* This article appeared in The
Parkersburg News on Monday, August 1st, 2005
Fenton Art Glass fan base
worldwide
By DAVE PAYNE Sr.
WILLIAMSTOWN - People from virtually every
corner of the country and across the world gathered in Williamstown Sunday to
help Fenton Art Glass mark a century of red-blooded, American-made glass.
The Fenton parking lot had
as many vehicles with out-of-state plates as ones from West Virginia and Ohio.
People drove from Nebraska, Arkansas, Nevada, Iowa, Connecticut, Tennessee, Wisconsin,
Massachusetts, Kansas, Maryland, Arizona, Georgia, Alabama, Indian, Virginia,
South Carolina, North Carolina, Illinois, New Jersey, Kentucky, Minnesota and
Florida.
The event began Friday and ends Tuesday.
Norma Fennel drove all the way from Vina,
Ala., an area known for the Sunshine brand dog food produced there.
Fennel has been collecting Fenton pieces for
almost 40 years and has about 100 pieces.
"I like it because it's American made.
You don't see much of that anymore. I collect Fenton, really, because I'm too
old to do anything else," she said.
She had pieces signed by members of the
Fenton family and had her picture taken with Tom and Scott Fenton, two men
Fennel considers - and treated like - celebrities.
Fenton Art Glass is the largest manufacturer
of handmade colored art glass in the United States and has 450 employees. Its
products are available for sale in more than 4,500 retail shops across the
nation.
Fenton has crafted a special collectible for
the event. The Centennial Celebration Exclusive is a Mandarin Red Sherbet
glass. The mould was designed by company founder Frank L. Fenton during the
1930s. The piece is only available on the grounds at Fenton during the
Centennial Celebration.
One Sunday highlight was the Centennial Collector
Auction held at Marietta College. Shelly Fenton Ash also signed pieces. Just Us
Friends and the Mid-Ohio Valley Players provided musical entertainment Sunday.
Dozens of vendors sold their wares in an
arts and crafts area. Among them was Belmont resident Eddie Seese, a former
employee of Ritchie County marble-maker Mid-Atlantic of West Virginia Inc. and
Fenton Art Glass.
"I love working with glass. You create
a vision of your own art and then try to pull that off in glass," he said.
The event also attracted area residents who
had never seen the facility before. Sunday was the first time Ritchie County
resident Steve Minardi had visited.
"I've never been here before. I think
it's a great place," he said.
Minardi couldn't help but notice that many
people traveled thousands of miles for the event.
"I saw on the sign-in sheet where
someone from India had signed. Some people we took a factory tour with were
from California," he said.