Tags
Ashland, fiddle, fiddling, John Hartford, Kentucky, mandolin, Mona Haley, music, photos, Poage Landing Days

Mona Haley and John Hartford performing at Poage Landing Days in Ashland, Kentucky, 1996
06 Wednesday Aug 2014
Posted in Ed Haley, John Hartford, Music
Tags
Ashland, fiddle, fiddling, John Hartford, Kentucky, mandolin, Mona Haley, music, photos, Poage Landing Days

Mona Haley and John Hartford performing at Poage Landing Days in Ashland, Kentucky, 1996
05 Tuesday Aug 2014
Posted in Ed Haley, John Hartford, Music
Tags
Ashland, Bobby Taylor, Brandon Kirk, Ed Haley, Ed Haley Fiddle Contest, fiddling, Good Old Country Town Where I Was Born, Green McCoy, Harold Postalwait, history, J P Fraley, Jimmy McCoy, John Hartford, Kentucky, Mona Haley, music, Ugee Postalwait, writing
In September, Brandon and I met in Ashland for the “Second Annual Ed Haley Memorial Fiddle Festival.” Before the contest, we talked with Mona, who’d written down the words to three of Ed’s old songs on yellow notebook paper. It was the first time I’d seen any lyrics for “Good Old Country Town Where I Was Born”:
Oh, the days are sad and the nights are long
And the whole wide world is going wrong
And it’s all because I’m far away from home.
When I bow my head and close my eyes
It’s then I stop and realize:
Oh, what a fool I was to ever roam.
There’s a long, long trail a winding
To a land that’s fair and bright.
It’s a trail I’m always finding
When I go to sleep at night.
I dream of climbing up the hills
Where I used to hear those whippoorwills
In the good old country town where I was born.
I tried to figure out just what it’s all about,
Why I ever left home.
I got a notion in my head
The old hometown was most too dead.
I learned a thing or two
As you’re a bound to do
When you’re a roaming around.
I made up my mind right now
I’d soon be homeward bound.
Oh the sun shines brighter every day
And the breezes blow your blues away
In the good old country town I’m longing for.
It’s a place where clothes don’t make the man
And they mean it when they shake your hand
And a stranger won’t be turned from any door.
It’s a land of milk and honey
Where the folks are on the square.
Though they don’t have lots of money
You’re always welcome there.
I know I’m just a small town guy
But I’m going back to live and die
In the good old country town where I was born.
When I get off at the station
And I see those happy smiles,
I can tell the whole creation
I would walk a thousand miles
Just to be back there where the skies are blue
And to know my friends are always true
In that good old country town where I was born.
That afternoon, everyone headed to the contest, which was held in a downtown auditorium. There were a lot of familiar faces. J.P. Fraley and Bobby Taylor were judges. Contest organizers seated the Haley family at the front of the crowd. Mixed among the family were Brandon, Ugee Postalwait, Harold Postalwait, and Jimmy McCoy, a great-grandson of Green McCoy.
05 Tuesday Aug 2014
Posted in Big Ugly Creek, Cemeteries, Leet
05 Tuesday Aug 2014
Posted in Big Ugly Creek, Coal, Gill, Timber
Tags
Alkol, Allen, Andrew Adkins, Bach Linville, Bernie, Big Ugly Creek, Brad Gill, Bruce Walls, Cassie Hager, Clark Collins, coal, Democrats, Dick Aldridge, Emery Fry, fishing, Gill, Grant Cremeans, Griffithsville, Guyandotte River, Hamlin, Hattie Gill, Henon Smith, history, Huntington, James A. Hughes, Jupiter Fry, Lattin, Lee Adkins, Lincoln County, Lincoln Republican, Logan County, measles, mumps, Omar, Peacha Hager, Philip Hager, Philip Sperry, Sherman Linville, Tom Mullins, West Virginia, Westmoreland, Wilburn Scragg
“Two Brothers,” local correspondents from Gill in Lincoln County, West Virginia, offered the following items, which the Lincoln Republican printed on Thursday, May 3, 1923:
Grant Cremeans, of Hamlin, Sherman Linville, of Alkol, Bruce Walls, of Griffithsville, and Bach Linville, of Bernie, were recent business visitors at this place.
Louis Fry caught a fish one day this week that weighed five pounds.
There is a number of cases of measles in this section.
Philip Spery, Hainen Smith and others loaded thirty-two thousand feet of lumber for Philip Hager one day last week. The lumber was shipped to Jas. A. Hughes, West Moreland, W.Va.
Prof. Lee Adkins’ singing school at this place closed Wednesday night. A large crowd heard the instrumental music rendered by Misses Peacha and Cassie Hager, which was enjoyed by all.
The coal traffic on Guyan is becoming enormous. Everything seems to be on the boom in the Guyan Valley.
Wilburn Scragg, of Allen, was a recent Gill visitor.
Brad Gill is recovering from the mumps and is able to be out again.
Miss Hattie Gill has the mumps.
Emery Fry and Dick Aldridge have been hauling telephone poles the past week.
The mining operations at Lattin have been having trouble securing cars the past few weeks.
Hainen Smith has gone to Omar, where he will cook for a mining crew.
Mrs. Tom Mullins and Mrs. Andrew Adkins were shopping at Gill one day the past week.
Clark Collins was a recent business visitor in Huntington.
You can’t fool all the people all the time. Neither can you please half the people half the time.
Democrats can’t forgive prosperity for coming back when they are out.
05 Tuesday Aug 2014
Posted in Cemeteries, Harts, Lincoln County Feud
Tags
Blood in West Virginia, Brandon Kirk, cemetery, Charles Brumfield Family Cemetery, Charley Brumfield, genealogy, Harts, history, Lincoln County, Lincoln County Feud, photos, West Virginia

Charles Brumfield headstone, located at Harts, Lincoln County, WV, 2014

Charles Brumfield footstone, located in Harts, Lincoln County, WV, 2014
02 Saturday Aug 2014
Posted in Ed Haley
Tags
Ben Walker, Blood in West Virginia, Chapmanville, Ed Haley, Green McCoy, Green Shoal, Grimes Music Store, Harts Creek, history, John Hartford, Lincoln County, Lincoln County Feud, Logan, Logan County, Low Gap, Milt Haley, music, Nashville, Robert Ellis, Walker Family Cemetery, West Virginia, writing
That night, I left Harts and headed toward Nashville, where I soon called Robert Ellis, a Logan County man who supposedly had some Haley records.
“Ed used to play some music with my oldest brother that passed away in January,” Robert said. “He’d been to our house a lot of times, where we lived here in Chapmanville, and I’d heard him play a lot on the streets in Logan and around through the county here in different places. He was a good fiddler. One of the best.”
I asked Robert if he was a musician and he said he used to be but gave it up after a hand injury during World War II. He was pretty sure he had some of Ed’s records.
“I believe I do,” he said. “One or two of his records. My grandmother used to buy them here in Logan at the old Grimes Music Store in Logan.”
I never heard anything about Ed selling records like that…but who knows?
Robert surprised me when he started talking about Milt Haley’s murder.
“About where Milt and Green McCoy were buried down there at Harts Creek, a feller told me some time ago that it was there at Low Gap,” he said. “How come me to know about that, we used to do military funerals a lot and we had a flag-raising at that Walker Cemetery there. I asked this feller if we were close to where those men were buried. He said, ‘Yeah, right back up yonder those fellers are buried.’ And this Carver that was with us that day, his grandfather was in with the ones that buried these people.”
Robert heard about the Haley-McCoy murders from his grandmother.
“These Brumfields, they killed these fellers and left them in a big two-story house there at the mouth of Green Shoal,” Robert said. “That two-story house is torn down now. Somebody was supposed to be left to guard them and they all got drunk and carousing around, so someone slipped in — so my grandmother told me — and chopped the boys up with an axe. Some of them found out about it and they said, ‘These men’s gotta be buried.’ So some of the Brumfields — at that time they was a lot of them down in there and they were tough — and they said, ‘Leave them where they’re at.’ This Carver, his grandfather said, ‘We’re gonna bury them. That’s all I’m gonna say and I’ve told you we’re gonna bury them.’ So them Brumfields evidently knew him and wouldn’t bother him and they went up there and buried those boys.”
02 Saturday Aug 2014
Posted in Atenville, Women's History
02 Saturday Aug 2014
Posted in Big Creek, Big Ugly Creek, Chapmanville, Coal, Gill, Ranger
Tags
Bernie, Big Creek, Big Ugly Coal Company, Big Ugly Creek, Brad Gill, C&O Railroad, Chapmanville, Ernest Sperry, forest fires, genealogy, Genil Messinger, Gill, history, Houston Elkins, I.E. Tipton, Lee Adkins, Lincoln County, Lincoln Republican, Logan County, mumps, Philip Sperry, Ranger, Sam Sperry, singing schools, W.M. Sperry, West Virginia
“Reporter,” a local correspondent from Gill in Lincoln County, West Virginia, offered the following items, which the Lincoln Republican printed on Thursday, April 26, 1923:
We are having fine weather for farming.
The Sunday school is progressing nicely at this place.
Prof. Lee Adkins is teaching a singing school at this place. The young folks seem to be taking a great interest, and are learning to sing nicely.
A number of the Ranger boys visited our singing school Sunday.
I.E. Tipton, our section foreman, has a very sick child.
Sam and Ernest Sperry, of Bernie, were visiting their brothers, W.M. and Philip Sperry, of Gill, Saturday, and Sunday.
Brad Gill has been suffering from the mumps the past week or two.
The Big Ugly Coal Co., has ceased operation here and their property will sell on April 30th to pay off their indebtedness, and will probably go into the hands of new operators.
Genil Messinger has moved down from Big Creek, Logan County, to Gill.
Forest fires were raging in this section last Sunday. Houston Elkins came very near losing his barn, horses and cows.
Fourteen coal cars were derailed at Chapmansville one day last week. No one was injured in the wreck.
01 Friday Aug 2014
Posted in Big Harts Creek, Lincoln County Feud
01 Friday Aug 2014
Posted in Big Harts Creek, Ed Haley, John Hartford, Music, Shively
Tags
Arkansas Traveler, Billy in the Lowground, Birdie, Black Bottom, Brandon Kirk, Brushy Fork of John's Creek, Charles Conley Jr., Charlie "Goo" Conley, Charlie Conley, Dixie Darling, Dood Dalton, Down Yonder, Drunken Hiccups, Ed Haley, Ella Haley, fiddle, fiddler, fiddling, Garfield's Blackberry Blossom, Goin' Across the Sea, Handome Molly, Harts Creek, Hell Among the Yearlings, history, I Don't Love Nobody, John Hartford, Logan, Logan County, music, Pickin' on the Log, Stackolee, The Fun's All Over, Twinkle Little Star, West Virginia, Wog Dalton, writing
After a few minutes of downplaying his ability, Charlie had his wife fetch his fiddle from inside the house. With some hesitation, he put it against his chest and took off on “The Fun’s All Over”.
After he’d finished, I asked him if Ed played with the fiddle at his chest and he said no — he put it under his chin.
Charlie played some more for us: “Birdie”, “Stagolee”, “Twinkle Little Star”, and “I Don’t Love Nobody”.
He seemed a little displeased with his playing, remarking, “Boys when your fingers stop working like they used to, you don’t do as you want to. You do as you can.”
Brandon asked Charlie, “Do you remember how Ed pulled his bow when he played?”
“He held it like that toward the middle and just shoved it,” Charlie said. “He played a long stroke. When he’d be playing a long stroke, I’d be a playing a short stroke and every now and then you’d see him turn his head around and listen to ya. If you missed a note, buddy, he called you down right there. ‘That ain’t right,’ he’d say. ‘That ain’t right.’ Man, he’d sit in playing ‘er again just like a housefire.”
I asked, “When Ed would play a tune, how long would he play it for?”
“He’d play as long as they’d dance,” he said.
Would he play it for fifteen minutes?
“No, hell, he’d play for an hour at a time,” Charlie said. “After he finished a tune, he’d hit another’n.”
I wondered if Ed ever played “Down Yonder”.
“Yeah, I’ve heard him play it,” Charlie said. “He played everything in the world, Ed did.”
What if someone asked him to play something he didn’t like?
“He’d shake his head no and he’d play something else,” Charlie said. “That’s just the way he was…he was a stubborn old man. He had one he played he called ‘Handsome Molly’.”
“That’s almost ‘Goin’ Across the Sea’,” I said. “Did Ed play ‘Goin’ Across the Sea’?”
Charlie said, “Yeah, that old woman would sing it.”
I got out my fiddle, hoping to get Charlie’s memory working on more of Ed’s tunes. I played “Blackberry Blossom” and “Brushy Fork of John’s Creek” with little response other than, “Yep, those are some of old man Ed’s tunes.”
Then, when I played “Hell Among the Yearlings”, Charlie caught me off guard by saying, “That’s called ‘Pickin’ on the Log’.”
At that juncture, he took hold of his fiddle and played “Arkansas Traveler” and “Billy in the Lowground”.
I could tell he was loosening up, so I got him to play “Warfield”. It was about the same thing as the Carter Family’s “Dixie Darling”, to which it would be real easy to sing:
Goodbye girls, we’re goin’ to Warfield.
Goodbye girls, we’re goin’ to Warfield.
Goodbye girls, we’re goin’ to Warfield.
Naugatuck’s gone dry.
It was great to watch Charlie because he was the first active fiddler I’d met on Harts Creek.
During our visit, Brandon and I were able to formulate some idea of Charlie’s background. He was born in 1923. His father Charlie, Sr. went by the nickname of “Goo” to distinguish him from his uncle Charlie Conley — the one who’d killed John Brumfield in 1900. Charlie’s earliest memories of fiddling were of watching his father play “some” on old tunes like “Drunken Hiccups”. He also remembered Dood Dalton.
“Yeah, I’ve heard him play,” he said. “I don’t know how good he was, but I’ve heard him jiggle around on the fiddle. He used to come up home. I was raised right up in the head of this creek up here. Him and my daddy was double first cousins and my daddy had an old fiddle. They’d get it out and they’d play on it half of the night — first one and then another playing on it — but I couldn’t make heads or tails of what they was playing.”
Charlie didn’t know that his great-grandfather Wog Dalton had been a fiddler.
Charlie told us a little bit about his early efforts at fiddling.
“My daddy had that old fiddle and I heard him fool with it so much I said to myself, ‘Well, I’ll just see if I can do anything with it.’ And I started fooling with it and the more I fooled with it the more I wanted to fool with it and I just got to where I could play it a little bit.”
Charlie got good enough to fiddle for dances all over Logan County, sometimes getting as much as fifty dollars a night at Black Bottom in Logan.
“You had to duck and dodge beer bottles all night,” he said. “Man, it was the roughest place I ever seen in my life. They’d get their guts cut out, brains knocked out with beer bottles and everything.”
It sounded a lot like my early days back home.
I asked Charlie how he met Ed and he said, “I got acquainted with him up there at Logan when him and his wife played under that mulberry tree there at that old courthouse. And I’d hear about him playing square dances. I was playing over there at this place one time — he was there. This guy had got him to come there and play, too. He just sit down there, buddy, and we set in playing. We fiddled to daylight. People a dancing, I’m telling you the truth, the dust was a rolling off the floor.”
Charlie said the last dance he remembered on Harts Creek was in 1947.
01 Friday Aug 2014
Posted in Big Harts Creek, Lincoln County Feud, Spottswood
Writings from my travels and experiences. High and fine literature is wine, and mine is only water; but everybody likes water. Mark Twain
This site is dedicated to the collection, preservation, and promotion of history and culture in Appalachia.
Genealogy and History in North Carolina and Beyond
A site about one of the most beautiful, interesting, tallented, outrageous and colorful personalities of the 20th Century