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Looking Back | Looking
Back Archive
Why study business history?
ABOUT
THE AUTHOR
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Dr.
Paul Levengood is managing editor
of the Virginia Magazine of History
and Biography at the Virginia Historical
Society in Richmond.
He also serves as the program coordinator
of the Reynolds Business History Center,
which opened in July as part of the VHS
175th anniversary celebrations.
To learn more, please visit www.vahistorical.org.
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by Paul
Levengood
for Virginia Business
July 2006
On July 22, the Virginia Historical Society (VHS) will
officially open the Reynolds Center for Business History,
the first facility in the South to collect and interpret
the business history of a state.
Initiated by generous grants from the
Richard S. Reynolds Foundation and Alcoa, the center
is part of a new $22
million wing of the VHS’ headquarters in Richmond.
It provides a repository for the records of important
and representative businesses and business leaders.
The center is fortunate to have already attracted several
major collections, including the papers of Reynolds
Metals,
Best Products, Lane Furniture, A.H. Robins, James River
and others.
In discussing the center with people
outside VHS, confusion frequently arises: “Old payroll records, interoffice
memoranda, employee newsletters, and the like . . . why
would you want these things?” The answer, in
a nutshell, is that we know of no other way to tell
the
complete story of Virginia history, especially that
of the 20th century, a period in which the commonwealth
underwent many of the most dramatic changes in its
history.
In fewer than 100 years, the fundamental
underpinnings of Virginia’s economy moved from
a centuries-old reliance on agriculture to a diversified
array of industries
and services. In 1900 close to 82 percent of Virginians
lived in the country, most on farms. In 2000 that number
had dropped to 26 percent.
AN
INVITATION
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To learn more about the
Reynolds
Center for Business History, the Virginia
Historical Society invites Virginia Business
readers to its
grand opening and open house on July 22 from 10 a.m. until 5 p.m.
After a ceremonial ribbon-cutting, visitors will
be able to tour the new wing, including the center
and the new long-term exhibition, “ Virginians
at Work.”
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In the same period, life expectancy,
per capita income and education levels all rose greatly.
Virginians today
are better paid, better educated, healthier and live
in a more just society than they did when the 20th
century dawned. Clearly a number of factors contributed
to this
revolution. But at the top of the list must be the
role played by a host of businesses led by several
generations
of business leaders. Largely through their efforts,
the commonwealth has gone from a net exporter of its
people — who
fled north or west in search of decent-paying jobs — to
a magnet for migrants from across the nation and the
world. Businesses have provided jobs, invested in Virginia
towns and cities, helped attract federal infrastructure
investment, supported the region’s institutions
of higher education, and encouraged a host of cultural
activities from museums to the performing arts.
In spite of the unquestionably important role business
has played in creating the Virginia of today, until the
VHS established the Reynolds Center, no institution in
the state was actively collecting the records of businesses
and making them available to researchers. We envision
becoming a magnet for those interested in the history
of business and commerce, the role of business in society
and the lessons to be learned from the entrepreneurs
of the past.
It is impossible to speculate what company records might tell future researchers.
Yet the prospect that they may be used to answer important questions about the
past is exciting.
Paul Levengood is managing editor of the Virginia Magazine of History and Biography
at the Virginia Historical Society in Richmond. He also serves as the program
coordinator of the Reynolds Business History Center.
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