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During Unionization of Coal Company workers, miners' families were evicted from Company owned houses.  The Union supplied building material and land and the miners plus others constructed temporary barracks until the labor trouble was settled. Beside the barracks, there was room for small garden plots and here they are shown working in them. See New York Times Sunday Sept. 5th Picture Section.

1. Women Working in Garden at Barrack Village Near Fairmont, W. Va.

Pictured standing by the house are Barbara Borror Warden and her daughter Janet Warden Hawes.

2. Dotson Farm, Greenwood, W. Va.

A group of workers are scattered across the fields which are in an unidentified location.

3. Welfare Gardens

Eight men are pictured on either side of the lawn. The photograph looks down a pathway lined by flowers and directly at a gazebo. The garden is likely part of the property at Linden Hall in Pennsylvania.

4. Gardens in Dawson, Pennsylvania.

A view of Anna Jarvis's porch garden at her home in Philadelphia.  Jarvis, a native of West Virginia, founded Mother's Day.

5. Anna Jarvis's Porch Garden, Philadelphia, Pa.

Group of unidentified people besides garden storage.

6. Subsistence Garden Work Crew

Unidentified man maintaining garden.

7. Worker at Scott's Run Reciprocal Economy Gardens

A view of vegetable garden.

8. Subsistence Garden

Men and women hoeing a field.

9. Work Crew at Scott's Run Reciprocal Economy Gardens

'Left: Violet Molisee Croston; Right: Francis Molisee, Cousin of Violet; 2 Mules: Violet is on Jack, Francis is on Jerry'

10. Violet Molisee Croston and Francis Molisee at Scott's Run Reciprocal Economy Garden

Garden plot in front of barracks at Adamston, W. Va.

11. Garden Plot and Barracks at Adamston, W. Va.

A view of two men standing by tool storage.

12. Father Molisee and Friend by Tool Cabin At Scott's Run Reciprocal Economy Garden