June 26, 2014
CHARLESTON,  W.Va. – Three archives lectures at the Culture Center in Charleston; children’s  activities and a tour and program about the Interpretive Garden at Grave Creek  Mound in Moundsville; and the 25th Anniversary Appalachian String Band Music  Festival at Camp Washington-Carver in Clifftop, Fayette County are among  the  West Virginia Division of Culture and History’s lineup of special  events in July.
Culture  Center, Charleston
The  Culture Center, located at the State Capitol Complex in Charleston, will  present three archives lectures. The building is open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.  Monday through Saturday. The museum is closed on Mondays. The following  programs at the Culture Center are free and open to the public.
“Time’s  Runnin’ Out: A Historical Perspective of the Movie and the Fight Against  Southern West Virginia Forest Fires” lecture: At 6 p.m. on Tuesday, July 1,  in the Archives and History Library, Robert Beanblossom and Richard Fauss will  present the 19-minute documentary Time’s Runnin’ Out, filmed by Wheeling  filmmaker Ellis Dungan in 1969 for the Cooperative Extension Service of the  West Virginia Center for Appalachian Studies and Development and the Division  of Forestry for the West Virginia Department of Natural Resources. Scholars and  educators with the cooperative extension service thought that a potent film  might help to lower the number of forest fires in southern West Virginia.  Beanblossom has shown the movie to youth groups, service clubs and civic  organizations as part of the program to bring attention to the harm that forest  fires can do to the land and the ecosystem. Beanblossom and Fauss will discuss  the making of the film and its impact.  Employed by the Division of  Natural Resources since 1973, Beanblossom is a member of the West Virginia  Recreation and Parks Association and a life member of the West Virginia  University Forestry Alumni Association. He routinely accepts Incident  Management Team assignments and is deployed as a public information officer to  critical wildfire situations and other emergencies throughout the United  States. Fauss is the audio and moving images archivist with Archives and  History. He is a longtime member of the Association of Moving Image Archivists,  who honored him in 2002 with its Dan and Kathy Leab Award for service to the  archival community.
“The  Riverine World” lecture: At  6 p.m. on Tuesday, July 17, in the Archives and History Library, Gerald  Sutphin will examine the impact that river life had on people living and  working on the western rivers during the age of steamboats. His presentation  will cover vessels from steam ferries to showboats and the people who worked on  them. Sutphin is recognized as one of the country’s foremost inland rivers and  river transportation historians. Since working 20 years for the Huntington  District of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, he has been the owner/operator of  a visual communication arts company and specializes in research, development  and presentation of inland rivers projects such as museum exhibits,  publications and motion picture production. One of his many credits includes The  Great Kanawha, An American Story, on which he served as researcher, writer  and featured historian on film.
“African  American Life in Charleston: A Personal Perspective, Part II” lecture: The second of the Block  Speakers Series will continue its programming at 6 p.m. Thursday, July 24, in  the Archives and History Library. Charles H. James III, a native of Charleston,  will discuss his family’s history in Charleston and the Kanawha Valley from  1865 to the present. His great-grandfather started a retail produce business  and later the wholesale establishment, C.H. James & Co. in Charleston in  1883. The company celebrated its 130th anniversary in 2013 and has been  recognized as one of the oldest family-owned businesses in the United States.  Charles H. James III has served as the chairman and CEO of C. H. James &  Co. since 1988. He represents the fourth generation of his family to own and  operate the business. Under his leadership, the company grew from a local food  distributor in southern West Virginia to a leading international supplier to  the U.S. government and multinational foodservice clients. In 1992, it was  named “Company of the Year” by Black Enterprise magazine.
Grave  Creek Mound Archaeological Complex, Moundsville
Grave  Creek Mound Archaeological Complex, located at 801 Jefferson Avenue in  Moundsville, will present children’s activities and a tour and program about  its Interpretive Garden. The museum is open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tuesday  through Saturday. The following programs at the mound are free and open to the  public.
“Plant a  Sunflower”: Now  through July 12, children of all ages are invited to plant sunflower seeds in  containers to take home and watch grow. The seeds are an heirloom variety known  as Arikara sunflowers, from the Arikara people of the Great Plains region, and  were harvested last fall from the museum’s Interpretive Garden.
“The  Grave Creek Mound Fan Club”: From  July 15 through Aug. 30, beat the summer heat when you make a fan at the  museum’s discovery table. The fans will feature a picture of the Grave Creek  Mound that can be colored and attached to wooden fan handles.
“Interpretive  Garden Program and Tour”: At 7 p.m. Thursday, July 31, visitors are invited to learn how the garden is  grown with the help of many volunteers and observe its progress this year. They  also can take a tour of the Interpretive Garden (weather permitting). This is  the fifth year for planting the garden with heirloom seeds using historic  Native American gardening techniques. 
Camp  Washington-Carver, Clifftop
Camp  Washington-Carver is located in Clifftop, Fayette County. The camp is open for  special events and private functions.
The  Appalachian String Band Music Festival is celebrating its 25th anniversary this  year. The festival, featuring some of the best fiddlers and banjo pickers in  the world, is set for July 30-Aug. 3. The five-day camping experience in  the heart of West Virginia also includes music contests, dancing, arts and  crafts, and games for the whole family.
The  popular annual festival draws thousands of string-band musicians and fans from  across the country and around the world for its concerts, dancing, workshops  and contests in which musicians and dancers can win prizes of up to $700. Music  contests include banjo and fiddle on Thursday, July 31, neo-traditional string  band on Friday, Aug. 1, and traditional string band on Saturday, Aug. 2. The  festival also presents an old-time dance contest on Saturday that emphasizes  the flatfoot style, and awards three prizes ranging from $25 to $75 in four age  categories. Nightly square dances are another big attraction.
There  are camping rates and daily visitor rates. Early camping starts July 25 at 1  p.m. Visit our website at www.wv.culture.org for more detailed information.
For  more information about Culture Center events, contact Caryn Gresham, deputy  commissioner of the division, at (304) 558-0220. For information about Grave  Creek Mound events, contact Andrea Keller, cultural program coordinator at the  mound, at (304) 843-4128. For information about the Appalachian String Band  Music Festival, contact J.D. Hess, site manager, at (304) 438-3005.
The West Virginia  Division of Culture and History is an agency within the West Virginia  Department of Education and the Arts with Kay Goodwin, Cabinet  Secretary. The division, led by Commissioner Randall Reid-Smith, brings  together the past, present and future through programs and services focusing on  archives and history, arts, historic preservation and museums. For more  information about the division’s programs, events and sites, visit www.wvculture.org. The Division of Culture and History is an Equal  Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer.
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