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The Big 4 Building towers over the street scattered with automobiles.

1933. Early 20th Century Third Avenue, Hinton, W. Va.

Two unidentified men pose by the intersection of Ballengee Street and 3rd Avenue.

1934. Two Men Pose Next to Automobile on 3rd Avenue, Hinton, W. Va.

Located at 304 3rd Avenue, Clyde Harford (right) and associates stand outside of the first ever Kroger Grocery & Baking Company store to enter the city. J. E. Garrettson served as the store's manager. The store later became Bowlings Dairy Bar.

1935. First Kroger Store in Hinton, W. Va.

Two unidentified children are pictured on the sidewalk of a relatively empty street. To the right is the Big 4 Building. Down the street is the intersection with TempleStreet.

1936. View down 3rd Avenue, Hinton, W. Va.

A group of men gather outside a tent where a man supposedly eats live snakes. View looking down from Temple Street toward Summers Street.

1937. Snake Eater Exhibition in Hinton, W. Va.

Maryat Lee lived on her farm near Hinton, W. Va. in Summers County from 1970 until 1984 when she moved to Lewisburg, W. Va.  She called her farm near Hinton "The Women's Farm" and it also served as the home of EcoTheater.Maryat Lee (born Mary Attaway Lee; May 26, 1923 – September 18, 1989) was an American playwright and theatre director who made important contributions to post-World War II avant-garde theatre.  She pioneered street theatre in Harlem, and later founded EcoTheater in West Virginia, a community based theater project.Early in her career, Lee wrote and produced plays in New York City, including the street play “DOPE!”  While in New York she also formed the Soul and Latin Theater (SALT), and wrote plays centered around the lives of the actors in the group.In 1970 Lee moved to West Virginia and formed the community theater group EcoTheater in 1975.  Beginning with local teenagers from the Governor’s Summer Youth Program, the rural theater group grew, and produced plays based on oral histories collected from the local community.  Each performance of an EcoTheater play involved audience participation and discussion.  With the assistance of the Humanities Foundation of West Virginia, guest scholars became a part of EcoTheater.

1938. Maryat Lee on her farm near Hinton, W. Va.

Looking West on Temple St.  Episcopal church to the right, Independent Herald Office to the left along with Fair.

1939. Episcopal Church where Big 4 is, Third Ave., Hinton, W. Va.

A truck carrying uniformed soldiers is pictured at the intersection of Ballengee Street and 2nd Avenue. Subjects unidentified.

1940. Army Day Parade in Downtown Hinton, W. Va.

View of a typical day in downtown Hinton. People are scattered across the sidewalks, conversing with associates or shopping. Subjects unidentified.

1941. Scene at Second Avenue in Hinton, W. Va.

Women dressed in fancy gowns stand on a float as four horses drag it along the corner of Ballengee Street and 2nd Avenue. Spectators line the sidewalks as they observe the spectacle. Subjects unidentified.

1942. An Army Day Parade Float Makes Its Way through Downtown Hinton, W. Va.

Four boys in their Boy Scout uniforms lead their troop down the street. Subjects unidentified.

1943. Boy Scout Troop 115 Marches Down the Street During the Army Day Parade, Hinton, W. Va.

Young boys in their band uniforms march down the street with their instruments in hand. Subjects unidentified.

1944. Marching Band Performing in the Army Day Parade, Hinton, W. Va.