Results for C
D.U.P. Relic Hall
This building, erected in 1866, served the community of Pa...
Wardlow Home / Red Car
Wardlow Home
Bruce and Martha Wardlow came here in 1...
Estrella Adobe Church
The first Protestant church in northern San Luis Obispo co...
Kesslers Cross Lanes
"Battle of Knives and Forks"
In 1861, both Union and...
Westlake Cemetery
Burial Place of Julia Jackson
This is one of the ear...
The Necessary Ingredient
Malden's Salt Works
In the decades before the Civil ...
Jenkins in Buckhannon
The Raiders Strike
(Preface): Confederate Gen. Alber...
McClellan's Buckhannon Camp
Prelude to Rich Mountain
(Preface): In the spring of...
Destruction at the Courthouse
The Raiders Strike
(Preface): Confederate Gen. Alber...
Trans-Allegheny Lunatic Asylum
No Asylum from War
When the Civil War began in 1861,...
Results for C
D.U.P. Relic Hall
This building, erected in 1866, served the community of Parowan for 52 years as a religious and cultural center. Later it was given by the L.D.S. Church to the Daughters of Utah Pioneers, who in 1939-40 restored the old edifice ...
Wardlow Home / Red Car
Wardlow Home
Bruce and Martha Wardlow came here in 1896. He farmed 300 acres and was very prominent in local affairs.
Red Car
The Santa Ana/Huntington Beach Pacific Electric Spur Line began transporting people in 1909. In 1922 the line closed for passenger ...
Estrella Adobe Church
The first Protestant church in northern San Luis Obispo county was built in 1879 by early settlers. This nondenominational church on the Estrella Plains prospered with the pioneer community, but by 1912 fell into disuse as the various denominations developed ...
Kesslers Cross Lanes
"Battle of Knives and Forks"
In 1861, both Union and Confederate forces vied for control of Western Virginia. By July, Union Gen. Jacob D. Cox had driven Confederate Gen. Henry A Wise’s army out of the Kanawha Valley and was advancing ...
Westlake Cemetery
Burial Place of Julia Jackson
This is one of the earliest identified cemeteries west of the Allegheny Mountains. William Tyree, owner of nearby Tyree Tavern, and Confederate Col. George W. Imboden, brother of Gen. John D. Imboden, are buried here. The ...
The Necessary Ingredient
Malden's Salt Works
In the decades before the Civil War, this region, called the Kanawha Salines, had a booming salt industry. Salt extraction created vast wealth here, and by 1846, this area had led the nation with 3.2 million bushels produced. ...
Jenkins in Buckhannon
The Raiders Strike
(Preface): Confederate Gen. Albert G. Jenkins led 550 cavalrymen on a 500-mile raid from Salt Sulphur Springs, Aug. 22-Sept. 12, 1862, attacking Federal forces and destroying military stores. He captured and paroled 300 Union soldiers, killed or wounded ...
McClellan's Buckhannon Camp
Prelude to Rich Mountain
(Preface): In the spring of 1861, Union forces rushed into northwestern Virginia to secure the vital Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, protect important turnpikes, and support Unionists against Confederates. The two sides fought numerous engagements between June and ...
Destruction at the Courthouse
The Raiders Strike
(Preface): Confederate Gen. Albert G. Jenkins led 550 cavalrymen on a 500-mile raid from Salt Sulphur Springs, Aug. 22-Sept. 12, 1862, attacking Federal forces and destroying military stores. He captured and paroled 300 Union soldiers, killed or wounded ...
Trans-Allegheny Lunatic Asylum
No Asylum from War
When the Civil War began in 1861, the one-story wing on the far left of the building in front of you was all that stood here at the Trans-Allegheny Lunatic Asylum. The foundation of the main building ...