Southwest Virginia and the Valley

Southwest Virginia and the Valley
Author: A. D. Smith and Co Staff
Publisher:
Total Pages: 528
Release: 2013-09-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781556130830

Originally published in 1892, this combination mug book/gazetteer was the first of its kind on the state of Virginia. The essays on the history, topography, geology, and natural resources of southwest Virginia were written by "well-known scientists and men of letters, and the facts set forth by them, while in some instances astounding, are correct." The biographical sketches are of "honorable men" from all walks of life. "Here will be found instances of men rising, by individual merit alone, from penury and obscurity to wealth and distinction; of many who, in pride and strength of young manhood, left the farm and the anvil, the lawyer's office and the counting-room, left every trade and profession, and, at their country's call, went forth valiantly to do or die.... Here, also, will be found men whose lives illumine the pages of a nation's history, and whose deeds in war and statesmanship reflect naught but honor upon a noble people - men in whose lives are united the glorious Old South with the unparalleled New."

Buildings of Virginia

Buildings of Virginia
Author: Anne Carter Lee
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2015
Genre: Architecture
ISBN: 9780813935652

"This second of two volumes devoted to the Old Dominion encompasses five regions (Shenandoah Valley, Allegheny Highlands, Piedmont, Southside, and Southwest Virginia), comprising 53 counties and 20 of the state's independent cities."--Publisher's description.

Far Southwest Virginia

Far Southwest Virginia
Author: Frank Kilgore
Publisher:
Total Pages: 320
Release: 2014-11-06
Genre: Buchanan County (Va.)
ISBN: 9780990887508

Take a fascinating journey through Far Southwest Virginia with vintage postcards and photos from the collection of attorney Frank Kilgore, a native of the area and longtime memorabilia collector. Over 1000 postcard and photographic scenes of mountains and valleys, bustling lumber towns, coal camps, railroad expansion, and strong people illustrate the beauty and challenges of life in this corner of Central Appalachia. This new and expanded edition includes many full-color postcards, glass plate slides, letters, scrip, and other rare documents.

Southwest Virginia's Railroad

Southwest Virginia's Railroad
Author: Kenneth W. Noe
Publisher:
Total Pages: 240
Release: 1994
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN:

Combining an adept use of anecdote and detail with analysis of the written record, Noe shows that many supporters of the Virginia and Tennessee Railroad viewed it as a political tool, believing it would spread slavery and unite the state. He focuses on the railroad's economic fruits - integration of the region into the tobacco kingdom, urbanization, a growth in industry, and the spread of slavery - and shows how these brought about political results.

Far Southwest Virginia

Far Southwest Virginia
Author: Frank Kilgore
Publisher:
Total Pages: 176
Release: 2004-01-01
Genre: Buchanan County (Va.)
ISBN: 9780972476515

This collection of over 250 vintage postcards (c. 1905-1955) takes the reader on a journey through the Appalachian coalfields of Far Southwest Virginia, revealing gently rolling mountains and valleys, bustling market towns, coal camps, and strong people.

Backcountry Makers

Backcountry Makers
Author: Betsy K. White
Publisher:
Total Pages: 183
Release: 2013
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9781572338760

This new book brings to life the material-culture heritage of southwest Virginia and northeast Tennessee. In Backcountry Makers, Betsy K. White expands on her previous study of the region's rich decorative arts legacy, Great Road Style, to offer a closer look at the individual artisans responsible for the diverse works that constitute that legacy. Beautifully illustrated with some 230 photographs, most of them in color, this volume includes biographical sketches of seventy-five makers—potters, weavers, spinners, quilters, embroiderers, cabinetmakers, metalsmiths, clocksmiths, gunsmiths, and artists—who worked in the region from the earliest eighteenth-century settlement days to the late twentieth century. The entry for each artisan is accompanied by one or more images of a signed or marked work, or, in a number of instances, an unmarked work with certain provenance. These vignettes offer a fascinating glimpse of the people behind the various pieces, describing their background, family life, and where they learned their trade. Using census records and other documentary evidence, White has traced the earliest of these artisans from their origins in such places as Europe and Philadelphia down through the Great Valley of Virginia to their ultimate destinations in southwest Virginia and northeast Tennessee. Along with the photos displaying the products of their craftsmanship, the book also includes a number of evocative images of the artists and their homes and towns, thus giving the reader a fuller sense of the region where these gifted people lived and worked. One of the few studies to addresses handmade objects in this locale—and one of the even fewer works to focus on the artisans themselves— Backcountry Makers will be of great value not only to scholars of material culture and the arts in Appalachia but also to those who collect regional antiques and crafts and want to know more about the individuals who made them.

Southwest Virginia and Shenandoah Valley

Southwest Virginia and Shenandoah Valley
Author: Thomas Bruce
Publisher:
Total Pages: 280
Release: 1891
Genre: Railroads
ISBN:

Southwest Virginia and Shenandoah Valley comprise the fairest dominion of any section of country lying within the limits of the Southern States. The wonderful development of these two sections which has marked the progress of events in the past ten years in the Southern States will be treated in this work rather in accordance with the landmark of time than that of territory. The great Southwest, neither more beautiful nor richer in agricultural and mineral resources than Shenandoah Valley, will be taken first, because, in point of time, it was the first to adorn the robe of material progress and growth. -- Introduction.