Tags
genealogy, Halcyon, Harts Creek, history, Logan County, photos, West Fork, West Virginia, William Stratton Dingess

William Stratton Dingess, born c.1835
25 Tuesday Mar 2014
Posted in Big Harts Creek, Halcyon
Tags
genealogy, Halcyon, Harts Creek, history, Logan County, photos, West Fork, West Virginia, William Stratton Dingess

William Stratton Dingess, born c.1835
25 Tuesday Mar 2014
Posted in Big Harts Creek, Halcyon
Tags
A.C. Hager, Buck Fork, Camp Meade, Elbert Baisden, genealogy, Halcyon, Harts Creek, history, Lee Carey, life, Logan County, Napoleon Dingess, Sol Riddle, Thompson School House, Tom Hensley, West Fork, West Virginia
“Daddy’s Girl,” a local correspondent at Halcyon on the West Fork of Big Harts Creek, Logan County, West Virginia, offered the following items, which the Logan Democrat printed on Thursday, January 23, 1919:
A.C. Hager has been holding meetings in the Thompson school house the past week.
Tom Hensley of Buck Fork will begin a singing school at this place a week from Saturday. Everybody will be invited to join us.
S. Riddle will begin our school next Monday.
The people of West Fork made up a donation for A.C. Hager at church Sunday night.
Elbert Baisden, who has returned from Camp Meade, visited A. Dingess Sunday.
Lee Carey and Pole Dingess, who have been mad at each other for some time, made friends at church the other night.
24 Monday Mar 2014
Posted in Big Harts Creek, Ed Haley, Lincoln County Feud
23 Sunday Mar 2014
Posted in Little Harts Creek
23 Sunday Mar 2014
Posted in Big Harts Creek, Whirlwind
Tags
Appalachia, Buck Fork, Chapmanville, Dave Tomblin, Dingess, Ed Avis, Frank Collins, genealogy, Gusta Tomblin, Harts Creek, history, Isaac Marion Nelson, John Tomblin, John Ward, Logan County, Ona Blair, Preston Collins, Reece Dalton, Sallie Tomblin, West Virginia, Whirlwind
“Blue Eyed Beauty,” a local correspondent at Whirlwind in Upper Hart, Logan County, West Virginia, offered the following items, which the Logan Democrat printed on Thursday, January 16, 1919:
The weather, which has been intensely cold, is now much warmer.
Marion Nelson did not appear to teach the Bible school on Buckfork Sunday, as was promised.
Reece Dalton hauled coal for Dave Tomblin Friday.
Mrs. Sallie Tomblin and son, John, visited with Mrs. Gusta Tomblin this week.
Frank, the eight-months-old child of Mr. and Mrs. Preston Collins, died on Monday and the remains were brought here for burial Tuesday.
John Ward is walking the pipe line between Chapmanville and Dingess. He makes two round trips a week.
Ed. Avis bought some cattle of Mrs. Ona Blair Saturday.
22 Saturday Mar 2014
Posted in Big Harts Creek, Whirlwind
Tags
Alex Henderson, Alex Hensley, Budda Carter, Burlie Riddle, Charleston, Dingess, Frank Adams, genealogy, history, influenza, Joseph Blair, Kentucky, Logan County, Logan Democrat, moonshining, Moses Tomblin, Mud Fork, South Carolina, Wes Vance, West Virginia, Whirlwind, World War I
“Blue Eyed Beauty,” a local correspondent at Whirlwind in Upper Hart, Logan County, West Virginia, offered the following items, which the Logan Democrat printed on Thursday, January 9, 1919:
We are having some real winter weather here at this writing.
Alex Hensley, who has been in the training camp at Charleston, So. Car., arrived home Sunday.
Joseph Blair is staying with the homefolks, helping nurse him through the influenza.
Alex Henderson is spending the winter with “Budda” Carter.
We hear that Burlie Riddle will leave in a few days for an extended visit with relatives in Kentucky.
Frank Adams, mail carrier, became water bound and was unable to make his usual trip between Whirlwind and Dingess Wednesday and Thursday.
United States marshals were in this vicinity Wednesday looking for illicit stills. It is said they failed to find any, but arrested Rev. Wese Vance for harboring deserters.
Mrs. Mae Thompson is staying with her mother, Mrs. Ona Blair.
Moses Tomblin quit his work on Mud fork Thursday on account of bad weather.
21 Friday Mar 2014
Posted in Big Harts Creek, Ed Haley, John Hartford
21 Friday Mar 2014
Posted in Big Harts Creek, Ed Haley
Tags
Al Brumfield, Billy Adkins, crime, French Bryant, genealogy, Harts Creek, Harve Dingess, history, Hollene Brumfield, Hugh Dingess, Logan County, Maude Dingess, Millard Dingess, Paul Dingess, West Virginia, writing
After talking with Oris, we drove back onto Smoke House Fork to locate the site of the old Hugh Dingess home. I wanted to see where Milt Haley had played his last tune. Some twenty minutes later, we parked in a driveway at Bill’s Branch and met Paul Dingess, one of Hugh’s many descendants, and a local resident. Paul gave us a walking tour of the Hugh Dingess farm, showing us what was left of the old Dingess place — a small pile of chimney stones — as well as the “hanging tree” where the mob almost hung Milt and Green. He said his grandfather Millard Dingess had inherited the property years ago. With darkness fast approaching, we thanked Paul and took off down Smoke House.
A short time later, we stopped to visit Harvey and Maude Dingess, a neat elderly couple who lived in a nice brick home just below the old Hugh Dingess homeplace. Maude, Billy said, was a niece to Hollena Brumfield and a granddaughter to Henderson Dingess. Her husband Harvey was raised on West Fork near the likes of French Bryant and others. These were incredibly close connections and I was very excited at the prospects of what they might know.
Inside, after all the proper introductions, we sat down at the kitchen table. I had Hugh Dingess’ hued log home on my mind, so I asked about it first. Harve said Hugh’s son Millard lived in it after Hugh’s death. The old-timers told all kinds of ghost stories about it.
“They said they would take pack-peddlers in there and take them upstairs and kill them and take their money and whatever they had and then take them out in the woods somewhere and just get rid of them,” he said.
I had heard similar stories about the Al Brumfield house in Harts so I had to ask if there was any truth to those kind of stories. I mean, did the Brumfields and Dingesses really murder these old pack-peddlers?
“I don’t know,” Harve said, “but it was talked. People’d swear that Hugh’s house was haunted, the upstairs part. It was pretty well dark up there. Them kids would go up there and play and they’d come running down the stairs. They’d swear it was haunted and they wouldn’t hardly go upstairs in that old house ’cause they’d told tales about it over the years, I guess. And they said Millard, back when he’d drink, he’d get down drunk and he’d swear that he could hear things up them stairs. Millard said it was all haunted up there.”
So what happened to it?
“About in the ’40s, they quit living in it for a long time,” Harve said, “and then it just kindly squashed down — the heavy snow and stuff — and it just laid there like a junk pile for a long time. They kept getting a little bit out at a time till it just got away — all but the old chimney rocks.”
21 Friday Mar 2014
Posted in Big Harts Creek, Ed Haley, Whirlwind
Tags
Appalachia, culture, Ellen Adams, genealogy, Harts Creek, history, life, Logan County, Minnie Smith, photos, Sherman Smith, Sol Adams, West Virginia, Whirlwind

Squire Sol Adams cabin, constructed in 1869, Whirlwind, Logan County, WV, 1995.
21 Friday Mar 2014
Posted in Big Harts Creek, Whirlwind
Tags
Bill Tomblin, Crit Blair, Eli Workman, Everett Adams, genealogy, Gordon Farley, history, influenza, Island Creek, Island Creek Coal Company, James Mullins, Jesse Mullins, Jim Tomblin, John Wokrman, Logan, Logan County, Marion Riddle, Moses Tomblin, Mud Fork, West Virginia, Whirlwind, World War I, Yuma
“Blue Eyed Beauty,” a local correspondent at Whirlwind in Upper Hart, Logan County, West Virginia, offered the following items, which the Logan Democrat printed on Thursday, January 2, 1919:
James Mullins, postmaster at this place, has sufficiently recovered from an attack of influenza as to be able attend to his duties in the office.
“Uncle Jim” Tomblin is spending the winter with relatives in this community.
Everett Adams, Jesse Mullins and Crit Blair have received their discharges from the army and have returned home.
Bill Tomblin was a visitor on Island Creek Christmas day.
Gordon Farley was released from jail in Logan in time to spend Christmas with his family.
Marion Riddle was a business visitor at Yuma Friday.
John Workman, who has been at Eli Workman’s sick with the influenza has returned home much improved in health.
Moses Tomblin has resumed his work for the Island Creek Coal Co. on Mud Fork.
17 Monday Mar 2014
Posted in Big Harts Creek, Ed Haley
16 Sunday Mar 2014
Posted in Big Harts Creek, Ed Haley, Lincoln County Feud, Timber
Tags
Appalachia, Burl Farley, Cabell County, culture, genealogy, history, life, photos, Roach, West Virginia, writing
15 Saturday Mar 2014
Posted in Ed Haley, Lincoln County Feud
14 Friday Mar 2014
Posted in Big Harts Creek, Ed Haley, Music, Women's History
07 Friday Mar 2014
06 Thursday Mar 2014
Posted in Big Harts Creek, Music
Tags
Appalachia, culture, Dood Dalton, fiddler, fiddling, genealogy, Harts Creek, history, life, Lincoln County, music, photos, West Virginia, writing
01 Saturday Mar 2014
Posted in Big Harts Creek, Ed Haley
Tags
Appalachia, culture, genealogy, Harts Creek, history, Jeff Baisden, life, photos, West Virginia
01 Saturday Mar 2014
Posted in Big Harts Creek, Culture of Honor, Ed Haley, Music
Tags
Ben Adams, Billy Adkins, Brandon Kirk, Cas Baisden, Clyde Haley, crime, Dingess, Ed Haley, Ella Haley, Ewell Mullins, genealogy, Greasy George Adams, Harriet Baisden, Harts Creek, history, Jeff Baisden, John Frock Adams, Johnny Hager, Maggie Mullins, murder, music, Peter Mullins, Ticky George Adams, Weddie Mullins, West Virginia, writing
One fall day, Brandon and Billy drove to see 80-something-year-old Cas Baisden, a son of Jeff and Harriet (Jonas) Baisden. Cas lived on a farm near the mouth of Smoke House with a relative of Uncle Peter Mullins. He had been mostly raised by Uncle Peter and had vivid memories of watching Ed Haley play in his yard, as well as in the house. He said Ed didn’t usually have a very big crowd around him. “People didn’t care a bit, even though he was about as good as they was,” Cas said. He said Ed and his wife could play anything. “He was real skinny and would drink anything he could get his hands on.” He added that Ed knew all the roads and trails up around the creek and could walk them as well as a sighted person.
Ed’s uncle Weddie Mullins married Cas’ aunt, Maggie Jonas. Cas said Weddie went to Dingess to get some booze one time and was killed in a shooting scrape. The man who shot him was laid up in bed when Weddie’s half-brother John Adams came in and asked, “Do you think he’ll make it?” Someone said he might live so Adams pulled out his gun and said, “I know he won’t,” and opened fire on him. Later, in unrelated events, Adams “blew his wife’s head off.”
Cas said Ed’s uncle Ticky George Adams was harmless. He was a small man, short and chubby, who dug ginseng a lot on Big Creek. George was a brother-in-law to Ed’s friend Johnny Hager, who came from the North Fork of Big Creek and stayed a lot with Ewell Mullins and others around Harts. Johnny was a good fellow, a musician and a non-drinker.
Cas knew that Ed sold his homeplace on Trace to Uncle Peter’s son, Ewell Mullins. It was a plank building with two long rooms. In the rear of the eating room there was a flat-rock chimney with a long fireplace. The other room was used for sleeping. Later, an old store building was pushed up against the sleeping room to make a kitchen. The house had no porch.
Cas said Ed’s son Clyde Haley was “like a monkey” when it came to climbing trees; one time, he climbed 40 feet up into a tree and all the other kids ran away because they didn’t want to see him fall.
Cas remembered sketches about Ben Adams but didn’t know if he had been involved in the 1889 feud. At one time, he operated a store on main Harts Creek below the mouth of Smoke House. Across the creek, he had a saloon made entirely of rock. Later, he lived on Trace. Cas said part of his old mill-dam could be seen in the creek at the Greasy George Adams place.
28 Friday Feb 2014
Posted in Big Harts Creek, Ed Haley
26 Wednesday Feb 2014
Posted in Big Harts Creek, Ed Haley, Lincoln County Feud
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