Search Constraints

You searched for: Geographic Names Ballengee Street (Hinton, W. Va.) Remove constraint Geographic Names: Ballengee Street (Hinton, W. Va.) Medium print Remove constraint Medium: print
Number of results to display per page

Search Results

Marching band members make their way down the street from Second Avenue to First Avenue.
An unidentified boy sits on top of a fire hydrant to get a view of the ongoing parade.
A crowd watches at the intersection of 2nd Avenue and Ballengee Street as a parade float disguised as a train drives by.
An unidentified boy is pictured riding between Second and First Avenues.
The building, located on Ballengee Street, is advertising "She Wore a Yellow Ribbon" playing that day.
Street view of the building located on Ballengee Street. The theatre is advertising The Ten Commandments.
A crowd gathers on the sidewalks as a float in the parade travels through the corner of Ballengee Street and 2nd Avenue.
Street view of the store located on Ballengee Street.
Looking at the home located on Ballengee Street.
Cars parked along the street in front of residences. The automobile in the center sports a sign reading "Ambulance" on its dashboard. To the far right, a sign for Barnett Funeral Home is pictured partially.
Miller Murrell, probably on left, and Danny Gardner hold a Kool-Aid stand outside the Murrell home at 309 Ballengee Street, Hinton, W. Va.
An unidentified man cross the street toward the super market. Parked cars line the sidewalk. The trees are bare, suggesting it is winter time.
A group of spectators watch as Parker re-enacts the circuit rider next to the First Methodist Church building located on the corner of Ballengee Street and Third Avenue.
Two young boys on bicycles watch Moorman Parker perform the re-enactment on a horse in front of the First Methodist Church building located on the corner of Ballengee Street and Third Avenue.
Moorman Parker sits on top of a horse to perform the re-enactment in front of the First Methodist church building located on the corner of Ballengee Street and Third Avenue. Other subjects and spectators unidentified.
Lona Richmond, left, and Betty Jane Arrington Angell, right, pose in front of the theatre on Ballengee Street.
Petrey pictured in front of the Ritz Theatre on Ballengee Street.
Pictured from left to right in the front is Earnett Cobb, Betty Jane Arrington Angell, and Lloyd Seldomridge. The two gentleman in the back are Homer Thrall, left, and Raymond W. Argabright. On the awning, above the group, reads, "The Gang's All Here".
Two unidentified men pose by the intersection of Ballengee Street and 3rd Avenue.
View of Robert Summers Neely home located on Ballengee Street. Neely was a local dentist and chairman of the republican county committee.
Street view of the building located on Ballengee Street.
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.
Unidentified group of men and boys lined up, facing the camera, on Ballengee Street.
Looking up Ballengee Street from the statue's position.