Sepia-toned postcard titled “Casino, Golf Course and Greenbrier Airport, White Sulphur Springs, West Virginia.” The elevated view looks across the grounds of the famed The Greenbrier in White Sulphur Springs. In the foreground are landscaped fairways and sand traps of the resort’s golf course, with a long, low clubhouse structure visible near the center. A winding river curves along the right side of the image, crossed by a small steel truss bridge.
Beyond the golf course lies the open field identified as Greenbrier Airport, an early resort airfield serving visitors arriving by private and commercial aircraft. The surrounding Allegheny Mountains frame the valley setting, emphasizing the approximately 2,000-foot elevation noted along the bottom margin of the card. The composition highlights the integration of aviation facilities within a luxury resort landscape during the early decades of air travel.
The postcard documents the period when prominent American resorts promoted direct air access as a modern convenience, linking leisure tourism with the growing popularity of regional aviation service.