Percival Everett
Join us for the 2024 McCreight Lecture, October 17, in Charleston.
Join us for the 2024 McCreight Lecture, October 17, in Charleston.
Minigrants support projects that request $2,000 or less, including small projects, single events, lectures, small museum exhibits, consultation needs, and planning for more complex projects.
If you missed the showcases last fall, you can now watch the recordings on the West Virginia Folklife YouTube channel.
Our first two Little Lectures of 2024 are now available online: "Dunmore's War: The Last Colonial Conflict" by Glenn F. Williams and "Echoes of the War on Terror: Gaza through the Lens of American Military History" by Peter Mansoor.
The Capon Bridge Founders Day Festival's "Focus on History" was one of the recipients (photo from the Cumberland Times-News).
These fellowships, unique in West Virginia, are among the Council's most competitive offerings.
We’re excited to announce our Grafton Monster Loves West Virginia Folklife campaign. The first 50 new Council GEM (Give Every Month) members who donate $5 or more per month will receive this exclusive new pin. We’d love your support!
The Humanities Council works with high schools students to research and write biographies of veterans
Please support the historic MacFarland-Hubbard House, our headquarters. The property serves as an active programming venue, and is itself an important community landmark.
This national initiative by The William G. Pomeroy Foundation commemorates legends and folklore as important parts of our cultural heritage.
Check out our traveling exhibit on West Virginia statehood and the Civil War at the Robert C. Byrd Center for Congressional History and Education at Shepherd University.
This follow-up to our previous issue illuminates more humane reactions from West Virginians in the wake of discrimination against American citizens of Japanese ancestry during World War II.
Two Americas: The debate over admitting Japanese-Americans in World War II relocation centers to a West Virginia college.
Minigrants are designed for projects requesting $2,000 or less. The next deadline is October 1.
See what grants and programs the Council supported in 2023 »
WV Folklife Collection at WVU Libraries receives the society’s Brenda McCallum Prize
Exploring the imaginary landscape of West Virginia through the lens of genre fiction and folklore
Visit wvpublic.org to hear This Week in West Virginia History, a collaboration between e-WV: The West Virginia Encyclopedia and West Virginia Public Broadcasting.
The West Virginia Humanities Council serves West Virginia through grants and direct programs in the humanities. Formed in 1974 at the invitation of the National Endowment for the Humanities, it is the principal organization promoting the humanities in West Virginia.