State Museum to unveil Sesquicentennial Exhibit
The West Virginia
State Museum will commemorate the state's 150th birthday with a special
sesquicentennial exhibit that opens Jan. 31 at the Culture Center in
Charleston. The public is invited to view the exhibit during an opening
reception at 6 p.m. that day.
"West Virginia 150"
focuses on 150 people, places and events that helped to shape the lives of West
Virginians over the past 150 years. It also features West Virginia's
national and international accomplishments and achievements as they have
unfolded since the state's birth on June 20, 1863.
The exhibit's
artifacts tell stories about the state's steel, coal, glass, timber and railroad
industries as well as such notable West Virginians as Nobel Prize-winning
author Pearl S. Buck, pepperoni roll inventor Guiseppe Argiro, award-winning
composer George Crumb and former Secretary of State Cyrus Vance. The Wheeling Jamboree, Mountain Stage,
Mister Bee Potato Chips, Shoney's and the Marble King also are featured.
"West Virginia has
such a rich and interesting history that it was really difficult to narrow the
exhibit down to 150 items," Museum Director Charles Morris said in a news
release. The final list contains suggestions from the public as well as from
archivists, historians and other employees of the West Virginia Division of
Culture and History.
Visitors to the
exhibit can add their own suggestions to a book placed at the end of the exhibit.
A special online exhibit featuring these recommendations will open later this
year. The public also is encouraged to donate items to commemorate the state's
birthday.
For more information,
contact Morris at 304-558-0220.