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Citizens National Bank building (Martinsburg, West Virginia)

Bank buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in West VirginiaBrutalist architecture in West VirginiaCommons category link is locally definedIndividually listed contributing properties to historic districts on the National Register in West VirginiaModernist architecture in West Virginia
National Register of Historic Places in Martinsburg, West VirginiaUse mdy dates from January 2025
Citizens National Bank Building (Martinsburg, West Virginia)
Citizens National Bank Building (Martinsburg, West Virginia)

The Citizens National Bank building in Martinsburg, West Virginia, United States, is a former bank building, built in 1970, that was touted as "a new beginning for future development of downtown Martinsburg." The modernist style, with references to Brutalism that was then a design trend, set it apart from surrounding development in a conscious break from local tradition.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Citizens National Bank building (Martinsburg, West Virginia) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Citizens National Bank building (Martinsburg, West Virginia)
West King Street, Martinsburg

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 39.456388888889 ° E -77.964444444444 °
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Address

William R McCune Jr Pllc

West King Street 115
25401 Martinsburg
West Virginia, United States
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Citizens National Bank Building (Martinsburg, West Virginia)
Citizens National Bank Building (Martinsburg, West Virginia)
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Nearby Places

Boydville
Boydville

Boydville is a late Georgian style mansion in Martinsburg, West Virginia. The house is near the center of the associated Boydville Historic District in 15.35 acres (6.21 ha). The house was built in 1812 by Elisha Boyd, a member of the Virginia House of Delegates and an officer of the Fourth Virginia Regiment in the War of 1812. The two story stucco-covered stone house consists of a center wing with nine rooms, a right wing that originally served as the nursery, and a left wing that housed the kitchens. The center-hall main house retains its original woodwork, with hand-carved door frames and mantelpieces imported from England. Interior partitions are brick covered with plaster.Elisha Boyd left the house to his daughter Mary at his death in 1841. Mary was married to Charles J. Faulkner I (1806–1884), was a member of the Virginia House of Delegates who advocated a gradual abolition of slavery and the forcible annexation of Texas from Mexico. Faulkner served as ambassador to France in the James Buchanan administration, 1859–1861. Faulkner was Stonewall Jackson's assistant adjutant-general during the American Civil War, and was temporary president of the West Virginia Constitutional Convention of 1872. Faulkner's son, Charles J. Faulkner II (1847–1929) became a United States senator.During the American Civil War Boydville and two other houses were marked for burning by General David Hunter in retaliation for the burning of Maryland Governor Bradford's house. On an hour's notice Mary Faulkner obtained an exemption from Abraham Lincoln, saving the house.Boydville was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1970.