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Caption on back of photograph reads: "Picture taken at Weston as Mrs. Davis signs oath of office as only woman member of State Advisory Board Department of Public Assistance. After Mrs. Rush Holt, Secretary of State, administered the oath."

1. Helen Holt Stands Beside Mrs. Davis While She Signs Oath of Office, Weston, W. Va.

2. View From Hill of Farmland and Homes in Weston, W. Va.

3. Train Depot, Weston, W. Va.

Portrait of a young Wilda Juanita Turner as she reads a book.

4. Wilda Juanita Turner Butcher, Weston, W. Va.

Claude Turner poses with his two dogs while his granddaughter Elizabeth Carole Butcher (b. 1934) balances on the automobile's bumper. Elizabeth later married a Weaver family member.

5. Claude Turner and Granddaughter with Dogs, Weston, W. Va.

Butcher stands in front of a tire at Hitt's Filling Station in Weston, W. Va. He is 3 years old in this photograph.

6. James Leonard Butcher at Filling Station in Weston, W. Va.

Butcher leans against an automobile outside the store in Lewis County, W. Va.

7. Robert Hugh Butcher Outside Hitt's Store, Weston, W. Va.

"The Weston State Hospital, also known as the Trans-Allegheny Lunatic Asylum, was constructed in the late 1800s and designated a National Historic Landmark in 1990. It is the largest hand-cut stone masonry building in North America, and is purportedly the second largest in the world, next to the Kremlin. The original hospital, designed to house 250 souls, was open to patients in 1864 and reached its peak in the 1950s with 2,400 patients in overcrowded and generally poor conditions. Changes in the treatment of mental illness and the physical deterioration of the facility forced its closure in 1994 inflicting a devastating effect on the local economy, from which it has yet to recover. Today, the hospital is open to historical tours and ghost tours."

8. Weston State Hospital, Weston, W. Va.