Explore Taylor County, West Virginia with this interactive street and satellite map. Browse all 2 cities and towns in Taylor County below.
| County | Taylor |
| State | West Virginia (WV) |
| County Seat | Grafton |
| Country | United States of America |
| Latitude | 39.303703 |
| Longitude | -80.075497 |
| Cities & Towns | 2 |
| Area Codes | 304 |
Taylor County unfolds across a landscape of Appalachian hardwood, a succession of ridges and hollows where the land rises and falls with a patient, enduring strength. Its western flank is defined by the Tygart Valley River, a ribbon of water that has shaped the contours of the terrain and the lives of its inhabitants, its currents carrying whispers of a past bound to the very rock and soil. To the east, the land continues its ascent, a mosaic of forested slopes and hidden valleys that bleed into neighboring counties, a geography that fosters a sense of self-reliance, an independence as deep-rooted as the ancient trees. The air here, particularly as the sun begins its slow descent, carries a particular clarity, a coolness that seems to wash over the senses, tinged with the scent of damp earth and pine.
Formed from parts of three older counties, Taylor County was established in the mid-19th century, a period of rapid expansion and a burgeoning desire for local governance. Its creation was a response to the growing population and the need to administer justice and infrastructure in this newly charted territory. The county seat, a place that grew organically from the crossroads of burgeoning commerce and the needs of the settlers, became the functional heart of this new entity, a hub around which lives were organized. The echoes of coal-camp memory still resonate, a spectral presence of a time when the earth yielded its riches through arduous labor, a history that has left its indelible mark on the character of the region.
The economy of Taylor County remains tethered to the land, with a blend of agriculture and industry that reflects its heritage. There's a quiet dignity in the work done here, a continuation of traditions passed down through generations, a sense that honest labor is its own reward. The character of the place is one of straightforwardness, of a community that knows its own strengths and weaknesses, its joys and its sorrows. Landmarks here are not always grand monuments, but rather the sturdy architecture of the past, the enduring presence of the natural world, and the simple, unpretentious rhythm of daily life. A walk through a neighborhood in the late afternoon reveals a certain stillness, a pause in the day where the quality of the light softens the edges of buildings and the sounds of children playing drift on the gentle breeze, a testament to a life lived with a grounding in place.
This page provides an interactive map of Taylor County, West Virginia alongside links to detailed street maps for 2 cities and towns. The county seat is Grafton. Each city and town map page includes live weather, local news and precise GPS coordinates.
Location data is sourced from the USGS GNIS database and verified by coordinates, not name matching alone.
| Page generated | June 2026 |
| Location data | USGS GNIS database; coordinates matched to 2020 US Census records |