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Portrait of Ethel Courtney as a baby.  Ethel is likely the daughter of Mollie and Ulysses Courtney, born in 1896.
Portrait of Mary Courtney Randall.  The Courtney family is distantly related to Blanche Lazzell.
Portrait of U. J. Courtney, husband of Mollie Courtney, sister of Blanche Lazzell.
Portrait of baby Lucille Courtney, likely the daughter of Mollie (Lazzell) Courtney.  Mollie's daughter, Flora Lucille, was born in 1894.
Full body portrait of a woman from the Courtney family, distant relatives of Blanche Lazzell.
Portrait of a woman from the Courtney family, distant relatives of Blanche Lazzell.
Portrait of male from the Courtney family, distant relatives of Blanche Lazzell.
Portrait of Ulysses James Courtney, brother in law of artist Blanche Lazzell.  Ulysses married Blanche's sister, Mollie, in 1891.
Portrait of Mollie Courtney, sister of Blanche Lazzell.  Mollie was born in 1869, and married  Ulysses James Courtney in 1891.
Crookshanks, father of Maggie Crookshanks, poses with the largest wild cat caught in Nicholas County, weighing 27 pounds and 4 feet, 7 inches in length.
Mrs. Calvert dumps water into pails. She was living without running water.
Cohen was a member of Morgantown's City Council. He also served on the Monongalia County Commission and was a West Virginia University faculty member.
William and Mary were married on June 13, 1878.  Written inside the paper enclosure are the words "While these you keep remember us."  The Corrothers family is likely related to the Zinn, Steele-Arnett, or Sanders family.
Holly was 10 years old in this photo. He was the brother of Casto Conner and John Conner. The Conners are related to the Weltner family. The back of the photo reads, "I am 10 years and 5 months old; 4 feet 6.5 inches high; weigh 75 lbs."
An aged Cox is pictured.
Portrait of baby Cox.
Portrait of Cox at the age of 19. He later moved to Baltimore, Maryland.
Carrol was a football coach at Terra Alta High School.
Cooper pictured during his freshman year at Terra Alta High School.
Portrait of Uncle Cy from a photograph album of late nineteenth century images featuring residents from Keyser, W. Va.
Portrait of Mrs. J. M. Clines, likely a resident of Keyser, W. Va., taken in Baltimore, MD from a photograph album of late nineteenth century images featuring residents from Keyser, W. Va.
Coralie Franklin Cook (1861-1942) was born into slavery and eventually became the first descendant of a Monticello slave known to have graduated from college.  She graduated from Storer College in Harpers Ferry, W.Va. in 1880.  She later taught elocution and English at the college and then taught at Howard University.  Cook was also known for her activities relating to the Civil Rights Movement.
J.R. Clifford graduated from Storer College in Harpers Ferry, W.Va. in 1874. He was the first African-American Attorney in West Virginia.  Clifford also published the newspaper, "The Pioneer Press" in Martinsburg, W.Va.
Charlton pictured standing in the middle of the field.
Charlton is a Civil War veteran who fought on the side of the Confederacy. He was wounded at the Battle of Cold Harbor, Va. in 1864. He later went on to become the first school teacher in Madam's Creek, a town near Hinton, W. Va.Charlton first married Nancy Parker. Together, Parker and Charlton had a daughter, Mary Jane Charlton. Mary Jane would later marry Silas Hinton.
Portrait of Jesse Campbell, brother of Lacy Campbell.
Photo of the tintype portraits.
Charlton and his wife, Sally, were parents of Mary Jane Charlton.
Denver and Benny Cook are pictured together in front of a wire fence.
The two are pictured inside their home which is located across from Tom's Run.
Benny Cook, Matt Cook, Virgie M. Cook Lilly, Denver Cook, and George W. Cook pictured together.
Portrait of a young Cook.
Portrait of the older woman.
Cook pictured wearing a dress and necklace.
Houston, son of Manderville Cook and Sally Goff Cook, is pictured in a suit.
Cook, a World War II soldier, is pictured in uniform.
Creekman, left, is the boss on the Tallery Mountain Road construction. Greene, pictured right, is from the Luther Greene Hollow Surveryor Branch.
Crawford retired as a Colonel and the highest ranking African-American military officer from Summers County.
Crawford, an educator, stands beside what appears to be a buffet table.
DeWitt served as Governor of New York from 1817-1822. While serving as Governor, he was largely responsible for the construction of the Erie Canal.
Clifford served in the Union Army during the Civil War. He was a graduate of Storer College in Harpers Ferry, W. Va. by 1875. He was the first African-American lawyer admitted to the bar in West Virginia in 1887. He became one of the leaders int he Niagara Movement, the beginning of the NAACP and Modern Civil Rights Movement (1905-1906).
Portrait of Cook in uniform at Ft. Jackson, South Carolina.
Eugene Cutlip, from Harrison County, was the step father of Richard Duez. He was a bronze star winner during the war. He passed away on July 14, 2007.