History Museum Shakes Off the Cobwebs

Botetourt County Museum
Botetourt County Museum

The story below is from our May/June 2020 issue. For more stories like it, Subscribe Today. Thank you! 


Botetourt County celebrates an anniversary, and with it, new opportunities for residents and visitors. (Please note their schedule may have changed at time of press.)



Botetourt County is so old and so full of history that it will take several organizations to help it celebrate its 250th anniversary beginning in May. The county predates the Declaration of Independence by five years and the Constitution by 17 years. 

Ground Zero for the celebration will be the Historical Society of Western Virginia (HSWV), sharing the O. Winston Link Museum downtown. Among other organizations taking part in the months-long reverie will be the Botetourt County History Museum and the Taubman Museum of Art. 

“Our summer blockbuster exhibit will be Botetourt County: 250 Years of Delights and will run from May 28 through November 7,” says Ashley Webb, curator of collections for the Historical Society of Western Virginia.

The first exhibit of the year was “Light & Shadow: Photographs by Jimmy Deck,” closing May 5. Other museums in the region will have special events through the year, recognizing Botetourt.

The HSWV has been searching for a higher profile since it left Center in the Square in 2017 and even though it has less space than it had at Center, “it makes sense to be here,” says board president Andy Stone. 

Board member Sandra Kelly is more precise: “It is difficult to support two museums [HSWV and the Link] with donations.”

Center in the Square was facing something of an identity crisis in 2017 and wanted to change its approach. It lost the History Museum, but expanded with a children’s permanent exhibit and introduced the popular (and lucrative) Pinball Museum, among others.

The new space for the HSWV is half the size it had at Center and has no storage, but “it’s convenient to have it all together,” says Stone. 

The museum continues to “find the right things, what will appeal to people,” says Kelly. Could be that Botetourt County will be that “thing.”

Botetourt was initially an enormous county that included all of Kentucky and its borders went to the Mississippi River and Lake Michigan. Fincastle was the county seat and retains the archives. Botetourt began as part of Augusta County but broke off and those counties consisted of what is now six states.

“Things have been disorganized [since moving from Center],” says Stone. “It’s settled down and we can better focus on exhibits and raising our profile.” 

The popular Jimmy Deck exhibit is a good example of what Webb calls “thinking outside the box.” Deck is an amateur photographer, model railroader and historian whose interests are varied and widely popular.

Board member Carol Fralin says there is a new emphasis on the 20th century and the cultural background of the area. To that end, the HSWV has hired an educator (retired Naval officer Rich Davis) as a consultant to go with the museum’s two full-time employees (Webb and Lynsey Allen, the museum manager) and three part-timers, as well as a raft of volunteers.

Botetourt County’s anniversary is not just a cause for celebration in these mountains, it also presents the Historical Society of Western Virginia a prime opportunity to reintroduce itself to an old audience and bring in a new one.


To read more from our May/June 2020 issue, Subscribe Today. Thank you for supporting local journalism!

Author

You Might Also Like:

rkr-faces-of

2026 Faces Of Virginia’s Blue Ridge

Welcome to the third edition of FACES of Virginia’s Blue Ridge!
DSC_6819-Edit-2_CMYK

The Face Of Home Décor: WyndRose

WyndRose is an ultimate destination in Virginia’s Blue Ridge for those seeking home décor and design that feels personal, inspiring, and approachable.
DSC_6740-Edit_CMYK

The Face Of Medical Education: Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine

As Dean of the Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine, I am privileged to help educate the next generation of physicians while strengthening the health and vitality of our region.
DSC_7962_CMYK

The Face Of Professional Lawncare: The Green Team

Joe Kormann and Caroline Adkins operate The Green Team, a family-owned lawn care company based in Roanoke.
Ellen D’Ardenne, Executive Director, and Shelli Schinkus, Director of Sales and Marketing, bring a combined 56 years of experience in the senior living industry.

The Face Of Retirement Communities: The Glebe

Ellen D’Ardenne, Executive Director, and Shelli Schinkus, Director of Sales and Marketing, bring a combined 56 years of experience in the senior living industry.
The Face Of Restoration Services: SERVPRO of Roanoke County

The Face Of Restoration Services: SERVPRO of Roanoke County

When disasters strike, SERVPRO of Roanoke County works to restore what customers already have before replacing it.
Susan Bailey

The Face Of Real Estate: Susan Bailey Realtor, Long & Foster

Susan Bailey has spent more than 20 years in real estate sales and has been the top sales agent for Long & Foster Roanoke for the past five years.
The Face of Community-Based Nonprofit Homecare: Good Samaritan

The Face Of Community-Based Nonprofit Homecare: Good Samaritan

As leaders in home health, hospice and palliative care, we have the privilege of walking alongside individuals and families during some of life’s most vulnerable moments.
Yoshira Buezo & Melida Santos Galvan Housekeeper LLC

The Face Of Professional Cleaning: Galvan Housekeeper, LLC

Owners Yoshira Buezo and Melida Santos have positioned Galvan Housekeeper LLC as a detail-driven, system-based service by building around structure, consistency, and client trust across Virginia’s Blue Ridge.
first bank

The Face Of Community Banking: First Bank

At First Bank, we believe banking is more than just transactions. It’s a people business.