In 1920, Augusta-based filmmaker Edgar Jones produced "In The River" a short, silent film that includes this very brief, but incredibly historic appearance by the WW&F Railway. Until this film's discovery in the Library of Congress by local film historian Edward Lorusso, and subsequent identification of the WW&F, there was no known existing footage of the WW&F in operation prior to its shutdown in 1933.
In this clip, we see the WW&F's largest locomotive, 2-6-2 number 6, arriving (southbound from Albion) at Windsor station with a mixed train consisting of several boxcars, a dairy car, and combine/RPO 7. After the train's departure, an interaction occurs between the film's main characters on the station platform. (Spoiler alert: they fall in love, chaos ensues at the lumber camp, and someone ends up "In the River".)
Watch the clip on YouTube:
https://youtu.be/B2Qp5WssS04?si=WNmGn2chNcwKaCVI