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1. Riley Law Building, Wheeling, W. Va.

Rear view showing tennis courts. See original for correspondence. Published by E.W. Kelly Stationery Store. (From postcard collection legacy system.)

2. New River State School; Montgomery, W. Va.

Published by Coffman Press Print. See original for correspondence. (From postcard collection legacy system.)

3. New Century Hotel; Romney, W. Va.

(From postcard collection legacy system.)

4. The Rox; Wappocomo, W. Va.

See original for correspondence. Published by Walter E. Dittmeyer. (From postcard collection legacy system.)

5. Chimney Rock; Harper's Ferry, W. Va.

See original for correspondence. (From postcard collection legacy system.)

6. Kanawha River Emptying Into Ohio River; Pt. Pleasant, W. Va.

See original for correspondence. Published by Auburn Post Card Manufacturing Company. (From postcard collection legacy system.)

7. Street View, Princeton Road; Athens, W. Va.

Built in 1769. Published by I. Robbins and Son. (From postcard collection legacy system.)

8. Old Log Cabin; Wheeling, W. Va.

Caption on back of postcard reads: "Founded 1902 by Henry G. Davis in memory of his wife. Fireproof. Approved by the American College of Surgeons. Equipped to most modern standards by the Davis and Elkins families. Complete clinical x-ray and radium laboratories. Four full time staff members. Expert consultant and attending staff." See original for correspondence. Published by I. Robbins and Son. (From postcard collection legacy system.)

9. Davis Memorial Hospital, Elkins, W. Va.

The Midland Trail is a National Scenic Byway and is part of US Route 60 in southern West Virginia. The image was published by Beckley Kodak Service.(from the postcard legacy system.)

10. Midland Trail Near Lewisburg, W. Va.

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.)

11. Fort Lewis, Near Staunton, Va.

Meeting of the states of Maryland, West Virginia, and Virginia. Published by Walter E. Dittmeyer. (From postcard collection legacy system--subject.)

12. Junction of the Potomac and Shenandoah Rivers, Harper's Ferry, W. Va.