Search

Search Constraints

Start Over You searched for: Creator Salt Sulphur Springs Company Remove constraint Creator: Salt Sulphur Springs Company

Search Results

Salt Sulphur Springs Records

5.8 Linear Feet Summary: 5 ft. 10 in. (85 ledgers)
Abstract Or Scope

Daybooks, ledgers, journals, letter books and reports. Primarily concern the various business enterprises of the Salt Sulphur Springs Company including general store, hotel, stage line, telegraph company and farm. Also a letter book of the Oriental Powder Mills, Charleston, W.Va, of which John W.M. Appleton was agent; general store daybooks of E.D. Ballard; hotel and general store cash and daybooks of Erskine and Caruthers from Lexington and Salt Sulphur Springs. Records of the M.C.C.C. and O. Company of Waldingfield and Mill Creek, W.Va., and Mill Creek School records and Sweet Springs Gristmill and hotel records.

1 result

Salt Sulphur Springs Records 5.8 Linear Feet Summary: 5 ft. 10 in. (85 ledgers)

Salt Sulphur Springs Records

5.1 Linear Feet Summary: 5 1/2 in. (3 wrapped ledgers)
Abstract Or Scope

List of guests at the Salt Sulphur Springs, including place of residence, and numbers of horses and servants. No data is given for the years 1831-1833. Pasted in the back of the last volume are doctors' prescriptions for medicine at Union, West Virginia, in 1883.

1 result

Salt Sulphur Springs Records 5.1 Linear Feet Summary: 5 1/2 in. (3 wrapped ledgers)

Salt Sulphur Springs Records

0.1 Linear Feet Summary: 1 in. (1 ledger)
Abstract Or Scope

Guest register of the Salt Sulphur Springs Hotel in Monroe County, West Virginia.

1 result

Salt Sulphur Springs Records 0.1 Linear Feet Summary: 1 in. (1 ledger)

Content Warning

ARVAS is an aggregator of archival resources. ARVAS does not have control of the descriptive language used in our members’ finding aids.

Finding aids may contain historical terms and phrases, reflecting the shared attitudes and values of the community from which they were collected, but are offensive to modern readers. These include demeaning and dehumanizing references to race, ethnicity, and nationality; enslaved or free status; physical or mental ability; religion; sex; and sexual orientation and gender identity.

Many institutions and organizations are in the process of reviewing and revising their descriptive language, with the intent to describe materials in more humanizing, inclusive, and harm-reductive ways. As members revise their descriptive language, their changes will eventually be reflected in their ARVAS finding aids.