West Virginia and Regional History Center The
West Virginia and Regional History Center, the world's largest collection of West Virginia-related research material, is in the Wise Library on the Downtown Campus. The collection includes over 4.5 million
manuscript documents, 30,000 books, 15,000 pamphlets, 1,200
newspapers, 100,000
photographs and prints, 5,000 maps, and 25,000
microfilms,
oral histories, films and
folk music recordings. The Center has an online digital collection, photographic archives, a rare books room, and various special collections including the International Association for Identification's library, which also has a digital collection, often called simply the "West Virginia Collection".
Appalachian Collection Located in the James V. and Ann Pozega Milano Reading Room on the third floor of Wise Library, the Appalachian Collection consists of literature of the 13-state Appalachian region. The collection is named after the
Appalachian Mountains which run from
New York to
Mississippi. Subjects include cultural stories of coal miners, music, pollution, crafts, traditions, wildlife, religion, and social conditions.
Government Information Services Located on the first floor of the library in the Research Services department, Government Information Services includes publications from the state and federal government. Federal publications are gathered and processed at the Downtown Library and sent to other libraries by subject.
Literary Landmark In October 2006, the Charles C. Wise, Jr. Library at WVU was made a Literary Landmark by the Friends of the Library Association U.S.A. (now United for Libraries) in partnership with WVU Libraries, in recognition of the university's connection with West Virginia poet laureate
Louise McNeill Pease and its efforts to preserve her writings and personal papers in the
West Virginia and Regional History Center. The plaque, hung in the atrium, reads: ==Gallery==