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Men generally did not live in towns when they worked timber.  Instead, they came in from outlying areas, lived in groups in barracks, and went home over the weekends.  Here they lived in arks on the river.

1. Arks Tied on Greenbrier River Near Cass, W. Va.

Portrait of Major General T.J. Jackson, C.S.A.

2. Jackson, General Thomas J. 'Stonewall'

A map of Grafton, County Seat of Taylor County by T. M. Fowler. The map includes Tygarts Valley River and Three Fork Creek as well as the Court House, Schools, Churches, Central Hotel, Shackelford Son and Co. Planing Mill, Crystal Ice Co., and National Cemetery.

3. Fowler Map of Grafton, W. Va.

Portraits of C&O Railroad Officials in the early days of Huntington, West Virginia.

4. Officials of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad, Huntington, W. Va.

'Tanks and loading rack at Volcano Junction. Here the Sand Hill and Laurel Fork Railroad met the Baltimore and Ohio. Both standard gauge tracks.'

5. Tanks and Loading Rack, Volcano, W. Va.

'Sunnyside from South's pasture.'

6. View of Morgantown and Monongahela River, Morgantown, W.Va.

View of the Hotel W. H. Shobe in Laneville, West Virginia. Two women stand outside and a man stands in the entrance way.

7. W. H. Shobe Hotel in Laneville, Tucker County, W. Va.

8. Arnold Brothers Farm, West Virginia University

'Photograph taken in front of Martin Hall'.

9. Civil Engineering Class with Surveying Equipment, West Virginia University

10. Ray Dille, West Virginia University

'A. B. 1898, Smithfield, Pa.'

11. Walter S. Deffenbaugh, West Virginia University

12. Stuart H. Bowman, West Virginia University