We asked several people but no one knew the history of the building. My guess is that it was an inn, with a restaurant below and rooms to rent above. It was located not far from the railroad.
Another intriquing sight in West Hamlin was this old railroad coaling tower. These were used to load coal into waiting coal cars behind the steam locomotives, before the days of diesel-fueled engines. You can see photos of other still-standing coaling towers and other West Virginia railroad buildings here. We did not find a train depot, but learned later that West Hamlin's is no longer standing.
We have been packing lunches this summer for these road trips, and it's been so nice to be able to stop and eat at little parks like this one on the Guyandotte River, just outside of Branchland, WV.
A "float" is planned for this weekend, I believe, and the river looks like a perfect place for kayaks and canoes.
A purple martin sits high on the wires over his home, thoughtfully erected in the park by someone.
I had to smile at this sign. Spell-check can be a useful tool. There is a story of another cemetery not far from this one that is supposedly haunted by a female ghost that will come up behind visitors and blow on their ear. I'd find that fairly alarming myself if I was alone at night in the place.
Other Lincoln County sights:
This photo just cried out for a black-and-white treatment.
Lincoln county was once a big tobacco-growing area, and the old curing barns can be seen everywhere, most of them falling down, re-purposed into other uses or, like this one, being reclaimed by Nature.
I wonder if this was once a schoolhouse? The number of windows in front make me think so, but it may have just been someone's home.
My mind says this was once a Gulf gas station. Why? Perhaps the shape of the glass window? or the red/orange trim? At first glance I thought the cages behind it were for dogs, but...
actually, they're for roosters, fighting roosters probably. Cock-fighting is illegal in West Virginia but owning the roosters is not.One has to wonder why then have the roosters? I suppose they could be sold to people in states where this bloody sport is still legal. Horrid thought.
I watched the elderly couple who lived in this house for a few minutes. She was cutting grass and working in their garden, which looked like it had been in good shape earlier in the summer but was now a bit on the weedy side. He had a cast on his leg, perhaps explaining the weedy garden. He was working, I think, on a pan of beans, stringing them for leather britches. I liked the setup of this house, with the root cellar so close to the back porch. This was evidently a home where gardening and putting up food had always been an important activity. I wish I could have had time to just sit and talk with them.
In the county seat of Hamlin, this old building looked to me as if it had once been the courthouse, although above the door a faded sign read "Lincoln County Bank." Today is it the home of a Masonic lodge.
This mural is in downtown Hamlin. It shows people climbing over a stone wall into the sunshine. I wonder what its meaning is to the artist? The old part of town is struggling, with quite a few empty storefronts, but on the edges of town there is new growth, and most of the homes in town were well-kept.
The new courthouse in Hamlin. Not as pretty as the old one, in my opinion, but probably more functional.
And lastly, a photo of the church that used to be the snake-handling church Larry remembered in my last post. This is in Sod, not in Sumerco as I thought. The church appears to be closed now, with a nice new house built very close to it. I love the trampoline in front--a testament to the passage of time.
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Another great road trip! Good photos and musings.
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