Buildings That Build

Buildings Shape Us

Buildings. We pass by them every day.

We enter them without a thought that they might not always have been there.

First we build our buildings, and then they build us.

Bishop Frederick P. Corson echoed Churchill’s  words on May 27, 1953 at the dedication ceremony  of the Annie Merner Pfeiffer Library . His remarks cover a wide range of things that are relevant for today, and I would encourage you to take a look at what he had to say about such things as Liberal Arts, education and democracy, the great success and growth of WVWC, and more.

Library Purpose from Bishop Corson's Address


Building the Buildings

The buildings themselves provide the space for us to learn, live, grow, and share as a community. But buildings do not just appear by magic. They take a lot of planning and fundraising. Then they take a lot of detailed work by architects. Then, the hard work and sweat of those who build them. It takes time, effort, and resources to build buildings.

Construction of Fleming 1952
Fleming 1952 (photo by Howard Hiner)
Construction 1963 Campus Center
Benedum Campus Community Center, 1963 (photo by Howard Hiner)
Chapel Steeple 1967 –  Photo by Howard Hiner
Construction 2008 September Reemsnyder
Reemsnyder September 2008 – Looking from the parking lot toward the back of the library (photo by Allison Hull)

Working in the Buildings

People work in them once they are finished. There are those who work hard to maintain and clean them. People who do the painting, fix the windows, keep the air conditioning and heat at the proper levels. People who are locksmiths, carpenters, groundskeepers, and who make sure that the physical environment is clean, comfortable, and safe. It takes time, effort, and resources to maintain our buildings.

The more buildings there are, the bigger job this becomes!

On this Labor Day 2018, I especially salute all of these hard workers. Many I know by name because I have been in the buildings where they work. Others I do not know, but your work makes everything else possible.

Labor Day Graphic
Thanks for all you do!!!

Buildings Build Us

At a college, there are those who teach in them and those who learn. Through this process people are built just as surely as the physical brick and mortar building is built. It takes time, effort, and resources to build our students.

  • The Lynch-Raine Administration Building builds Business Leaders, Communicators, and Educators.
  • The English Annex builds writers and those who love literature.
  • Haymond builds historians, political scientists, and those who focus on issues such as Gender Studies and Social Justice. It used to build scientists, but Christopher and Reemsnyder do that now.
  • The Library provides resources and a space for learners to interact with all of the wisdom of the ages (and their own thoughts).
  • Loar builds musicians.
  • The Martin Religious Center, connected to Wesley Chapel, builds people who think deeply and who tend to spiritual matters. Our founders would be especially proud to know of Bishops Peter Weaver (1966) and Thomas Bickerton (1980), and several others who have become leaders in the United Methodist denomination.
  • Middleton builds Nurses.
  • John D. Rockefeller, IV Physical Education Center builds Excercise Scientists and Athletic Trainers.

The original building on campus is shown here with the student body in 1892. Included in that group of students would be Thomas W. Haught and several others who became trustees and faculty and administrators in later years. They helped to guide and build the school, and wrote the histories so that we would be able to know more about our heritage.


Class at Harmer Gateway 2018
WVWC Class of 2022

This group (Class of 2022) is studying The Legacy of Dreamers and Giants (WVWC History) this fall. They will be learning about all of our buildings, those who built them, and those who have been built within the walls.

And the building goes on.

Connections and Legacies

Sometimes You Really Can Come Home Again

On Saturday, I had the chance to sit down and talk with Bishop Peter D. Weaver. He was reflecting on his time at West Virginia Wesleyan and how it had prepared him for his life’s work.

Weaver Committee 1965

Coming to Buckhannon

Pete Weaver was about 10 years old when his father, a Methodist minister, was assigned to the Emory Methodist Church in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. A member of that congregation was Michael Late Benedum, the native of Bridgeport, WV who had amassed a fortune in the oil and gas industry. In spite of the large mansion and all of the trappings of a rich man, Weaver’s impression of Mr. Benedum was that of Christian humility.

Bridgeport United Methodist Church
Bridgeport United Methodist Church

The choir from Emory would go to Bridgeport and sing at Mr. Benedum’s home church each year, and when the time came for Pete to attend college, Mr. Benedum encouraged him to seek out a Methodist college. After visiting a few, he came to Buckhannon and immediately felt at home here among the beautiful campus and friendly people.

Campus photo grove side

Values Taught, Learned, and Lived

He arrived as a freshman in 1962, and had the opportunity to learn from such Wesleyan Giants as Ralph C. Brown, Sidney Davis and Jose Franquiz. These men taught him Bible, Religion, Philosophy. All three of these had earned the Doctor of Sacred Theology degree from Boston University. President Stanley H. Martin and Dean Orlo Strunk, Jr. had also earned that degree from Boston University. Boston University’s program emphasized Social Justice, Mission, Ecumenical work, Counseling, and Ethics. These emphases are evident at West Virginia Wesleyan to this day — perhaps still echoing the legacy of these men and others.

Brown (1915), Davis (1936), and Strunk (1953) were also graduates of WVWC.

Many other faculty members from Bible, Christian Education, History, Sociology, Psychology, and Religion were graduates of other theological schools as well including: Garrett-Evangelical, Iliff, Lutheran, Wesley, Western, and Yale Divinity School. The subjects being taught were being taught from the perspective of Love, Justice, Hope, and facing the realities of povery and injustice which was to be seen all throughout the world in various contexts.

In particular, he especially remembers the impact that Dr. Herb Coston had on his life in the class called Fundamental Social Problems. This was a course that was required of all freshmen. Read the course description here.

Other things kept Pete busy at Wesleyan as well, including writing for the Pharos, acting in plays, Phi Sigma Epsilon Fraternity, and serving on the Program Board for the new Benedum Campus Community Center.

Formative Times

College is always a formative time for students, and Peter Weaver was here at a very formative time for the college as well. Even as he was learning to struggle with the many social issues of the 1960s from faculty members who challenged and supported him, the college itself was being transformed.

The Stanley H. Martin era was one of incredible change and growth. New buildings included:

  • 1958 McCuskey Hall
  • 1959 Jenkins Hall
  • 1962 Doney Hall
  • 1963 Benedum Campus Community Center
  • 1963 Holloway Hall
  • 1964 Paul G. Benedum Hall
  • 1967 Christopher Hall of Science
  • 1967 Wesley Chapel and Martin Religious Center
  • 1972 Middleton Hall
  • 1972/1973 Wraparound addition to the Annie Merner Pfeiffer Library

Campus Among the Hills

Coming Full Circle

After graduating from West Virginia Wesleyan in 1966, Peter earned his Masters of Divinity at Drew University and then followed in the footsteps of some of his mentor professors and went to Boston University to pursue the Doctor of Theology degree. He served churches for several years before being elected to be a Bishop in 1996 serving as Bishop in  Eastern Pennsylvania and Deleware conferences. From 2004-2006 he served as the President of the Council of Bishops.

In 2004, Peter Weaver was appointed to the New England Conference. As he was sitting in Boston University’s Marsh Chapel in that role, he looked up and saw the plaque bearing the name of none other than Stanley H. Martin. The chapel was dedicated in 1950.

Marsh Chapel Plaque

On Thursday, Peter Weaver gave the opening sermon for the West Virginia Annual Conference worship service — in Wesley Chapel. On Sunday, he assisted West Virginia’s Resident Bishop, Sandra Steiner Ball, in the ordination service for new clergy. He was home again on this campus which had so helped to build him even as Stanley Martin was building the campus.

I have to believe that Michael Benedum, Ralph C. Brown, Herb Coston, Jose Franquiz, Stanley Martin, Orlo Strunk, Jr., and all the rest, must be pleased.

Bishops Weaver and Steiner Ball June 10 2018