West Virginia's Food Heritage

On Thursday, September 17, 2015, Stan Bumgardner discussed “West Virginia’s Food Heritage” in the Archives and History Library of the Culture Center in Charleston. Bumgardner talked about the history of food in West Virginia. He examined how certain foods and beverages hold a special place in Appalachian culture and how this heritage has evolved over time--from early German and Scots-Irish pioneers, to later immigrants of the early 19th and early 20th centuries, to the present-day “local foods” movement.” He demonstrated how our food and beverage traditions take on unique forms in different parts of the state and, at the same time, bind us together as West Virginians. Stan Bumgardner has been a professional historian for more than 25 years. He has worked at Harpers Ferry National Historical Park, for the West Virginia History Film Project, at West Virginia Archives and History, and as acting director of the West Virginia State Museum. He served as creative director for the West Virginia State Museum renovation. He has also developed exhibits for the South Charleston Museum Foundation and the National Coal Heritage Area and created a traveling exhibit for the documentary The Great Textbook War. As a free-lance writer, Bumgardner is the author of The Children's Home Society of West Virginia: Children-Yesterday, Today, Tomorrow (1996) and Charleston (2006). He has written articles for American History and Wonderful West Virginia and developed a driving guide for historic sites in southern West Virginia. He also directed a project that documented the food heritage of each county in West Virginia. On August 17, he succeeded John Lilly as the editor of Goldenseal magazine and state folklife director. Description