State Humanities Program
FAIN: SO-268683-20
West Virginia Humanities Council (Charleston, WV 25301-3001)
Charlie Delauder (Project Director: April 2019 to August 2020)
Billy Joe Peyton (Project Director: August 2020 to April 2022)
Megan Tarbett (Project Director: April 2022 to present)
Funding details:
Original grant (2020) $101,843.00
Supplement (2020) $1,105,124.00
Supplement (2021) $826,200.00
Supplement (2022) $815,527.00
General operating support for state or territorial humanities council
The West Virginia Humanities Council promotes a vigorous program in the humanities statewide in West Virginia. We serve primarily through regrants and direct programs, which combine to produce over 400 public events each year. The regrants come largely from National Endowment for the Humanities funds, and include major grants and minigrants, media and publication grants, teacher institute grants and summer fellowships; NEH funds also provide general operating support. Our direct programs are those initiated and managed directly by Council staff and supported largely by state funds. e-WV, the online version of the West Virginia Encyclopedia, is currently our largest direct program, and we also operate a state folklorist project; a popular Chautauqua program; help to operate a state book festival; and broadcast state history bits twice daily on WV Public Radio, among other programs. We maintain a historic house as our headquarters and much-used program space.
Associated Products
Locked Down: An Oral History of COVID-19 in West Virginia's Eastern Panhandle (Database/Archive/Digital Edition)Title: Locked Down: An Oral History of COVID-19 in West Virginia's Eastern Panhandle
Author: Dr. Julia Sandy, Ed.
Author: Dr. Keith Alexander, Ed.
Abstract: The oral history project engaged several humanities fields. Oral history itself draws on oral tradition, and the project explicitly examined the impact of a new virus on the human environment. The project applied the tools of history to document that impact for future generations, as well as offering an initial historical analysis. It applied the social sciences by capturing data on the
differential impacts of the virus on a variety of individuals from various geographical areas and socioeconomic statuses. Because the interviews were video recorded, the data will be far richer than conventional oral histories, and could be utilized by future social scientists in ways we cannot yet imagine.
The project addressed developments of great interest to historians. Throughout the initial few weeks of national lockdowns due to the emerging pandemic crisis, West Virginia remained the one state without a single confirmed case of
Covid-19. That changed on March 17, when the state"s first coronavirus infection appeared in Shepherdstown, home to Shepherd University. That case, as well as the state"s initial mishandling of it, made international news. As we saw in communities around the nation, after the first positive case, life quickly turned upside down.
This project collected evidence about how the global pandemic
impacted the lives of people in our region. It included African American and Hispanic interviewees, as well as West Virginians from underrepresented areas of the state. Interview audio, video, and transcriptions from the interviews were collected and are available online.
Year: 2021
Primary URL:
https://www.shepherd.edu/oral-history-project/interviewsAccess Model: Public