Shenandoah County Library Archives

Shenandoah County Library Digital Archives

Browse Items (211 total)

Photograph of the Triplett Dam that spans the North Fork of the Shenandoah River east of Woodstock.

This photograph was taken when the dam was flooded in 1910. During that flood, the dam was dynamitedon June 19, 1910. This photograph was taken…

Photograph of a typewritten page that lists the inventory of personal effects and real estate of J.I. Triplett, deceased.

The document was dated April 8, 1930.

Photograph of the Triplett Mill located in Woodstock Virginia.

The steam, later electric, powered mill was used to process local crops for export and was built by J.I. Triplett. It still stands on the southern side of W. Court and Commerce…

Photo of a photograph of three unidentified men at the Triplett Dam and Powerhouse near Woodstock, Virginia.

The photograph was made following the 1910 flood that damaged the powerhouse.

Today the site is home to Burnshire Dam.

This dam was…

Four (4) photographs showing the aftermath of a February 14, 1925 fire that destroyed the Triplett High and Vocational School in Mt. Jackson Virginia.

Scan of the Triplett Trumpeter from May 24, 1943. The Trumpeter was a newspaper produced by the students and staff of Triplett High School in Mt. Jackson Virginia. Four (4) pages total.

Photograph showing Selena Hines. Taken from the 1957 Triplett High School Yearbook. Selena was secretary of that school for many years.

Photograph taken by William Hoyle Garber showing Triplett High School May Day King Donald Funkhouser and Louise Rinker.

Program created for the Triplett High School's 1954 Fair, sponsored by the Future Homemakers of America (FHA) and Future Farmers of America (FFA) chapters. This annual event was designed to promote the organizations, the competitions they competed…

Postcard with a picture of the Triplett High and Vocational Training School located in Mt. Jackson Virginia. The building is no longer standing.

Postcard showing an image of the Triplett Building in Mt. Jackson Virginia.

This building was home to the Mt. Jackson National Bank (later First Virginia Bank) on Main Street. It no longer stands.

This postcard was printed in 1910.
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