Sissonville Mourns 17-Year-Old Wylie Wilkinson After Fatal Crash

SISSONVILLE, W.Va. — The tight-knit Sissonville community is reeling after 17-year-old Wylie Wilkinson, a Sissonville High School student, died Wednesday afternoon in a single-vehicle crash on Rocky Fork Road. Deputies say the crash happened around 4 p.m. in the 7100 block of the road, and investigators are working to piece together exactly how it unfolded.

According to the Kanawha County Sheriff’s Office, Wylie was driving from Sissonville toward Cross Lanes when his vehicle drifted into the left lane, then sharply corrected, leaving the roadway. It plunged into a ravine, tipped onto its side, and struck a tree. Sadly, he was pronounced dead at the scene.

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On Thursday morning, the school community came together in remembrance at the site of the crash. Around twenty classmates stood in silence at the exact spot where Wylie’s car last was, their grief quiet but profound. Before that, they gathered back at Sissonville High to decorate his parking spot — writing heartfelt messages, placing photos, and draping purple ribbons, Wylie’s favorite color.

Friends like Ravyn Sumpter said the loss still feels surreal, as though visiting the crash site brought a painful reality into focus. Cooper Hall, another close friend, remembered Wylie’s infectious smile and laughter — how he lit up rooms, on and off the soccer field, and always seemed to lift the spirits of those around him.

Through the halls of Sissonville High, the atmosphere has shifted: the usual chatter and bustle replaced by a solemn stillness. But out of that grief, a strong current of unity is rising. Love and support are flowing in from across Kanawha County and beyond. Community members have begun wearing purple in Wylie’s memory. In stores, at homes, on mailboxes — purple ribbons are everywhere, small but powerful symbols of shared sorrow and solidarity.

The Kanawha County Sheriff’s Office has offered its deepest condolences to Wylie’s family, noting the heartbreaking impact this loss has on friends, classmates, and the entire school. Meanwhile, Sissonville residents are quietly planning more memorials: vigils, maybe even a scholarship fund. At every turn, people are looking for ways to honor Wylie’s life.

Wylie’s absence is felt deeply — but so is his presence: in the kindness he showed, the laughter he shared, and the way he made others feel seen. The purple ribbons, the prayers, the collective heartbreak — they’re all reminders that his memory lives on, not just as a loss, but as a light guiding those who loved him.

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