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61. Side View of Company Store, Sun, W. Va.

Beside the building and the railroad is a mail crane.

62. Coal Company Club House, Thayer, W. Va.

63. Railroad Station, Thayer, W. Va.

A group of men are pictured on and beside a train car.  A bridge in the background crosses the New River.

64. Railroad Bridge and Turntable, Thurmond, W. Va.

Built in 1901, the Dunglen was a towering 4-story, 100-room wooden structure with a wrap-around deck. The Dunglen was known for the many parties it hosted, where huge dances were held in the elegant ballroom and symphonies would play through the night.According to Ripley’s Believe it or Not and the Guinness Book of World Records, the Dunglen housed the longest-running poker game, which stretched on through 14 years.The hotel was burned down by arsonists on July 22, 1930.

65. Dunglen Hotel Under Construction, Thurmond, W. Va.

The engine used oil headlights. Five men are pictured on and beside the locomotive.

66. C. and O. Enginge No. 254 at Thurmond, W. Va.

A group of men are pictured on and beside a locomotive. Subjects unidentified.

67. Round House Crew, Thurmond, W. Va.

The walk way on the right is identified as leading to the Dun Glen Hotel. Wallace Bennett lived in the first house from 1918 to 1922, and the second house from 1925 to 1933.

68. Railroad Section Houses, Thurmond, W. Va.

P. H. Kelly and a colleague stand outside of a dog wagon--a small restaurant often specializing in short orders that occupies a converted vehicle or that is built to suggest such a vehicle.

69. Dog Wagon at Depot, Thurmond, W. Va.

An unidentified man stands at the building's entrance.

70. National Bank of Thurmond, Thurmond, W. Va.

On the left, a man stands at the window of New River Banking & Trust Co. On the right is Mankin Drug Co.

71. Mankin Building, Thurmond, W. Va.

Standing at the gate are Mother, Emma and Andy Oschlager.

72. Home of Turkey Knob Company Coal Miner, Turkey Knob, W. Va.