Nov. 15, 2017
WHEELING, W.Va. – West Virginia Independence Hall (WVIH) in Wheeling will  celebrate Thanksgiving with special activities on Saturday, Nov. 18. The event  is free and open to the public.
Beginning at 11 a.m., younger visitors can create a  Thanksgiving craft on the lower level of the museum to take home. Refreshments  also will be served. At 1 p.m., John W. King, a first-person portrayer of  Abraham Lincoln, will speak in the Hall’s historic courtroom, followed by a  question and answer session and photos with ‘Lincoln.’
The pilgrims  are credited with starting the tradition of Thanksgiving in America, but  declaring Thanksgiving Day a formal holiday on the fourth Thursday in November  required a proclamation by Abraham Lincoln in 1863, calling on Americans to  “set apart and observe the last Thursday in November as a day of thanksgiving,”  partly to celebrate victories in the then-raging Civil War.  
King will tell Lincoln’s story of Thanksgiving and how he also was the first president to pardon a turkey, what has become  an annual tradition. Each year, the president pardons a turkey before  Thanksgiving.
In  2013, King won the “Lincoln Look-Alike Contest” at the Shriver House Museum in  Gettysburg, Penn. He was judged the most genuine-looking Abraham Lincoln of the  group. For the past 25 years, he has been telling the story of the 16th  president during great conflict.
For more information about this event or WVIH, contact Debbie Jones, site  manager, at (304) 238-1300 or [email protected]. 
West Virginia Independence Hall has been on the National Register of Historic  Places (NRHP) since 1970. It was originally built as a federal custom house in  1859, served as the home of the pro-Union state conventions of Virginia during  the spring and summer of 1861 and as the capitol of loyal Virginia from June  1861 to June 1863. It also was the site of the first constitutional convention  for West Virginia. Designated a National Historic Landmark in 1988, the museum  is maintained and operated by the West Virginia Division of Culture and  History, with the cooperation and assistance of the West Virginia Independence  Hall Foundation. The museum is open daily from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tuesday through  Saturday, with the exception of major holidays. The museum is located on the  corner of 16th and Market Streets in Wheeling.
   The West Virginia Division of Culture and History is proud to be able to  present its programs at no charge to the public, but without a solution to the  state’s budget situation, this could be the last year that programs of this  type could be offered. The division, led by Commissioner Randall Reid-Smith, is  an agency within the Office of Secretary of Education and the Arts with Gayle  Manchin, cabinet secretary. It 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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