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The workers and caboose belong to the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad Company.

1. Railroad Workers in front of a Caboose

The former employees pose for a group portrait. Pictured is Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Hinton, Mr. and Mrs. R. F. Wilson, Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Richmond, Mr. and Mrs. Whitlock, Henry Lee, Thomas Haskins, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Thomas, Mr. and Mrs. Krim Bess, Mr. King, J. W. McCallister, Jr., D. B. Murphy of Clifton Forge, Va., E. L. Wiseman, Mr. Reese, and W. L. Taylor. The group was attending the 38th convention of the Veterans' association held in Greenbrier Valley Fair Grounds.

2. Retired Employees of the C. & O. Railroad in Hinton, W. Va.

Smoke pours from the fast moving engine as it pulls the train cars across the rails.

3. C. & O. Railroad Locomotive and Train, Hinton, W. Va.

Plumley pictured in a nice dress and bow holding a bouquet of flowers. She married John H. Plumley, a sheet metal worker for the C. & O. Railroad, in 1928. In 1930, she began to work for the railway, as well, and in 1948 became the Chief Operator. She has one son, John Jr. Plumley.

4. Vida Pearl Lilly Plumley as a Young Girl, Summers County, W. Va.

Daughter of Jeremiah Mills and Louisa Elva Cassell (Mills). Grace had one brother, Jeremiah IV, and four sisters, Mabel, Elizabeth, Susie, and Louisa Elva.Grace was born December 3, 1871. She was employed by the C. &  O. Railroad as a telegraph operator from July 1, 1893 to August 11, 1942. She died July 8, 1958.

5. Grace Mills Diefenbach of Hinton, W. Va.

A group of unidentified workers and what appears to be their African-American cook gather for a picture. Behind them are Chesapeake and Ohio Railway cars.

6. Railroad Workers in Summers County, W. Va.

A crowd observes an early diesel engine at the station.

7. C. & O. Engine No. 500 at Hinton Station, Hinton, W. Va.

Looking at the engine sitting on the tracks, following by train cars reading, "Chesapeake & Ohio".

8. C. & O. Engine No. 128, Hinton, W. Va.

Huntington was the president of the C. & O. Railway when the line moved, in 1972, into what would later become Hinton and Summers County, W. Va.Huntington purchased, for the railroad, all the land where the City of Hinton now stands at public auction. He later purchased from the railroad all the land that would not be used by the railroad.

9. Portrait of Collis P. Huntington, President of the Chesapeake & Ohio Railway

Engine No. 2101, named "Chessie Steam Special", is pictured on the C. & O. track.

10. Train at Hinton Yards, Hinton, W. Va.