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1. Livestock Show, Wheeling, W. Va.

Front view of Shay No. 11 train engine at the water tank with six crew members in front.

2. Shay No. 11 at Spruce Water Tank With Crew

3. Bridge Over Cheat River, Mouth Big Sandy Creek, Preston County, W. Va.

4. WVU Football Team

5. Horse Show in Wheeling, Ohio County, W. Va.

"Baker House $1.00 per day" on sign.  Cass, W.V.

6. Hotel (Baker House), Cass, W. Va.

7. Agriculture Train on the K and M at Montgomery, W. Va.

A picture postcard of the Farmers and Merchants Bank in Ritchie County, West Virginia.

8. Farmer's and Merchant's Bank, Cairo, Ritchie County, W. Va.

9. Maple Avenue, New Martinsville, Wetzel County, W. Va.

10. Central Baptist Church Members, Hinton, Summers County, W. Va.

State troops are standing behind the stacks of guns and ammunition that they seized during the First Martial Law Proclamation.

11. Guns and Ammunition Seized During First Martial Law Proclamation

Caption on back reads, 'Fire in the ventilation system or fan house of the Gaston Mine, 1912.  This mine was opened by James Otis Watson in 1874. Located at Watson and closed in 1925. It was located in what is now the present boundary of the friendly city of Fairmont.'

12. Fan House Fire at Gaston Mine in Fairmont, W. Va.

13. Passengers Arriving at a Special Reunion for Old Civil War Veterans, Hardy County, W. Va.

14. Passengers on the Agriculture Train, West Virginia University, Agricultural Experiment Station

15. Participants in a Farmers' Course on Grafting and Budding, West Virginia University, Agricultural Experiment Station

16. WVU Baseball Team Captain Hutchinson

17. Train Wreck in Nicholas County Pardee and Curtin Lumber Company

Group portrait  taken at Keller Presbyterian Church.

18. Farmers' Institute, Lowell, W. Va.

Buggies with horses are parked outside of the small station.

19. Agriculture Train at New Haven, W. Va.

Loggers pose atop a large pile of logs.

20. Logging Scene in Nicholas County

"Campbell's Creek Coal Company's Steamers 'E.R. Andrews', and 'D.T. Lane, (and their coal harbor,) Point Pleasant, West Virginia, during Ice Run Out."

21. Campbell's Creek Coal Company's Steamboats on the Icy River at Point Pleasant, W. Va.

22. WVU Baseball Coach McClure

23. Campbell's Creek Coal Company's Steamboats Passing Point Pleasant W. Va.

State troops stand behind the huge piles of guns and ammunition that was captured or surrendered during the first martial law proclamation.

24. Guns and Ammunition Seized During First Martial Law Proclamation

25. Baseball Team at the Ball Park on Little Wolf Creek, Hinton, W. Va.

Large crowd of people gathered on the sidewalk of High Street, Morgantown, W. Va.

26. High Street, Morgantown, W. Va.

27. Fan House Fire at Gaston Mine in Fairmont, W. Va.

28. Fan House Fire at Gaston Mine in Fairmont, W. Va.

29. Fairmont State Normal School Baseball Team

Group portrait of students and flags at Franklin's First High School, opened in 1912.

30. First High School, Franklin, Pendleton County, W. Va.

Four men are seen in front of the building while a horse grazes nearby. It was Established in 1910.

31. Public School Building Near Clarksburg, W. Va.

32. Mary Gibson's Harmony Grove Sunday School Class, Valley Point, Preston County, W. Va.

'Arms and ammunition surrendered to or captured by state troops immediately after first declaration of martial law on Paint Creek and Cabin Creek, September 2, 1912. See book, page 32, etc. Picture used on page 32 of book by H. B. Lee. Rifles, machine guns, pistols, and ammunition seized by the militia in the strike zone. Boxes on the left contain 225,000 rounds of machine gun ammunition.'

33. Guns and Ammunition Seized During First Martial Law Proclamation

34. Pisgah Methodist Episcopal Church Quarterly Conference Announcement, Preston County, W. Va.

Property of G.S. Wallace in Huntington, West Virginia.

35. Wallace Home, Huntington, W. Va.

Group portrait of the Fairmont Normal School Basketball Team.

36. Fairmont State Normal School Basketball Team

37. E. M. Brook Farm at French Creek

38. Protecting Hogs from Cholera, West Virginia University Agricultural Experiment Station

View of the Hardy County Bank and surrounding buildings on Main Street in Moorefield.

39. Hardy County Bank, Hardy County, W. Va.

40. Grand Army of the Republic Soldiers Decoration Day, Bruceton Mills, Preston County, W. Va.

41. Fan House Fire at Gaston Mine in Fairmont, W. Va.

View of Hackney's Drug Store at the Northeast corner of Main and Washington Streets occupied this location from 1910 to 1950. This building was built in 1910 by Dr. R. E. L. Hackney of Washington, D. C. who was a Dentist, and made his home in Moorefield from 1910 until his death. He operated a Drug Store and Soda Fountain on the first floor and had his Dental Offices on the second floor front rooms. The back rooms on the second floor were occupied for some years by Club Do-Easy. Dr. Hackney sold out in (date unkown) and Chambers and Williams operated a garage here, building a shop farther back on the lot, which is now the Moose Home. The Loyal Order of Moose bought the property in (date unknown) having rented it for several years from another owner. In (date unknown) they tore down the Drug Store Building. A Bakery was operated in this building at one time by a man by the name or Ours.

42. Hackney's Drug Store, Moorefield, W. Va.

Junction of the Anthony's Creek Road and the James River and Kanawha Turnpike 'now route 60' where Averell's force met Patton's brigade in a head on collision. This was the scene of the fiercest fighting; the road in the center was filled with the dead and wounded.  Photo taken about 1912 is from Mac Corkle's 'White Sulphur Springs. See West Virginia Collection Pamphlet 6610 and Boyd Stutler's 'West Virginia in the Civil War.'

43. Junction Where Battle Between Averell and Patton Took Place

44. WVU Men's Gymnastic Team

45. Fan House Fire at Gaston Mine in Fairmont, W. Va.

'Old Drawing Room, now Electronics Lab.'

46. Students Studying in Mechanical Hall, West Virginia University

47. West Virginia University President Thomas Edward Hodges

Dr. Callahan seated at his desk.

48. Dr. James Morton Callahan, West Virginia University