search

Results for L

Colonel John Donelson

In appreciation of

the services of

Colonel John Donelson

Born in Delaware, 1718.

Died in Kentucky 1786.

Distinguished in early life in Virginia as a civil, industrial and military leader.

Member of the House of Burgesses, iron manufacturer, Lieutenant Colonel of Pittsylvania County and devoted vestryman ...

photo_library
John Campbell Memorial Home

John Campbell (1818-1891), founder of Ironton, was an ironmaster and president of the Ohio Iron & Coal Company, a Presbyterian, and an abolitionist. This house and barn, which he built in 1850, became a stop on the Underground Railroad for ...

photo_library
The Hanging Rock Iron Region / The Blast Furnaces of Lawrence Co

The Hanging Rock Iron Region

To furnish the needs of the early settlers, then to furnish ordnance for a nation at war, and finally to furnish merchant iron to the steel mills, 100 iron producing blast furnaces were built within these ...

photo_library
Ironton - Lawrence County Memorial Day Parade

Since 1868, Ironton's annual Memorial Day parade has recognized those in Lawrence County who died while defending our country's freedom. This was the same year in which the Grand Army of the Republic established May 30 as Decoration Day. Originally ...

photo_library
The Underground Railroad in Pike County

Historic Underground Railroad Site

An Elm Grove abolitionist maintained a lonely Underground Railroad station where he provided safety for escaping enslaved persons. These fugitives were attempting to travel the unfriendly route from Houston Hollow in Scioto County to safe places in ...

photo_library
Historic Kolob Mountain

Kolob

by Owen Sanders

When lassitude tugs at your body

and robs you of zest to exist

come with me to Kolob

and walk through the mild morning mist

Huddle at dawn on a hillside

and scan the green valley below;

Listen to snapping and crackle of twigs

and ...

photo_library
Survival in Utah’s Dixie

The warm comfortable productive climate in the sheltered valleys along the meandering Rio Virgin and its lower tributaries in Washington County became known as "Utah's Dixie".

The rugged pioneer colonizers and their descendants are known as "Dixieites" and the stalwart men ...

photo_library
Hurricane Canal

Utah Historic Site

The construction of the Hurricane Canal is one of Utah's proudest stories of pioneer determination. This canal, built completely by hand, opened the Hurricane Bench to farming and the establishment of the town of Hurricane.

In 1893 two local ...

Pioneer Trails

Two Important Pioneer Trails Lie to the South of Here

Historic Temple Trail

The Temple Trail which has two parts, was used during the years 1874-1876 to bring lumber by ox-team from two sawmills at Nixon Springs on the south face of ...

photo_library
Site of Rose Hill -- 1794

The home of Judge Joseph N. Whitner, Anderson County's founding father, was located at the crest of this will. It stood until recent years when it was torn down. Judge Whitner was a South Carolina House of Representative from Pendleton ...

photo_library
menu
more_vert