AB Brooks

March 4th, 2025  |  7:00 am to 12:00 pm

Charleston Town Center Marriott, Charleston, WV

The 39th Annual AB Brooks Memorial Forestry Symposium will be held on March 4th from 7:00 am to 12:00 pm at the Marriott Charleston Town Center Hotel in Charleston, WV. Registrants will receive CFE credit through the Society of American Foresters (SAF).

Full registration includes; “Taste of West Virginia”  Banquet March 3rd at the Marriott – 6:00PM

SAF Signup sheets for CFE credits will be available at the meeting.

Registration will close on Friday, Feb. 28th.

Overnight room reservations can be made by calling the Charleston Marriott Town Center at (304) 345-6500. Identify the West Virginia Forestry Association to obtain the $113.00 room rate.

SPECIAL ROOM RATE EXPIRES 2/10/2025!!!!

Countdown to The 39th A.B.Brooks Forestry Symposium

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AB Brooks History

The annual A. B. Brooks Memorial Forestry Symposium was inaugurated in 1986 to honor and commemorate West Virginia’s first and most illustrious forester. His full name was Alonzo Beecher Brooks, although he was simply “A. B.” to friends and acquaintances. He was born May 6, 1873. The Brooks family lived on a typical West Virginia hill farm near French Creek, Upshur County, West Virginia. There was no money for college; so A. B. taught himself plane surveying and began the preparation of a map that included every road and every dwelling (outside the corporate limits of Buckhannon) in Upshur County.

In 1905, the map was completed, and sales provided funds for his entrance to West Virginia University. Since there were few public high schools, A. B. spent two years in college preparation courses, then began a baccalaureate program (1908) which included the first forestry courses ever offered at the University. He was a member of the first graduating class that had instruction in forestry.

He then accepted an appointment as the forester for the West Virginia Geological Survey (1910-1911) to collect data for, and to prepare a survey of West Virginia’s forest resources, county by county. This detailed study resulted in a book of 486 pages and was published as Forestry and Wood Industries, Volume 5 of the West Virginia Geological and Economic Survey, in 1911. It is the classic on the State’s early forest conditions and resources.

  1.  A. B. later served as forester for the West Virginia Agricultural Experiment Station, where he worked on a program concerned with stopping the spread of chestnut blight. From West Virginia, he moved to the state of New York and spent two years in its Conservation Department. After this, he returned to West Virginia where he soon published a 242- page book (West Virginia Trees). This book included identification data, descriptions, ranges, and a detailed drawing of every tree species known to occur within the State. Originally published by West Virginia University in 1920, it was reprinted in 1951 and republished in 1972.

In 1921, West Virginia’s first Conservation Commission was established, and A. B. became its first Director with the title of Chief Game Protector. Under his administration, the first State Forest (Seneca) and the first State park (Watoga) were established.

When Colonel E. W. Oglebay left his 700-acre Waddington Farms to the city of Wheeling, a recreational and educational program of music, nature study, handicrafts, horticulture, and other cultural activities was instituted. A. B. became Oglebay Institute’s first Staff Naturalist. His Sunday morning bird walks along Oglebay’s trails gradually developed into the internationally famous Brooks Bird Club.

Detailed Agenda

7:00 Registration
7:15 Buffet Breakfast
8:15 Welcome & Opening Remarks
WVFA President, Joe McNeel, and Executive Director, Bob Boyles
8:30 WV Division of Forestry Update
Jeremy Jones, State Forester, WV Division of Forestry
9:00 Goodfellow Distribution; The company and their insight
into the hardwood future
Dean Alanko, General Manager, Goodfellow Distribution, Inc.
9:30 Appalachian Market
Trends and Uses
Matt Bumgardner, Research Economist, USDA Forest Service, Northern Research
Station
10:00 Break
10:15 Economic Impacts of the Trump Administration on the Forest
Products Industry
Dana Cole, Executive Director, Hardwood Federation
10:45 WVU Forestry Program Reorganization
Amy Welsh, Director, WVU School of Natural Resources & Environment
11:00 New Opportunities for Forest-Based Companies Relocating to
WV
Matt Borror & Joe Brouse, WV Department of Economic Development
11:30 Creating a Hardwood CLT Manufacturing Facility from Scratch –
Where we are…
Jeremy Adams, CEO, Crosswood Mass Timber
12:00 Economic Impacts of the Forest Products Industry in WV
Kathryn Gazal, Associate Professor – Forest Economics, WVU School of Natural
Resources & Environment
12:30 Lunch
1:30 Adjourn

Sponsor the 2025 A.B.Brooks Forestry Symposium

Please contact Event Coordinator Gabrielle Hedges -gabrielle@wvfa.org or Executive Director Bob Boyles- bob@wvfa.org 304-532-6568 with any questions!