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You searched for: Acquisition Source Trail, Stephen D. & Fred Long Remove constraint Acquisition Source: Trail, Stephen D. & Fred Long Topical Subjects Counties--Summers. Remove constraint Topical Subjects: Counties--Summers. Topical Subjects Automobiles--West Virginia. Remove constraint Topical Subjects: Automobiles--West Virginia.
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Automobiles belonging to the army, forest service personnel, and corps engineers are parked along the dirt road. The insignia formation is pictured on the left.
Freeland sits in the driver's seat of an automobile.
Automobiles line along the New River's shore line so their passengers may observe the view.
Automobiles line along the west side of the river so that their passengers can look out from the shore.
Two cars are seen splashing through the waters of the gradually submerged road.
A car is caught in the flood waters.
A truck makes its way through the road flooded by the  Greenbrier River. Two cars are also seen in the background attempting the same journey.
Flood waters from the Greenbrier River make driving difficult for the car pictured.
A group of men, dressed in overalls and working boots, stand on the back of the automobile. A man holding a child sits in the passenger seat with an associate driving. A woman is also pictured behind the car. Subjects unidentified.
Automobiles cover the lawn in front of the movie screen.
Keaton stands beside the U. S. Department of Agriculture's Forest Service automobile.Keaton was born June 13, 1913 and his father was L. B. Keaton, the former sheriff. G. E. Keaton married Elizabeth Kelly in 1935 and fathered two girls, Margaret and Elaine.
The unidentified man poses beside a car on top of the newly completed bridge over the mouth of the Bluestone River.