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by John Cuthbert The author is curator of the West Virginia and Regional History
![]() It has often been said that history holds the keys to unlocking the future. If there is even a kernel of truth to this statement, then surely the West Virginia and Regional History Collection of the WVU Libraries is an asset that will prove to be invaluable to the citizens of West Virginia as we struggle to meet the new challenges of the next millennium. As the primary keeper of the historical record of the Mountain State, the West Virginia Collection has a formidable number of keys at its disposal.
The collection's audiovisual resources, including sound recordings, motion picture footage, and more than 100,000 photographs, provide an opportunity to literally look at and listen to West Virginia's past: the camp of the West Virginia Brigade near Keyser during the Civil War, a rousing speech by United Mine Workers of America leader John L. Lewis, a square-dancing exhibition at the 1953 Glenville Folk Festival. Each year these and other unique resources, available only at the West Virginia Collection, provide scholars and laymen, policymakers and citizens, journalists, genealogists, and many others with the information they need to understand the past in their personal or professional quests to explain and enrich the present and prepare for the future. The history of WVU's commitment to fulfilling a function that is more often performed by a state historical society dates back to the late 1920s, when Professor Charles Ambler, chair of the WVU History Department, began to seek out and acquire primary historical documents that related to his research in the relatively young field of West Virginia history. Deeply concerned by the fact that West Virginia lacked the coordinating authority of a state library or historical society to protect its archival treasuresas many other states did haveAmbler felt that it was incumbent upon WVU, as West Virginia's intellectual center, to ensure that the information resources that elucidated the state's creation and early history were preserved for posterity.
The Willey papers became the cornerstone of an archives and manuscripts collection that would grow by leaps and bounds in the ensuing years. The collection's success was fostered by the opening in 1931 of a new main library consisting of seven stories, "just two less than Yale, the largest library in the U.S.," as well as by the backing of WVU President John R. Turner. A native of Raleigh County, Turner had, in fact, instructed Head Librarian Lonnie Arnett to focus upon the collection of books and documents "pertaining to the history and physical characteristics" of the state shortly after his arrival at the University in 1928. Aided by a "small compensation" and travel allowance, Ambler conducted a statewide survey during the summer of 1931 which identified more than 100 significant manuscripts collections stored in attics and warehouses across West Virginia. His efforts were rewarded by the immediate donation of a handful of the most important of these collections, including the papers of political and capitalist titans Johnson Newlon Camden and Henry Gassaway Davis, as well as those of another of the state's founding fathers, Francis H. Pierpont. A native of Fairmont, Pierpont was elected governor of the "Reorganized Government of Virginia" which was established in Wheeling at the beginning of the Civil War. Along with the Willey Papers, these collections would irrevocably establish the WVU Libraries as the primary repository of information regarding West Virginia's early political and economic history.
In the months that followed, a steady stream of collections
flowed into the WVU Libraries, including the voluminous county
court records of Monongalia and Ohio counties. The job of cataloging
and indexing these records, along with those of several more
of West Virginia's earliest counties which later arrived, got
off to a running start in 1935 when funds from President Roosevelt's
Works Progress Administration were made available to hire 19
archival assistants through the Morgantown Federal "Relief
Office." To assist Ambler, who continued to direct the program on an essentially volunteer basis, the 1935-1936 University budget provided for the hiring of the Division of Documents' first full-time archivist, Festus P. Summers. A recent graduate of the WVU history program, Summers assumed full responsibility for the documents program two years later. Under his direction, and that of his successor, Oscar D. Lambert, the division continued its dramatic growth for the next decade and a half. In addition to the papers of West Virginia's first governor, Arthur I. Boreman, and those of several of his successors, the first installment of the priceless collections of the great West Virginia antiquarian Roy Bird Cook entered the collection during this period.
A half century ago, in his first annual report, Curator Shetler noted that a sum total of 57 researchers had consulted the resources of the West Virginia Collection during the year 1950-1951. Today the collection serves more than 5,000 users annually. Its library of West Virginia books, periodicals, and newspapers is unmatched, as are its holdings of early West Virginia photographs, maps, broadsides, and sound recordings. The collection's 3,383 various archives and manuscripts collections continue to embrace most of the deposited papers of the state's political leaders, up to and including those of Governor Arch Moore and Senator Robert C. Byrd, as well as outstanding archival resources regarding all aspects of West Virginia's economic and social history.
The Civil War and birth of West Virginia, the post-statehood exploitation of the state's previously untapped wealth of natural resources, the intense and sometimes bloody conflict between labor and industry during the early 20th century, West Virginia's colorful folk heritage, its genealogical significance as a gateway to the Westthese are but a few of the many doors to which the West Virginia and Regional History Collection of the West Virginia University Libraries holds the keys.
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