November 25, 2012
Center director carries on W.Va. folklorist's work
Page 2 of 2
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Interestingly, Ruth Ann Musick lived at the very site where the West Virginia Folklife Center currently sits.

"She passed away right here. When she first came to Fairmont State in 1946, her first apartment was upstairs, right above here. Down here is where she died," Byers said. "Isn't that a beautiful antique oaken cabinet? It came from our home [economics] department, and we can't keep the doors closed! They want to pop open! And I tell the students, don't worry, it's just Dr. Musick looking at us. Overseeing us!"

Byers said she promised Musick on her deathbed that she would carry on Musick's work. And she has, as the Frank and Jane Gabor West Virginia Folklife Center has been open for more than a year. The center publishes a publication called Traditions, a journal of West Virginia's folk culture, which includes stories and even songs inspired by folk traditions.

Byers said there's a lot more to do.

"It's my dream someday to see continual major studies, to get people excited about their own collecting. In the time of Ruth Ann Musick, there was a movement that the folklore of regional areas all throughout America needed to be collected, or we would lose the story of what we called the folk," she said.

"Now we are at the point that we are encouraging people to do their own collecting, to go out and do their own stories."

And for now, that's exactly what Byers is hoping people do. And she said, it's taking the work Ruth Ann Musick left to her, and moving it forward.

"It's exciting, I had Ruth Ann Musick for folk literature. We still teach that folk literature class here, but now we have a whole program. For instance, in introduction to folklore, the students do two collection projects. One of which is their own family story, that then they give as a gift to their family," Byers said.

"That's very satisfying to see them say, 'oh, I want to make sure I talk to my grandmother, before she passes on. I want to make sure that I get those photographs identified, that I look at those artifacts.'"

Byers said she thinks Musick would be very happy to see how the program has grown.

Byers hopes to publish more of Musick's works in books.

She also says the Folklife Center will create more programs to connect students and those interested in folklore with the tools they need to retrace their own family histories.

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