West Virginia Humanities Council

West Virginia Humanities Council The Council is a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization that serves as the state affiliate of the National Endowment for the Humanities.

The West Virginia Humanities Council is a nonprofit organization governed by its Board of Directors. Our mission is to promote a vigorous program in the humanities statewide in West Virginia. Council headquarters are located in the 1836 MacFarland-Hubbard House in Charleston. You may contact us there Monday through Friday from 9:00 until 5:00 p.m. Council staff cannot be held responsible for the a

ccuracy or reliability of comments posted by the public. We reserve the right to remove comments we deem objectionable or inappropriate, and to ban users who post such comments repeatedly.

Read about how to apply for the August, 1, 2026, minigrant deadline. This will be the Council's only grant opportunity i...
05/26/2026

Read about how to apply for the August, 1, 2026, minigrant deadline. This will be the Council's only grant opportunity in 2026.

https://wvhumanities.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/2026MinigrantPressRelease.pdf

04/26/2026

At our April Little Lecture today, Beth White discusses our nation’s history of trial by jury.

Congratulations to 2026 National Heritage Fellow Gerry Milnes of Elkins!
04/21/2026

Congratulations to 2026 National Heritage Fellow Gerry Milnes of Elkins!

GERALD MILNES OF ELKINS HONORED AS NATIONAL HERITAGE FELLOW Gerald “Gerry” Milnes of Elkins, West Virginia, has been named a 2026 National Endowment for the Arts’ National Heritage Fellow, the nati…

In 1774 founding father John Adams said, "Representative government and trial by jury are the heart and lungs of liberty...
04/20/2026

In 1774 founding father John Adams said, "Representative government and trial by jury are the heart and lungs of liberty. Without them we have no other fortification against being ridden like horses, fleeced like sheep, worked like cattle, and fed and clothed like swine and hounds."

Adams' rival Thomas Jefferson wrote to Thomas Paine in 1788, “I consider trial by jury as the only anchor ever yet imagined by man, by which government can be held to the principles of its constitution."

Join us THIS SUNDAY, APRIL 26, at 2:00pm to learn just how foundational TRIAL BY JURY was to the writers of the Declaration of Independence and framers of the Constitution! Speaker BETH WHITE takes us back to the American Revolution in this second Little Lecture of 2026—part of our themed America 250 series!

ONLINE RSVP: https://forms.gle/yUzPjtHfQfXq2KTV9
MORE INFO: https://wvhumanities.org/programs/little-lectures/
SHARE THE FB EVENT: https://www.facebook.com/events/2391323498053756

161 years ago today, April 14, 1865, Abraham Lincoln, the nation's 16th president, was assassinated at Ford's Theatre Na...
04/14/2026

161 years ago today, April 14, 1865, Abraham Lincoln, the nation's 16th president, was assassinated at Ford's Theatre National Historic Site. Two West Virginia connections stand out with Lincoln's life.

Nancy Hanks, Lincoln's mother, was likely born on February 5, 1784, possibly in what is now Mineral County, WV. While land records make it difficult to pinpoint exactly where her family lived at the time, evidence suggests they may have resided in that area around then. In 1929, a state committee concluded that Nancy Hanks was indeed born on Mikes Run leading to this state memorial being placed in 1933, but by 1966, Governor Hulett Smith had determined there was no definitive evidence confirming her exact birthplace. The monument still stands and has been designated as a Mineral County Historic Landmark. (Photo courtesy of West Virginia & Regional History Center)

Ward Lamon, a Jefferson County native who grew up in Berkeley County, was a friend and informal bodyguard to Lincoln. On April 14, 1865, Lamon was organizing government operations in Richmond after the fall of the Confederate capital. That evening, he was more than 100 miles away and unavailable to protect Lincoln from John Wilkes Booth. Lamon died in Martinsburg and is buried in Gerrardstown.

On April 8, 1951--75 years ago today--a C-47 transport plane crashed near West Virginia International Yeager Airport - C...
04/08/2026

On April 8, 1951--75 years ago today--a C-47 transport plane crashed near West Virginia International Yeager Airport - CRW (then Kanawha Airport), killing 21 Air National Guard members. They were on their way to Charleston for the funeral of Guard member Maj. Woodford Sutherland, who had been killed in a training accident. To this day, Guard members wear a patch with 21 stars in memory of the crash victims.

You can learn more in these e-WV articles:

Aviation: https://wvencyclopedia.org/entries/292
Air National Guard: https://wvencyclopedia.org/entries/160

Photo of the crash site by Earl Benton, Charleston Daily

Photo of the memorial services at Charleston's Municipal Auditorium courtesy of the 130th Airlift Wing, Air National Guard

Thinking of the families and friends of the 29 coal miners killed at Upper Big Branch (UBB) on April 5, 2010, the day af...
04/05/2026

Thinking of the families and friends of the 29 coal miners killed at Upper Big Branch (UBB) on April 5, 2010, the day after Easter. UBB was West Virginia's deadliest coal disaster since the Buffalo Creek Flood killed 125 in 1972 and worst coal mine disaster since the Farmington explosion took 78 lives in 1968.

Learn more about the UBB Disaster: https://wvencyclopedia.org/entries/2227

Photo of a makeshift UBB memorial by Michael Keller

Address

1310 Kanawha Boulevard E
Charleston, WV
25301

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 4pm
Tuesday 9am - 4pm
Wednesday 9am - 4pm
Thursday 9am - 4pm
Friday 9am - 4pm

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