Construction
of the house began in
1888 and was completed in 1895; the Architect-Builder was
Charles A. Johnson. The exterior of
the building is made of sandstone and limestone quarried locally
and hand-chiseled. Native red oak is used throughout the
interior of the building with hand-carved motifs adorning the
windows and doors.
In 1885
Rufus Ayers served as
Virginia's Attorney General. He and other gentlemen such as John Imboden,
Charles Sears, George Carter, and John Taggart felt that Big Stone Gap could
become the "Pittsburgh of the South" because of its iron ore and coal deposits.
Rufus was instrumental in helping develop the coal and iron ore industry in
Southwest Virginia and bringing the railroads to this area. Big Stone Gap,
however, did not become the next Pittsburgh due to the economic depression.
The house was purchased by
C. Bascom Slemp in
1929. Slemp, a native of Lee County, served many years in Congress and later
became the private secretary to President Calvin Coolidge. C. Bascom and his
sister, Janie Slemp Newman, had a love for Southwest Virginia, its people,
history and rich culture. They collected artifacts depicting life of the area,
which were originally displayed in the Janie Slemp Newman Museum. Before C.
Bascom's death in 1943, he established
The Slemp Foundation. It was his wish that the state acquire the Ayers' home
for a museum and that the Janie Slemp Newman collection be given to the state
for their museum.
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The Southwest Virginia Museum is a
member of the American
Association of Museums, the American Association of State and
Local History, and the Virginia Association of Museums.
