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Generally speaking, lower humidity (I don't have numbers) will be found at the higher elevations. In WV's case, that will be along the "spine" of the Allegheny Mountains.
Find Thomas WV on a map, up by the western border of Maryland. Follow US-219 generally south all the way to Princeton and Bluefield at the southern end of the state. I'm guessing that the lowest humidities will be found 25-50 miles either side of Rte 219.
Except possibly for the eastern panhandle, WV does not normally have the muggy kind of humidity you'd find in Florida, Georgia, Wash DC, etc. But neither is it the low humidity of Arizona, Nevada, the Rocky Mountains. Maybe the best description is that it's like the mid-west: Ohio, Indiana, and so forth.
And the higher elevations will be less than that, but still not desert southwest low humidity.
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