Charleston Regional Chamber of Commerce and Development (Charleston, W. Va.)
Title:
The Charleston Regional Chamber of Commerce & Development ... annual report.
Call Number:
P17199
Date:
1988
Description:
Serial. Printed Ephemera Collection has: 1988.
Subject Corporate Names:
Charleston Regional Chamber of Commerce and Development (Charleston, W. Va.)--Periodicals.
Subject Topical:
Community development--West Virginia--Charleston--Periodicals.
All:
Charleston Regional Chamber of Commerce and Development (Charleston, W. Va.)--Periodicals., Community development--West Virginia--Charleston--Periodicals.
Wheeling Post No. 1, the American Legion endorses T. Y. "Tom" Beckett for Commander, Department of West Virginia, subject to action of the Beckley Convention, Sept. 3-4, 1944.
Call Number:
P172
Date:
1944
Description:
Pamphlet.
Subject Personal:
Beckett, T. Y. (Tom Y.)
Subject Corporate Names:
American Legion. Wheeling Post No. 1 (Wheeling, W. Va.)
All:
Beckett, T. Y. (Tom Y.), American Legion. Wheeling Post No. 1 (Wheeling, W. Va.)
Serial. Printed Ephemera Collection has: v.6:no.4 (1975:winter). Issue for winter 1975 includes article: The Brooks Family of French Creek by Robert Fullerton.
Subject Personal:
Brooks family.
Subject Corporate Names:
West Virginia University--Periodicals.
Subject Geographic:
French Creek (W. Va.)
All:
French Creek (W. Va.), Brooks family., West Virginia University--Periodicals.
Tourism in Mountainaire country : a preliminary summary of the 1970 MTC-CEA travel marketing study.
Call Number:
P17200
Date:
undated
Description:
Photocopy of typescript. "Co-sponsored by the Mountainaire Travel Council and the Center for Economic Action, Concord College, Athens, West Virginia..."
Letter of the President of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad.
Call Number:
P17201
Date:
1861
Description:
Tearout from ? "To the Hon. Luther C. Carter, chairman of the House Committee of the District of Columbia." Letter regarding a bill authorizing the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company to extend the Washington Branch of their road to and across the Potomac River.