Search Constraints

You searched for: Medium print Remove constraint Medium: print Topical Subjects Counties--Upshur. Remove constraint Topical Subjects: Counties--Upshur.
Number of results to display per page

Search Results

Photograph of a map of Buckhannon in Upshur County includes roads, rivers and structures
Basketball Team of West Virginia Conference Seminary, Buckhannon, W. Va.  The school was founded in 1890 by the Methodist church, and assumed its current name of West Virginia Wesleyan College in 1906.
Information included on the back of the photograph: "Picture made in 1907 at Goshen, W. Va. where he drove these lovely horses - uncle Charles Thomas".
Post card print
A pitched tent with a few cots. Likely the Hall family.
Post card sent March 26, 1911.
Colored postcard photograph. See back of the original image for correspondence.
Roy Warner on right, Rome Dean on left, and the man in the middle is unknown.
Near Buckhannon, W. Va.
Postcard photograph. See back of the original image for correspondence.
Colored postcard photograph. See back of the original image for correspondence.
Team photo portrait of unidentified players and coach.
In this picture boys from the State Industrial School at Pruntytown are shown marching.
Schools girls potraying robins are leading the parade. Director Carl Beer may be seen in the foreground, all other persons are unidentified.
Mary Lou Thorn, Queen of the festival sits with her court.
'A million dollar fire destroyed four acres of buildings of the General Storage Company and Mountain State Fabricating Company here yesterday. Intense heat and smoke prevented fireman from bringing the fire under control, a number of buildings were dynamited to keep the blaze from spreading. To the right is a Vets hospital which was in danger for a while. (AP WIREPHOTO) (WFS 60700STF-WFS)1952.'
Team portrait of unidentified members of the Wesleyan Baseball Team.
A spectacular view of Hanging Rock over a railway in Buckhannon, W. Va..
Message on postcard: 'Dear, Alberta: I suppose your garden is a way up by this time. The weather is pretty warm, but I don't mind it much as it is so nice and shady around here. It won't be so very much longer until I will be home. Beryle.' Sent to Mrs. R. E. Mockler, Mannington, W. Va. on May 22, 1911.
'Left Side: W. A. Colerider's Saddle & Harness Shop; Ross Miller's Cabinet Work Shop; Lewellyn Buckhausen's Shoe Shop; Doctor's Office and Post Office; On Right Side: A. N. Singer's Store; M. E. Church; First Post Office; Doctor's Office; Tower Hall; Miller Store & Telephone Exchange; Old Buntin Home; Lloyd Talbott Home and H. B. Darnall Home.'
Mill buildings and stacks of lumber.
Group photo of Willing Workers Club members, Warren Center.
Members of the Willing Workers club.
Identified in the photograph: Sam Hartford (Rev.); Mrs. Lucille Duffield; Mary Alice Rusmisell (Bragg); Nancy Perkins (Knight); Jo Ann Rollyson (Withrow); Ruth Duncan (Skidmore); Bill Richards.
The church was organized between the years of 1863 and 1865.  The church was first a log building, but a frame structure replaced it in 1889. A new building was built in 1954.
The church was established c.1860 as as Methodist organization.  It additionally served as a schoolhouse until a separate building was established for the church.
This Methodist church was established in 1840.
The organization was established in 1756 and is one of the oldest in its area.
The church was established in 1817.
The church was organized in 1852 when a deed was made for the land.  However, the church was first built in 1843 and dedicated in 1846.  The present church was built in 1951.
The church was established by the community in 1852.
The church was organized in 1836.  The present church was built in 1875.
The church was organized in 1838.
The church was established in 1844 and is located about three miles south of Buckhannon, W. Va.
The church was established in 1819.
A group of church m embers are gathered outside of the building which was built in 1880. The organization was established in 1847.
The church was established in 1857 by seven people who had immigrated from Virginia.
The church was established in 1849. It has two branches, the other being located in Arlington, W. Va.
The church was established in 1849. It has two locations, the other being in Rock Cave, W. Va.
The organization was established as a Methodist church in 1816 by a band of pioneer Christians.
The church was organized in 1862 and dedicated in 1868.  The present church was built in 1938.
The church was established in 1840 as a branch of the Buckhannon Baptist Association until it was dissolved in 1850 and became independent.
The church was organized in 1858.
The church was organized in 1835.  The first church was built in 1881. The current church was built in 1913.
The church was organized in 1852. The present church frame building was built in 1880.
The church is thought to have been established in 1852.
The church was established in 1854.
The church was established in 1853 and is located less than two miles east of Buckhannon, W. Va off Staunton Turnpike, United States Highway 33, and West Virginia Route 4.
This Methodist church was organized in 1829.
The church was established in 1843 by the first settler family, the Tenney family. The church was used by both Methodist Episcopal and Methodist Protestant branches of Methodism.
This organization was established in 1849.
The church was established sometime between 1853 and 1854 by early pioneers who wanted to avoid hazardous traveling and benefit from a church in their immediate vicinity.
The church is located between the towns of Hodgesville and Volga. It was established in 1810.
There are planted crops and haystacks in front of the house.
There are stacks of hay in the surrounding fields as well as a few other outbuildings.  There is an old car parked in the road in front of the house.
There is a road at the bottom of the field.
A West Virginia Natural Bridge, Uncle Beechers Rooks at Laurel Fork of French Creek in Upshur County, West Virginia.
Tree stumps are spread throughout the field in the foreground.
There is a garden planted in the back of the house and stacks of hay to the sides.
A split rail fence separates the fields.
A stream runs through the land in front of the house.
One field has haystacks and another has corn.  The hill behind these fields has felled trees.
Hay stacks are behind the planted field.
An ink engraving of the Methodist Episcopal Conference Seminary in Upshur County, West Virginia.
To the far right people can be seen sitting on a fence next to a corral.