COMING HOME — Pittsburgh-based engineer-businessman Curtis Kossman holds up a gun made by the Hollenbeck Gun Co. of Wheeling in the 1880s. Kossman donated the gun to West Virginia Independence Hall on Thursday. -- Joselyn King
WHEELING — A rare antique shotgun made in Wheeling during the 1880s has returned to the city and will soon be on display at West Virginia Independence Hall.
But its journey involves a boat making “The Great Loop” up the east coast, and a dyslexic youth who learned to read and then graduated from both The Linsly School and Carnegie Mellon University.
Now a successful engineer, Curtis Kossman, Linsly class of 1987, has started two schools in Pittsburgh geared toward helping dyslexic students.
He runs both the Kossman Development Company and Provident Charter School

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