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View of Coke ovens and buildings surrounding them at the Collinsville Mine, Glen Jean.
Men stand in front of the tipple and power house at the Great Kanawha Mine, Great Kanawha Colliery Co., Kanawha County.
View of the town of Scarbro shows part of White Oak Valley.
Portrait of men standing on and around a porch.
Loaded August 30, 1913.
Cars and people file down the streets at Mount Hope, W. Va.
Elk Horn Mining Corporation, Eastern Kentucky
On the front: "Five teams- six mules each team- hauling building material from mouth of Beaver Creek, a distance of twenty-five miles, prior to arrival of railroad."
On the front: "Substation- reducing current from 40,000 volts to 250 volts."
On the front: " Boone Creek is named after Daniel Boone, who passed through this country in 1781. The tree still stands and is in a healthy condition. It is located about two miles from Fleming, near the lower end of the property."
On the front: "Sawmill, which has capacity of 30,000 feet per day."
On the front: "Eventually the coal will be hauled by electric power."
Elk Horn Mining Corporation
On the front: "One of the stores- dimensions 65 x 90."
On the front: "One of the office buildings."
On the front: "Hotel- Contains Pool Room, Restaurant, Moving Picture Parlor and Barber Shop."
On the front: "Town Hall- used for Post Office, Court Room and Bank- Upstairs used for various secret orders."
Elk Horn Mining Corporation
Elk Horn Mining Corporation
From left to right: Jake Sibloski, Walter Miller, Louis Roncaglione, Andrew Vargo and Fred Lamb.
Group portrait of miners and rescue equipment.  This group took first place at competitions St. Louis.  From Left to Right: Frank Colline, Edward Graff, Howard Samuels, Andrew Lightfoot, R.P. Nicholls and Fred Lamb.
Mining town of Lochgelly in the Winter.
Orchestra standing at the top of some steps. Broadcasted from KDKA, Pitt.
Directors cup at annual employees first aid meet at Scarbro.
Clusters of miner's houses in the distance at Sprague, W. Va.
Children playing on playground at Price Hill, W. Va.
The Summerlee Store at the Summerlee Mine of the New River Company. The people sitting in front of the store from right to left; Harry Stamper, Lola Lewis, A.R. Long, Delia Alexander, A.J. Bishop.
V.P. in charge of operations since 1911, resigned for health reasons in 1941.
View of the church at Cranberry.
Tipple with a parked car outside with man leaning on it.
Trains filled with coal file past a group of miners houses in Sprague, W. Va.
Loaded railroad cars on the tracks at Skelton show the famous White Oak Smokeless Coal.
Men riding in coal cars along snow covered tracks to the Skelton mine during winter time.  Miner's homes and wood piles visible.
Aerial view of the town of Cranberry 'Foreground' and the town of Prosperity 'Background.'
Stanaford Tipple loading coal cars.  Coal cars moving up and down hill on tracks.
Group of people wait at the train station as a train comes in.
On the right is the MacDonald Presbyterian Church, and on the left is probably a schoolhouse.
Horse drawn carts emerging from the White Oak Coal Company Storage and Distributing Plant at Richmond, Virginia.
Group of men and child pose in front of train No. 122 at Lochgelly station. Left is the Lochgelly store which burned in  1941. Right is the Supply House which burned in 1917.
Scene on Collinsville grounds shows early residents.
Timber piles around the Prosperity Mine and Tipple.
'Operated by the White Oak Fuel Co. of Fayette County.'
White Oak Railway Co. built this Oak Hill Station to serve the area.
Station of the Piney River and Paint Creek Railroad Co. at Beckley, Raleigh County, W. Va.
Klondyke Mine, Dunn Loop was the largest producer in the field. 'Dunn Loop Coal and Const. Chartered in W. Va. on Feb. 16, 1893.'
Tipple and General Store in the Background
Collins Operation - tipple and coke ovens.  Collins Colliery Co., Fayette County.  Daily capacity 1200 tons, 125 tons.
Birds eye view of Summerlee Mine, shows railroad leading to the tipple.
Panoramic view of the town of MacDonald with tipple on the hillside.
Men and horses stand in cut in hillside.  This construction work done by the White Oak Railway Co. was the Carter's Branch Cut to connection with the Virginia Railway.
View of tipple, coke ovens, and surrounding buildings.
Passenger Train of White Oak Railway Co. with a line of people outside of it.
'Operated by Cranberry Fuel Company of Raleigh County. Daily capacity was 1000 tons.'