Skip to main content

WVU Libraries releases materials, digital photographs from Congressman Rahall’s career

rahall feature

Before he was elected to Congress, Nick Rahall worked in the office of then U.S. Senator Robert C. Byrd and as assistant to the Majority Secretary of the Senate. He is pictured with Senators Jennings Randolph, Mike Mansfield and Byrd in June 1976. 

Download full-size

Thousands of archival records and digital photographs from the Congressman Nick Joe Rahall II papers are now open for research at West Virginia University Libraries’ West Virginia & Regional History Center.  

In 1976, Nick Rahall II, a 27-year-old Beckley native, won the race for the West Virginia Fourth Congressional District and went on to win re-election to the U.S. House of Representatives for another 18 terms (1977-2015), making him the longest-serving congressman in West Virginia history.

The materials in his collection document Rahall’s numerous contributions to national policy and state projects. Throughout his career, Rahall was recognized for his expertise relating to transportation, infrastructure, technology, energy and the environment. He led the development of federal highway and transit legislation and authored legislation to establish the New River Gorge National River as a unit of the National Park Service and to designate the Gauley River National Recreation Area and the Bluestone National Scenic River.

As the grandson of Lebanese-Protestant immigrants, Rahall took an interest and leadership role in national and foreign policy related to the Middle East, making numerous delegation trips to the region during his congressional service.  

The opened materials come primarily from the press files and include speeches, press releases, and newspaper clippings from 1976-2014. Numerous photographs document Rahall at various events, hearings and meetings with West Virginians in his Washington, D.C., office. Photographs also capture moments from his numerous overseas trips and visits to West Virginia. A large portion of the photographs have been made available online at rahall.lib.wvu.edu.

Rahall donated his papers to WVU Libraries in 2015. The collection is one of the largest in the Libraries’ holdings at more than 2,089 record cartons, and it continues to be processed. Researchers interested in using the collection should contact the Assistant Curator, Congressional and Political Papers Archivist.

-WVU-

mm/11/20/17

CONTACT: Monte Maxwell
Communications Coordinator, West Virginia University Libraries
304.293.0306; monte.maxwell@mail.wvu.edu 

Follow @WVUToday on Twitter.