David B. Frye
20 Sunday Jul 2014
20 Sunday Jul 2014
20 Sunday Jul 2014
Posted in Big Harts Creek, Ed Haley, Music
16 Wednesday Jul 2014
Posted in Big Sandy Valley, Culture of Honor, Hatfield-McCoy Feud
Tags
Appalachia, Big Sandy River, blood poisoning, crime, Frank Phillips, genealogy, Hatfield-McCoy Feud, history, Huntington Advertiser, Kentucky, Mingo County, Pike County, Sheriff Keadle, U.S. South, West Virginia, Williamson

“His Last Fight: Frank Phillips is Given Up to Die,” Huntington (WV) Advertiser, 28 September 1895
15 Tuesday Jul 2014
Posted in Big Harts Creek, Spottswood
14 Monday Jul 2014
Posted in Big Harts Creek, Culture of Honor, Harts
13 Sunday Jul 2014
Posted in Fourteen
Tags
Andrew Elkins, Appalachia, Church of Christ, Elizabeth Elkins, history, Lincoln County, Marvel Elkins, photos, preacher, religion, U.S. South, United Baptist, West Virginia

Marvel Elkins (1866-1935), son of Andrew and Elizabeth (Elkins) Elkins, resident of Fourteen, Lincoln County, WV
12 Saturday Jul 2014
Posted in Big Harts Creek, Whirlwind
11 Friday Jul 2014
Posted in Big Harts Creek, Culture of Honor, Harts, Lincoln County Feud, Stiltner
10 Thursday Jul 2014
Posted in Big Harts Creek, Culture of Honor, Lincoln County Feud, Timber, Warren
10 Thursday Jul 2014
Posted in Ferrellsburg
07 Monday Jul 2014
Posted in Cemeteries, Ed Haley, Inez, Lincoln County Feud
Tags
Appalachia, Aquillia Porter, Bill Duty, Bill Fields, Billy Adkins, Brandon Kirk, cemetery, Ed Haley, genealogy, Graveyard Point, Hinkle Valley Road, history, Inez, James A Garfield, Jim Webb, Joe Fannin, John W Runyon, Kentucky, Lawrence County, Leonard Porter, Martin County, Mary Runyon, Mary Runyon Fields, Mary United Baptist Church, Milo, Nat's Creek, Peach Orchard, Route 1884, Route 40, Samuel W. Porter, Stidham, Tomahawk, U.S. South, Walt Mollett, Wealthy Fry, Webb Music Store, writing
A month or so after “striking out” on the Ed Haley house, Brandon and Billy drove to Inez, Kentucky, and searched for more information about John Runyon. Venturing north of the county seat, they met Leonard Porter, who lived in a little settlement called Tomahawk. Porter remembered Mrs. Runyon staying with Mary Fields in a small house at the mouth of nearby Hall Branch and said she was likely buried in the Fields family cemetery on a point at nearby Hall Branch Road. Billy and Brandon headed up there, where they found the grave of Bill Fields (1882-1948) and Mary Fields (1888-1985), but none of John Runyon’s family. Just down the hill from the cemetery (presently a trailer court) was the old homestead of Mr. and Mrs. Fields. At one time, they later discovered, the Fieldses ran a store beside of their home. Across the road was the location of the former Mary United Baptist Church — named for Mary Runyon or Mary Fields – now converted into a house. As they stood on the hill, Billy reminded Brandon that Bill Duty’s mother-in-law was a Fields prior to her marriage.
They next tried to find the location of John Runyon’s homeplace. According to the Williamson family history, Runyon lived at the “old Stidham post office,” which they figured was located on Rockhouse Fork. Unfortunately, they found no sign of “Stidham” up the many branches of Rockhouse. There were no mailboxes labeled “RUNYON” or any signs to help them along. Many of the names of local hollows had changed since the time of the old deeds.
Feeling a little desperate, they pulled into a driveway with a mailbox labeled “HINKLE” and spoke with a very nice middle-aged man who told them the exact location of the old Stidham Post Office — actually, all three of them. The first location ran by Joe Fannin was situated at the mouth of Spence Branch near Milo. Around 1935, the office was relocated to a site on what is now called Hinkle Valley Road, just across the creek from a sign reading “Left Fork.” The final Stidham Post Office was in what is today James Webb’s Music Store. Upon viewing the sites, Billy deduced that the old Runyon homeplace had been near the second post office.
While in that vicinity, they talked with an elderly man named Walt Mollett who confirmed that John Runyon had been a local resident. He said Runyon was probably buried down the road in a cemetery on Graveyard Point at Stidham, basically the junction of Route 1884 and Route 40.
A few minutes later they were at the cemetery, parking beside the road in a treacherous curve and tromping through a forest of damp growth. At the center of the cemetery was a single, ancient pine tree. Near the pine, Brandon spotted the grave of Runyon’s daughter, Wealthy Fry. Just below her was Aquillia Porter. And below her was a grave with a new tombstone written as “Mary M. Runyons” and dated “January 28, 1861-January 29, 1958.” Beside of Wealthy Fry’s final resting place was an older stone originally created for “Mary Runyon” dated “January 28, 1861-January 29, 1956.” There were plenty of Williamsons in the cemetery — all relation to Mrs. Runyon — including Sam Porter’s second wife — but absolutely no sign of John Runyon’s grave.
Jim Webb, a gentle middle-aged musician and proprietor of Webb’s Music Store, told Brandon and Billy that someone had wrecked in the cemetery a few years earlier and destroyed many of the tombstones. Equally tragic, the wrecker that removed the vehicle from the cemetery had caused more damage to the stones. The community had organized a fund to restore the graves, Webb said, but it was little consolation. Brandon theorized that John was buried beside of Wealthy — that someone had used Mary’s old tombstone to “sort of” mark the spot. He didn’t rule out, though, that Runyon had been buried with his parents on nearby Nat’s Creek in Lawrence County. (The Graveyard Point cemetery was more oriented toward his wife’s family, the Williamsons.) A quick drive to Nat’s Creek, including a tour of the “town” of Peach Orchard (a virtually abandoned coal town once prominent in business affairs and the site of a General Garfield Civil War story), failed to produce any signs of a Runyon cemetery, although it did offer some of the most serene, peaceful, spooky and haunting countryside found in the locale.
Brandon felt a real frustration in not being able to positively find Runyon’s grave and thus achieve some sense of closure on that facet of the story. It was as if he and Billy, whose ancestors had supposedly spent years looking for Runyon, had also been evaded by ole John — even in his death.
05 Saturday Jul 2014
Posted in Harts, Lincoln County Feud
01 Tuesday Jul 2014
Posted in Big Harts Creek, Civil War, Ed Haley, Lincoln County Feud
Tags
34th Battalion Virginia Cavalry, civil war, Ed Haley, genealogy, history, Jackson Mullins, Logan County, U.S. South, Vincent A. Witcher, West Virginia

Jackson Mullins military record, Company D, 34th Battalion Virginia Cavalry, 1862-1863

Jackson Mullins military record, Company D, 34th Battalion Virginia Cavalry, 1862-1863

Jackson Mullins military record, Company D, 34th Battalion Virginia Cavalry, 1862-1863
30 Monday Jun 2014
Posted in Big Harts Creek, Lincoln County Feud, Stiltner, Women's History
28 Saturday Jun 2014
Tags
Allen B. Straton, Bella Wilkinson, civil war, David Straton, genealogy, Henry Clay Ragland, history, James A. Nighbert, John B. Wilkinson, John F. Aldridge, Logan Banner, Logan County, Mary Perry, Minnie Straton, photos, U.S. South, Vicie Nighbert, West Virginia, West Virginia Legislature, William Straton, Williamson

Major William Straton headstone, Logan, WV, 2010

William Straton obituary, Logan (WV) Banner, July 2, 1903

William Straton obituary, Logan (WV) Banner, July 2, 1903

William Straton obituary, Logan (WV) Banner, July 2, 1903

Major William Straton footstone, Logan, WV, 2010
28 Saturday Jun 2014
Posted in Atenville, Big Harts Creek, Civil War, Green Shoal
Tags
34th Battalion Virginia Cavalry, Admiral S. Fry, Appalachia, Barney Carter, civil war, Harts Creek, history, James M. Merritt, Levi Collins, Logan County, M.H. Waldron, Philip Hager Sr., Spencer A. Mullins, T.R. Ferrell, U.S. South, West Virginia

List of officers, Company D, 34th Battalion Virginia Cavalry, CSA
26 Thursday Jun 2014
Posted in Dingess
Tags
Appalachia, culture, genealogy, history, Jim Kirk, life, moonshine, moonshining, photos, U.S. South
25 Wednesday Jun 2014
Posted in Big Harts Creek, Culture of Honor, Ed Haley, Lincoln County Feud, Spottswood
23 Monday Jun 2014
Posted in Big Harts Creek, Spottswood
22 Sunday Jun 2014
Posted in Green Shoal, Lincoln County Feud
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