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Football players practice while construction of Woman's Hall, now Stalnaker Hall, goes on in the background. Subjects unidentified.
Teacher at the bottom right is George C. Cottle. Cottle's grandfather, Bob Wood, is sitting in the doorway. The children are unidentified.
Cook pictured with horses, named Dan and Doc, on the farm.
George Green, in uniform, worked at Foxburg Bank.
George Green is the brother of James Green Sr.
Print number 1631.
Soldiers stop to snack on food provided by the Red Cross women.
Published by Dawson & Co. See original for correspondence.
See original for correspondence. Published by The Helmbright Brothers. (From postcard collection legacy system--subject.)
Published by Union Stationery Company. (From postcard collection legacy system--Non-WV.)
(From postcard collection legacy system--subject.)
(From postcard collection legacy system--subject.)
(From postcard collection legacy system--subject.)
See original for correspondence. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
Group of boys enjoy the river and rest on the bank. See original for correspondence. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
See original for correspondence. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
(From postcard collection legacy system.)
See original for correspondence. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
See original for correspondence. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
See original for correspondence. Published by I. Robbins and Son. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
Published by Ess an Ess Photo Co. See original for correspondence. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
(From postcard collection legacy system.)
Vandervort School children and teacher Hiram Evans pose for picture outside of school building. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
See original for correspondence. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
See original for correspondence. Published by I. Robbins and Son. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
Published by I. Robbins & Son. See original for correspondence. (From pstcard collection legacy system.)
See original for correspondence. Published by The S. Spencer Moore Company. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
See original for correspondence. Published by The S. Spencer Moore Company. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
Published by I. Robbins & Son. See original for correspondence. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
See original for correspondence. Published by I. Robbins & Son. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
See original for correspondence. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
See original for correspondence. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
(From postcard collection legacy system.)
See original for correspondence. Published by Louis Kaufmann & Sons. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
Unidentified soldier is probably from West Virginia.
Note the "WV" behind the soldier, next to the door. All the men in the 155th Field Artillery trained at Camp Lee were from West Virginia and fought in some of the deadliest battles of World War l.
Unidentified soldier and army cook, most likely from West Virginia pose outside at basic training camp.
An instructor teaches soldiers how to use a gas mask in case of a mustard gas attack during World War l
Unidentified soldiers, most likely from West Virginia, prepare to shave. This unit saw heavy fighting during World War l
The units were composed of men from West Virginia and saw heavy fighting during World War I from the Meuse Argonne into Germany.
Men read while waiting their turn with the barber in a make-shift outside "shop". Many West Virginians trained at Camp Lee for fighting in Europe during World War I. Most were members of the 313th, 314th and 315th Field Artillery Units.
Probably used for the training of trench warfare which was the type of fighting waged during World War I. Camp Lee was a basic training camp that included several men from West Virginia.
Member of the 80th Division U.S. Army on horseback at basic training at Camp Lee, Virginia.
Members of the 80th Division U.S. Army give each other a shave while at basic training at Camp Lee, Virginia.
Members of the 314th Field Artillery which eventually became part of the 155th Brigade boasted more days of continuous combat firing than the batteries of any other American Division.
Because of significant heriage in the past, residents of Pennsylvania, Virginia, and West Virginia became the structure of the 80th Division. The 80th Division was organized in August 1917 at Camp Lee, Virginia.
Members of the 80th Divsion U.S. Army inside their sleeping area at Camp Lee, Virginia during basic training. During the Meuse Argonne campaign, the 80th Division was the only one that saw action during each phase of the offensive. And they first earned their motto, "The 80th Division Moves only Forward!".
Members of the 80th Infantry Division, nicknamed the "Blue Ridge Division", it was initially composed of draftees from the mid-atlantic states of Virginia, West Virginia, Pennsylvania, and Maryland.
Supply Co. 314 at basic training in Camp Lee, Virginia. Members of the 314th Field Artillery, 80th Divison U.S. Army were mostly from West Virginia. The 314th eventually became a part of the 155th Brigade which saw heavy and constant action in Meuse Argonne, through the armistice.
Automobiles, waving American flags line the main street.
Two of the students identified are Ray (Dusty) Ash, front row-first,left and James (Jim) Guiher, front row-third left. Information included on the photograph includes ". . . several [are] Clarksburg men. . ."
Possibly a circuit photograph of the facilities at the Sutton Chemical Company just below the town of Sutton. The photograph was taken during World War I.
Wife of West Virginia Governor John Jacob Cornwell (1917-1921).
Part of the Morgantown and Wheeling Railroad, a passenger service which extended to Pentress in western Monongalia County.
'Raine Andrews Lumber Company.  X marks Fred Hertig on the front porch of the Boarding House.  He is my brother. Note the poster on the wall, it is World War I.'
Group portrait of Pendleton County's Second Contingent of soldiers assigned to artillery duty.
View of Moorefield in Winchester Avenue from the Hotel about 1917, in Hardy County, West Virginia.
Men are participating in military training at Camp Greenbrier in Greenbrier County, West Virginia.
Four African-American World War I draftees in front of the post office.
The wreckage of a boat lies on the river bank, at the foot of Walnut Street in Morgantown.
People and goods in front of George H. Coffman Store in Elkins, West Virginia; See W. Va. Gazeteers 1903-04; 1923-24.
'Great Flood of 1917, covering North Alderson.'
Frontal view of the Woodson - Mohler Grocery Co. Wholesale Grocers building in Alderson W. Va. with C&O boxcar situated in front of building.
Sign on side of building reads, 'The 1917 scale means starvation wages, slavery conditions [and] sacrafice of honor to coal miners.'