George Fry home
07 Saturday Jun 2014
Posted in Culture of Honor, Ed Haley, Green Shoal, Lincoln County Feud
07 Saturday Jun 2014
Posted in Culture of Honor, Ed Haley, Green Shoal, Lincoln County Feud
07 Saturday Jun 2014
Posted in Queens Ridge
Tags
Alice Workman, Appalachia, Hezekiah Workman, history, life, Mingo County, photos, Queens Ridge, Rufus Workman, U.S. South, Wayne County, West Virginia

Abijah J. and Alice (Porter) Workman with sons Hezekiah and Rufus, residents of Grant District, Wayne County, WV, c.1908
30 Friday May 2014
Posted in Big Harts Creek
28 Wednesday May 2014
Posted in Big Creek, Chapmanville, Ferrellsburg, Toney
Tags
Annie Davis, Big Creek, Bulger, Catherine Toney, Chapmanville, education, Ferrellsburg, history, Jane Lucas, Jim Brumfield, life, Lincoln County, Lincoln Republican, Lottie Lucas, Lula Fry, Ora Toney, Sarah Workman, Tom Davis, Toney, Virgie Brumfield, West Virginia
“Bess,” a local correspondent from Toney in Lincoln County, West Virginia, offered the following items, which the Lincoln Republican printed on Friday, August 22, 1912:
Mrs. S.J. Baisden is improving rapidly in health to the great delight of her many friends.
Jim Brumfield was a business visitor to Chapmanville Monday.
The young folks had a very delightful time peeling apples last Saturday night at the home of Mr. and Mrs. T.B. Davis, who were very entertaining.
Our school was discontinued Monday on account of not having the new text books.
Miss Lottie Lucas spent the better part of last week in Big Creek.
Mrs. K.E. Toney and daughter visited her mother near Big Creek last Sunday.
Mrs. Sarah Workman was the guest of Mrs. B.D. Toney on Sunday.
Miss Lula Fry, of Bulger, who has been visiting relatives here returned to her house on Monday.
Mrs. Watson Lucas and Virgie Brumfield were shopping in Ferrellsburg Saturday.
25 Sunday May 2014
Posted in Big Harts Creek
19 Monday May 2014
Posted in Atenville, Big Ugly Creek, Ferrellsburg, Hamlin, Rector, Sand Creek, Toney
Tags
Bernie Lucas, Big Ugly Creek, Blackburn Lucas, Chris Lambert, Clerk Lucas, Democrat, Dollie Toney, Emma Watts, Etta Baisden, Ferrellsburg, genealogy, George Thomas, Hamlin, history, Homer Hager, Jerry Lambert, life, Lincoln County, Lincoln Republican, Lottie Lucas, Maggie Lucas, Maud Dial, Midkiff, Rector, S.J. Baisden, Sand Creek, Toney, Ward Baisden, Watson Lucas, West Virginia, Wib Adkins
“Bess,” a local correspondent from Toney in Lincoln County, West Virginia, offered the following items, which the Lincoln Republican printed on Thursday, June 20, 1912:
We are having very warm weather and rain is needed very much.
Misses Dollie Toney and Maggie Lucas returned home a few days ago from Hamlin, where they had been attending the normal.
Miss Emma Watts is here from Hamlin for a few days visit with Miss Toney and the Misses Lucas.
Misses Etta Baisden and Maud Dial were the guests of B.B. Lucas and family Sunday.
Mrs. S.J. Baisden is much improved in health.
Clerk Lucas bought a fine pair of mules from Ward Baisden last week, paying $390 for them.
Chris Lambert and family visited Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Lambert, of Sand Creek, Saturday and Sunday.
The democrats held their district primary last Saturday at Atenville. A large turnout is reported.
Clerk and Bernie Lucas, W. Adkins, and Homer Hager attended church at Rector Sunday. The boys say they like to go to Big Ugly.
Misses Emma Watts and Lottie Lucas were at Midkiff and other points on the G.V. Ry. last week.
Wib Adkins and Watson Lucas have Geo. H. Thomas at Ferrellsburg.
Success to the Republican and its readers.
13 Tuesday May 2014
Posted in Big Creek, Big Harts Creek, Big Ugly Creek, Calhoun County, Music
Tags
Akron, Arthur Smith, banjo, Bertha Bias, Big Creek, blind, Boone County, Boone County Genealogical Society, Broad Branch, Calhoun County, Chapmanville, Clay County, Dave Brumfield, Dicy Thomas, Dolly Bell, Ed Belcher, Ed Haley, Ella Haley, fiddle, fiddler, Garretts Fork, genealogy, Greenview, Harts Creek, Harvey Hicks, Hewetts Creek, history, Hubert Baisden, Irene Hager, Jeff Baisden, Jeff Duty, Jess Chambers, Johnny Hager, Kanawha County, Kansas, Kentucky, Kith and Kin, Laury Hicks, life, Little Coal River, Logan County, Lydia Johnson, Madison, Mary Baisden, Morehead, music, North Fork, Ohio, Powderly, Riland Bias, Robert Martin, Rowan County, Sampson Thomas, Simon Bias, Spruce Fork, Texas, Trace Fork, Turley Adams, Ugee Postalwait, Victoria Adams, West Virginia, Wilson Craddock, writing
After his return to West Virginia, Johnny Hager took immediate notice of the large number of musicians who lived in the head of Big Harts Creek. His first cousin, Jefferson “Jig-Toe” Baisden (1879-1970), was a dancer and banjo-picker. J. E. “Ed” Belcher (1889-1970), who played several instruments, and Robert Martin, an Arthur Smith-style fiddler, were other significant musicians in the area. Ed Haley (1885-1951), a blind fiddler from Trace Fork, particularly caught Hager’s attention. Johnny’s desire to absorb Haley’s music was understandable because, as Jess Chambers stated, “It was a badge of honor to have played with Ed Haley.” Jeff Baisden, a cousin to both men, may have introduced the pair.
Johnny could supposedly play any instrument and his trip out to Kansas allowed him to soak up a variety of western tunes and playing styles which were completely new to folks in Logan County. Both of these qualities, his diverse musical capabilities and his unique musical background, ensured that he an Ed Haley had many intense music sessions. According to Turley Adams, Johnny’s great-nephew, Hager encouraged Ed to take his show on the road and volunteered to serve as Haley’s “eyes” on such trips. This willingness to travel, coupled with his apparent competence as a musician, made Johnny a perfect sidekick to Ed. Haley and Hager were both unmarried, a convenience which allowed them to roam the country with few cares or responsibilities.
Johnny and Ed traveled to various places in West Virginia but are particularly remembered up around the Calhoun-Clay County area north of Kanawha County. Aside from being populated with rural folks similar to Hager’s neighbors in Logan and Boone Counties, the area was also endowed with a host of great musicians. Haley and Hager wintered there as young men with a fiddler named Lawrence “Laury” Hicks (1880-1937). Ugee (Hicks) Postalwait of Akron, Ohio, a daughter of Laury Hicks, said that Ed and Johnny first came and visited her father in the early 1910s. Hager was a tall, slim banjo-picker. When Ed and Johnny left Laury’s home in the spring, with Johnny leading the way, Ugee and her brother stood on the bank by the house and “hollered and cried after them.”
Most agree that Johnny’s travels with Ed Haley ended around 1914 when Haley married Ella Trumbo, a blind music instructor from Morehead in Rowan County, Kentucky. Haley’s habit of cursing and drinking also helped end the partnership. Hager did not care for it.
For the most part, Johnny spent the remainder of his life playing music while boarding with his Baisden kinfolk on the North Fork of Big Creek. Irene Hager, a daughter of Hubert E. and Mary (Pauley) Baisden, remembered Johnny playing music on her father’s front porch in the late 1920s. Her father, a banjo-picker, lived at Greenview and the Big Branch of Spruce Fork of Little Coal River in Boone County. Hubert Baisden was Johnny’s first cousin. Hager boarded with him for several weeks at a time. One of Hager’s chores at the Baisden home was to keep wood in the stove. Irene said that Johnny often talked about his early travels with Ed Haley.
Johnny Hager was a man with little roots and family, a fellow who never had a real home. Many from Harts Creek remember that Hager was simply from the “the North Fork of Big Creek.” Dave Brumfield, a great-nephew, said that Hager stayed in that vicinity with a Thomas family. No doubt, this Thomas family was headed by Sampson Thomas who married Dicy Adams, a sister-in-law to Johnny’s sister Victoria Adams. Incidentally, just over the mountain from North Fork was the Broad Branch of Big Ugly Creek where lived a fiddler named Jefferson “Jeff” Duty (born about 1877). During Hager’s stay on the North Fork, he probably visited this musician (and any others in this locality) to learn a few new licks.
Hager also stayed with Simon and Bertha (Baisden) Bias on Bias Branch in Boone County. Mrs. Bias’ grandfather, Riland Baisden, was a brother to Johnny Hager’s mother. He spent a lot of time on the Garretts Fork of Big Creek with the Barkers before leaving them to stay with Wilson Craddock’s family on Hewitts Creek in Boone County. Mr. Craddock’s widow has a necklace which Johnny gave her during his time there. Lydia (Adkins) Johnson of Powderly, Texas, recalled that Hager lived with her mother and father during her “growing up years at home” in the late 1920s and 1930s. Johnson “was born (around 1923) and raised in Boone Co. just over the hill from Chapmanville.” Hager was a hard worker and was very efficient at “old-time” carpentry jobs and such tasks as digging wells. According to Johnson: “[Johnny] was a handy man, & a fiddle player. (Sometimes) a neighbor would need him to come live with them, to build them an out house for them. He was noted for the best out houses, he earned his keep by living with & helping others.”
Lydia Johson described Johnny as “a very neat man” and Dolly Bell agreed, stating that he always kept his hair cut and his face shaved. He never wore suits and never dated women so far as any of his family knew. In Irene Hager’s words, he “was a pretty straight fellow” and Dave Brumfield said he never drank when visiting his father’s home on Harts Creek.
NOTE: Originally published in “Kith and Kin of Boone County, West Virginia” Volume XXII
Published by Boone County Genealogical Society
Madison, West Virginia, 1997
Dedicated to the late Dolly (Hager) Bell
13 Tuesday May 2014
Posted in Big Harts Creek, Ed Haley, Music, Whirlwind
12 Monday May 2014
Posted in Big Harts Creek, Spottswood, Women's History
11 Sunday May 2014
Posted in African American History, Logan, Women's History
Tags
Charles Dingess, culture, Fannie Dingess, history, life, Logan, Logan County, slavery, West Virginia

Fannie Dingess obituary, Logan County Banner, Thursday, May 15, 1902
11 Sunday May 2014
Posted in Big Harts Creek, Spottswood
Tags
Alice Adams, Belle Dora Adams, Bettie Workman, culture, education, genealogy, Grover Adams, history, Hoover Fork, Island Creek, Joe Crause, life, Logan Banner, Logan County, Palmer Stave Mill, Sol Riddell, Spottswood, W.J. Bachtel, West Virginia, Williamson
“Oliver Winters,” a local correspondent from Spottswood in Logan County, West Virginia, offered the following items, which the Logan Banner printed on Friday, August 7, 1903:
The graded school at this place, conducted by Mr. Riddell, opened Tuesday with a fine attendance.
Misses Alice and Belle Dora Adams and Bettie Workman, three of Spottswood’s belles, are attending Institute at Williamson this week.
Joe Crause, foreman for the Palmer stave mill, wearing his genial smile, was making it pleasant for certain young ladies of Spottswood last Sunday.
Grover Adams has moved into his new residence at the forks of Hoover.
Mr. W.J. Bachtel has gone to Island Creek to accept a position in the Company store. W.J. is a hustler and will be a good man for the place.
As I look out of my window a troop of merry school children are trudging past. Their faces are ruddy with the glow of health. Their spirits are running over with joy. Their will is truly the “wind’s will,” and their thoughts “are long, long thoughts.” I see an other procession with a poor boy in it who is a cripple for life. He catches the inspiration and tries to be merry and gay, but something in his manner and looks speaks plainer than words of his pitiable condition. We too often forget the destitute and suffering. Bless the school children, they are now happier than they will be when they grow older and wiser. I have digressed from my purpose, but I have to think. Hope this will not reach the waste basket.
04 Sunday May 2014
Posted in Harts
03 Saturday May 2014
Posted in Lincoln County Feud, Music
Tags
genealogy, Green McCoy, Green McCoy Jr., guitar, history, life, music, photos, Spicie McCoy
03 Saturday May 2014
Posted in Big Harts Creek, Lincoln County Feud, Stiltner, Women's History
30 Wednesday Apr 2014
Posted in Ferrellsburg
27 Sunday Apr 2014
Tags
Abe Keibler, Appalachia, Charley Keibler, family, fiddlers, history, John Keibler, life, music, Ohio, photos, Portsmouth
23 Wednesday Apr 2014
Posted in Ferrellsburg, Green Shoal, Logan, Toney
Tags
Blackburn Lucas, Branchland, Catherine Toney, Clerk Lucas, Dollie Toney, Ferrellsburg, genealogy, Green Shoal, Hamlin, history, Huntington, Jim Brumfield, Joseph Elkins, life, Lincoln County, Lincoln Republican, Logan, Maggie Lucas, music, Nancy Elkins, Toney, West Virginia, William Elkins
“Violet,” a local correspondent from Toney in Lincoln County, West Virginia, offered the following items, which the Lincoln Republican printed on Thursday, April 13, 1911:
The weather is fine and the mud is drying rapidly.
The farmers are hustling about planting potatoes and preparing the ground for new crops.
The Death Angel visited the home of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Elkins on last Thursday and called from them their infant son. Interment took place in the Ferrellsburg cemetery Friday. We extend our sympathy.
There was a large crowd of persons assembled at the Green Shoal school house on Sunday and heard a very interesting sermon delivered by Rev. Adkins of Branchland.
Misses Dollie Toney and Maggie Lucas attended the examination at Logan last week.
B.B. Lucas spent last week in Huntington serving as Juror in Federal Court.
Miss Lottie Lucas spent a few days in Logan recently on a shopping tour.
Mrs. B.D. Toney was calling at Jim Brumfield’s, Monday.
A number of Guitar Harps have been purchased around here; plenty of music at every house.
Clerk Lucas took the examination at Hamlin last week.
23 Wednesday Apr 2014
Posted in Big Harts Creek, Ed Haley, Lincoln County Feud, Whirlwind
22 Tuesday Apr 2014
Posted in Ed Haley
Tags
Ashland, Catlettsburg, Catlettsburg Stock Yard, Doc Holbrook, Ed Haley, Ella Haley, Great Depression, history, John Hartford, Kentucky, Lawrence Haley, life, Mona Haley, Ohio, Pat Haley, Ralph Mullins, South Point, Ward Hollow, writing
Pat, slowly becoming the interviewer, asked Mona how far back she could remember and she said, “As far back as I can remember was Halbert Street. I can remember going out in the rain and standing out in the rain while Mom and Pop was fighting or Pop was fighting Mom — which that was probably the way it was. But it takes two to make a fight or an argument. I don’t remember whatever started it. I just remember Pop being mean to Mom, and that was on 45th Street. And the next memory I have is at Ward Hollow. 337 37th Street, that was Ward Hollow. And the next one was at 17th Street. And the next one was back up on 45th Street.”
Pat said, “When they lived on 45th Street that time had to be about ’48, ’49.”
Mona agreed: “It was, because Ralph was a baby. My Ralph.”
Pat said, “Good or bad memories are you talking about?”
Mona kind of laughed and said, “They’re all bad but there had to been some good ones.”
I said, “Bad stuff is easiest to remember. Most history and everything is told in terms of bad things instead of good things. Usually, if you go along a highway, most highway markers that you see commemorate battles and tragedies.”
Mona said, “I remember some good times with Mom. I remember seeing a lot of movies.”
Pat said, “That’s what Larry said. Said you’d see movies while they played.”
Mona said, “Yeah. I can imagine how Mom worried, too. I couldn’t sit there with her. They didn’t let us go too far away.”
Mona said she mostly traveled with Ella as a girl but remembered going with Ed to Doc Holbrook’s office where she watched him reach into her father’s mouth with something that looked like a giant spoon and take out his tonsils. Ed said, “How long do I have to do this?” and Doc answered, “It’s over…” and then they started playing music.
I said, “Did your mom and dad usually play around a movie theatre?” and Mona said, “Seems to me like it might have been a block or two away from the movies but that wasn’t very far.”
I asked what kind of places Ed usually looked for when he first came into a town and she said, “Pop always looked for a courthouse square or a YMCA — something where they’d be a lot of people around. He played at the Catlettsburg Stock Yard a lot, him and Mom.”
We made small talk for a few minutes — the kind that often signals the end of a conversation — when Pat said to Mona, “What do you remember about your childhood other than those bad memories?”
“I remember Mom playing with me and me getting a wash pan and washing her face and her hands and her arms,” Mona said. “Just with Mom, you know. Lawrence and I would take turns doing dishes and cooking for Mom and Pop. I remember playing cowboys and Indians with the boys and they didn’t like me playing with them.”
Mona was apparently quite the tomboy when she was a young girl.
Pat said, “I told John about how harsh they were with you about keeping your dress down and sitting property.”
Mona said, “Yeah, they were. They was rough on me. There wasn’t any ‘Come here, let me have you,’ or no love. Always ‘You do this’ or ‘You do that.'”
Pat said she figured Lawrence had been right in on all that and Mona said, “Why, I’d a whipped Lawrence. You remember Mom sent Lawrence to get me one time — I don’t know where I was – and he said, ‘I can’t.’ She said, ‘Why?’ He said, ‘She can whip me.'”
Pat said, “I’ve heard Mom tell that story. And he used to tattle on you.”
Mona said, “Yeah, he did. But I don’t know if I tattled on him or not. I don’t remember.”
A little later, when they were teenagers, Lawrence was so overprotective of Mona that he cut one of her boyfriends with a knife trying to run him away from the house. Ed was also hard on her boyfriends; he called one of them a “raggedy-ass-son-of-a-bitch.”
Mona told me about her memories of Ed in his later years.
“He retired from playing…period. I remember one time on 45th Street. I came over from South Point, where I lived, and I tried to get Pop to play some for me and Mom said, ‘He’ll never play no more. He’s quit.’ It was a long time after the divorce.”
I asked her if Ed had his beard at that time and she said, “Yes. I used to shave him with a straight razor under his beard. Trim it. He shaved hisself most of the time, but once in a while I’d shave him.”
She said Pop seldom took baths.
“He said it was a waste of water. He was like that guy that said too much bathing will weaken you.”
21 Monday Apr 2014
Posted in Harts
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