Gordonsville
LATEST NEWS
New School Zone Cameras Coming to Monitor Hydraulic Road
CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA (CVILLE RIGHT NOW): Albemarle County has announced that school zone speed on Hydraulic Road will soon be regulated by traffic cameras. The County hopes to give drivers an incentive to pay more attention to how they are driving around the Lambs Lane Campus, the area that includes Albemarle High School, Journey Middle School, and Greer Elementary School. Exceeding the speed limit, along with reckless driving, has been a problem in the area around the schools for some time, and when the safety of kids is at stake, action is necessary.
First Alert Weather Day Wednesday
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (WVIR) - Tracking a weak weather disturbance passing over the region through this Monday evening. It will spark an isolated shower, downpour and thunderstorm. Any thunderstorm that forms through sunset may cause localized damaging wind gusts. Hazy, hot and humid Tuesday with a spotty shower and thunderstorm around...
Get in On The Deals Early!
WNRN’s Fall Fund Drive officially kicks off Friday, September 27, and we want you to get the most value when you become a WNRN Member!. When you become a Member before the drive begins, you’ll have access to our limited time $12 a month level, which includes the new t-shirt, the weekly Member List, In Studio Vol 12, and WNRN socks!
Closer look: Where are Virginia's transfers, last season's seniors playing in 2024
With Virginia football set to start its 2024 season on Saturday, Wahoos247 is here to provide a quick update on the players who left the program this offseason. We'll start with those who advanced to the pros and whose careers came to an end. - WR Malik Washington was the...
CASPCA fundraiser with Duck Donuts
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (CBS19 NEWS) -- The Charlottesville-Albemarle SPCA held a sweet collaborated fundraiser this weekend in Charlottesville. The CASPCA and Duck Donuts teamed up to raise money for the shelter. Duck Donuts had a special called the Fifi and Fido specialty donuts and 50 percent of the money raised during...
The Marlboro sign and a very short history of tobacco manufacturing in South Richmond
A quarter of the way through their VA 100: 100 people, places, things that you should know about Richmond series, the RTD finally gets to something on this side of the river with The Marlboro sign. They don’t really get into it beyond “they make a lot of cigarettes”:
Women’s Soccer: #21 Virginia steamrolls Utah State, 5-0
Virginia got goals from five different players in a 5-0 win over Utah Valley on Sunday at Klöckner Stadium. The 21st-ranked ‘Hoos (4-0-0) jumped out early, scoring in the ninth minute when Laughlin Ryan drove to the endline and served a cross in toward the penalty spot. Allie Ross headed it in back toward the near post for the score.
RIP to the Army’s first Black 3-star general, base namesake
The Army’s first Black three-star general died Thursday. Retired Lt. Gen. Arthur Gregg was 96. Gregg was the first living namesake of an Army post, and his service extended from war-torn Germany to the post-Vietnam, all-volunteer era. He retired in 1981 after having led a supply and support battalion...
Average Gas Prices Down Across the Southside and Virginia
Average gas prices across Virginia dropped by seven cents this week to $3.22 a gallon, while the average price of gas across the country is down six cents to $3.35 a gallon, according to AAA. The average price of gas in Danville fell by nine cents to $3.04, while the...
Pinpoint Weather: Increasing heat and humidity this week
ROANOKE, Va. (WFXR) — Stay cool and hydrated! Hot and muggy conditions will impact Southwest and Central Virginia through the middle of the week. High pressure will keep the region mostly dry, but a warming trend will occur over the next few days. For Monday, morning temperatures will start in the 50s and 60s. A few […]
Clear and calm tonight; a toasty start to next week
Sunday evening looks great for last-minute outdoor plans: temps in the 80s/70s under mostly sunny skies. The sun setting won’t change much as we continue to see mostly clear skies for the remainder of tonight. Temps will also continue to cool further down as they drop into the 60s. Monday shouldn’t see any troubles in […]
Archaeologists in Virginia unearth colonial-era garden with clues about its enslaved gardeners
Archaeologists in Virginia are uncovering an ornamental garden from the 1700s where a wealthy politician and enslaved gardeners grew exotic plants from around the world. Such plots of land served as status symbols. They were the 18th-century equivalent of buying a Lamborghini. The garden in Williamsburg belonged to tobacco grower John Custis IV, who also served in the colonial legislature. His garden has long intrigued historians. But the dig also focuses on learning more about the enslaved gardeners. The excavation is being conducted by Colonial Williamsburg. It's a living history museum that now owns the property in the former colonial capital.
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