After much debate and multiple farmers sharing their opinion on the subject, the Grant County Commission voted last week to extend farmer contracts on the land at the Grant County Airport and Grant County Dog Pound from one year to two years. The two pieces of land in question are owned by the county but contracted out to local farmers through a bidding process each year. These farmers then harvest the hay from the land for their own usage. The conversation came from a request surrounded the soil quality of the land, with a farmer saying it would be more productive and healthful for the land if it was fertilized.

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After years of delays, Lawrence “Grasshopper” Puffenbarger’s trial started in Hampshire County Circuit Court on Monday, February 23.

The delays resulted mainly from scheduling confl icts, pretrial legal motions and personnel changes, including the appointment of a new prosecutor.

The trial was moved from Pendleton County to Hampshire County to ensure fairness, given local publicity and concerns about impartial jurors.

Day One of Trial

Puffenbarger was being charged with three counts of First Degree Sexual Abuse. West Virginia State Code §61- 8B-7 defi first-degree sexual abuse as subjecting another person to sexual contact without their consent, when the victim is younger than twelve years old, or when the defendant is in a position of trust, authority, or supervision over a child. This charge refl ects the seriousness of the alleged offenses and the legal standards involved.

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We Salute Our Student Athletes! 
 
Our Spring Sports Preview is coming soon, and we’re giving Petersburg High School and Union High School parents, grandparents, and families the chance to send a special well wish to their favorite athlete or team! This tab will be a one-stop reference for all things Spring Sports.
 
For just $15, you can include:
• 5 lines of personalized text
• A keepsake your athlete will treasure
 
(Text only — no photos)
Spots are filling quickly! Deadline to reserve your spot is March 3.
 
Call the Grant County Press office to place your message
Or email Tiffany at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
 
Let’s pack this page with love and support for our Vikings and Tigers!

 

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Every now and then, a night in high school basketball becomes something more than just a win or a loss. Sometimes it becomes a piece of history.
That may be what happened on March 2, 2026, when Petersburg senior Kaleb Kuhn poured in 49 points at Pendleton County. The scoring performance appears to surpass, based on available records, the highest documented single-game total in Petersburg High School basketball history.
Following Kuhn’s performance, the Grant County Press began researching the program’s historical scoring marks. Petersburg athletic officials said they could not confirm or deny the record. The school does not maintain a complete archive of single-game scoring performances.
Meanwhile, the family of former Petersburg standout Carroll Michael had long known about the mark tied to his name. Over the years, they had heard of big scoring nights that came close — but none that appeared to surpass it.
That changed with Kuhn’s standout performance.
With no official record, we shifted research focus to our newspaper archives.
Bound volumes of the Grant County Press and historical materials from the early 1950s were pulled from the shelves. Yearbooks from the Michael family accompanied them. The 1951 Petro-Schola yearbook contained a passage documenting Viking basketball history.
The entry noted that Carroll Michael scored 45 points in a game, describing the performance at the time as a Potomac Valley Conference individual scoring record. For more than seven decades, that performance appears to have stood as the highest-scoring night in Petersburg basketball.
Kuhn’s 49-point performance at Pendleton County surpasses the 45-point mark noted in the yearbook. Incomplete historical records mean earlier feats cannot be ruled out entirely. However, research conducted by the Grant County Pressfound no documented performance exceeding Michael’s total.
Michael was a standout player for Petersburg in the early 1950s, starting on the varsity team as a freshman under coach Walt Owens. He earned Potomac Valley Conference all-conference honors in each of his four seasons.
In the early 1950s, basketball was played before three-point lines and digital scoreboards. Michael’s 45-point performance came at a time when every basket was worth two points and offensive explosions were rare. This made the feat all the more remarkable.
After graduating, Michael attended Shepherd College, earning a Bachelor of Arts in education before returning to Petersburg to begin a long career in coaching and teaching.
From 1959 to 1969, he served as the boys' varsity basketball coach, while also coaching track and assisting with baseball and football. His teams captured sectional tournament titles in 1961, 1964, 1965, and 1969. He also helped establish the PHS Holiday Tournament in 1961, which became a longtime local basketball tradition.
Following his coaching career, Michael served as principal at Maysville Elementary School before retiring from education after 39 years of service.
Seventy years later, Kuhn’s night reignites Petersburg basketball history. In doing so, a new chapter emerges.

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The Petersburg High School girls basketball team fell short in the WVSSAC Class AA Region II Co-Final Thursday night in Philippi. The Colts defended their home court with a 50–40 victory over the Lady Vikings.

A slow start by Petersburg gave Philip Barbour the cushion needed early. The Colts led 17–7 at the end of the first quarter. From that point on, the Vikings played the Colts nearly even the rest of the way.

Petersburg outscored Philip Barbour 12–10 in the second period to cut the deficit to 27–19 at halftime. Junior Miley Tingler scored half of the Vikings’ points in the quarter.

The visiting Vikings opened the second half with an 8–2 run to trim the lead to 29–27 with 3:18 remaining in the third quarter. A free throw by Ella Markwell pulled Petersburg within one point at 31–30 with 2:16 left in the period. Philip Barbour responded by closing the quarter on a 5–0 run to take a 36–30 lead after three quarters.

That would be as close as Petersburg could get. The Colts extended their run to 13–0 to begin the fourth quarter and created enough separation to secure the win. The Vikings continued to battle but could not overcome the early deficit.

Miley Tingler led Petersburg with 18 points. Shyane Tawney and Addie Day each added four points.

With the win, Philip Barbour advances to the WVSSAC State Tournament this week in Charleston.

Petersburg finishes the season with a 15–7 record. Coach Jon Webster’s team will look to make a splash in Region II next season, as they return a wealth of experience.

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Union delivered a complete performance Thursday night, pulling away early and never looking back in a 62–33 victory over Paw Paw.

The Tigers set the tone from the opening tip, scoring 18 points in the first quarter and carrying that momentum into a halftime advantage. Union remained steady after the break, posting 17 points in both the second and third quarters to put the game out of reach before the final frame.

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Coach Jon Webster’s Lady Vikings opened tournament play Friday night on their home floor in impressive fashion. The third-seeded Vikings welcomed sixth-seed Braxton County and delivered a dominant performance, shooting 47 percent from the field while forcing 28 Eagle turnovers en route to a 62-32 victory.

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The Petersburg High School Vikings traveled to Berkeley Springs Friday night knowing they had already secured the top seed for the upcoming regional tournament.

Despite having postseason positioning locked up, the Vikings stayed focused and took care of business with a convincing 64-40 victory over the Indians. Petersburg came out firing on all cylinders, erupting for 23 first-quarter points while holding Berkeley Springs to just five. The Vikings continued to build their advantage in the second period, extending the lead to 40-11 by halftime.

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Vikings finish 7–0 in regional play as coaches across the region vote Petersburg atop the bracket; Philip Barbour visits Friday night for postseason opener.

The Petersburg High School boys basketball team has secured the top seed in the West Virginia Secondary School Activities Commission (WVSSAC) Class AA Region II tournament after completing a perfect 7–0 run through regional play.

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