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You searched for: Date ca. 1909 Remove constraint Date: ca. 1909 Medium postcard Remove constraint Medium: postcard Projects West Virginia History OnView Remove constraint Projects: West Virginia History OnView
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See original for correspondence. Published by E.F. Milian. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
See original for correspondence. Published by The Valentine and Sons Publishing Company. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
Published by the Hugh C. Leighton Co. See original for correspondence. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
The fort was subject to two major sieges, two notable feats (McColloch's Leap and Betty Zane's trek through the battle), and other skirmishes.
Caption on postcard reads: "Ebenezer Zane's Old Log Cabin. The first building erected in Wheeling built in 1769, torn down 1908. This is the cabin to which Elizabeth Zane made her heroic dash for powder during the siege of Ft. Henry by the British and Indians."
See original for correspondence. Published by J.K. Hall. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
See original for correspondence. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
Illustrated postcard of two men and a boy standing along pedestrian walkway across bridge on Bridge Street. See original for correspondence. Published by Grant Graham. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
In 1891 W.H. Crawford established the Crawford Woolen Company which employed fifteen workers and produced around seven hundred yards of cloth a week. In less than fifteen years Crawford's textile plant failed due to the old age of the operating machines and low capital. During the same time a number of modern electric powered mills moved to Martinsburg, turning it into an important textile center. Published by W.E. Holfheins & Company. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
See original for correspondence. Published by Fred H. Baker. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
See original for correspondence. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
Alexander Campbell was a religious leader who helped start the Restoration Movement which created several Churches of Christ, an independent and pre-denominational congregation, in America. He also founded Bethany College in Bethany, West Virginia. See original for correspondence. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
Yankee Street covered in snow during the winter. See original for correspondence. Published by N.E. paper and Stationery Company. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
Several people gather on the deck of a ferry departing onto the Ohio River. See original for correspondence. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
See original for correspondence. Published by Kiger's Book Store. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
(From postcard collection legacy system.)
See original for correspondence. Published by C.E. Wheelock & Co. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
See original for correspondence. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
Published by S. Spencer Moore & Company. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
See original for correspondence. Published by S. Spencer Moore & Company. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
Homes in the distance at base of mountain at Kanawha Falls, West Virginia. See original for correspondence. Published by Raphael Tuck & Sons. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
Man sits on a rock to the right side of the river. See original for correspondence. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
See original for correspondence. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
Man stands besides Bowlder Rock on the side of railroad tracks to emphasize it's size. See original for correspondence. Published by The Rose Company. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
A dirt road combs through the small town. See original for correspondence. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
See original for correspondence. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
Hand painted aerial depiction over town center. See original for correspondence. Published by The Hugh C. Leighton Co. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
See original for correspondence. Published by W. R. Powers. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
See original for correspondence. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
Train tracks running through rocky mountain sides into a tunnel. Published by the Hugh C. Leighton Company. See original for correspondence. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
A small group rests on the hill by Organ Cave. See original for correspondence. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
See original for correspondence. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
See original for correspondence. Published by Davis & Gould. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
See original for correspondence. Published by C.O. Weaver and Company. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
View of the fountain at Newell Park. See original for correspondence. Published by The Valentine & Sons Publishing Company. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
Several horse and buggies travel down the road during some sort of possible festivity. See original for correspondence. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
See original for correspondence. Published by C.E. Wheelock & Company. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
Hotel was destroyed by a fire in 1911. See original for correspondence. Published by Wheelock & Company. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
A few men sit by the curb, observing the grounds by the depot as a crowd gathers outside to greet the approaching train. Published by Pike News Company. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
See original for correspondence. Published by Hill's Pharmacy. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
See original for correspondence. Published by Walter E. Dittmeyer. (From postcard collection legacy system.)
Caption on back of postcard reads: "Court House at Charlestown, W. Va. (then Virginia), where John Brown was tried and convicted on Nov. 2, 1859. The scaffold on which Brown was executed was afterwards built into the porch of a house, bought by a Confederate soldier, still the owner. It was taken to Chicago and then brought to Washington. The Kansas State Historical Society will probably become its permanent owner." Published by The National Tribune. (From postcard collection legacy system.)