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Alderson - Visiting the Past
Learn
why
Elder
John
Alderson
spent
his
first
months
in
the
Alderson
area
at
Jarrett’s
Fort;
what
behavior
would
draw
the
ire
of
the
early
Baptist
Church;
the
earliest
fort
in
our
area;
the
earliest
fort
in
our
area;
"The
Christmas
Anna
Angel";
and
other
interesting
chapters
from
Alderson's
past
in
the
newest
edition
of
the
"Alderson
History
Highlights
and
Tantalizing
Tidbits"
series
published
by
Alderson
Main
Street.
Titled
“Visiting
the
Past”,
this
new
volume
covers
Alderson's
history
from
the
very
earliest
settlement
to
the
space
age.
Author
Belinda
Anderson
has,
once
again,
outdone
herself
in
finding
little
known
facts
and
researching
the
history
of
buildings
and
people.
"Alderson
has
such
an
amazingly
rich
history.
There
are
so
many
stories
of people and places to tell," Anderson said.
Volume
X
is
available
in
person
at
the
Alderson
Artisans
Gallery,
101
Railroad
Avenue
or
online
at
https://www.aldersongallery.com/shop.html
or
by
ordering
through
Alderson
Main
Street.
The
order
form
is on the AMS facebook page.
All
ten
volumes
are
also55
available
individually
or
as
a
set
that
may
be
extra
welcome
this
holiday
season.
What
a
great
Christmas
gift
for
family
and
friends
who
may
not
be
able
to
follow
country
roads
home to West Virginia this year. Anderson recaps the volumes as follows:
Volume
I--Read
about
the
railroad
wreck
that
littered
so
much
tobacco,
flour,
and
bacon
that
local
storekeepers sold none of those commodities for a month.
Volume
II--An
Alderson
inventor
who
was
awarded
a
patent
for
a
still
in
1897--but
it’s
not
the
kind
you
are
probably imagining.
Volume III--Read about the stories of heroism that saved lives during Alderson’s thousand-year flood.
Volume IV--Alderson was founded because of forbidden love.
Volume
V--America’s
first
female
ambassador
and
her
husband,
a
captain
of
the
Danish
King’s
Guard,
lived in Alderson in a home that is now listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
Volume
VI--Learn
about
the
hardware
store
that
sold
everything
from
turkeys
to
sheet
rock.
Read
the
memo with the store’s request to “ship us…7 Widows.”
Volume
VII—Read
about
the
lion
and
the
traveling
salesman,
the
Alderson
native
who
became
a
Jazz
Age
sensation and the family that turned a three-story brick warehouse into a home.
Volume
VIII—This
special
edition
commemorates
six
decades
of
West
Virginia’s
Largest
Fourth
of
July
Celebration.
Volume
IX
-
Read
about
Tick
Tock's
clock,
the
story
of
how
the
pedestrian
bridge
came
to
be
decorated
with
lights
every
Christmas
and
the
movie
made
by
a
major
studio
from
a
book
written
by
a
former
Alderson student.
Whether
you
live
in
Alderson
or
far
away,
these
volumes
of
history,
meticulously
researched
and
prepared
by Anderson, are a trip down memory lane that will celebrate the holiday season.
PHOTO CAPTION:
Cover
of
Volume
X:
In
August,
1935,
local
No.
13
paused
at
Alderson
at
12:45
pm
to
conduct
business
and
one
of
its
passengers,
William
Monypeny,
alighted
and
took
this
photo.
Courtesy
of
Greenbrier
Historical Society.