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![]() Tour antebellum mansions, hardscrabble cabins, one-room school houses, a 1920s "grand" theater, restored and working barns, history-rich churches, country stores and Civil War encampments.
The homes tour is a central attraction of Heritage Weekend. Tickets to the homes tour are available at all three headquarters locations. Tickets for the entire tour are $12.00. Tour of a single home is $5.00. Get information, directions, and house tour tickets at the following Welcome Centers: Hardy County Public Library, Main Street, Moorefield (304) 538-6560 For a detailed description of each historic building on the tour, please visit the "House Tours" page.
The Mathis Ruritan Club will be ready Saturday at 8am to serve pancakes to hungry crowds coming to the old Mathias School cafeteria. Service will continue until Noon. Pancakes will be topped with maple syrup tapped and refined just up the road. The school house is located on Upper Cove off WV 259. There will be a charge for the meal which will benefit the services the Club provides to the community.
Annually, the folks at Arkansaw put on a celebration that brings families home for reunions and brings visitors back again and again. You can expect bake-off quality pies, pit bar-b-que and chicken, handmade crafts and live music peformances on Saturday and Sunday. If you're going for the first time, arrive early on Saturday if you want one of the freshly baked pies. The activities take place in the Arkansaw Community Center located on Arkansaw Road. Turn left off Route 29 North.
With roots that run deep, the folks of Mathias honor their heritage and history during Heritage Weekend at the
The Wardensville Community is hosting the first Annual Chili Cook-Off which will be held from 11 am - 3 pm on Saturday only at the War Memorial Building. Many area businesses, service groups, churches, restaurants, and individuals are promising to enter their best recipes. The public will get a chance to rate the chili, and ribbons will be awarded. The event is being organized by the Wardensville Youth Group meeting at the Lutheran Church. An admission fee includes as many samples as one can handle. The event will benefit the group's activities. Bowls of chili, cornbread and soft drinks will also be available for purchase.
Saturday, September 29, 7:00 am - 4:00 pm - Community Yard Sale, No pre-registration required.
9:00 am - 12 Noon, Saturday, September 29 - Special Activities.
The ever-popular Potomac Eagle Excursion from Moorefield through the Trough will run Saturday afternoon. Passengers board the Eagle at noon and travel along the South Branch of the Potomac River, enjoying early fall foliage, the bald eagles that nest in stately trees and cruise the river for fish, and the educational narrative that is popular with children and adults.
LOST RIVERGuest House at Lost River - 897-5707 Inn at Lost River and General Store - 897-7000 Lost River Grill and Motel - 897-6482 MATHIASMisty Valley Grocery and Deli - 897-5976 N & S Family Restaurant - 897-6502 MOOREFIELDAromas Coffee House - 530-8888 Colt's Restaurant and Pizza Park - 538-2523 Fox's Pizza Den - 530-2424 Good Times Lounge - 530-4070 Main Street Grill and Catering Co. - 530-1855 McDonald's - 538-6545 O'Neill's - 530-2727 Peking Chinese Buffet - 538-3200 Stray Cat Café - 530-2233 Subway - 530-6680 NEEDMOREBroken Spoke - 897-7706 Old Route 55 Country Store - 897-5737 WARDENSVILLEFox's Pizza Den - 874-4201 Freeze King - 874-4139 Kac-Ka-Pon Restaurant - 874-3232 Mountaineer Country Store - 874-4024 Mountaineer Restaurant - 874-3838 PETERSBURGFox's Pizza Den - 257-4342 Hermitage Inn and Restaurant - 257-1711 North Fork Mountain Inn - 257-1108
Kelly Chapel COB Youth,Town Park, Wardensville Mathias Community Center, Mathias Mathias Community Center, Mathias American Legion Auxiliary #64, Moorefield The Soda Wagon Moorefield Volunteer Fire Company, Moorefield |
![]() Tickets for the various Heritage Weekend events and tours can be purchased in advance at the following locations: Hardy County Public Library, Main Street, Moorefield (304) 538-6560 Tickets prices and fees for Heritage Weekend Events House Tours Train Tickets Banjo and Fiddle Contest Tickets Frye House Tiles |
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![]() Arts and crafts has always been a popular attraction of Heritage Weekend. Be sure and visit the craft show Friday evening, Saturday and Sunday featuring the best of West Virginia crafters, furniture makers, toy makers, pottery and paintings.
A favorite stop during Heritage Weekend is the craft show which has been moved this year back downtown to the Moorefield High School. Dozens of vendors form throughout the region sell handmade items running the gambit from candles, and soap to woodwork and leather goods. The craft show has free admission, and has a preview opening on Friday from 7 - 9pm. Saturday hours are from 9 am - 5 pm and Sunday from 9 am - 3 pm.
The Highland Star Quilters Guild is keeping the Appalachian art of quilting alive, and their annual display of quilts and coverlets is one of the most popular attractions of Heritage Weekend. Last year, the guild paid tribute to the late Marge Wade of Moorefield. This year the guild will feature the McCoy Museum's collection of woven coverlets. Always a popular hit with quilt lovers, the 2007 winners of the prestigious Hoffman Challenge are on display. The Quilt Show, held at Moorefield Elementary School, is open Friday, 7 - 9 pm, Saturday 10 am - 5 pm and Sunday 1 - 4pm. Admission is $1. Children and students are admitted free.
Again this year, Heritage Weekend is proud to welcome Albert Mach's display of photographs and artistic photo renderings of scenes from Hardy and Grant Counties. Mach's photo exhibit is on display in at the County Courthouse in Moorefield on Saturday form 10 am - 5 pm and from 1 - 4 pm on Sunday
Juried Appalachian crafts by local and regional artisans are available for sale at the Lost River Craft Cooperative at the historic Harper Barn on WV 259 in
John Reel returns this year as the sponsor of the antique car display. Enjoy seeing the cars your grandfather drove in what promises to a large display of antique cars in the parking lot of co-sponsor Summit Community Bank in Moorefield on Sunday. On Saturday and Sunday, the Farm Bureau of Hardy County will display another kind of horsepower with a showing of antique farm equipment in the same location. Sponsored by Summit Community Bank.
Local and regional artists display and sell their work at the art show annually held in the large meeting room of the Hardy County Public Library in Moorefield. The library also is the main hub for ticket sales and information, making it convenient to view the work of the artists before going on your way to other activities. The art show is open Saturday and Sunday. If you are an artist, an application to display and sell your work is available on the "Vendor" page.
Weather permitting, a clothesline art show will display the works of local artists Saturday and Sunday. Open courtesy of the Lost River Craft Cooperative Directions: Midway between Mathias and Baker on WV 259. |
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The 2007 Heritage Weekend Tiles are on sales as of this week. The 2007 Tile House depicts the Frye House, an early 1800s brick farm house located just north of Wardensville. The tiles are available at the Hardy County Public Library (538-6560), the Lost River Craft Co-op (897-7242), and at Antiques Etc. in Wardensville (874-3300). You may want to call and check on hours of operation. The price of the tile is $12.00 each. It is a great addition to the series which began in 1972, making this year's the 35th to be released by the Hardy County Tour and Crafts Association. The entire collection is on display at the Public Library in Moorefield.
The Board of the Hardy County Tour and Crafts Association is happy to announce that a Heritage Parade is back on the list of activities for Heritage Weekend. Bill Fitzwater has graciously offered to oversee the parade which is scheduled to step off at 4PM on Saturday, September 29th. To obtain a registration form contact Mr. Fitzwater at 304-257-2343. Terri Shockley, chair of the Board, said that they would like the parade to focus on the area's rich history. They are encouraging participation by horse drawn units such as buggies and carriages, vintage fire equipment, vintage farm equipment and automobiles, older bicycles and motorcyles, and marchers dressed in period clothing. Re-enacter's groups are also invited to participate as are floats with a heritage theme.
Another addition this year will be free guided walking tours of North and South Main Street. The tours will start from the Library. They will take place every half hour from 1PM to 3:30 PM. Julie George and Robie Evans will act at the tour guides.
The Heritage Weekend booklet containing the schedule and the history of the tour homes and buildings is now available at the Hardy County Public Library and at other sites around the County. The Booklet and the 2007 House Tile are also available at Antiques Etc., in Wardensville, and at the Lost River Craft Co-op in Lost River. Be sure to check the website www.heritageweekend.com for up-dated information. As always, we continue to need more volunteers. If you could offer a couple of hours over the weekend, contact Terri Shockey at 538-2945.
An overview of Hardy County's history, written by Julie George, is now available online. Click here to read more.
In recent years, several local collectors have shared items connected to local history with the pubic during Heritage Weekend. Again this year, Fellowship Hall of the Presbyterian Church will be the site of a free exhibit highlighting a number of displays. Linda Shear, Lea Gregory, Leon Wolfe and Carlton Hilliard are busy gathering together the pieces that will be on display on Saturday, September 29th from 10:00 am to 4:00 pm. Mr. Wolfe plans to be back on Sunday as well. In the past, Linda Shear has had several different collections on display, but this year she laughs and says her exhibit will be rather heavy in nature. No, she isn't implying that it will have a deep intense meaning. What she is planning on sharing is her cast iron collection of cooking utensils which were used by her family and others in the preparation of meals on a daily basis. She has fireplace implements and tools, pots and pans, and other items which won't be as recognizable. Lea Gregory, on the other hand, has taken a lighter approach, and plans to bring her collection of biscuit and cracker jars and tins accumulated through the years. Leon Wolfe is known by many for his collection of old currency and bank notes - some issued by the South Branch Valley National Bank and now quite rare. He also has collected an impressive collection of old newspapers and invites anyone interested to stop by and talk with him. He enjoys sharing his tales of local history with others. Finally, Carlton Hilliard has a fine grouping of pieces related to the black history of Hardy County. He has photos of the segregated schools, some handmade toys that were used by the students, and newspaper articles that talk about the role of the black community in the development of the area. He also has some photos which picture some yet-to-be-identified people, and he would like any assistance in solving that puzzle. If anyone else in the Moorefield community has a collection that they would like to share during Heritage Weekend, please contact the Heritage Weekend office at 530-0281. The space is free. Exhibitors just need to be there during the day to oversee their display. No sales allowed at this event.
The ever-popular Potomac Eagle Excursion from Moorefield through the Trough will run Saturday afternoon September 29th. Passengers board the Eagle at 11:30AM and travel along the South Branch of the Potomac River, enjoying early fall foliage, the bald eagles that nest in stately trees and cruise the river for fish, and the educational narrative that is popular with children and adults. The train departs at Jefferson St. Crossing in Moorefield at noon and returns to Jefferson St. Crossing at 3pm. Ticket prices for the Trough excursion are $20 for adults and $10 for youths 6 to 16. Children under six ride free. Tickets are available at the Hardy County Library in Moorefield and the Lost River Craft Cooperative. Cash and check sales only at these sites. While people are enjoying the roundtrip through the Trough, passengers arriving earlier on the Eagle from Romney to Heritage Weekend will tour historic homes in the South Branch Valley. Tickets prices for the Romney to Moorefield include a free house tour ticket. Tickets can be purchased at the Eagle's Romney ticket office or by calling (304) 822-7464 or (304) 424-0736.
John Reel of Petersburg, and Summit Community Bank have joined forces to again sponsor a major antique car show in Moorefield during Heritage Weekend. The car show scheduled to begin at 10AM, will be held Sunday, Sept. 30, in the parking lot of the bank at 310 North Main Street. Also on the schedule is another kind of horsepower. Gerald Sites, Petersburg, is organizing a vintage tractor and farm equipment display for Saturday and Sunday on the parking lot of Summit Financial Group. Both events are free and will be entertaining and educational for kids of all ages. Heritage Weekend, now in its 54th year, celebrates the history and culture of Hardy County with historic house tours, quilt displays, craft shows, craft demonstrations, Civil War living history displays and enactments, art shows, jousting, muzzle loading and numerous other events. John Reel invites collectors with cars that predate 1983 to contact him to arrange to display them at the car show. His telephone number is (304) 257-1973. "We give a dash board plaque to everyone who brings a car to the show, and we will have door prizes for everyone and special prizes for the persons who travel the greatest distance and who display the oldest vehicle," Reel said. He also is planning to have a DJ playing oldies for entertainment. Summit Community Bank is underwriting the plaques and the music and is providing the space. Reel hopes to have 40-50 vintage autos on display. "People like what they grew up with," he said. "Right now muscle cars, that's what everybody is interested in. But we still will have old model Ts and As. You've got to have something for everybody." Reel has been restoring cars for 15 years and currently has completed work on a 1978 Corvette and a 1978 MG Midget and is "just a paint job" away from final restoration of a 1950 Ford pickup. On the Summit Financial Group parking lot next door will be the gathering of vintage tractors and farm equipment on both Saturday and Sunday beginning at 10AM. Gerald Sites has several tractors of his own, and has invited others to join him in exhibiting their pieces. Mr. Sites can be reached at 304-257-4397. Both men are planning to have some of their vehicles in the Heritage Parade planned for Main Street at 4PM on Saturday. |
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![]() The rich history of Hardy County will be featured and experienced in many events held during Heritage Weekend including encampments, muzzle-loading demonstrations, Civil War-era church services and more.
Get information, directions, and house tour tickets at the following Welcome Centers: Hardy County Public Library, Main Street, Moorefield (304) 538-6560 Lost River Craft Cooperative, WV#259, Lost River (304) 897-7242 Antiques Etc., 295 N Main St., Wardensville, (304) 874-3300
to give visitors a taste of what camp life was like, along with educational demonstrations and exhibits. The home is the union of a 1798 brick cottage at the rear and a grand Greek Revival mansion Felix Seymour added in 1840. The front porch has hand-carved Corinthian columns. Inside, the 15-foot ceilings top heavy cornices over every door and window. The bricks were made on the premises and laid in an American Bond. The Corinthian-style columns at the front were carved from single tree trunks. The first floor has 15-foot ceilings with windows 12-feet high. An 18 x 40-foot ballroom trimmed with elaborate cornice and dentil work was the legendary setting of the During the Civil War, McNeill's Rangers, the storied Confederate Calvary, sometimes used the house for a hospital, and fittingly the Sons of Confederate Veterans, Camp 582, McNeill Rangers, are staging the encampment. Comfort food will be provided for purchase. Heritage Week began here in 1953 when then-owners Mr. and Mrs. Donald Pryce Jones opened their home to raise money for the Hardy County Public Library. Open courtesy of Royce Saville Directions: From the Moorefield library, go east on
The history of its black citizens is an integral part of the history of Hardy County. Hardy County was involved in slavery, desegregation and the many transitions leading up to present day conditions. Blacks have contributed to the growth and prosperity of this county; first as slaves and then as free men and women. They helped as field hands, carpenters, brick layers, blacksmith's cooks, teachers, lawyers and business professionals. Come and enjoy the exhibit. A sampling of the items on display include photos of the early segregated schools, a handmade baseball and other toys from an earlier era, pictures of some of the slaves who lived in Moorefield, and a couple of pictures where the participants have not been identified. Stop by and see if you can help. Directions: Presbyterian Church, Main Street, Moorefield.
A necessary skill to provide food and security for the frontier family, muzzle loading of flintlocks is today a sport enjoyed by gun enthusiasts in competition more challenging than shooting range contests. One of the unique aspects of the muzzle-loading shoot is the use of simple handmade targets of tin, coal and straw rather than paper bull-eye targets. The crude targets increase the level difficulty and more closely resemble the challenge the frontiersmen faced. The annual muzzle loading exhibition is held, as in the past, at the Rod and Gun Club on Added this year will be a 22 Caliber Match also scheduled for 10am. Rules are open site only at 25 yards. No scopes or peep sites. Participants under 16 must be accompanied by an adult.
Jousting, which originated in medieval
At 11:00 am Sunday morning, the Rev. Katherine C. Jackson is leading a special ecumenical Heritage Weekend worship service at Presbyterian Church of Moorefield. The order of worship, the music and the liturgy will be similar to a service from the Civil War. Union and Confederate re-enactors will take part. Open courtesy of the Presbyterian Church of Moorefield Directions: Main Street just below Winchester Avenue, Moorefield. Emmanuel Episcopal Church will conduct a worship using the 1789 Book of Common Prayer and Eucharistic bread that would have been used during the Civil War. Some members of the congregation will dress in period attire, and the original prayer books will be on display. Rev. Michael Simon will lead the service which is also scheduled for 11 a.m. Open courtesy of Emmanuel Episcopal Church. Directions: Corner of Winchester Avenue and South Fork Road
On Friday evening at 7:30 pm, the Grant County Arts Council is offering a unique musical experience for the area with a performance by The Missing Person Soup Kitchen Gospel Quartet, otherwise known as Soup Kitchen. (They are a quartet minus one.) The free concert takes place at the First Baptist Church, Virginia Ave., Petersburg.
With roots that run deep, the folks of Mathias honor their heritage and history during Heritage Weekend at the
The Moonlighter's CEO's will host an Open House and Heritage Day event at the recently opened Wardensville Visitor Center located on Rt 259 in the north end of town. Activities include free light refreshments, historic photo exhibit of Wardensville, table top displays by local groups showcasing their history and achievements, and craft, quilt and art displays. Music will be provided by Courtney Tusing and his dulcimer at 10:00 am and Eunice and Herbie Brown as they demonstrate their flat footing skills at 1:00 pm. At 11:00 am a panel discussion on local Civil War history will be led by Arthur Halterman and members of the Sons of the Confederacy, Hardy County # 877. The Visitor Center is located in an old schoolhouse/railroad station that has undergone major renovations including public restrooms and a conference room. The building will be open from 10-5 Saturday only.
The South Branch Fiddle and Banjo Contest will be held at McCoy's Grand Theatre in downtown Moorefield on Saturday starting at 6 pm. An acoustic gem, the McCoy is a restored 1920's theater. Competition is held for adults in fiddle and banjo in fiddle, banjo and mandolin for youths. The Keplinger Family Blue Grass Band provides opening and intermission entertainment. This year, Amanda Barger, a talented traditional West Virginia dancer from Petersburg, will be demonstrating Appalachian flat footing during the event. Tickets are $10 and available at the Heritage Weekend Welcome Center at the public library in Moorefield and at the door. Be aware that this event usually sells out in advance. If you would like to enter the contest, contact Stan Merritt at 304-538-2859. This is an open call contest. Contestants should arrive at the theatre at 5PM to get registered for the show that begins at 6PM. Thank you to the sponsors who make the contest a success: Adult division: A & A Express Mart, Anderson's Corner, Champ's Tire and Lube, Chad's Barber Shop, Eastern Building Supply - Romney and Moorefield, Fox's Pizza - Moorefield and Wardensville, Guest House at Lost River, Guesthouse Realty, Lost River Crossing, Lost River Real Estate, Riggleman's Towing, and Wolfe's Garage. Youth Division: American Woodmark Corp.
Annually, the folks at Arkansaw put on a celebration that brings families home for reunions and brings visitors back again and again. You can expect bake-off quality pies, pit bar-b-que and chicken, handmade crafts and live music peformances on Saturday and Sunday. If you're going for the first time, arrive early on Saturday if you want one of the freshly baked pies. The activities take place in the Arkansaw Community Center located on Arkansas Road. Turn left off Route 29 North.
Linda Shears, Lea Gregory and Leon Wolfe will join forces at the Presbyterian Church on Saturday from 10:00 am to 4:00 pm with a display of items from their personal collections. Linda has many pieces of cast iron cookware that were used by the family in the past, and Lea will display her collection of biscuit and cracker jars. Leon is a collector of old currency, bank notes and local newspapers, and he enjoys sharing tales of local hisotry with others. Mr. Wolfe plans to be there both days. |
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2007 © Hardy County Tour and Craft Association. All rights reserved. Site design by Dan Reichard. Photos by Cressida Payavis. |
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