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News & Features


Business history center to trace economic legacy

by Robert Powell
Virginia Business

April 2005

History isn’t solely the study of wars and elections. The Virginia Historical Society in Richmond is making that point by adding a wing that will trace the development of the commonwealth’s economy.

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Under construction is the $16 million, 54,000-square-foot Reynolds Business History Center that will provide an archive for Virginia corporate documents and include a long-term exhibition on the state’s economic history, “Virginians at Work.” The four-story wing, scheduled to open in the spring of 2006, also will house a classroom and a 500-seat lecture hall.

The project will showcase the role business plays in shaping culture. “Business is such an important part of life,” says Charles Bryan, president and CEO of the Virginia Historical Society. “[Businesses] create jobs, they create wealth, they improve the standard of living and our quality of life.  And you can’t overlook the philanthropic contributions that prominent business leaders make.  However, while they are doing it, businesses seldom realize that they are shaping history.”

Plans for the center were sparked in 2001 by a $1million gift from the Richard S. Reynolds Foundation and a $500,000 grant from Alcoa Inc. In addition, Alcoa, which acquired Reynolds Metals Co. five years ago, donated Reynolds’ corporate papers.

With most of their emphasis on day-to-day operations, businesses don’t tend to think of themselves historically. “Their focus is the future, not the past,” notes Bryan. “They seldom understand their legacy, and thus do not think about what to preserve. That is where we can help.  We review their archives and assist businesses with the important question of ‘What should I hold on to?’”

In addition to the Reynolds Metals’ collection, the center will house business documents from companies such as A.H. Robins, James River Corp., Signet Bank, Thalhimers, Lane Furniture and Best Products, among others.

Brent Halsey, the former chairman and CEO of James River, says that the business history center provides a “missing link” in modern culture. “I think it’s a segment of the 20th century that has been missing from the archives of any institution. Its usefulness is in teaching economic history to kids and anyone else.”

Key to the business center’s mission is a plan that encompasses these goals:
• tell the human stories of the state’s historically significant corporations,
• demonstrate how culture is affected by the corporation,
• prevent the loss of important documents so that they are can be used as educational resources,
• teach corporations the importance of archiving their documents, and
• document contributions to business history made by African-Americans, women and “other under-represented segments of our country’s population.”

Historical society officials say Virginia is an appropriate place for a business history center because it is the birthplace for a number of companies that have been pioneers in their industries. In addition, Virginia offers a vivid example of the transformation that the nation has gone through in moving from an agrarian economy to an industrial society to the current information age.

Events in this economic evolution have often been overlooked. As Bryan notes, “Virginia has been guilty of forgetting that there is any history after Appomattox. Virginia has traditionally focused on preserving the colonial period and the Civil War.  We haven’t done as good a job on collecting and preserving history from our time.”


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