Search Constraints

You searched for: Acquisition Source Hathaway, Joyce T. Remove constraint Acquisition Source: Hathaway, Joyce T. Projects West Virginia History OnView Remove constraint Projects: West Virginia History OnView
Number of results to display per page

Search Results

Cars line the street of the downtown area. On the right is Thompson Drug Co.
A crowd observes as the cornerstone for the new Calhoun County courthouse is lain. The new court house building is located by the Masonic Lodge.
Hardman, left, and Hathaway, right, pose together by the street. In the background is Thompson Drug Co.
Three unidentified women pose beside a car parked in front of Thompson Drug Company.
David B. Hathaway, center, poses with fellow Boy Scouts. On the left is the Jeffrey Hotel.
Third from right is W.T.W. Dye, M. D. To his front right is Sophia A. Dye. Other subjects unidentified.
View of the wreckage at the natural gas station. The explosion occurred on Thanksgiving Day that year. The station, originally proposed to be named "Boston-on-Kanawha," was, at the time, supposedly the world's largest carbon black factories.
Photograph shows the third floor fully engulfed in flames while the auditorium below has yet to catch fire.
A man sits on a chair in the lawn. In the background is a small pavilion. The stereograph is part of photographer William Dunnington's "Webster Springs Series."
Opened in 1955 when gas was 29 cents a gallon. The business was home-owned by A. G. "Ted" Burch.
Organized and issued a charter in 1935, stockholders were L. J. Morris, C. A. Jarvis and Earnest Mollohan.
The first bank established in Calhoun County opening its doors in 1901 to a cautious public being "reluctant to hand over their money for keeping to someone else".