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Photo 1
White's Paradise, Ph84-229, Mrs. Frank Morris Collection


Photo 2
White's Paradise, Ph84-229, Mrs. Frank Morris Collection


Photo 3
Otis White in front of store and house, Ph-84-229, Mrs. Frank Morris Collection


Photo 4
Captolia Casey Brown and Della Brown (Taylor). Several months after this picture was taken, Mrs. Brown died in childbirth. Ph84-230, Della Brown Taylor Collection


Photo 5
Boyd School - Fannie Cobb Carter, Ph84-231, Jane Dunlap Collection (Dunlap-Taylor)


Photo 6
West Virginia Collegiate Institute, 1918, Ph84-231, Jane Dunlap Collection (Dunlap-Taylor)


Photo 7
West Virginia Collegiate Institute, 1918, Ph84-231, Jane Dunlap Collection (Dunlap-Taylor)


Photo 8
C. H. James and Sons, a wholesale produce company established in 1916, became a major black business in the Kanawha Valley. Their first Charleston location was at 23 Summers Street between Kanawha and Virginia streets, circa 1916, 118-9, C. H. James Collection


Photo 9
Elsie Davis, Fannie Cobb Carter, and Ruth Norman, at a celebration honoring Carter's 100th birthday. Ph84-235, 1st Baptist Church Collection


Photo 10
Men's Bible Class, 1st Baptist Church, Charleston, 1923, Ph84-235, 1st Baptist Church Collection


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Introduction

African-Americans in West Virginia
West Virginia Archives and History