You might consider the PA archery hunt for bear; I used to have a hunting camp in the Allegheny NF near Tionesta and between the NF land and paper company land, there was more land with good bear populations than you could ever hunt. We killed a handful of bears out of my camp, some by taking a stand in a good area and some by pushing out the clearcuts. Best areas were where a 3-5 year old clearcut or tornado-damaged area was next to a stand or ridge of white or red oaks. You can actually get a map showing the oak tree distribution and compare it to satellite photos that show clearcuts to target areas to scout, then follow up on the ground. When the acorns are dropping, and especially if you have a good funnel between their bedding and feeding area, you will see bears! That was years ago, before PA opened a bear archery season; several times I had a bear under my tree or walked up on one stuffing its face with acorns, but couldn't do anything about it. Even had a bear claim a buck that I shot at dusk and came back with my buddy to drag out several hours later.
I also hunted the Jefferson NF just across the WVA border into VA, and as mentioned, if you locate actively dropping white oaks close to a laurel thicket, you should be good to go. The area I hunted had lots of narrow "finger ridges" going of a main ridge and most had bear trails on them; find a saddle where several of these finger ridges come together, close to some dropping white oaks, and you should be good to go. By the way, don't be surprised to see the Bears up in the oaks, stripping off acorns or cutting off smaller branches that are loaded with acorns. As for an area in WVA, a buddy hunted public land (monongahalia NF) near Elkins and saw a lot of bears there while deer archery hunting.