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The front of the Fostoria Glass Museum in Moundsville, Marshall County, West Virginia is shown.

1. Fostoria Glass Museum, Moundsville, W. Va.

Published by United Art Publishing Co. See original for correspondence. (From postcard collection legacy system.)

2. Church of God; McMechen, W. Va.

See original for corresopndence. (From postcard collection legacy system.)

3. McMechen Dam; Marshall Co., W. Va.

See original for correspondence. (From postcard collection legacy system.)

4. Marshall Street Looking North; McMechen, W. Va.

(From postcard collection legacy system.)

5. Family Sitting by the Porch of Their Home; Marshall Co., W. Va.

(From postcard collection legacy system.)

6. Court House and Soldiers Monument; Moundsville, W. Va.

See original for correspondence. (From postcard collection legacy system.)

7. Stewart Stamping Co.; Moundsville, W. Va.

1861 to 1865. Published by Bullard Printing House. (From postcard collection legacy system.)

8. Monument Erected to the Memory of the Soldiers of Marshall Co., W. Va.

Published by I. Robbins & Son. See original for correspondence. (From postcard collection legacy system.)

9. Post Office; Moundsville, W. Va.

Published by J. C. Myers & Co. (From postcard collection legacy system.)

10. Seventh Street, Looking East from Washington Ave.; Moundsville, W. Va.

See original for correspondence. Published by J.C. Myers and Company. (From postcard collection legacy system.)

11. Fifth Street, Looking West; Moundsville, W. Va.

See original for correspondence. Published by T.R. Rogers and Son. (From postcard collection legacy system.)

12. The W. Va. Penitentiary, From Top of Mound; Moundsville, W. Va.

Published by The Hugh C. Leighton Company. (From postcard collection legacy system.)

13. State Penitentiary; Moundsville, W. Va.

See original for correspondence. Published by I. Robbins and Son. (From postcard collection legacy system.)

14. Central Public School; Moundsville, W. Va.

See original for correspondence. Published by I. Robbins and Son. (From postcard collection legacy system.)

15. Main Entrance, State Penitentiary; Moundsville, W. Va.

See original for correspondence. Published by I. Robbins and Son. (From postcard collection legacy system.)

16. First Ward Public School; Moundsville, W. Va.

See original for correspondence. Published by Chas. H. Skinner and Hills Pharmacy. (From postcard collection legacy system.)

17. High School Building; Cameron, W. Va.

Caption on back of postcard reads; "This mammoth mound is the largest prehistoric monument in America. It is 79 feet high, 900 feet in circumference at base. Discovered 1772, Opened in 1838 by a tunnel along the natural surface to the center and a shaft from the apex to tunnel. Two vaults constructed of timber were revealed in which were found three human skeletons and numerous ornaments of copper, iron, mica, and bone. Also a curiously carved stone the characters on which have never been deciphered. Located at Moundsville and is now owned by the State of West Virginia." See original for correspondence. Published by I. Robbins and Son. (From postcard collection legacy system.)

18. The Prehistoric Mound; Moundsville, W. Va.

Published by the Rotograph Company. (From postcard collection legacy system.)

19. Prehistoric Mound in Winter; Moundsville, W. Va.

Train pile up on bridge. (From postcard collection legacy system.)

20. Wreck at Woodland, W. Va.

Published by Foto Lab. (From postcard collection legacy system.)

21. City Building, Fifth and Walnut Streets; Martins Ferry, W. Va.

Caption on back of postcard reads: "Located at the entrance of Walnut Grove Cemetery. This statue was dedicated in 1928 in honor of Betty Zane for her heroism in the siege of Ft. Henry in 1782. it was erected by the school children of Martins Ferry." Published by Foto Lab. (From postcard collection legacy system.)

22. Betty Zane Memorial; Martins Ferry, W. Va.

Original illustration created in 1850. Caption on back of postcard reads; "This mammoth mound is the largest prehistoric monument in America. It is 79 feet high, 900 feet in circumference at base. Discovered 1772, Opened in 1838 by a tunnel along the natural surface to the center and a shaft from the apex to tunnel. Two vaults constructed of timber were revealed in which were found three human skeletons and numerous ornaments of copper, iron, mica, and bone. Also a curiously carved stone the characters on which have never been deciphered. Located at Moundsville and is now owned by the State of West Virginia." (From postcard collection legacy system.)

23. Romance of American History, Great Mound on the Banks of the Ohio; Near Grave Creek, Va.

See original for correspondence. Published by The Hugh C. Leighton Company. (From postcard collection legacy system.)

24. Reynolds Memorial Hospital; Glendale, W. Va.

See original for correspondence. Published by T.R. Rogers and Sons. (From postcard collection legacy system.)

25. The Spring, Camp Grounds; Moundsville, W. Va.

See original for correspondence. Published by Franz Huld Company. (From postcard collection legacy system.)

26. Camp Grounds; Moundsville, W. Va.

Published by I. Robbins and Son. (From postcard collection legacy system.)

27. Looking Through the Camp Grounds and Camp Ground Tabernacle; Moundsville, W. Va.

See original for correspondence. (From postcard collection legacy system.)

28. Bird's Eye View; Cameron, W. Va.

Mound is 79 feet high and 900 feet in circumference at base. See original for correspondence. Published by T.R. Rogers and Sons. (From postcard collection legacy system.)

29. The Prehistoric Mound; Moundsville, W. Va.

See original for correspondence. Published by T.R. Rogers and Sons. (From postcard collection legacy system.)

30. First M.E. Church, Seventh St. Front; Moundsville, W. Va.

Published by B.O. Thompson. (From postcard collection legacy system.)

31. Trinity Church; Moundsville, W. Va.

See original for correspondence. Published by I. Robbins and Son. (From postcard collection legacy system.)

32. First M.E. Church; Moundsville, W. Va.

See original for correspondence. Published by Genuine Curteich. (From postcard collection legacy system.)

33. Cameron Clay Products Inc.; Cameron, W. Va.

Published by Curt Teich and Company. (From postcard collection legacy system.)

34. Water Street, Showing Methodist and Presbyterian Churches; Cameron, W. Va.

See original for correspondence. Published by Genuine Curteich. (From postcard collection legacy system.)

35. Main Street, Showing Movie Theatre; Cameron, W. Va.

A description of the event from "The Petroleum Gazette": "Tony Shuster, an oil well shooter was blown to atoms at 6:30 this morning when the nitroglycerine magazine of the Marietta Torpedo Co. 1/2 mile east of town, exploded. Shuster's team and wagon were blown to bits, the shoe of one horse falling in the center of the town. Every window in Cameron was demolished. Windows at Bristoria 12 miles distant, were broken. A great hole 30 feet in diameter and 15 feet deep marks the spot where the magazine stood. Bits of flesh were found over an area of over 1/2 a mile." (From postcard collection legacy system.)

36. Place of the Glycerine Explosion; Near Cameron, W. Va.