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Martinsburg, West Virginia native David Hunter Strother was appointed Consul to Mexico by President Rutherford B. Hayes in 1879. The photograph was taken in the gardens called Tivoli De San Cosme at Espiritu Santo, Mexico. Strother is front and center with the white, flowing beard.

1. United States Consul to Mexico, David Hunter Strother in Group Portrait at Tivoli De San Cosme, Mexico

House owned at one time by David Hunter Strother, "Porte Crayon", 1851-1852.

2. Norbourne Hall, Martinsburg, Berkeley County, W. Va.

The artist and writer, also known as Porte Crayon, served in the Union Army.

3. Lieutenant Colonel David Hunter Strother during Civil War

The artist, also known as Porte Crayon.

4. David Hunter Strother

The artist, also known as Porte Crayon.

5. David Hunter Strother of Berkeley Springs, W. Va.

The artist and writer,  also known as Porte Crayon from Martinsburg, W. Va.

6. David Hunter Strother

Print of a painted or sketched portrait of David Hunter Strother.

7. David Hunter Strother

Home was razed in 1977.

8. Brigadier General David Hunter Strother at Home in Berkeley Springs, W. Va.

'Cecil D. Eby, Jr., the biographer of Porte Crayon, is a native of Charles Town.  He is a graduate of Shepherd College and holds degrees from Northwestern University and the University of Pennsylvania.  Dr. Eby's specialty has been American literary history.  His biography of David Hunter Strother appeared in 1960 under the title "Porte Crayon": the Life of David Hunter Strother. The journals of General Strother were edited and published by the University of North Carolina Press in 1961 under the title, A Virginia Yankee in the Civil War.  Selections from Strother's Virginia Illustrated, North Carolina Illustrated, A Winter in the South and the Dismal Swamp, along with "Porte Crayon's" inimitable illustrations appeared under the collective title, The Old South Illustrated, also published by the University of North Carolina Press in 1959.  The author is presently on the faculty of Madison College, Harrisonburg, Va., where he is assistant professor of English.'

9. Cecil D. Eby, Jr.

David Hunter Strother's works displayed in E. Moore Hall as part of the first West Virginia Day celebration.

10. Frank Franz Honors David Hunter Strother Family Members at the Dedication of the Strother Collection, West Virginia University

The David Hunter Strother exhibit was located in E. Moore Hall and was a part of the celebration for the first W. Va. Day.

11. John Cuthhert Speaking to a Group Viewing the Strother Exhibit at West Virginia University

The exhibit was part of the celebration for the first W. Va. Day, and was located in E. Moore Hall.

12. David Hunter Strother (Porte Crayon) Exhibit at West Virginia University