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Located on the corner of 3rd Avenue and Ballengee Street, a group of church members pose in front of the building and on the steps. The reverend at the time the picture was taken was Rev. Gates. Subjects unidentified.

1. First Methodist Episcopal Church, Hinton, W. Va.

Jeeps filled with boy scouts head down Ballengee Street to participate in the parade. To the left is Carnagie Library.

2. Boy Scouts in Veterans Day Parade, Hinton, W. Va.

Marching band gets in position on the corner of Fourth Avenue and Ballengee Street. Ann Harvey Gore's parents home pictured on the far right.

3. Veterans Day Parade, Hinton, W. Va.

A man stands at the trunk of a car and holds up two dead foxes.  Inscription on reverse says photo is from VE Day 1945.

4. Ballengee Street, Hinton, W. Va.

A string of decorated cars make their way through the intersection of Ballengee Street and 2nd Avenue as a crowd watches from the sidelines.

5. Parade Floats Participate in the Army Day Parade, Hinton, W. Va.

A truck carrying uniformed soldiers is pictured at the intersection of Ballengee Street and 2nd Avenue. Subjects unidentified.

6. Army Day Parade in Downtown Hinton, W. Va.

Women dressed in fancy gowns stand on a float as four horses drag it along the corner of Ballengee Street and 2nd Avenue. Spectators line the sidewalks as they observe the spectacle. Subjects unidentified.

7. An Army Day Parade Float Makes Its Way through Downtown Hinton, W. Va.

Photo of the neighborhood intersection.

8. Residential Area between Ballengee Street and Seventh Avenue, Hinton, W. Va.

Men with painted stomachs and costumes walk down Ballengee Street. Subjects unidentified.

9. West Virginia Water Festival Parade, Hinton, W. Va.

Looking up Ballengee Street from the statue's position.

10. View from Confederate Soldier Statue in Hinton, W. Va.

Street view of the building located on Ballengee Street.

11. Ritz Theatre, Hinton, W. Va.

View of home lived in by Harold, son of Edward Calvin Eagle.Edward C. Eagle served on the local Hinton bar for nearly a quarter of a century after paying his way through West Virginia University. Mr. Eagle served his first term as prosecuting attorney of Summers County from 1902 to 1904 and for the following twenty years was the United States commissioner at Hinton. In 1920, he was elected prosecuting attorney on a platform that called for the suppression of moon-shining and law-breaking in general.

12. Harold Eagle Home on Ballengee Street, Hinton, W. Va.