Appalachian Community HistoriesColdiron, Harlan County: Family Name, River Road, and the Making of a Small Mountain Community Alex Hall / Harlan County KY
Appalachian Community HistoriesLynch, Harlan County: The Rise and Memory of Kentucky’s Largest Company Coal Town Alex Hall / Harlan County KY
Appalachian Community HistoriesPathfork, Harlan County: Post Office, Coal, and Community on Puckett Creek Alex Hall / Harlan County KY
Appalachian Community HistoriesCawood, Harlan County: Creek Mouth, Coal Country, and a Community That Kept Its Name Alex Hall / Harlan County KY
Appalachian Community HistoriesBledsoe, Harlan County: Pine Mountain, Roads, and the Making of a Mountain Community Alex Hall / Harlan County KY
Appalachian Community HistoriesWallins Creek, Harlan County: Post Office, Coal, Church, and the Making of a Mountain Community Alex Hall / Harlan County KY
Appalachian Community HistoriesAlva, Harlan County: Black Star Coal, Company Town Life, and Mountain Memory Alex Hall / Harlan County KY
Appalachian Community HistoriesBlair, Harlan County: Post Office, Flood, and a Community in the Cumberland Corridor Alex Hall / Harlan County KY
Appalachian Community HistoriesSouth Wallins, Harlan County: Coal, Census, and the Southern End of Wallins Creek Alex Hall / Harlan County KY
Appalachian Community HistoriesBaxter, Harlan County: Bridges, Coal Memory, and a Community at the Forks Alex Hall / Harlan County KY
Appalachian Community HistoriesDayhoit, Harlan County: A Coalfield Community of Names, Water, and Memory Alex Hall / Harlan County KY
Appalachian Community HistoriesChad, Harlan County: A Railroad Stop, a Post Office, and a Coalfield Community Alex Hall / Harlan County KY
Appalachian Community HistoriesClosplint, Harlan County: A Late Coal Camp of the Clover Fork Valley Alex Hall / Harlan County KY
Appalachian Community HistoriesBrookside, Harlan County: From Model Coal Town to National Strike Alex Hall / Harlan County KY
Appalachian Community HistoriesCranks, Harlan County: Creek, Gap, and Survival on the Edge of Kentucky Alex Hall / Harlan County KY
Appalachian Community HistoriesFresh Meadows, Harlan County: Reconstructing a Kentucky Community Through Official Records Alex Hall / Harlan County KY
Appalachian Community HistoriesGulston and Pansy: One Community in Harlan County Alex Hall / Harlan County KY
Appalachian Community HistoriesElcomb, Harlan County: Reconstructing a Coal Camp in the Harlan Valley Alex Hall / Harlan County KY
Appalachian Community HistoriesGrays Knob, Harlan County: Post Office, Railroad, and School in the Coalfields Alex Hall / Harlan County KY
Appalachian Community HistoriesHolmes Mill, Harlan County: A Border Community in the Coalfields Alex Hall / Harlan County KY
Appalachian Community HistoriesHiram, Harlan County: A Railroad Name and a Coalfield Community Alex Hall / Harlan County KY
Appalachian Community HistoriesHigh Splint, Harlan County: From Coal Camp to Strike Ground Alex Hall / Harlan County KY
Appalachian Community HistoriesPutney, Harlan County: Lumber, Railroads, and the Ranger Station on Pine Mountain Alex Hall / Harlan County KY
Appalachian Community HistoriesSmith, Harlan County: Martins Fork, the Post Office, and the Lake That Changed the Valley Alex Hall / Harlan County KY
Appalachian Community HistoriesPine Mountain, Harlan County: School, Landscape, and Appalachian Memory Alex Hall / Harlan County KY
Appalachian Community HistoriesRosspoint, Harlan County: A Community of Roads, Schools, and Mountain Memory Alex Hall / Harlan County KY
Appalachian Community HistoriesTeetersville, Harlan County: Postal History, Family Memory, and Coal Camp Life Alex Hall / Harlan County KY
Appalachian Community HistoriesVerda, Harlan County: A Coal Camp on Jones Creek Alex Hall / Harlan County KY
Appalachian Community HistoriesTacky Town, Harlan County: Reconstructing a Small Appalachian Community Alex Hall / Harlan County KY
Appalachian Community HistoriesTotz, Harlan County: A Coal Camp on the Poor Fork Alex Hall / Harlan County KY