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'From roof of C.& O. station shed looking southwest.  All that vacant ground you see is now Huntington's south side.'

1. View from Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad Depot Near Huntington, W. Va.

2. Aerial View of Huntington State Hospital, Huntington, W. Va.

3. Marshall College Library, Huntington, W. Va.

Building was constructed in 1923, originally founded as the West Virginia Normal and Industrial School for Colored Children. The building was closed in 1956 and was transferred to Marshall University in 1961, where it was used as college owned apartments. The apartments were later demolished in 2011.

4. West Virginia Colored Children's Home Sun Parlor, Near Huntington, W. Va.

The C. & O. Engine pictured on the yard tracks.

5. Engine No. 490 at Huntington Yards, Huntington, W. Va.

Legendary engineer, Richardson, pictured in white coveralls, poses next to new American engine No. 70 after a run from Hinton.

6. Billy Richardson with C. & O. Class-A Locomotive in Huntington, W. Va.

Rufus Switzer and the first commissioners sitting around a table

7. Rufus Switzer and First Commissioners, Huntington, W. Va.

Hite ('18) was a halfback for West Virginia University's Mountaineer football team. During the 1917 season, Hite enlisted in the First Officers Training Camp after the United States declared war and was commissioned as a lieutenant. In his absence, the team elected Russell Bailey as the captain of the team. Russell came to WVU from Huntington High and was well-known as an excellent athlete.

8. WVU Football Captain Clay B. Hite, Morgantown, W. Va.

Text on the back reads, "The Collins P. Huntington Monument. Erected Oct. 22, 1924, in memory of Collins P. Huntington, the founder of the cities of Huntington, W. Va. and Newport News, Va. He was born Oct. 22, 1821 at Harwington, Conn. Through his efforts in 1862, the Central Pacific Railroad Company was formed to construct a telegraph and railroad line from the Pacific Coast to Ogden, Utah, to connect with the Union Pacific Railroad. The completion of this project placed him in the foremost ranks of American empire builders. He was president of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad Company from 1869 to 1887. Died Aug. 13, 1900."

9. Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad Station and C. P. Huntington Monument, Huntington, W. Va.

10. Class Picture 7th and 8th Grades, Douglass School, Huntington, W. Va.

11. Barnett School Orchestra, Huntington, W. Va.

Caption reads: "Mr. Barnett was one of the earliest black students to graduate from Dennison University in Granville, OH (1892) and was the second principal of Douglass High School (1897–1900). Mrs. Barnett lived to be 109 and moved for a while to Columbus, Ohio, to work and send them her two sons to college. She was a major source of history in the Huntington area."Further information on back of photo: "Carter Harrison Barnett (1867–1921) A. B. Dennison University, Granville OH (1892). Callie Jackson Barnett (1871–1980) Graduate of Granville H. S., Granville, OH (1893). Retired attendance officer, Cabell County, WV (1941)."

12. Carter Harrison Barnett and Callie Jackson Barnett, Huntington, W. Va.

A statue of Dr. Carter Godwin Woodson.The plaque reads: "Dr. Carter Godwin Woodson, 1875 - 1950. 'Father of Black History.' Former Principal - Douglass High School. 'We should emphasize not Negro history but the Negro in history.'--CGW Memorial Foundation Inc.Founded 1986 by former Mayor Robert Nelson.Special Thanks - Mayor Jean Dean.-- Newatha Perry, President"

13. Dr. Carter Godwin Woodson