Showing Collections: 1511 - 1520 of 4811
Helen A. Wesp, Compiler, Scott Family Genealogy
Eight manuscript sheets of Scott genealogy compiled by Helen A. Wesp, Indianapolis, Indiana, showing the descendants of Alexander Scott, centered in Monongalia County. Other related families mentioned include Martin, Daugherty, Rees, Gapen, Marchant, Metcalf, Dent, Pindall, Hess, Chipps, Hamilton, Barker, Ridgeway, Morgan, Bouslog, Barrickman, Chesney, Huffman, Neely, Fortney, Britton, Davisson, Barnes, and Boggess.
Helen Goldsborough, Collector, Miscellaneous Papers
Miscellaneous papers collected by Helen Goldsborough of Shepherdstown. Includes wills, deeds, broadsides, and some legal and personal papers of Edmund Lee.
Helen Holt Papers
Helen Holt Papers regarding Federal Housing Administration and Other Material
Helen M. Fleming Papers
Typescripts relating to Marion County, including "In Memory of John Marshall Jacobs, a Good Churchman," "Early Days of Mining in Marion County," and "In Memory of Jessie Hickman Jamison," all written by Helen M. Fleming. There are a number of photographs of Fairmont and Marion County, family photo albums, and seven scrapbooks of clippings of U.S. and West Virginia history, with emphasis on Marion and Monongalia counties.
Helen M. Lewis, Author, "The Subcultures of the Southern Appalachians: Their Origin and Boundary Maintenance"
Paper written by Helen M. Lewis regarding regional differences and the subcultures of Appalachia. It was read at the institute of Southern culture, Longwood College, Farmville, Virginia. Helen M. Lewis (1924-) is a professor, sociologist, historian, and activist who specializes in Appalachia and women's rights.
Helen McGinnis, Conservationist, Papers regarding Wilderness Preservation in West Virginia
Helen Scott, Compiler, Genealogy Records
Genealogical notes and research of a member of the Fayette Co., WV Genealogical Society, Helen Scott, on the following families: Arthur, Blake, Decker, Jaynes, Johnson and Scott. There are cemetery readings for Fayette County including the areas of Fayetteville, Mt. Hope, Oak Hill, and Pax and of the Blue Ridge Cemetery. There is also a copy of the genealogical research conducted by Laura Blake.