Request WVPB Education to attend or host an event!
America's Awesome Kids
West Virginia’s children ages 8-10 have the opportunity to “tell their stories” as part of the America’s Awesome Kids project. A partnership between WVPB and WGBH in Boston.
This week, a Tennessee DJ takes us on a tour of Appalachian punk and metal. Also, Appalachian culture is enriched by its immigrants. We explore the fusion of West Virginia and Japan. And, Appalachia isn’t all punk rock and Japanese food. There’s also string band music.
Point Pleasant River Museum Breaks Ground On New Building
Listen
Share this Article
Museum staff broke ground on Monday for a new building to house the Point Pleasant River Museum and Lakin Ray Cook Learning Center.
Following a fire that gutted the Old Nease Building, the previous home of the museum, the museum staff has been working to raise funds for a new building.
Teri Deweese
/
Point Pleasant River Museum.
Smoke rolling out of the roof of the Point Pleasant River Museum on the day of the fire.
“Once it is built and fully operational, you’re going to be able to experience a ‘wow.’” said James McCormick, executive director of the museum. “You’re going to learn things about the history of the museum, the history of the river.”
Many of the artifacts were saved after the fire for the reopened museum. The new building will resemble a flatboat like those that used to travel up and down the Kanawha and Ohio rivers.
“The architecture of the design of this building, I mean it’s gorgeous,” McCormick said.
The facilities will also house the Lakin Ray Cook Learning Center, a training center with riverboat simulators for inland waterway navigation, as well as an attraction for the general public.
There are only six training centers in the country and only three on the east side of the Mississippi River. McCormick said the new facility will offer a better electrical situation for the simulators and put Point Pleasant on the map as a designation for riverboat training.
In addition to training, McCormick said he also plans to offer history preservation classes at the center. McCormick hosts a show about rare artifacts and discoveries on West Virginia Library Television and said he will use that knowledge to expand the museum’s archaeological operation.
“This area always, always turns up layers of artifacts,” said McCormick. “The river is loaded not only with artifacts but history, because there was so much that was going on, that was dependent on the river.”
Point Pleasant, and its waterways, share a storied kinship with America’s history.
The town earned its name after George Washington commented that the intersection of Ohio and Kanawha rivers was a “pleasant point” in 1770. The Battle of Point Pleasant in 1774 pre-dated the battle of Lexington and Concord and is considered by some to be the first battle of the American Revolution.
In 1908, the U.S. Senate recognized the Battle of Point Pleasant as the first of the American Revolution. The measure failed in the House of Representatives.
For two decades, museum founder and former executive director Jack Fowler has chronicled the history of West Virginia’s waterways. He passed away last year at the age of 85.
James McCormick
/
Point Pleasant River Museum
“Our prayer was that he could be the first to open that door,” Point Pleasant Mayor Brian Billings said to the Huntington Herald-Dispatch at the time. “Now he’s not.”
Construction on the building is scheduled to be completed in August and McCormick said the museum will reopen to the public in the fall.
When that day comes, he looks forward to welcoming the community back. Through teaching history classes for kids, he said he’s seen the impact of hands-on history education.
“We want to work with the local community, we want to work with the kids in the area,” he said. “I want to make history come alive.”
Officials say the unit will offer short-term care in a private, comfortable environment for patients who need extended treatment or monitoring but who don’t need to be fully admitted to the hospital.
A Jefferson County author's new book unveils the history of Thomas and Lavinia Lovett, a Black couple who in 1890 opened Harpers Ferry's iconic Hill Top Hotel.
Some regions have waited more than 30 years for municipal systems to deliver clean drinking water. Meanwhile, they rely on faith communities bringing bottled water. From the tiny town of Anawalt, Wendy Welch attended a water distribution day and brings us this story.
Every week, more than two newspapers close in the United States, leaving whole communities without local coverage. In West Virginia, 43 of 55 counties have just one news source — or none at all. In the next Us & Them, Trey Kay visits communities on the verge of becoming news deserts to see how they’re fighting to keep their stories alive, from the long-standing Hurricane Breeze to a new startup in Greenbrier County.