Met up with a colleague from my 1st public library system of 2014, @OCPu licLibraries! 🍊 #OCPL (at Riverside Convention Center)
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Met up with a colleague from my 1st public library system of 2014, @OCPu licLibraries! 🍊 #OCPL (at Riverside Convention Center)
New library card day featuring 'Rita the Zebra' at my old library!! So nice seeing former co-workers I haven't seen in almost 2 years!! #zebraradar #costamesalibraries #ocpl (at Costa Mesa Library)
FidoFest Returns on May 16 with Full Day of Dog-Friendly Fun
WHEELING, W.Va. – May 4, 2026 –Wheeling Heritage will host its annual FidoFest on Saturday, May 16, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Garden Park in Warwood. The free, family-friendly event celebrates the community’s love of dogs with activities, demonstrations, vendors, an adoption center, and entertainment for all ages. FidoFest has become a signature summer event, drawing dog lovers from across the valley for a day of fun, shopping, and connection with local pet-focused organizations and businesses. Attendees can purchase this year’s official FidoFest T-shirt by Holler Merch, have a custom pup portrait created by Green’s Photography, and support the “Stuff the Subaru” donation drive benefiting local animal shelters. Donation boxes are available in advance at the Ohio County Public Library, Wheeling Artisan Center, and Wheeling Volkswagen-Subaru, as well as onsite during the event. "The whole team at Wheeling Subaru is once again proud to be a FidoFest sponsor, and are proud to help care for and support all of our furry friends." Tony Bonitatibus, Sales Manager at Wheeling Subaru “FidoFest continues to grow each year, and it’s become such an exciting way to bring people together while supporting local animal organizations and small businesses. There really is something for everyone, whether you’re coming for the dogs, the vendors, the demonstrations, or just to enjoy a fun day in the park. It’s a welcoming, high-energy event that reflects the spirit of our community, and we’re excited to see it return to Garden Park!” Riley Carpenter, director of programming at Wheeling Heritage. Event highlights include a Doggy Parade at 11:30 a.m., where participants and their pets will take a celebratory lap around the park. Costumes are encouraged but optional, and all participating dogs will receive a goody bag. Additional activities throughout the day include live music, demonstrations, children’s programming, and interactive experiences. Schedule of events: 10:30 a.m.: Pawz in Time demonstration 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.: Meet and greet with Bluey 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.: Ohio County Public Library storytimes and crafts 11:30 a.m.: Doggy Parade Noon: Live music by Stone Campus 1:30 p.m.: Wheeling Police Department K9 demonstration 2:15 p.m.: Upper Ohio Valley Obedience Training Club demonstration 2:45 p.m.: Raffle basket winners announced 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.: Adoption Center open with multiple local rescue organizations: Ohio County Animal Shelter, Marshall County Animal Shelter, The Road Home Animal Project, Belmont County Animal Shelter Vendors and food trucks include 87 Coffee Co., B & T Creations, Boyds Barkery, Caricatures by Megz, Confectionery Canvas, David Weimer’s Typewriter Portraits, Dunya’s, Dupe’s Scoops, Evelyn’s Creations, Green’s Photography, K9 Compass LLC, Leona Crafts, LexPDesigns, Low Stress Pet Services, Mason Dixon BBQ, MCTV, MERK & Co., Ohio County Public Library, Pawsitive Creations, Pawz In Time/HeartSoul Dog Training, Potomac Concessions (Mr. Squeezy’s Lemonade), Sea Salt & Cedar, The Friendlier City Project, The Gringos Tacos, The Kernel Crew, The Moors Collective, The Spotted Hound Accessories, Upper Ohio Valley Obedience Training Club, West Liberty University Biology/Veterinary Program, WPHS Paws for a Cause, and Yinz & Yappers. Wheeling Heritage extends its appreciation to this year’s sponsors, including lead sponsor Dirty Paws; Wheeling Volkswagen-Subaru; Hall of Frame; K.E.Y. Animal Hospital; MCTV; Upper Ohio Valley Building & Construction Trades Council; Pet Supplies Plus; Smith Oil Inc.; Uniglobe; Visit Wheeling, W.Va.; and Wheeling Veterinary Associates. For updates and more information, follow Wheeling Heritage on Facebook or visit wheelingheritage.org. Read the full article
Thursday at Noon: Staff Talent Show at the Ohio County Public Library!
In celebration of National Library Week 2026 (April 19-25), several members of the staff of the Ohio County Public Library have agreed to showcase their wide-ranging talents for the entertainment of their loyal patrons. “Find Your Joy,” is an invitation for people of all backgrounds to explore and discover what sparks joy in them at the library. So, at a special Thurs. edition, these intrepid library pros will share some of what sparks joy in them, be it through song, dance, the written word, visual art, various crafts, feats of strength (unlikely), or even cooking/baking (more likely)! Read the full article
April 21 at Noon: Scott Wallace at OCPL's Lunch with Books
This talk by award-winning writer and photographer, Scott Wallace, accompanied by the author’s photographs, offers a gripping frontline view of a war reporter’s quest for truth amid a landscape of death and deception, rich in storytelling and abiding relevance in today’s world. Scott Wallace is an award-winning writer and photographer who covers armed conflict, the environment, and vanishing cultures in volatile frontier regions around the world. Formerly a correspondent in Latin America for CBS News, "Newsweek," and "The Guardian," he is the author of the award-winning photographic and narrative memoir, "Central America in the Crosshairs of War: On the Road from Vietnam to Iraq," and the "New York Times" bestseller, "The Unconquered: In Search of the Amazon’s Last Uncontacted Tribes," based on his firsthand experiences trekking through the land of an uncontacted Indigenous group deep in the Brazilian jungle. His written work has also appeared in "National Geographic," "National Geographic Adventure," the "New York Times," "Washington Post," "Harper’s," and "Smithsonian," among many others. His photography is represented by Getty Images and has been published in newspapers and magazines throughout the world. Currently an associate professor of journalism at the University of Connecticut, he is a graduate of Yale University and the University of Missouri School of Journalism. “Scott Wallace’s 'Central America in the Crosshairs of War; on the Road from Vietnam to Iraq' is really several books at once that cohere into a magnificent whole. It is the evocative, at times nostalgic, at others harrowing, personal account of a young journalist’s coming of age during his first foreign journalism assignment, always keenly observant and thoughtful.” — "ReVista: Harvard Review of Latin America" Read the full article
OCPL on May 5 at Noon: 'We Were Promised' with Author Julia Flint
Author Julia Flint will discuss he new book, We Were Promised: How an Appalachian Grandmother Fought a Corporate Giant. The book follows Karen “Momma K” Gorrell and a group of determined retirees on their long journey to seek justice—from staging an Occupy-inspired camp at the Ravenswood plant in West Virginia to confronting corporate executives in Illinois and California. In highlighting Appalachia's role in the modern labor movement and the impact of women activists in the region, this story serves as a powerful example of everyday folks, as Karen said, “having the courage to stand up and raise hell and fight back.” Julia Flint is a writer from the Appalachian Rust Belt. She is the daughter of a steelworker and a therapist. With a background in qualitative research, she has worked for the last decade as a research assistant on projects related to community health and education. Read the full article
History: Henry Schmulbach - The Fate of an American Dream – Part 2
He was a mere 8-year-old child when his parents, Johan and Anna Elizabeth Schmulbach, joined another family to depart Germany for the United States.
The Schmulbachs settled in Wheeling as did thousands of other German immigrants because not only did the region have German-language newspapers and several relevant singing societies, but employment also was in ample supply to hard-working men and, in some cases, male children. Henry Schmulbach was such a young man and at the age of 10 he accepted a cabin boy position on a steamboat offered by an uncle, George Fellers.
Once the Civil War began in early 1861, Schmulbach left the waterway at 17 years old to open a grocery store in the area now recognized as Centre Market. He sold the retail business operation three years later and briefly returned to the steamboat industry, but according to information listed in the Ohio County Public Library archives, it was in 1865 when Schmulbach got his first taste of the alcohol business in the Upper Ohio Valley.
“By all accounts, Henry Schmulbach was a very motivated young man,” said local historian Ryan Stanton, an educator at Wheeling Park High School. “I’ve not found any documents or direct quotes about his thirst for money, but his early work history certainly appears to have something of a start as far as his wish to collect as much wealth as possible.
“Henry must have been a saver in his early years, too, because it’s apparent he jumped from one industry to the other and not as an employee but as an owner,” he explained. “That trend continued, too, with everything he did until he died in 1915. Schmulbach was always in charge, and if he wasn’t when he first got involved with something new, his role always changed very quickly to titles like president and chairman.”
Schmulbach had several financial interests in the Wheeling area.
A perfect example of such a movement involved the German Bank of Wheeling. Again, the OCPL’s archived obituary for Schmulbach reveals why the entrepreneur targeted the institution in his late 30s.
“This bank owes its life to Mr. Schmulbach. The bank was incorporated in the late '40s and grew steadily until 1879. In that year a failure of the tobacco crop, in which much of its resources were invested, caused it to meet severe losses.”
In the very beginning, Schmulbach and bank president Chester D. Hubbard opposed the bank board's decision to suspend operations, and soon later Schmulbach took over as the bank’s president.
“One of the main focuses for Schmulbach later in his life was the German Bank of Wheeling. Everything I have seen about that stage of his life allows me to believe that the bank was one of the great points of pride of his life,” Stanton reported. “Of course, the German Bank of Wheeling is now known as Wesbanco Bank, so he must have built something that has lasted through the years when many banks have not. I think it speaks to the due diligence that he displays with everything he did both professionally and for recreation. He made sure he did everything the right way.
“By all accounts, I’ve seen, that’s how he went about everything beginning when he was young through his 70 years here,” he said. “I believe his life is the true story of realizing the American dream as it was presented to immigrants at the time he moved to the United States as a child.”
There are many legends connected to the Roney's Point area of Ohio County, and some are true while others are not.
A Brewer’s Death Nail
In the 1912 general election, after years of effort by state lawmakers, a majority vote by 92,342 Mountain State residents cast ballots in favor of prohibition, which became state law at midnight on June 30, 1914.
It was not until Dec. 5, 1933, when the 21st Amendment to the U.S. Constitution was ratified and effectively repealed nationwide prohibition, and West Virginia was the 15th state to vote in favor of repeal. Schmulbach, and his brewery, however, already had been dead for nearly 20 years.
“When lawmakers in West Virginia approved prohibition, that had to have broken Schmulbach’s heart because he had worked so hard to establish what he did in the brewing business. At first, his board of directors tried to relocate the brewery to Ohio, but that never materialized, and I believe part of the reason why was because Henry and the others were so well off at that point that they let it go,” Stanton said. “To the employees of the brewery and the employees of all the other connected businesses, it had to be devastating, but for a guy like Schmulbach, he had so much wealth and so many other businesses that he really didn’t need to brew beer anymore.
The Schmulbach Mansion was the first house in Ohio County to feature air conditioning, but once the millionaire died, his widow sold it to the Ohio County Commission.
“But it still had to hurt. It was what he was really known for,” the historian considered. “They had a lager, a porter, and a crown ale that were very, very popular, and they had some seasonal beers as well for certain times of the year. The man loved his heritage and that’s why when the fall rolled around, he brewed and distributed an Oktoberfest beer that was said to be very good,” he said. “Schmulbach was also a master marketing guy, and it was obvious he had a lot of fun with it.”
Of course, Henry Schmulbach succeeded in establishing yet another “first” despite having died following a year of poor health.
“There was a time when a person could take a trolley from downtown Wheeling to Roney’s Point, and when Schmulbach died, they had the funeral up here, and they had special trolley service to get everyone to the service. By all accounts, that service was a very big deal,” Stanton said. “Henry actually had the first funeral procession that was led by automobiles. The very first ever in the Wheeling area.
“Not only was this guy an entrepreneur and the first person to do a lot of different things, but he was a very driven man to set a lot of standards in this area. The Schmulbach Building, which is now known more as the Wheeling-Pittsburgh headquarters, is an example of how he went about it the right way,” he said. “That’s why seeing the mansion the way it is now with so much of it missing and all of the vandalism and graffiti that’s taken place is a pretty sad thing to me.”
In the basement of the former Wheeling-Pitt headquarters is a bathhouse that was included in the 1907 construction by the builder, Henry Schmulbach, and these ornate wall sculptures remain today.
The Widow
When Pauline Bertschy Schmulbach passed away several years after her husband’s death, her estate was valued at more than half a million dollars, a figure that would exceed $8 million today.
That estate, however, did not include the family’s property at Roney’s Point because she had sold it to Ohio County for $125,000 in 1917.
“She didn’t want to live there, not even when Henry was alive,” Stanton insisted. “Not only did Henry and Pauline know each other from their church, but she was the hostess at the family funeral parlor. She was a very social lady, so living out in the middle of nowhere like Roney’s Point was back then never appealed to her. She did it, but once she could sell, she did.
“But back then, very soon after the Great Depression hit, Ohio County utilized the land as the county poor farm. The men of the county would go there and work the farm so they could earn some of the food they produced there, and they also earned a few bucks each day that they were able to take home to help with their families.”
The inside of the mansion has been vandalized on many occasions through the years.
Some of the men, Stanton said, would live on the property, too, and the county established the County Farm Cemetery for the interments of those who passed away during those years. The graveyard later was utilized for the patients who passed away at the hospital, and those who simply wished to use the yard as their final resting place.
Most of the graves today, however, are unmarked, and the gas and oil industries as well as flooding have left the cemetery completely unmarked.
“That’s just an example of everything else that has happened to the Schmulbach property at Roney’s Point,” Stanton said with disappointment. “His Chapline Street home has been preserved, and it’s now in a protected block with other beautiful Victorian houses, and the brewery building still stands, too, and the Schmulbach Building is pretty much known as the Wheeling-Pitt building now because the steel company had several floors of it for its headquarters for a lot of years.
“But with all my research on Henry Schmulbach, I have always had the impression that it was the Roney’s Point property he was most proud of because it was where he could take all of his hobbies and have fun with them,” the historian added. “But then it was all allowed to just rot, so I guess, it’s gone the same way the American dream has through the years.”
Today's OCPL's Lunchw With Books: Short Creek United Methodist Church - 240th Anniversary
Short Creek United Methodist Church, founded in 1785 amid America’s frontier, is on the National Historic Register, is the oldest Methodist congregation in West Virginia’s Northern Panhandle and among the earliest Methodist churches in the Nation and one of the earliest west of the Alleghenies. From secret gatherings and a stone “fort church” to today’s ministry, it embodies 240 years of faith, resilience, and enduring community. Presenter Pastor Heather E. Rogers serves as pastor of Short Creek United Methodist Church and Warwood United Methodist Church in Wheeling, West Virginia. Rescheduled from Dec. 3! Read the full article