For most of the twentieth and for a good part of the early twenty-first centuries,
Lewis County in central West Virginia had been the home of some thirty glass manufacturers and at one time during the 1940s could boast that it was the largest producer of hand blown
stemware in the world. In 1990, Dean Six, a West Virginia entrepreneur, well-known glass researcher and author, thought a major glass museum in the state was needed to preserve state-wide glass industry memorabilia, exhibit ware from these manufacturers and facilitate scholarly research. While advocating this idea in northern West Virginia, his initiative came to the attention of Merle Moore, the Director of the Lewis County Chamber of Commerce. She invited Dean Six to Weston where, with the help of a grant, they assembled a study group, composed of local, municipal, county, state and glass industry representatives to discuss Six's suggestion. This one-day meeting resulted in a recommendation that plans be drawn up to create a glass museum and research facility. In May, 1992, the Weston Area Glass History and Study Group came together. It was composed of retired glassworkers, those interested in glass in general and specifically, preserving the glass industry's history in the local area. This informal group advocated strongly for creation of a museum, raised funds and began purchasing pieces of historical glass intended for the museum. An application for incorporation of The West Virginia Museum of American Glass, Ltd. in the state of West Virginia was signed and notarized on April 15, 1993. A state charter as a non-profit was granted on May 7, 1993. On July 24, 1994, tax exempt status under Section
501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code was granted. Later, the Lewis County Chamber of Commerce contracted with the
Marshall University Center for Business and Economic Research in
Huntington, West Virginia, to conduct a feasibility study of the economic impact of a major glass museum in West Virginia. A 1995 proposal to house the Museum in either the abandoned West Virginia owned
Weston State Hospital (Trans-Allegheny Lunatic Asylum) or former Danser Hardware & Supply Company building, both in Weston, was drawn-up. Neither building was available but on October 1, 1996, a state grant was received to purchase a building to house the Museum. In the winter of 1996, Museum owned glassware, purchased and donated by the Weston Area Glass History and Study Group, was displayed in the Penny Saved Antiques Mall, in the former JCPenney's building, at 230 Main Avenue in Weston. Later on April 25, 1998, the West Virginia Museum of American Glass, Ltd opened to the public in the former Cain's Drug Store building at the corner of Main and Second Streets in downtown Weston. This building provided 800 square feet of display area on the ground floor. Due to an ever expanding collection, the Board of Directors eventually determined a larger building was needed. Less than ten years later, an agreement was signed in September, 2006, to purchase the former JCPenney's department store complex at 230 Main Avenue. This has been the Museum's location ever since then. ==Collection==