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History of the City of Norton, Virginia
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Early
settlement occurred in Norton in the late eighteenth century. William Prince
settled in the area in 1787, and his name was associated with that location
for a century in the reference to it as Princes' Flats. As a rural frontier
area, Princes' Flats prospered through development of agriculture and
lumber-related industries.The first U. S. Post Office was established in 1883 and named Eolia; but this was changed in 1890 to Norton to honor Mr. Eckstein Norton, President of the Louisville and Nashville Railroad. It was during this boom period that Norton was connected to the industrialized east coast by steel ties of the Norfolk and Western Railroad. In 1889, the Norfolk and Western Railway Company dispatched five men to lay out a town.
Expansion of population, commerce and industry followed in the wake of railroad and related mining and industrial development. An urban settlement emerged and began to expand. The Town of Norton was incorporated on February 15, 1894 under a council manic form of municipal government. Some historic records suggest that the Town of Norton was enlarged through additions of territory from Wise County.
A major governmental change occurred on September 1, 1936, when the Town of Norton adopted the manager form of municipal administration which remains to this day. On April 6, 1954, the Virginia General Assembly granted a City Charter to the Town of Norton, thus creating the first city in far southwestern Virginia and, to this day, the only City in Wise County. Eight years later, in 1962, the City of Norton annexed three-fifths of a square mile of land from Wise County--a largely vacant area on the northeast side of the City adjacent to the community of Esserville.
Of note in these two annexations by the City, little population or area subject to urban development was involved; e.g., the doubling of Norton's municipal land area in 1975 netted the City a gain of only 84 residents. In recent years, the City of Norton has seen tremendous commercial growth along the U.S. 58 Corridor in the eastern section of the City. After many years of hard work, the long-awaited U.S. 23 Norton By-pass was completed in 1996. The By-pass is expected not only to relieve traffic congestion on Park Avenue (which previous traffic counts estimated over 24,000 vehicles traveled through downtown daily) but has improved the highway system for the region, which among other things, will assist in the region's economic development activities.
The City of Norton is beginning its second century with eagerness and anticipation of the many exciting things to come.
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