New Exhibit Showcases Role of the State in Military

A new exhibit is showcasing West Virginia's role in military history.The West Virginia Division of Culture and History says the new exhibition, "West…

A new exhibit is showcasing West Virginia’s role in military history.

The West Virginia Division of Culture and History says the new exhibition, “West Virginians Answering the Call,” is opening Friday at the Culture Center in Charleston.

The exhibit features military uniforms, medals and insignia and arms from the West Virginia State Museum’s collection and from the West Virginia National Guard.

Officials say the artifacts date from the American Revolution to Afghanistan and also include a scale model of the USS West Virginia.

The exhibition will remain on display through July 11.

How to Celebrate West Virginia's 151st Birthday

I crawled out of bed this morning at 4:30. 

I’m not bragging, I had to come in to host the morning newscasts and West Virginia Morning.

But I woke up feeling good. ‘It’s West Virginia Day, after all’ I thought to myself as I was getting ready, doing my best not to crawl back into bed and wind up late for work. 

I can’t lie, the first thought as I was waking up wasn’t how to solve the state’s problems, or how to get West Virginia out of dead last in many national rankings. 

Honestly, my first thought was how terribly I wished I could stop by Tudor’s Biscuit World and grab a Thundering Herd or a Ron on my way into work. Nothing would be more West Virginian of me while starting my day.

Sadly, though, the Tudor’s on the East End of Charleston opens at 5:30. I was in the newsroom prepping newscasts just after 5.

On days like today when I fill in for news director Beth Vorhees, I get the opportunity to watch the world wake up. It comes to life in a stream of social media posts as people start their days. It’s strange sometimes, but today it has been awfully fun and rather sentimental. 

Today, the beautiful state where I was born, raised, and where I still reside is 151 years old. And even though she has her issues, I think she still looks pretty good.

And since we still have a full day ahead of us, here are some ideas on how to celebrate our home,  West Virginia:

Swing by the Culture Center in Charleston

Check out some of the exhibits they’re launching. If you missed last year’s 3-D projection onto the Capitol, you’ll want to check it out in the theater downstairs of that building.

FestivALL

For the next 10 days, Charleston will become a melting pot of arts and culture with FestivALL. Everything from live music, to performance art, art workshops and fairs and more. Might as well get out and get started today.

Learn Some West Virginia History

You could celebrate by immersing yourself in the state’s rich history, through documentaries like last year’s radio special West Virginia 150: Commemorating Statehood or the Emmy-nominated television piece West Virginia: The Road to Statehood.

Drink a Locally Brewed Beer 

West Virginia’s craft brew industry has grown significantly in recent years. Festivals like Mountain State Brewing Company’s Brew Skies Festival, or Huntington’s Rales & Ales are still a few weeks away. But, there’s plenty of places all over the state to enjoy a great, locally brewed craft beer. Some of my favorites include:

  • Bridge Brew Works (Fayetteville) –  Long Point Lager
  • Charleston Brewing Company – Mountain Stage Ale
  • The North End Tavern (Parkersburg) – 5-Way IPA
  • Mountain State Brewing Co. (Thomas & Morgantown) – Seneca IPA

Get a West Virginia Tattoo

If you’re really hardcore about your love for West Virginia and want to show your pride like I do, you could get your body permanently etched with something related to the Mountain State. A cardinal or a rhododendron might work well. You could go with the state seal. Or you could keep it simple like I did with the state’s border. (Trust me, I didn’t have the idea first!) If you’re looking for a recommendation, Tat-Nice in Huntington and New Hope in Barboursville both do excellent work.

Now matter how you celebrate, though, make it a good one. 

As an added bonus, here’s some some outpouring of West Virginia pride I witnessed this morning as the state “woke up” on social media:  

[View the story “West Virginian’s 151st Birthday” on Storify]

Events Set to Celebrate West Virginia Day

  The West Virginia Division of Culture and History is commemorating West Virginia Day with festivities in Charleston and Wheeling.

Officials say the free, public events on Friday will take place at the Culture Center in Charleston and Independence Hall in Wheeling.

The Culture Center will host a birthday celebration that includes educational activities, a speech on historic Charleston and cutting of the state’s birthday cake.

Officials say a new museum exhibit and video entitled “150 in 3-D: A Century and a Half of West Virginia Pride” will officially be open for visitors to see inside the State Museum.

West Virginia Independence Hall will have its annual celebration with Civil War re-enactors on site giving demonstrations and tours. There also will be a commemoration ceremony in the historic courtroom.

What's Next, West Virginia? Mountaineer Boys State Says It's Time for Change

    

Almost every year since 1936, a select group of high schools boys have attended Mountaineer Boys State, and since 1941 girls have attended Rhododendron Girls State. The week long camps, sponsored by the American Legion, focus on citizenship, leadership and patriotism. This year, Boys State focused on the nonpartisan, statewide initiative, What’s Next, West Virginia?  The young men at Boys State had a great deal to add to a conversation on positive change in West Virginia during a 45 minute discussion in Charleston.

Topics included:

  • West Virginia’s greatest strengths.
  • West Virginia’s greatest challenges.
  • The opportunities West Virginia offers to develop a more prosperous state.
  • What the boys would like to see in West Virginia 20 years from now.
  • What they see as their role in helping West Virginia thrive.

“I think the youth is our greatest strength, because anywhere you go in West Virginia you always see, I feel, as if, I always see kids trying to take initiative with helping the future, like Boys State.”
“I think our environment, our state’s natural beauty, really makes us unique, our rolling green hills, and everything, really makes our tourist industry strong.”

“I really feel that West Virginia’s greatest asset lies with the people. Our state has had a history of adversity and overcoming it, and I think the responsibility for that has, or can be attributed to the people of our state.”

Many boys believed West Virginia’s greatest challenge was keeping its youth in the state, noting the lack of jobs for college graduates as the biggest obstacle.

“I know for me, somebody who doesn’t really plan on going into the natural gas industry or any energy industries, at least where I’m from, there really isn’t much for me…which is honestly really depressing, cause I love Wheeling, I love where I come from, but there’s just no jobs there, there’s just no where for me to go after college, other than somewhere else.”

“…most of our highly qualified, intelligent people are leaving the state and going to other states and other cities to work. What I feel we need to work on, is we need to keep these intelligent people in the state, improving the state for us.”

The students said tourism could be West Virginia’s greatest ally in building a more prosperous state, but to do this, they felt the state would need to work on refurbishing areas that are falling apart.

“You go to some of the larger cities in our state, and you see winding roads, you see dilapidated buildings. We need to focus on urban planning, because businesses that want to locate in cities don’t want to locate in cities that their employees won’t move too. Essentially, we need to focus on beautification of our cities. We need to focus on making it more applicable to the modern industry.”

“…instead of refurbishing them and making the town look better, they’re building new buildings on the outskirts of town. So I think a lot of the things we need to focus on is restoration, instead of keep building more stuff, while we have buildings that can be still used.”

Another big challenge the boys noted was West Virginia’s image.

“West Virginia also has a stereotype of being like, hillbillies or lower-class, that necessarily isn’t true. It gives us a bad name, which makes people not want to come here.”

“Not only does West Virginia have that stereotype, there’s also those people who either don’t realize or don’t remember the fact that we’re a state. You say, where are you from? West Virginia. Oh is that Richmond?”

“But if we, you know, put off as a youth, as a whole, as a state a new persona, stating that West Virginia is, you know, the wild and wonderful state that it is, then I think that will also help, you know, people come to West Virginia.”

Improving infrastructure, education, and building human capital were also specific suggestions.    

“Well I like to think is our greatest opportunity lies is where we’re weakest. We’re weak and our buildings are falling apart. We’re not using our buildings. Our education is low, this means that we can use our education that is low, we can bring teachers in that are renowned teachers that know what they’re talking about, are very respected. Bring those in, you’ll be able to bring up a generation that is very respectable…this is where we have opportunity.”

“I personally believe the most critical one right now is education, because that is our future. We are our future. Each consecutive generation are going to be those who help the state, and if they are uneducated, then what hands have we put our state in?”

Twenty years from now, these young men want to see an even greener West Virginia.

“The biggest thing I’d like to see in twenty years; an expansion of renewable energy, like solar panels, wind power, and hydroelectric power, because we’re currently focusing on only temporary fixes for energy like…coal…that’s just not going to be around forever, we can’t expect to depend fully on that…The world is, entirely, is gonna have to transition over to green energy eventually. That’s hundreds years down the road, but to be in the leading forefront of everybody, to be switching to green energy would be wonderful…”

Several said the role they play begins today; that they have a responsibility to make the people around them see West Virginia as they do.

“…be active in the community, take school seriously, work hard the way we like too. I think that’s our role, and I think in twenty years, if we take on that role in twenty years, I think the statistics will change. I think West Virginia will, will really be seen for what it really is.”

“I think it’s the role of our generation, and us in this room, the men of tomorrow, the leaders of tomorrow to be the pioneers for the future, and the engineers of change, because we are gonna be in these public positions, we are gonna be in charge of what changes we want to see. We have to be that change in our state that we want to see in the future.”

Gala Set for W.Va. Arts Awards on Thursday

West Virginia is celebrating some of its best artists and art supporters.
 
The 2014 Governor’s Arts Awards ceremony is scheduled for Thursday night at the Culture Center in Charleston.

The Division of Culture and History and the West Virginia Commission on the Arts say the awards honor those who have made significant contributions to the state’s culture.
 
The honors include: the Arts in Education Award, the Distinguished Service Award to the Arts, the Leadership in the Arts Award, the Artist of the Year Award, and the Governor’s Arts Award for Lifetime Achievement.
 
This year’s event made news after a student’s plan to recite a poem about the Upper Big Branch mine explosion at the event was denied.
 
Officials blamed miscommunication and the student will be allowed to recite the poem.
 

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