Search Results

Ku Klux Klan members setting up tents and raising flags for meeting.

31105. Ku Klux Klan Members in Robes at Meeting in Morgantown, W. Va.

Cars lined up for a Ku Klux Klan meeting with Morgantown homes in the background.

31106. Ku Klux Klan Convention, Morgantown, W. Va.

Close up of the eyes of a Ku Klux Klan Member.

31107. Ku Klux Klan Member, Mercer County

Large stone includes information about various members of the Prickett family of Fairmont. There are two engraved captions...'The First White Woman That Was..Cross The Allegheny Mountains' and ...'And Killed By The Indians...While Near The Mouth Of Pricketts Creek.'

31108. Prickett Tombstone

Little girl gazing up at a cross with Jesus in the woods.

31109. Cross in the Woods

'This Boulder Is Established To Commemorate Clendenin's Fort Which Was Built In 1788 For The Protection Of The Early Settlers Against The Indians And Stood Here.' An additional inscription reads ' Erected In 1915 By The Kanawha Valley Chapter Daughters Of The American Revolution, By Permission Of C.C Lewis SR.,Who Owns The Site Of The Old Fort.'

31110. Clendenin's Fort Boulder

Fairmont W.Va. military memorial. 'That Government By The People Shall Not Perish In Grateful Tribute To Those Sons And Daughters Of Marion County Who Serve The Cause Of Freedom.' The monument list those 'In Service 9266 and Died For Their Country 223.'

31111. Memorial in Court House Square, Fairmont, W. Va.

Statue of Madonna of the Trail located in Wheeling on U.S Rt. 40. A Daughter's of the American Revolution statue. p. 114. 'N.S.D.A.R Memorial To The Pioneer Mothers Of The Covered Wagon Days.'

31112. Madonna of the Trail at Entrance to Wheeling Park on U.S. Route 40

Located in Berkeley County W. Va.

31113. Monument Erected by the State of West Virginia to the Memory of Morgan Morgan, Bunker Hill, W. Va.

Noted Monument in Richmond.

31114. Stonewall Jackson Monument in Richmond, Va.

'Grave of mother of 'Stonewall' Jackson at Ansted, W. Va. as it appeared in 1906. In 1916 some interested friends had lot surrounded by iron fence and area overhauled.' July 17, 1907 Note sent to Mr. Thomas Ranson in Staunton, Va. from Tidewater Railroad Company that reads, 'Mr. Thomas D. Ranson, I take pleasure in enclosing herewith a recent photograph of the grave of Julia Beckwith Neale which was taken by our photographer here. Yours very truly, W. H Evans.'

31115. Stonewall Jackson's Mother's Grave in Ansted, W. Va.

Letter on paper from 'The All States Hotel in Washington D.C. attached to the back of the photo. 'Monument over the grave of 'Stonewall' Jackson at Lexington, Va. where he was a professor at the Va. Military Institute. Mrs. Lyne attended his funeral services where he lay in state at the Va. Capitol. She was one of the little brand of Confederate ladies who met in the Presbyterian Church in the Capitol of the Confederacy, to organize Memorial Day - when Va. was Military District, No.1. - when no Southerners could form a procession and ride in the carriages by Federal Law - yet they went on foot. The Unknown and Hollywood cemeteries all scattered roses over the Confederate dead.

31116. Stonewall Jackson Tomb in Lexington, Va.