North Carolina and again last year at LSU on the same stage.
Taking in the atmosphere in 2025 at Alex Box Stadium, when the Mountaineers played in front of consecutive crowds of 12,000-plus, provided a look at college baseball I’d never experienced and a newfound appreciation of the sport.
The MCWS took it a step further and continued the ascension of a Mountaineer program that gained national notoriety while hosting the Morgantown Regional and a Super Regional series against Cal Poly.
Envisioning WVU playing on the premier stage in college baseball was unfathomable a decade ago and even highly unlikely as recently as five years back.
But let’s not forget this is a program with four consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances and one of only two (North Carolina the other) to reach the Super Regional round each of the last three years.
What transpired this season as the Mountaineers set a new single-season program mark with 47 victories is a culmination of a lot of hard work from a lot of people within the program and athletic department alike, but it cannot be considered an overnight success story.
While West Virginia was swept in best-of-three sets in Chapel Hill and Baton Rouge, it’s important to remember those were 36 and 44-win teams that won regionals outside of Morgantown — feats fans should appreciate even more after witnessing the postseason atmosphere at Kendrick Family Ballpark.
WVU hadn’t won in the Super Regional round prior to this season, but two years ago, it had a ninth-inning lead against the Tar Heels in Game 1 and lost Game 2 by one run. Last season, the Mountaineers were eliminated by the eventual national champion.
“There are financial realities of the sport, and people may have assumptions about specific programs or about West Virginia in general that may or may not be correct,” WVU coach Steve Sabins said. “We have a whole lot of people working really hard on a whole lot of different areas, whether that’s Gold & Blue Enterprises, whether that’s BioPrecision with us, whether that’s the School of Sports Science or Biomechanics and Performance Center, whether that’s third-party NIL, specific donors, West Virginia has all of that.
“And it’s competing at the highest levels in all these areas, and I think it would probably surprise a lot of folks of the amount of effort, work, attention to detail and financial resources that have been poured into our program.”
— — — — —
A tip of the cap to West Virginia senior outfielder Brock Wills.
The UNC Wilmington transfer was a mainstay in the Mountaineer lineup throughout the regular season and Big 12 Conference Tournament when he appeared in 50 of 53 games with 45 starts.
When the NCAA Tournament rolled around, Sabins opted to start fellow senior Ben Lumsden in place of Wills.
The decision proved difficult to debate as Lumsden came up with numerous hits in key spots and finished 12-for-37 with three home runs, two doubles, 13 RBI and 11 base-on-balls over 11 games.
Wills, meanwhile, came off the bench to play in three NCAA Tournament games, one of which was Wednesday’s 12-7 season-ending loss to North Carolina when he came on as a right fielder to start the fifth inning.
Wills had three plate appearances against the Tar Heels, the first of which was a well-struck, but tough-luck double play on a liner to second base with the bases loaded in the sixth. He followed it with a walk in the seventh and a single in the ninth.
“So awesome. That kid has been such an instrumental piece of this team,” Sabins said. “In high-level competition, things don’t always go your way. There’s only nine dudes that get to play, and so coaches have to make hard decisions, and that happens every single year. And some years it’s a bigger storyline and some years it’s not, and some guys play good and some guys don’t. And there’s always some mix of that.
“But when things don’t go your way, it’s very easy to cash out. And so when you see a kid that has been so team-oriented and then to get inserted into the biggest game of his career and perform, it just shows you everything that you need to know about character. Because if you cash out, you don’t roll into the highest competition in the world and have success.
“Whether he had success or not, I knew his character. I knew that he was still working, and I knew he was team-oriented, and I knew he was fighting like hell to be great for the Mountaineers, and that’s why he got his opportunity. That’s why it came back around to him.”
For the season, Wills hit .283 (47-for-166) with two home runs, six doubles, three triples and 23 RBI.
West Virginia
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