This week on Inside Appalachia, during a pandemic, where do you give birth? Also, we’ll have the story of a family that
cultivated an heirloom tomato in West Virginia. It took a lot of work. And, a musical tradition brought people together — even when they couldn’t gather in person.
The small town with a population of less than 500 people already has a big history. During the 1920’s coal miners were fighting for equal pay and better working conditions. While dramatized, historians say the 1987 Jan Sayles film Matewan captures the atmosphere of the regional situation at the time.
While much has changed, the fighting spirit of Matewan is still alive and well. As one of the winners of the Turn this Town Around Project, the community has pulled together, yet again, in the last two months hosting community clean up days, and a community meeting which was standing room only.
More than 75 people packed into the United Mine Workers of America Local 1440 Union Building late last month to hear from Kent Spellman of the West Virginia Community Development HUB. The HUB is providing tools, technical assistance and possible funding for Matewan during the ‘Turn Town Around’ project.
Credit West Virginia Public Broadcasting
/
West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Kent Spellman of The West Virginia Community Development Hub talks during the community meeting for Matewan as part of the Turn This Twon Around project.
Some of the proposed projects include a garden club, a souvenir shop with longer hours, a Hatfield and McCoy Festival, historical underground coal mine, and more.
“We came into an abandoned high school that was recently shut down in our local home town that we actually both graduated from,” Justin Bradford said.
Bradford along with his partners already have a jump start on one of the goals; making a community center out of the high school.
Bradford is co-owner of the Old School Fitness Center, formerly Matewan High School. The owners have worked out a lease agreement with the town and worked to renovate several rooms. Bradford said so far Old School Fitness hosts a small arcade, usable gymnasium, and a workout or fitness center.
Bradord said the community support has been overwhelming. He sees the center as a place for folks to exercise during the cold winter months. Bradford also hopes to provide monthly gun shows, professional wrestling, and even the Rough and Rowdy Feud.
You might be familiar with the Rough and Rowdy brawl, a boxing match between amateur fighters. The feud would be exclusive to Kentucky and West Virginia fighters similar to the Hatfield and McCoy Feuds that played out along the border of the two Appalachian states.
Pride in the ability to withstand a ‘tough blow’ is part of West Virginia culture. But Spellman says the project is meant to help channel and organize that pride, without settling.
“Here in West Virginia we are really, really proud of our ability to survive all sorts of challenges and adversarial situations,” Spellman said. “Whether it’s floods or declining population or the railroad closing whatever it is we are really, really proud of our ability of surviving.”
“I’m going to challenge you to quit being proud of surviving. Quit being proud of surviving, start being proud of thriving,” he added.
Hopefully that means each citizen will then thrive as well. Spellman says the project will only work if it’s locally determined, and locally driven.
A re-enactment of the Matewan Massacre along with a festival is scheduled for Saturday May 17. The Rough and Rowdy Feud is scheduled for June 6 and 7.
This week on Inside Appalachia, during a pandemic, where do you give birth? Also, we’ll have the story of a family that
cultivated an heirloom tomato in West Virginia. It took a lot of work. And, a musical tradition brought people together — even when they couldn’t gather in person.
Almost everyone has heard of the Mothman — West Virginia’s best known cryptid. But have you heard of Veggie Man? That’s another West Virginia cryptid. And it helped inspire a zine project from the Frank and Jane Gabor West Virginia Folklife Center at Fairmont State University. Producer Bill Lynch spoke with the center’s director, Lydia Warren, about the forthcoming publication, which is taking submissions.
Our spring broadcast season continues this week with a premiere episode of Mountain Stage, recorded at the Culture Center Theater in Charleston, WV. Host Kathy Mattea welcomes Oliver Wood, Stephen Wilson Jr., Dar Williams, TopHouse, and Cloud Cult.
Five years ago, the COVID-19 lockdowns kept a lot of people out of public spaces — and a lot of artists used that time to create. Like the Cornelius Eady Trio. The group is organized around Cornelius Eady, a poet and professor at the University of Tennessee at Knoxville, whose writing has been nominated for the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award. With the help of musicians Lisa Liu and Charlie Rauh, Eady puts his words to music.