December 1, 2012
Book assembles photographs of Depression-era W.Va.
A coal miner's child takes home kerosene for lamps in Pursglove, Scotts Run, W.Va. Photographer: Marion Post Wolcott. September 1938. Photo from the Library of Congress.
Marion Post Wolcott took this photograph in September 1938 of children in the bedroom of their house. Their mother had tuberculosis. Their father worked with the Works Progress Administration in Charleston, W.Va. Photo from the Library of Congress.
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CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- Between 1934 and 1943, 10 talented photographers came to West Virginia and produced a series of striking photographs depicting the impact of the Great Depression on the state and its people.

The 10 were part of a larger corps of photographers who crisscrossed the nation, dispatched by a federal agency, the Farm Security Administration, to locales stretching from Maine to California. Their efforts produced a body of work now looked on as one of the most significant and influential collections in the history of photography.

In recent years, at least two dozen states have seen publication of books bringing together FSA photographs taken in those states. Now, thanks to the editing efforts of award-winning landscape photographer Betty Rivard, West Virginia has joined this group with a long-overdue book of its own.

Rivard's "New Deal Photographs of West Virginia, 1934-43" contains more than 150 images taken in the state by FSA photographers, including Walker Evans, Marion Post Wolcott, Arthur Rothstein and Ben Shahn.

Never more than a tiny cog in the federal bureaucracy, the FSA lacked the resources to photograph every part of every state. And so, Roy K. Stryker, the visionary genius who conceived and supervised the project, had to carefully pick and choose where he sent his photographers.

In West Virginia, most attention was given to the northern and southern coalfields and the homestead communities the New Deal established in Arthurdale, Eleanor and Tygart Valley, while other photographs were taken in communities both large (such as Charleston) and small (such as Richwood).

The two-headed mission of the FSA photo project was to show the needs resulting from the Depression and to document the success of President Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal programs designed to address those needs.

Many of the photographs in the first category carry an undeniable emotional wallop. The book's cover reproduces a photograph of a little girl struggling to carry a heavy can of kerosene down a dirt road past the company houses in the coal camp where she lives. Looking at the photograph you can't help but want to take her by the hand and help her with her task. Another photo shows two dirty children in the ramshackle bedroom of their home in Charleston. What, one wonders, was in store for them when they grew older?

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Copyright 2012 The Charleston Gazette. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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