Wheeling Couple Buys Former Wellsburg Middle School
photo by: Warren Scott
Brooke County Board of Education members accepted a bid Monday for the former Wellsburg Middle School from Ed and Beth Hinebaugh of Wheeling, a couple who own a day care center and party rental place in Wheeling as well as about 50 single-family homes.
The former Wellsburg Middle School has new owners with the Brooke County school board’s acceptance of a $225,000 bid for the three-story building and surrounding property.
The bid was submitted by Ed and Beth Hinebaugh, a Wheeling couple who said their intention is to use the property for a business involving children. The pair owns Noah’s Ark Childcare and the Fulton Fun Factory, which offers indoor bounce houses and other activities for youth and rental space for parties, as well as 50 single-family homes in the Wheeling area.
A graduate of Brooke High School, Beth Cawthon Hinebaugh said she had attended the former middle school and her father was a student there when it was a high school.
Plans had called for the school to be closed when its student body was merged with students of Follansbee Middle School with the opening of Brooke Middle School in 2018.
But it gained a new lease on life when the school district’s alternative learning center moved into the building.
It also has become home to the Wellsburg Police Department and the Brooke County Family Resource Center, an organization that provides educational programs for local families.
Superintendent of Schools Jeff Crook said with the cooperation of the Hinebaughs, the alternative learning center isn’t expected to move until after the current school year.
In anticipation of a sale in August, the board had advertised for renovations at the high school to accommodate the center.
In response, the board received bids for various aspects of $113,750 from Lombardi Development Co., $25,200 Crook said Wellsburg Police and the family resource center were advised of the pending sale and their continued presence will depend on the Hinebaughs’ plans.
Before unanimously accepting the bid, the minimum set for the property and the only one received at the Nov. 20 auction, the board heard from another interested party.
Michael Robinson, who identified himself as representative of a substance abuse treatment center, asked the board to consider a higher offer and a donation for it.
Robinson, who didn’t disclose the business’ name, said such a facility would help to reduce local cases of drug addiction and bring many jobs to Wellsburg.
Board President Ted Pauls told Robinson the board can’t negotiate collectively, and may only consider the recommendation put before it. Crook told Robinson the auction was conducted as prescribed by law and one bid was received.



