New State Exhibit To Highlight How W.Va. Fossil Fuel Production ‘Built’ US Industry

A new exhibit entitled “West Virginia: Nature Designs a State that Fuels a Nation” is slated to open in early 2025 at the West Virginia State Museum in Charleston.

Just outside the state capitol, a new exhibit will soon display West Virginia’s role in the fossil fuel industry, and how the state’s natural resources powered industrial development across the United States.

The new exhibit, entitled “West Virginia: Nature Designs a State that Fuels a Nation,” is slated to open in early 2025 at the West Virginia State Museum in Charleston. It marks the state’s participation in America250 — a national, nonpartisan celebration of the 250th anniversary of the signing of the United States Declaration of Independence.

West Virginia’s exhibit will highlight 11 industries and natural resources that have made the state “a global leader,” according to a Thursday press release from the office of Gov. Jim Justice.

Justice was joined by Randall Reid-Smith, secretary of the West Virginia Department of Arts, Culture and History (WVDACH), at a groundbreaking ceremony for the project Wednesday.

During the ceremony, Justice said the federal government tasked state officials with displaying what the state has done to contribute to the success of the United States.

“For crying out loud, it’s easy,” he said. “At the end of the day, our natural resources fueled this nation. Not only did we fuel the nation, we built the world and steel production, on and on and on.”

The new extension of the state museum will feature displays about “coal, oil and gas, iron and steel, clay, chemicals, salt, agriculture, timber, glass, water and railroads,” according to the press release.

Justice added that the museum’s new extension also aims to highlight the work of workers who power the state’s industries each day.

A 3D rendering of the West Virginia State Museum’s new exhibit shows large-scale replicas of locomotives, as well as displays encased in wooden show boxes.

Rendering Courtesy of WV Governor’s Office

It will feature larger artifacts, like replicas of a steam locomotive, a coal shuttle car, a block of coal and farming plows. Also included will be a roll of steel from Nucor Steel Company, which is opening a new steel plant in Mason County in 2026.

The exhibit “will always be here to make us proud of who we are and what we’ve done to build this country,” Reid-Smith said. “I don’t care if I get in trouble. It’s about fossil fuels, baby.”

WVDACH Director of Administration Sam Calvert said the project makes use of in-ground wells on the north and south sides of the museum, which were being used only to protect the building from flooding.

But Calvert said both of these wells leaked, and the land around them was also not accessible per the Americans with Disabilities Act.

America250 marked the opportunity to address these issues and an “opportunity to turn [the area] into an exhibit,” he said, adding that funding for the project came in part through appropriations from the West Virginia Legislature.

Justice and Reid-Smith expressed hope that the new exhibit can evoke a sense of pride in residents from across West Virginia who visit the state capitol complex.

“It’s a great day not only for the arts, but it’s a great day for West Virginia,” Reid-Smith said. “We now have the opportunity to tell our own story, and how our natural resources built this country.”

A new exhibit on industry and natural resource usage will open at the West Virginia State Museum in early 2025.

Photo Credit: WV Governor’s Office

January 27, 1933: Folk Artist Connard Wolfe Born in Kanawha County

Folk artist Connard Wolfe was born at Standard in Kanawha County on January 27, 1933. The self-taught sculptor started carving wood and stone after being discharged from the army about 1955. His first significant carvings were stones for a wall and two headstones. Other early works included a gigantic reclining nude carved from a boulder in the hills near his home and two life-sized sculptures in tree trunks: ‘‘Mountain Girl’’ and ‘‘Standing Christ.’’ Both tree sculptures were later destroyed. His most famous surviving works are a bear on the campus of the West Virginia University Institute of Technology in Montgomery, a beaver at Bluefield High School, and a madonna and child in a Kanawha Valley church.

In addition to his creative works of art, he was also known for his unusual tools, which he made from automobile leaf springs and engine valves. Wolfe played a major role in the craft revival of the 1960s and 1970s, giving demonstrations at fairs and festivals. One of his stone carvings, “The Kiss,” is on display in the West Virginia State Museum.

Connard Wolfe died in 2012 at age 79.

West Virginia History Goes Digital

The West Virginia State Museum unveiled its Elementary Edition of West Virginia A Digital Primer.  The online resource, two and a half years in the making, covers grades K-5 social studies West Virginia History Standards.  The site provides interactive content for students and teachers. 

Nancy Herholdt , Education Manager in the Museum was thrilled to get the project launched.  “Where there was no text that met our needs, teachers and others have collaborated to produce a resource that answers those needs.” Partners in the project include West Virginia: Division of Culture and History, the Department of Education, the Library Commission and Public Broadcasting. Included in the resource are primary source documents, lesson plans, videos and the interactive maps. 

Today, Yvonne Martin, one of the teachers who contributed to the primer brought her students to the museum to  give the primer a test drive.  Yvonne loves the museum and all it has to offer.  “I can teach each  of my standards, it is such a rich opportunity.”  Today Yvonnes’ students were accompanied by their “grandfriends” in celebration of Grandparents day.  Everyone was busy putting counties in place and finding our fun facts.

WVPB is excited to be a part of the project.  We have linked the Digital Primer to West Virginia LearningMedia.  We are proud to provide a link to this resource for West Virginians. Additionally, we are also providing this resource on a National Platform so it is there for others from around North America to search for information about West Virginia.

A Secondary Edition is in the works.  We look forward to its completion.-

Nancy Herholdt, Museum Education Manager
Exit mobile version