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J. Coleman Alderson and others in the streets of Charleston. Col. J. Z. McChesney is on his right.

1. Major J. Coleman Alderson in Old Confederates Veterans Parade at Charleston, W. Va.

Group portrait of members attending the Reunion Greenbrier Confederate Veterans and 36th Ohio Regiment at Lewisburg, in Greenbrier County, West Virginia on May 23, 1904.

2. Reunion of Greenbrier Confederate Veterans, Greenbrier County, W. Va.

Confederate Veterans from left to right: George Hammer, John Ruddle, and Henry Roberson.

3. Confederate Veterans, Pendleton County, W. Va.

Confederate veterans George, Isaac, and Benjamin Hammer.

4. Confederate Veterans, Pendleton County, W. Va.

Man holding flag: George Hammer,  man marked X: John M. Ruddle, man on horse: Captain Daugherty.  Also pictured: Ike Hammer, Bill Kiser.

5. Confederate Reunion, Pendleton County, W. Va.

Pictured from left to right- Ben Hammer, Ike Hammer, George Hammer.

6. Confederate Veterans, Pendleton County, W. Va.

7. Confederate Veterans, Beckley, W. Va.

Confederate soldier reunion in Beckley, Raleigh County, W.Va.  Front row, from left to right:  D. P. L. Maynor; Captain Stephen Adams of Lynchburg, Va. and former commonwealth attorney for Raleigh County; Alfred Hurt; James Anderson Gunnoe (lost his leg at the Battle of Cedar Creek); J. W. Sweeney; and Joshua Griffith.  Back row, from left to right:  A. J. Hutchinson; J. E. F. Miller of Sand Branch, Raleigh County; John Prince of Beckley; C. W. Tolley; a veteran named Mann from Summers County, and a non-veteran also named Mann.  Captain Adams commanded Company A of the 30th Virginia Battalion, second of two companies organized in Raleigh County.

8. Confederate Soldier Reunion, Beckley, West Virginia

9. Large Group of Confederate Veterans

1. Maj. P. H. McDonald 2. Mr. Buck Oshome 3. Capt. Glenn

10. Confederate Reunion

Last survivor of Lee's Confederate Army in Monongalia County, W. Va, died Summer, 1943

11. Portrait of George Sill of Monongalia County, W.Va.

Brown Price and unidentified others pose at the High Water Mark on the battlefield at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. The monument marks the farthest point of advance for the Confederate Army during Pickett's Charge, before being repulsed by the Federal troops on Cemetery Ridge.

12. Reconciliation, July 4, 1913, 10:00 AM at High Water Mark, Cemetery Ridge, Gettysburg, Pa.