Search Results

Hemlock tree being felled on lands owned by the Cherry River Boom and Lumber Company.

217. Lumber Work in the Gauley Ranger District of Mononahela National Forest

Hinkles Fort marker that marks where a house was built several hundred yard away. John Justus Kinckel built a blockhouse for his family that later became a fort during the revolution.

218. Hinkle's Fort Marker, Pendleton County, W. Va.

View of landscape, Seneca Rocks and the South Branch River at Smoke Hole.

219. Landscape of Smoke Hole, Pendleton County, W.Va.

Lower Smoke Hole Section and the South Branch (of the Potomac) River.

220. Landscape of Smoke Hole, Pendleton County, W.Va.

Built in the wake of the devastating Flood of 1937, when the Ohio River crested at more than 19 feet above flood stage at Huntington. The flood wall was built in 3 separate sections. Shown here is the Guyandotte Section under construction.

221. Huntington Flood Wall Section 2; Cabell Co., W. Va.

Built in the wake of the devastating Flood of 1937, when the Ohio River crested at more than 19 feet above flood stage at Huntington. The flood wall was built in 3 separate sections. Shown here is the Guyandotte section under construction.

222. Huntington Flood Wall Section 2; Cabell Co., W. Va.

Built in the wake of the devastating Flood of 1937, when the Ohio River crested at more than 19 feet above flood stage at Huntington. The flood wall built in 3 separate sections. Shown here is the Guyandotte section under construction.

223. Huntington Flood Wall Section 2; Cabell Co., W. Va.

Elizabeth Furnace 1836-1888 in Shenandoah Valley, Va. near the Massanutten Mountains, used to create pig iron from iron ore mined in the area. The pig iron was transported via the Shenandoah River to Harper's Ferry for forging. (From postcard collection legacy system--subject.)

224. Furnace in George Washington Forest, Shenandoah Valley, Va.