Note: Many of the images in this article have been taken directly from Patriot Front’s online output. The pictures have been altered solely to deface them and to obscure elements they use for recruiting, such as web addresses and social media handles. They have not otherwise been altered with respect to their content.
Members of the neo-Nazi organization Patriot Front have been spreading propagandistic stickers, wheat-pasted posters, flyers, banners, and at least one “mural” in and around the Eastern Panhandle for at least the past five years. We know this, on the one hand, because we can see it on lightposts, street signs, walls, and gas pumps in our communities, and on the other hand, because they continually post images of their handiwork online via their various Telegram channels. In particular, they have repeatedly targeted Martinsburg, Charles Town, Harpers Ferry, Shepherdstown, and Winchester, VA, and they have become noticeably more active over the past year.
The following is an attempt to document the problem in terms of both its content and its scale. A Las Barricadas will present some examples that will hopefully help people understand what to look out for and where to look for it so that Patriot Front’s “promotional materials” can be removed or covered up as quickly as possible. This article will look at what kinds of images they distribute, where they frequently put them, how Patriot Front operates, and what they hope to achieve. It will also explain why it is, in fact, appropriate to call them neo-Nazis. Finally, this essay will end with a series of tables documenting when and where Patriot Front members have left their materials over the past five years.
Mandatory Vandalism
Patriot Front members are required to buy stickers, stencils, patches, and other paraphernalia directly from the group’s founder and leader Thomas Rousseau of Grapevine, Texas, so that they can engage in what they internally call “activism,” or what others might call using vandalism to spread hate. Members are also encouraged to deface existing public art, if that art expresses a desire for more equality in the world, and to steal and destroy objects like pride flags or Black Lives Matter signs. Members are required not only to do these forms of “activism,” but also to document it. As one leaked internal guide states, “If your work has not been documented, it is not complete. Photography is the easiest way to to complete this documentation.” Those photos then have to be submitted to higher-ups for approval. As one “network director” within the organization wrote in a leaked Discord chat a few years ago, “You need to post a single photo anytime you’re doing activism in this chat channel to show your efforts.”
So membership in the group requires constantly seeking approval from above in a strictly top-down organization that exerts such a high degree of control that its leaders have even intervened in their subordinates’ dating choices. Members’ personal identities are obscured not only by blurring their faces in photos and requiring them to wear masks during public group activities, but also by giving them fake first names and making them use their home states as last names (“Gabriel WV,” for example). They justify these measures by citing security concerns, but it is nonetheless a cult-like way of operating.
Meanwhile, the organization’s bottom-rung members are under constant pressure to put their “promat” (promotional material) where the rest of us can see it. They do this both as a recruiting tool and as a way to make the group seem bigger and more ubiquitous than it really is. Apart from Rousseau, other members hide their identities and are not allowed to speak publicly as Patriot Front members. Their only voice is Rousseau’s, including via the “promotional materials” that he designs, sells to them, and requires them to distribute.

Apart from “activism,” members also regularly engage in “training,” which is to say learning and practicing fighting techniques. Patriot Front is a nationwide organization that has carved up the US into a dozen or so “networks,” and according to its social media posts, at least some members who are in “Network 9” train in what looks like a small, cinder-block garage in Martinsburg. A post dated June 29, 2024 includes four photos of two people engaged in various wrestling maneuvers in the garage. Another post, dated February 27, 2025, shows seven people in the same garage (that’s in addition to whoever took the photo). Patriot Front is an extremely image-conscious organization, and members seldom miss an opportunity to make their numbers appear as big as possible, even when their claims are obviously absurd. So the fact that the photos from June 2024 showed only two people and in February 2025 they showed seven may be an indication that the local crew is growing. Nonetheless, there is no telling how committed any of their recruits may be. Patriot Front has a very high turnover rate, as most people pretty quickly get tired of the terms of membership and the generally nasty ways the leadership treats its members.

Leaked internal Patriot Front chat logs show that West Virginia didn’t fit into any of the existing networks as recently as November 2021. At that time, Network 9 “Network Director” Paul Gancarz (aka “Samuel VA”) pointed out that, “As of right now WV is sandwiched between VA (NW9) and OH (NW13).” The February 27, 2025 post states that “Activists from Network 9 trained in West Virginia,” so whatever happened in the meantime, the group that trains in Martinsburg has clearly identified itself with that network, which covers Delaware, most of Maryland, about two thirds of Virginia, and the three easternmost counties of West Virginia, according to the most recent information available.
These Network 9 “activists” have been increasingly busy in and around the Eastern Panhandle for several years. Based on Patriot Front’s own posts on the social media/messaging app Telegram alone, A Las Barricadas has documented no fewer than 167 incidents in the area between August 2020 and March 2025, with a notable surge over the last year of that period. Note that almost every “incident” documented here represents a minimum of four stickers, flyers, or posters left in a public location somewhere in the area, and most likely significantly more than that. (Scroll to the bottom for a more detailed breakdown of when and where Patriot Front members have placed their “promotional materials” in and around the Eastern Panhandle over the past five years.)



After Patriot Front members do their mandatory “activism” and submit their photos, other members of the group organize those images into sets of four, sorted by location, and sporadically publish collections of them via Telegram. Not every photo that members submit is ultimately uploaded, and just about every one of the incidents identified in this study represents four different stickers, flyers, posters, or signs left in a given location. As a result, we can generally assume that the total number of items that members have distributed is significantly higher than the numbers shown here — by at least a factor of four and probably significantly more than that. However, it should also be noted that members’ photo submissions can sometimes sit for a few weeks or even months before the images are processed and ultimately published, so the dates given here should not be assumed to be the dates when the “activism” was done. (For instance, one Patriot Front Telegram account posted photos on March 25, 2025 showing stickers that were put up in Berkeley Springs. Given that members of Patriot Front were present at a conference held at the Berkeley Springs castle between March 7-9, it seems likely that the stickers were posted then.) Ultimately, the posts in Patriot Front’s Telegram channels can be seen as a rough, imperfect indicator of the amount of activity in a particular area at a given moment.
Particularly hard hit have been Martinsburg, Charles Town, Harpers Ferry, and Shepherdstown, as well as Winchester, VA. Although the evidence shows an increase across the entirety of the Eastern Panhandle since the spring of 2024, the spikes in the top graph are particularly due to rising “activism” in Shepherdstown and Winchester: there was a major spurt of Patriot Front activity in Winchester, including on the Shenandoah University campus, between the fall of 2021 and spring of 2022, and then another starting last fall and continuing to the present. Patriot Front had not posted any evidence of activity in Shepherdstown at all prior to March 2024, however it has posted no fewer than 16 incidents just in the year or so since then. Given that one incident usually includes four photos, that means a minimum of 64 stickers, flyers, or posters, and probably more.
Possible reasons for the spikes in Winchester and Shepherdstown could include a) “activism” being done by students at Shenandoah and/or Shepherd University during the school year, b) a decision by Patriot Front members to target college campuses for recruitment, c) an active member happened to move to town, or d) new members have been recruited in those areas. Additionally, the Party for Socialism and Liberation (PSL), a self-identified Marxist-Leninist organization, has a rather visible presence on the campus of Shepherd University, and it is possible that Patriot Front members are seeking to intimidate PSL members or claim territory. Patriot Front has specifically posted photos of their own stickers covering up parts of PSL posters as well as torn signs promoting the PSL candidate in the 2024 presidential election. Patriot Front members could have just taken the PSL signs down, but damaging them and posting the evidence publicly sends a much clearer, more aggressive message.

Most of the time, however, Patriot Front members seem to want to leave their “promat” in whatever spots come with the lowest risk while still earning them Rousseau’s approval. They regularly put stickers on the backs of street signs, gas pumps, parking meters, and public trash cans — whatever is the easiest way to keep up with membership requirements without getting into trouble. In that sense, they are not only Supermen with the precious blood of the “founding stock” in their veins (more on that below), they also function like petty bureaucrats checking boxes until it’s time to punch out.

Two examples of local members attempting to create the impression that they have engaged in bold, highly visible action while actually running a very low risk of being caught (and thus having to defend their abhorrent ideas) are a banner drop in Winchester, posted on Telegram in early November 2021, and a “mural” in Harpers Ferry, posted in August 2024. In the first case, members appear to have hung a banner from an overpass in the dead of night when few people were likely to see their work, and in the second case, they painted a mural (also under cover of darkness) in a location so obscure that A Las Barricadas has been unable to locate it despite actively trying to do so. Nonetheless, these low-impact actions did serve their purpose: when the members submitted their required “documentation,” they satisfied the demands of their leader 1,300 miles away and were able to demonstrate their alleged bravery and audacity to other members.

Is Patriot Front Really a “Neo-Nazi” Organization?
When people on the right side of the political spectrum hear words like “fascist,” “white nationalist,” or “neo-Nazi,” they often respond by saying things like “you people call everyone you disagree with a fascist these days.” But “these days” have stretched on for a very long time by now; the complaint that “everyone is a Nazi to you” has been circulating since at least the World War II era.
That argument is still made and taken seriously even in discussions of actual fascists because, while (neo-)Nazis do exist and have existed for 100 years now, they don’t always wear swastika armbands anymore or even call themselves “fascists.” So how do we know what they are? We know because they say it in lots of other ways. The symbols change, but the ideas remain more or less the same.
When we identify Patriot Front as a neo-Nazi organization, it is because, among other things, the group has clearly stated its desire for a revolutionary national renewal that would make the US into an all-white ethnostate. Nonetheless, Patriot Front is a very image-conscious organization, and so its members utilize the language of “patriotism” and euphemisms like “founding stock” when what they really mean is “white.” Their guidelines for general conduct prohibit members from explicitly using “slurs,” yet still encourage them to apply the ideas that justify slurs:
Keep your conduct professional. Avoid slurs, as terms which have a purely negative connotation, as opposed to simple descriptive terms. This does not mean that you cannot oppose the actions or thoughts of others, only that the method of statement is important while the content of the statement can remain the same.

Despite their efforts to present themselves as merely a “patriotic” organization, the group’s own manifesto expresses, in no uncertain terms, a belief that only white people can be “American.” In a typically overwrought passage concocted by Rousseau, they write:
From the varied nations and cultures of Europe a new nation was forged in the flames of conquest. E Pluribus Unum was the new creed that bound our people together with their pan-European identity as Americans.
If that’s not clear enough, the manifesto includes a quote from the late US president Calvin Coolidge that reads
There are racial considerations too grave to be brushed aside for any sentimental reasons. Biological laws tell us that certain divergent people will not mix or blend.
Rousseau is, in fact, correct in his assumption that he and his goons are ideological descendants of bigots like Coolidge, however Rousseau conveniently failed to mention here that Coolidge was talking about the alleged superiority of “Nordics” over Eastern and Southern Europeans, not some kind of “pan-European identity” that binds together all the “real Americans” and separates them from brown-skinned people without (much) European ancestry. Of course, if Rousseau were to acknowledge that “racial” boundaries are constantly shifting, his whole ideology would fall apart, so we can’t expect him to do that, can we?
In any event, when Patriot Front puts up stickers or posters that say “Defend American Labor,” their manifesto says unambiguously that “American” always means “white” to them and that their message isn’t one of working class solidarity, but rather of racial exclusion.
The manifesto also makes it very clear that Patriot Front seeks to bring the current US state to an end and replace it with a “new American nation state.” This is reflected in the stickers they often put up that say things like “Forward for a New American Nation State” or “Against the State, For the Nation.” Why do they want this? Because, in Rousseau’s words,
The State has long since ceased to advocate for the interests of the descendants of its creators, and thus a State which will be, above all else, a reflection of the national interest must be implemented fully and absolutely.
And what would that look like? For starters, it would be exclusively white:
Membership within the American nation is inherited through blood, not ink. Even those born in America may yet be foreign. Nationhood cannot be bestowed upon those who are not of the founding stock of our people, and those who do not share the common spirit that permeates our greater civilization, and the European diaspora.
The idea of a “founding stock” permeates Patriot Front’s rhetoric.

So we’ve established that Patriot Front is a white nationalist group in that they literally want an all-white nation-state. But is that the same as being fascists? Or even neo-Nazis?
Well, for one thing, they do use the fasces as a logo, so yes, they do very much see themselves as fascists in the “classical” sense. And if there is one thing that distinguishes Nazis (neo- or otherwise) from other kinds of fascists, it is the fact that Nazis are extremely focused on the idea that a cabal of manipulative, exploitative elites are causing all the problems that good white people face. And while they at times do try to use coded language to hide what they really mean, it always comes down to the same thing: they’re talking about Jews.
So does that apply to Patriot Front?
Yes. Yes it does.
When Patriot Front members post images with text that says things like “Free Occupied America” or “No Zionists in Government, We Serve One Nation,” they are engaging in long-standing antisemitic tropes like the idea that the United States has a “Zionist-Occupied Government” (ZOG) or that Jews always have divided loyalty and cannot be trusted to consistently support any country other than Israel.
Patriot Front also distributes stickers with the words “No More Foreign Wars.” Like the “Defend American Labor” stickers, this sounds like a reasonable slogan that would appeal to a broad base in the US, including many leftists. In the post-Bush era, there has been an understandable, widespread wariness about foreign military adventures. However, Patriot Front is a group that is obsessed with being prepared to fight and is in no way opposed to militarism or conquest (see, for instance, their stickers that feature a map of the US with the words “Not Stolen, Conquered”). For people like them, “foreign wars” is an idea derived from the long-debunked conspiracy theory known as The Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion, which would have its readers believe that Jews are responsible for provoking countries to fight one another for their own benefit.
But if that’s not enough, you can also just watch at this video, which ends with a Patriot Front member giving a Nazi salute while saying “Sieg fucking heil, let’s go!” as his colleagues laugh while they think no one is watching.
Is This Really a Major Problem In This Area?
A few stickers here, a poorly stenciled sign there, what’s the big deal? Nobody pays attention to those things anyway, right?
It doesn’t work like that.
The problem is that these are neo-nazis doing what neo-nazis always try to do: they constantly work to expand their terrain and their comfort zone. On the one hand, they are seek to intimidate vulnerable populations, as when they post images with text identifying immigrants as “invaders” or when they place stickers over public displays memorializing Black people’s contributions to the history and the culture of the US. If they can get away with that and nobody pushes back, they will keep trying to go a little bit further, always a little bit more aggressively, always a little bit more explicitly racist, xenophobic, misogynist, etc.

On the other hand, they are out to make themselves appear both ubiquitous and inevitable. By constantly flooding certain spaces with small indications of their presence, they are trying to get people used to the idea that they are there. If they can establish a sense that they are constantly present in an area, then when people — and by “people,” we specifically mean young white men in this case — inevitably feel a sense of dissatisfaction in their lives, as everyone does sometimes, at least one possible solution will already exist in their minds. It’s a fraudulent, unhelpful solution, but to a young, vulnerable person looking for answers, it may seem like just what they’re looking for.
It should also be pointed out that Patriot Front members have a long, widespread history of violence. Thirty-one of its members were arrested in Idaho in 2022 as they were approaching a pride event. They were uniformed, armed with their own riot shields, and clearly there to disrupt an event that was not harming anyone. On the contrary, while far-right ideologues are fond of claiming that their political enemies are “pedos” and “groomers,” it was a Patriot Front member whose phone was found to have child porn on it that day. This past January, a federal judge ordered Patriot Front to pay a Black musician $2.75 million in damages after they attacked him in Boston during one of their unannounced marches in 2022. One Patriot Front member stabbed another motorist in Texas during a road rage incident in 2019 amid a barrage of homophobic slurs.
While Patriot Front’s most notorious tactic is to organize unannounced marches in different states (they were in Charleston just about a year ago), behind the scenes, they are constantly training to fight and consuming a steady stream of rhetoric about their own victimhood. So it should be no surprise that all of this leads to violent outbursts. Violent individuals are one thing, but once they start to organize, their capacity to do harm rises dramatically.
What Can We Do About This?
The first and most obvious thing is pretty simple: don’t be quiet about it. Make it clear that this is not acceptable behavior and that you care about your neighbors, regardless of their race, gender, ethnicity, religion, sexual orientation, where they were born, or any other quality that haters often choose to hate. Say it out loud. Make it so that people who harbor Nazi beliefs would feel uncomfortable in your presence, even if they haven’t openly stated what they really think. There’s nothing radical about doing this. Caring about other people — having a basic sense of empathy — is not some kind of “woke” idea. It’s actually just how decent human beings act.
Secondly, of course, you can keep your eyes open for stickers, flyers, and posters from Patriot Front or groups like them. When you do find them, either remove them or, if that isn’t possible, cover them up with something of your own — it’s helpful to keep a few stickers handy for just that purpose. There have been rumors for a long time about Patriot Front stickers having razors stuck under them in order to injure people who try to remove them. There is little evidence of that happening, but we can’t say that it can’t or won’t ever happen, so take reasonable precautions.
Additionally, you can organize within your own community. Find out who might be interested in doing some reading about fascism and about past efforts to combat it. Being an antifascist doesn’t mean constantly punching Nazis (admittedly, that is sometimes unavoidable, but that’s a topic for another day). Far more often, it means demonstrating that supporting one another is a valid way to find solutions to social problems and it doesn’t require people to satisfy some kind of litmus test based on ethnicity, gender, language, etc.
On a larger scale, talking to other people about this stuff and working to build stronger, more accepting communities where nobody falls through the cracks is the best way to address the fascist creep. Fascists thrive on people’s sense of alienation. They offer a sense of belonging and comradeship, even though acquiring power at the expense of others is always their end goal, and they will gladly turn their backs on their friends to get it. So fostering a strong, open community that is vocal about accepting everyone is one way to deprive a group like Patriot Front of oxygen.
Details About Patriot Front Activity In/Around the Eastern Panhandle
Last but not least, here are some dates, locations, and info detailing just what Patriot Front members have been up to over the past five years. All dates given indicate when one Patriot Front social media channel or another posted “documentation” of members’ “activism” and should not be interpreted as the actual date when that “activism” took place. As previously mentioned, every incident labeled “stickers,” “signs,” “flyers,” or “posters” involves four photos of different “promotional materials,” so each of those incidents should be multiplied by four to get a baseline understanding of just how widespread the problem is. Additionally, not every photo that members submit is published, so you can assume the problem is even bigger than that.
Augusta
Stated Location | Date | Type of Activity |
---|---|---|
Augusta | 12/23/2024 | Stickers |
Augusta | 12/26/2024 | Stickers |
Augusta | 2/23/2025 | Stickers |
Augusta | 3/14/2025 | Stickers |
Berkeley Springs
Stated Location | Date | Type of Activity |
---|---|---|
Berkeley Springs | 4/8/2022 | Stickers |
Berkeley Springs | 3/25/2025 | Stickers |
Brunswick, Maryland
Stated Location | Date | Type of Activity |
---|---|---|
Brunswick, MD | 12/8/2024 | Stickers |
Brunswick, MD | 2/23/2025 | Stickers |
Cacapon
Stated Location | Date | Type of Activity |
---|---|---|
Cacapon | 3/25/2025 | Stickers |
Capon Bridge
Stated Location | Date | Type of Activity |
---|---|---|
Capon Bridge | 9/27/2024 | Stickers |
Capon Bridge | 2/23/2025 | Stickers |
Capon Bridge | 3/14/2025 | Stickers |
Charles Town & Ranson:
Stated Location | Date | Type of Activity |
---|---|---|
Charles Town | 10/12/2020 | Stickers |
Charles Town | 11/27/2020 | Stickers |
Ranson | 12/11/2020 | Stickers |
Charles Town | 11/06/2021 | Stickers |
Charles Town | 2/10/2022 | Stickers |
Charles Town | 8/14/2023 | Posters |
Charles Town | 8/22/2023 | Posters |
Charles Town | 6/28/2024 | Stickers |
Charles Town | 9/24/2024 | Stickers |
Charles Town | 9/28/2024 | Stickers |
Charles Town | 11/18/2024 | Stickers |
Charles Town | 12/23/2024 | Posters |
Ranson | 12/27/2024 | Posters |
Charles Town | 1/12/2025 | Stickers |
Charles Town | 1/12/2025 (again) | Stickers |
Charles Town | 2/22/2025 | Stickers |
Cumberland, Maryland
Stated Location | Date | Type of Activity |
---|---|---|
Cumberland, MD | 9/3/2021 | Stickers |
Cumberland, MD | 3/24/2024 | Stickers |
Cumberland, MD | 3/27/2024 | Stickers |
Cumberland, MD | 4/6/2024 | Stickers |
Cumberland, MD | 4/7/2024 | Stickers |
Cumberland, MD | 5/24/2024 | Stickers |
Cumberland, MD | 6/13/2024 | Stickers |
Cumberland, MD | 6/24/2024 | Stickers |
Cumberland, MD | 6/29/2024 | Stickers |
Cumberland, MD | 8/10/2024 | Stickers |
Cumberland, MD | 9/27/2024 | Stickers |
Cumberland, MD | 4/8/2025 | Stickers |
Hagerstown, Maryland
Stated Location | Date | Type of Activity |
---|---|---|
Hagerstown, MD | 7/18/2021 | Stickers |
Hagerstown, MD | 7/18/2021 (again) | Stickers |
Hagerstown, MD | 8/31/2021 | Stickers |
Hagerstown, MD | 10/5/2021 | Stickers |
Hagerstown, MD | 10/18/2021 | Stickers |
Hagerstown, MD | 2/10/2022 | Stickers |
Hagerstown, MD | 2/11/2022 | Stickers |
Hagerstown, MD | 4/4/2022 | Stickers |
Hagerstown, MD | 4/4/2022 (again) | Stickers |
Hagerstown, MD | 12/11/2023 | Stickers |
Hagerstown, MD | 11/18/2024 | Stickers |
Hagerstown, MD | 4/8/2025 | Stickers |
Halltown
Stated Location | Date | Type of Activity |
---|---|---|
Halltown | 12/17/2024 | Posters |
Harpers Ferry & Bolivar
Stated Location | Date | Type of Activity |
---|---|---|
Bolivar | 11/24/2020 | Stickers |
Harpers Ferry | 8/23/2021 | Stickers |
Harpers Ferry | 4/6/2024 | Stickers |
Harpers Ferry | 5/10/2024 | Stickers |
Bolivar Heights | 5/15/2024 | Stickers |
Harpers Ferry | 6/4/2024 | Stickers |
Harpers Ferry | 8/19/2024 | Mural |
Harpers Ferry | 9/24/2024 | Stickers |
Harpers Ferry | 11/25/2024 | Stickers |
Harpers Ferry | 12/8/2024 | Stickers |
Harpers Ferry | 1/12/2025 | Stickers |
Harpers Ferry | 1/12/2025 (again) | Stickers |
Harpers Ferry | 1/31/2025 | Stickers |
Harpers Ferry | 2/23/2025 | Stickers |
Hedgesville
Stated Location | Date | Type of Activity |
---|---|---|
Hedgesville | 12/20/2024 | Stickers |
Inwood
Stated Location | Date | Type of Activity |
---|---|---|
Inwood | 6/28/2021 | Stickers |
Inwood | 11/3/2022 | Stickers |
Inwood | 9/27/2024 | Stickers |
Kearneysville
Stated Location | Date | Type of Activity |
---|---|---|
Kearneysville | 1/9/2024 | Stickers |
Martinsburg
Stated Location | Date | Type of Activity |
---|---|---|
Martinsburg | 3/11/2022 | Stickers |
Martinsburg | 4/2/2022 | Stickers |
Martinsburg | 5/21/2022 | Stickers |
Martinsburg | 10/18/2022 | Stickers |
Martinsburg | 10/19/2022 | Stickers |
Martinsburg | 1/13/2023 | Stickers |
Martinsburg | 5/24/2024 | Stickers |
Martinsburg | 6/29/2024 | Training |
Martinsburg | 7/1/2024 | Stickers |
Martinsburg | 7/6/2024 | Stickers |
Martinsburg | 8/30/2024 | Stickers |
Martinsburg | 8/30/2024 (again) | Stickers |
Martinsburg | 10/27/2024 | Stickers |
Martinsburg | 2/27/2025 | Training |
Martinsburg | 3/25/2025 | Stickers |
Paw Paw
Stated Location | Date | Type of Activity |
---|---|---|
Paw Paw | 3/25/2025 | Stickers |
Romney
Stated Location | Date | Type of Activity |
---|---|---|
Romney | 12/23/2024 | Stickers |
Romney | 12/23/2024 (again) | Stickers |
Romney | 3/14/2025 | Stickers |
Romney | 3/25/2025 | Stickers |
Seneca Rocks
Stated Location | Date | Type of Activity |
---|---|---|
Seneca Rocks | 10/26/2024 | Stickers |
Shanghai
Stated Location | Date | Type of Activity |
---|---|---|
Shanghai | 9/27/2024 | Stickers |
Shanghai | 10/26/2024 | Stickers |
Shanks
Stated Location | Date | Type of Activity |
---|---|---|
Shanks | 12/23/2024 | Stickers |
Shenandoah Junction
Stated Location | Date | Type of Activity |
---|---|---|
Shenandoah Junction | 11/2/2024 | Stickers |
Shepherdstown
Stated Location | Date | Type of Activity |
---|---|---|
Shepherdstown | 3/24/2024 | Stickers |
Shepherdstown | 4/6/2024 | Stickers |
Shepherdstown | 5/8/2024 | Stickers |
Shepherdstown | 9/24/2024 | Stickers |
Shepherdstown | 9/27/2024 | Stickers |
Shepherdstown | 10/3/2024 | Stickers |
Shepherd University | 10/26/2024 | Stickers |
Shepherdstown | 11/18/2024 | Stickers |
Shepherdstown | 12/20/2024 | Stickers |
Shepherdstown | 1/31/2025 | Stickers |
Shepherdstown | 2/10/2025 | Stickers |
Shepherdstown | 2/23/2025 | Stickers |
Shepherdstown | 2/23/2025 (again) | Stickers |
Shepherdstown | 3/14/2025 | Stickers |
Shepherdstown | 3/14/2025 | Stickers |
Shepherdstown | 3/25/2025 | Stickers |
Summit Point
Stated Location | Date | Type of Activity |
---|---|---|
Summit Point | 12/23/2024 | Stickers |
Summit Point | 1/12/2025 | Stickers |
Wiley Ford
Stated Location | Date | Type of Activity |
---|---|---|
Wiley Ford | 6/14/2024 | Stickers |
Winchester, Virginia
Stated Location | Date | Type of Activity |
---|---|---|
Winchester, VA | 8/13/2020 | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 11/17/2020 | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 4/9/2021 | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 4/10/2021 | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 9/22/2021 | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 9/29/2021 | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 10/5/2021 | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 10/12/2021 | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 10/18/2021 | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 10/18/2021 (again) | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 10/20/2021 | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 10/29/2021 | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 11/3/2021 | Banner drop |
Winchester, VA | 11/6/2021 | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 11/9/2021 | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 11/9/2021 (again) | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 11/9/2021 (again) | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 11/9/2021 (yet again) | Stickers |
Shenandoah University | 11/9/2021 (one more time) | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 12/12/2021 | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 12/23/2021 | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 2/11/2022 | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 2/11/2022 (again) | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 2/12/2022 | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 2/12/2022 (again) | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 2/12/2022 (again) | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 3/25/2022 | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 3/25/2022 (again) | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 3/25/2022 (again) | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 3/25/2022 (again) | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 3/25/2022 (again) | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 3/25/2022 (again) | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 4/6/2022 | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 4/8/2022 | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 9/24/2024 | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 10/1/2024 | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 10/2/2024 | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 10/26/2024 | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 10/27/2024 | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 10/27/2024 (again) | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 11/25/2024 | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 12/08/2024 | Stickers |
Shenandoah University | 12/23/2024 | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 12/30/2024 | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 12/30/2024 (again) | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 1/1/2025 | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 2/23/2025 | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 2/23/2025 (again) | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 3/14/2025 | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 3/14/2025 (again) | Stickers |
Winchester, VA | 3/25/2025 | Stickers |