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A train traveling through fields. 'Railroads were the principal way that West Virginians traveled in the early twentieth century.  The Little Kanawha Railroad was built in 1893 and abandoned in 1933.'
Woodrow "Woody" Wilson, owner of the Wirt County Journal, talks to two unidentified students at the office of the Wirt County Journal in Elizabeth, West Virginia.The photos in this collection were used in chapters that appeared in Mountain Trace, a publication of Parkersburg High School in West Virginia, edited by Kenneth G. Gilbert.
A linotype machine involved in the newspaper operation at the Wirt County Journal in Elizabeth, W. Va. owned by Woodrow "Woody" Wilson.The photos in this collection were used in chapters that appeared in Mountain Trace, a publication of Parkersburg High School in West Virginia, edited by Kenneth G. Gilbert.
Woodrow "Woody" Wilson, owner of the Wirt County Journal in Elizabeth, W. Va., next to the linotype machine used for the newspaper.The photos in this collection were used in chapters that appeared in Mountain Trace, a publication of Parkersburg High School in West Virginia, edited by Kenneth G. Gilbert.
A linotype machine used to print the newspaper at the Wirt County Journal in Elizabeth, W. Va., which was owned by Woodrow "Woody" Wilson.The photos in this collection were used in chapters that appeared in Mountain Trace, a publication of Parkersburg High School in West Virginia, edited by Kenneth G. Gilbert.
Woodrow "Woody" Wilson with two unidentified students at the Wirt County Journal in Elizabeth, W. Va.The photos in this collection were used in chapters that appeared in Mountain Trace, a publication of Parkersburg High School in West Virginia, edited by Kenneth G. Gilbert.
Woodrow "Woody" Wilson, owner of the Wirt County Journal, speaking at the newspaper office in Elizabeth, W. Va.The photos in this collection were used in chapters that appeared in Mountain Trace, a publication of Parkersburg High School in West Virginia, edited by Kenneth G. Gilbert.
Woodrow "Woody" Wilson, owner of the Wirt County Journal, in the office of the newspaper in Elizabeth, W. Va.The photos in this collection were used in chapters that appeared in Mountain Trace, a publication of Parkersburg High School in West Virginia, edited by Kenneth G. Gilbert.
A linotype machine used when printing newspapers at the Wirt County Journal in Elizabeth, W. Va.The photos in this collection were used in chapters that appeared in Mountain Trace, a publication of Parkersburg High School in West Virginia, edited by Kenneth G. Gilbert.
The church was founded and built in 1858. There is no record of a Methodist church in Elizabeth, W. Va. before 1858.
The church was organized in 1816.
The negative has been reversed on this image.  The Bell Tower should be on the other side of the building.The Pisgah Methodist Church was organized in 1818. The present church is a remodeled version of the church built in 1869. In 1921 it was rebuilt.