U.S.S. West Virginia in dry dock, likely in Newport News, Va. during construction. The keel was laid down in April 1920, and the ship was launched in November 1921.
Noel Family Gathered at Morris Hill, Allegheny County, Va.
Date:
ca. 1925
Description:
From left to right is Minnie Noel; Lawrence Noel; Forest Noel; an unidentified Noel; Clarence Noel; Bob Noel; Harvey Noel; Clyde Noel; and Emmitt Noel.
Noel Family Portrait at Morris Hill, Allegheny County, Va.
Date:
ca. 1925
Description:
From left to right is Maudie Noel (kneeling); Minnie Noel (kneeling); Harvey Noel; Clyde Noel; Emmitt Noel; Henry A. Noel Senior; Bob Noel; Clarence Noel; and Lawrence Noel.
Front row, from left to right, is Kendal Noel (first wife of Henry Senior); Henry Noel Senior; unidentified; Anna Noel (Married to Emmit Henry's second son); and unidentified. Thr group is gathered around a horse-drawn wagon.
Carter Hall, Near Millwood and Boyce, Clarke County, Va.
Description:
Caption on back of postcard reads: "Carter Hall erected about 1792 by Colonel Nathaniel Burwell. Sometime the home of Wm. A. Carter, latterly of Mr. Geo. Burwell and now the residence of Mr. Townsend Burwell." Published by Williamsport Paper Company. (From postcard collection legacy system--Non-WV.)
Big Bend Lookout in Jefferson National Forest From Mt. Walker Lookout, Between Wytheville, Va. and Bluefield, W. Va.
Description:
Highest point on U.S. Route 21 and 52, elevation 3,405 feet. Caption on back of postcard reads: "Over this pass at Mt. Walker Lookout, Union Cavalry under Colonel John T. Toland raided to Wytheville to destroy the Virginia and Tennessee Railway (N. & W.) July 1863. Mary Tynes, a girl of the neighborhood, rode ahead to warn the people. When the raiders reached Wytheville they were repulsed by home guards and Toland was killed." Published by Genuine Curteich. (From postcard collection legacy system--Non-WV.)
View From Mt. Walker Lookout, Showing Jefferson National Forest and Big Bend Lookout, Between Wytheville, Va. and Bluefield, W. Va.
Description:
On U.S. Route 21 and 52. Caption on back of postcard reads: "Big Walker Mountain is one of the highest ridges in south-west West Virginia. These mountains abound in rare wild flowers including Azaleas, Rhododendron and Laurel and the rare Sourwood Tree, the blossoms of which yield the world's finest honey." Published by Genuine Curteich. (From postcard collection legacy system--Non-WV.)
Postcard reads, "The stone section of this ancient house, two miles east of Staunton, is doubtless the oldest structure in Augusta County. Here lived Col. John Lewis, pioneer settler, who came with some thirty Scotch-Irish about the year 1732, when Augusta was a no-man's land. Lewis, a fine type of frontiersman and one of the first magistrates of Augusta, died in 1762 at the age of eighty-four, his grave being near the house above. His five sons were conspicuous men of their times; Thomas laid out Staunton in 1750, while Andrew was the victor at Point Pleasant and a general in the Revolutionary War." Published by Shenandoah Publishing House. See original for correspondence. (From postcard collection legacy system--Non-WV.)
Postcard reads, "The above is a typical harvest scene in the highly productive Valley of Virginia. In the foreground, fertile, undulating fields; in the background, a graceful, forested mountain ridge. George Washington called the Shenandoah Valley the "Garden of America". When in 1861, the Confederate government placed Gen. J. E. Johnston in command in the Lower Valley, he said that section alone would feed an army of 40,000 men. And in this calculation only three counties were considered. Little wonder that the Shenandoah Valley was known as the "Granary of the Confederacy." Published by Shenandoah Publishing House. (From postcard collection legacy system--Non-WV.)
Postcard reads, "After Gen. Braddock's defeat (July 1755) by the French and Indians near Fort Duquesne, Lieut.-Col. George Washington was given command of the colonial forces on the frontier. Washington then built Fort Loudoun at Winchester, and while supervising this work (1756-7) he occupied the building shown above. During this time three companies of Virginia troops were quartered within a stockade built upon the lot to the southward. Prior to the French and Indian War (1749-53) Washington had used this building as an office while employed by Lord Fairfax as a surveyor." Published by Shenandoah Publishing House. (From postcard collection legacy system--Non-WV.)
Postcard reads, "General Sheridan occupied this home during one of the famous Winchester campaigns and from it began his famous ride to the Battle of Cedar Creek, 'twenty miles away'". Published by Marken & Bielfied Inc. See original for correspondence. (From postcard collection legacy system--Non-WV.)
Ruins of Old Lutheran Church, Built 1764, Used as Barracks During Revolutionary War, Winchester, Va.
Date:
ca. 1914
Description:
Land given by Thomas Lord Fairfax, this old Lutheran Church was used as barracks during the Revolutionary War. Published by the Williamsport Paper Co. See original for correspondence. (From postcard collection legacy system--Non-WV.)
Postcard reads, "The Homestead at Virginia Hot Springs has been operated for more than a century and a half as a luxury resort to the first families of America. It is located in a lovely valley on the east side of the Alleghany mountains and has an elevation of 2,300 feet." See original for correspondence. (From postcard collection legacy system--Non-WV.)