January 26, 2013
New 150th anniversary of statehood exhibit features the flavor of W.Va.
Kenny Kemp
Roy Dolin (L) and David Husband set a double cheeseburger on the hand of Big Boy, who will welcome guests to the Culture Center's exhibit celebrating West Virginia's 150 years of statehood. Until the 1980s, Big Boy was the mascot for Shoney's restaurants, which started in the Mountain State in 1947.
Kenny Kemp
Giuseppe "Joseph" Argiro of Fairmont invented the pepperoni roll, which coal miners began putting in their lunch pails because it did not require refrigeration.
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CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- Big Boy got to hold up his big double cheeseburger at the state Culture Center on Friday.

The 4-foot cheeseburger is so heavy, it took both Roy Dolin and David Husband to lift onto Big Boy's hand.

With his smiling face, Big Boy will greet visitors arriving at the West Virginia State Museum on Thursday for the opening of a special exhibition commemorating the Mountain State's 150th anniversary.

Betty Schoenbaum signed her name on one of Big Boy's feet. Her late husband, Alex Schoenbaum, opened the first of his restaurants on Charleston's West Side in 1951, which became a Big Boy franchise that later was named Shoney's.

The exhibit, which will remain at the Culture Center through the rest of the year, features 150 displays featuring individuals, places, artifacts and historical events -- one for each year of the state's history.

Exhibits range from beautiful pieces of glassware to books written by West Virginia authors, from a miner's lunch pail to an ad for chewing tobacco. They also include a little piece of wood from a historic Wheeling bridge, an original oil pipeline used in the 1880s and sculptures of the heads of President Abraham Lincoln, who signed West Virginia into statehood, and Booker T. Washington, who grew up in nearby Malden.

Exhibits also feature early pottery, old railroad equipment, artistic glass creations, oilcans and a Gravely tractor, first made in 1916. Benjamin Franklin Gravely made his tractors, called "motor machines," in Dunbar.

West Virginia seceded from Virginia to become the nation's 35th state on June 20, 1863. President Lincoln had signed the "statehood proclamation" two months earlier.

An old wooden box that looks like a book contains 21 butterflies preserved by William Henry Edwards, a naturalist and explorer who published his three-volume "The Butterflies of North America" in 1879, providing detailed descriptions of 165 species of butterflies. Edwards lived in Coalburg, Kanawha County.

Culture and History Commissioner Randall Reid-Smith said his office welcomed opinions from the public, online and otherwise, about what they'd like to see in the exhibit.

Charles W. Morris III, the state's director of museums, said, "We wanted to touch on the important events in West Virginia history, but we also wanted to feature some of the curiosities and some of the celebrities known around the world."

Those celebrities from the Mountain State include:

• Don Knotts, the Emmy-winning actor from Morgantown who played Barney Fife on "The Andy Griffith Show."

• Jerry West, the star basketball player from Cabin Creek who played for the Los Angeles Lakers his entire career. His silhouette has served as the NBA's logo since 1971.

• Kathy Mattea, the singer from Cross Lanes who has produced more than 30 hit singles on country music charts.

• John C. Norman Jr., a black cardiovascular surgeon from Charleston who developed pathbreaking techniques to help patients with heart problems.

• Mother Jones, a charismatic speaker, author and leader of strikes and marches to unionize coal mines in West Virginia, especially on Paint Creek and Cabin Creek.

• Pearl Buck, the first woman to win the Nobel Prize for Literature, for her book, "The Good Earth." She was born in Hillsboro in 1892.

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