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Unidentified man may be its owner.

12517. Wood Frame Home in Greenbrier County, W. Va.

Portrait of a family on the porch of a home in Greenbrier County. An old man stands beside the house to the left, and a pet dog lies in the front yard.

12518. Family Group in front of their Home in Greenbrier County, W. Va.

Two men standing in front of the home, each with a horse, and two women standing in front of a car with a pet dog.

12519. Simmons Home near Spring Creek, Greenbrier County, W. Va.

View of Main Street in Moorefield looking north from opposite McCoy Theater site. Building at right was then Turley Hotel.

12520. Main Street, Moorefield, W. Va.

A view of the Meadow River Lumber Company Office and Bank Building in Rainelle, West Virginia.

12521. Meadow River Lumber Company Office and Bank, Rainelle, Greenbrier County, W. Va.

View of a group of buildings in Rainelle, West Virginia.

12522. Rainelle, Greenbrier County, W. Va.

12523. Winter View of John Raine Home, Rainelle, Greenbrier County, W. Va.

A view of the John Raine home in Rainelle. People on a porch swing converse while  someone works in the yard to the left of the home.

12524. Home of John Raine, Rainelle, Greenbrier County, W. Va.

'Dwyer Home in Rader Valley'. Portrait of family standing along the front of their home. Two young girls pose for the picture while standing on the porch roof.

12525. Dwyer Family and Home, Greenbrier County, W. Va.

'Gauley Mount, home of Colonel C. Q. Tompkins. A few years before the war Colonel C. Q. Tompkins, a West Point engineer, came to Paint Creek to open mines. Two miles from Gauley Bridge, on a picturesque point, he built a summer home and brought his family from Richmond. Colonel Tompkins was active in the Confederate cause in the early days. The family continued to reside at Gauley Mount for a long time after Union forces were in possession of the country and it was a pleasant place for General Cox and other officers to visit. The Tompkins family was finally sent through the lines to Richmond. The fine mansion was carelessly allowed to burn by Union soldiers quartered in it.'

12526. Gauley Mount, Home of Colonel C. Q. Tompkins, Fayette County, W. Va.

Construction on the dam at Hawk's Nest.

12527. Hawk's Nest Dam Project, Fayette County, W. Va.

Drawing of Gauley Mount, home of Colonel Tompkins, and military encampments on the farmlands nearby.

12528. Gauley Mount, Home of Colonel C. Q. Tompkins, Fayette County, W. Va.