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A photograph of the entrance to a railroad tunnel.

133. Hillside Mine Entrance, Lynchburg Coal & Coke Company

134. Hillside Mine Entrance, Lynchburg Coal & Coke Company

A photograph of fallen rock that appears to have covered a tunnel entrance.

135. Mine Construction Site, Lynchburg Coal & Coke Company

A pile of logs stacked up in the wilderness.

136. Stack of Lumber, Lynchburg Coal & Coke Company

A photograph of a hillside of what appears to be a construction site for a railroad.

137. Stripped Hillside, Lynchburg Coal & Coke Company

A photograph of a hillside and what appears to be a construction site for a railroad.

138. Stripped Hillside, Lynchburg Coal & Coke Company

139. Thomas J. (Stonewall) Jackson

140. Visitors at Thomas (Stonewall) Jackson's Grave

'Section of log taken from cabin built in the present city of Clarksburg, near the southeast corner of the Main St. at the intersection of East Main St. & Monticello Ave. bridge over Elk Creek.  The original size of the cabin was 18 feet x 20 feet.  Building was demolished May 1933 in preparing for construction of a filling station.  Following names and items are carved into surface of log: WM Lowther; Jess Hughes; El Hughes; J. Ratcliffe; Jon Merrick; Jake Eib; Soth Hickman; John Hacker; Cole B. Rowen; J.G. Jackson; Masonic Emblem--killed this day Sept. 3, 1787; Jno Bennet (Bonnet).  The original section of log is now preserved in the Public Library at Clarksburg, West Virginia.'

141. Log from Cabin in Clarksburg, W. Va.

'Edward John Jackson, son of David E. & Juliet Jackson, born July 31, 1810, died Dec. 8, 1896--the famous 'Ned'.'

142. Edward John Jackson

143. Garret A. Hobart

'Hildreth, Dr. S. P..: One of the first members of the Ohio Geological Survey, published in 1936, with Dr. S. G. Morton, the first important paper on the geology and paleobotany of what is now W. Va. Most of the fossil collecting and studying of these two Marietta men took place around Charleston.' (WV Encyclopedia)

144. Dr. S. P. Hildreth