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The Countryside Transformed:
The Railroad and the Eastern Shore of Virginia 1870 - 1935

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The transformation of the Eastern Shore countryside is richly documented in maps, newspapers, photographs, and other media.

  • 1904
    - Map
    Department of Commerce and Labor, Coast and Geodetic Survey, Chesapeake Bay, Eastern Shore, Mattawoman Creek to Craddock Creek, 1904
  • 1904
    - Map
    Tracing from Topographic Survey, Chesapeake Bay, Eastern Shore from Chesconessex Creek to Craddock Creek, 1904
  • 1904
    - Map
    Department of Commerce and Labor, Coast and Geodetic Survey, Pocomoke Sound, Chesconessex Creek to Pocomoke River, 1904
  • 1904
    - Map
    Department of Commerce and Labor, Coast and Geodetic Survey, Chesapeake Bay, Eastern Shore, Craddock Creek to Chesconessex Creek, 1904
  • 1904
    - Map
    Department of Commerce and Labor, Coast and Geodetic Survey, Eastern Shore of Chesapeake, Butlers Bluff to the Gulf, 1904
  • 1904
    - Public Document
    January Term, 1904
  • 1904
    - Public Document
    January Term, 1904
  • 1904
    - Public Document
    CHAP. 156.--An ACT to protect pheasants or grouse in the counties of Accomac and Northampton.
  • 1904
    - Public Document
    LIGHTED BEACON AT MOUTH OF PUNGOTEAGUE CREEK, VIRGINIA.
  • 1904
    - Newspaper
    Forest and Stream, May 21, 1904

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Copyright Brooks Miles Barnes, William G. Thomas, III and Rector and Board of Visitors.

University of Virginia    |    All Rights Reserved 2008    |    Southern Spaces

In association with Eastern Shore Public Library and the Institute for Advanced Technology in the Humanities.

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