Search Results

13897. Huntington State Hospital, Cabell County, W. Va.

View of Women's Ward Building at Huntington State Hospital. W. D. McClung, M. D., superintendent. Following the death on September 20, 1930, of Dr. L. V. Guthrie, who for nearly 30 years was head of Huntington State Hospital, his widow, Mrs. M. L. Guthrie was appointed by Governor Conley as acting superintendent of that institution, to serve until such a time as Dr. Guthrie's successor should be appointed and qualified. On December 5, 1930, W. D. McClung, M. D., for ten years superintendent of Spencer State Hospital was commissioned by Governor William G. Conley as superintendent of Huntington Hospital. This institution is located at Huntington, Cabell County, and is reached by the Baltimore and Ohio, Chesapeake and Ohio, Virginia Railroads; by the interurban line of the Ohio Valley Electric Company, by Ohio River steamboats, and by bus or auto on State Routes 8, 10, and 62, also U.S. Route 60. Number of patients June 30, 1930 was 996.

13898. Women's Ward Building, Huntington State Hospital, Huntington, W. Va.

The nurses' home at Huntington State Hospital. L. V. Guthrie, M. D., Superintendent. This institution is located at Huntington, Cabell County, and is reached by the Baltimore and Ohio, Chesapeale and Ohio, Virginia Railroads; by the interurban line of the Ohio Valley Electric Company, by Ohio River steamboats. Number of patients July 1, 1920 was 771.

13899. Nurses' Home, Huntington State Hospital, Huntington, W. Va.

Building for female patients at Huntington State Hospital. L. V. Guthrie, M. D., Superintendent. This institution is located at Huntington, Cabell County, and is reached by the Baltimore and Ohio, Chesapeale and Ohio, Virginia Railroads; by the interurban line of the Ohio Valley Electric Company, by Ohio River steamboats. Number of patients July 1, 1918 was 758.

13900. Building for Female Patients, Huntington State Hospital, Huntington, W. Va.

Building number 1 for male patients at the West Virginia Asylum. L. V. Guthrie, M. D., Superintendent. This institution is located at Huntington, Cabell County, and is reached by the Baltimore and Ohio, Chesapeale and Ohio, Virginia Railroads; by the interurban line of the Ohio Valley Electric Company, by Ohio River steamboats. Number of patients July 1, 1914 was 636.

13901. Building Number 1 for Male Patients, West Virginia Asylum, Huntington, W. Va.

The entrance of the West Virginia Asylum. L. V. Guthrie, M. D., Superintendent.

13902. Entrance to West Virginia Asylum Grounds, Huntington, W. Va.

Superintendent was L. V. Guthrie.

13903. Driveway and Rear of administration Building, West Virginia Asylum, Huntington, W. Va.

13904. Male Patients Building, West Virginia Asylum, Huntington, W. Va.

13905. Female Ward Interior at West Virginia Asylum, Huntington, W. Va.

A view of the old Sweet Springs Sanitorium, now the Andrew Rowan Memorial Home.

13906. Nurses Home from Southwest Sweet Springs, Monroe County, W. Va.

A view of the old Sweet Springs Sanitorium, now the Andrew Rowan Memorial Home.

13907. Jefferson Building, South End Sweet Springs, Monroe County, W. Va.

A view of the old Sweet Springs Sanitorium, now the Andrew Rowan Memorial Home.

13908. Cottage Number 4, Sweet Springs, Monroe County, W. Va.