Affrilachian Poet Frank X Walker’s New Collection Explores The Civil War In Kentucky

Frank X Walker is a Kentucky poet who in 1991 became a founding member of the Affrilachian poets. 

Walker says the word “Affrilachia” “spoke to the union of Appalachian identity and the region’s African-American culture and history.” 

Walker has a new book, Load in Nine Times. Inside Appalachia host Mason Adams recently spoke with him about it.

This interview has been lightly edited for clarity.

Adams: Frank X Walker, thank you for coming on Inside Appalachia.

Walker: Honored to be here.

Adams: How did you first conceptualize this book? What planted the idea in your head?

Walker: Well, it came about organically. I had been hired to write some short biographies of Civil War soldiers for this new project in Kentucky called Reckoning, Inc. They wanted to take all these archival documents that were newly available and were being digitized, and alongside the invitation to do your own research, they would show examples of bios written by Kentucky writers. Then I realized this information that I was finding in these documents was so interesting, that I was more moved to respond with a poem than a traditional bio. I asked permission to also include poems with the bios, and they were very excited about that. 

After about a half dozen anonymous soldiers with no connection to me, I recalled that I had relatives, but I didn’t have very much information, and I asked them if they would consider my own relatives with their research. A week later, they came back with a 99-page document of pension files and affidavits and records connected to Randal and Mary Edelen, which were my third great-great-grandparents. That changed my whole trajectory, and I just wanted to write about them. I wanted to know more about them, so I abandoned the project I already started, and just focused on researching the Civil War and writing poems in response to what I was finding out about how it impacted Black families whose men and women were connected to Camp Nelson, which had a refugee camp in what is now known as Nicholasville, Kentucky. I passed by this place for decades and only visited maybe once or twice, but didn’t know how much of my own family story was present there, both Randal Edelen and Henry Clay Walker. Another great third, great great grandfather had been stationed there at the same time. Just knowing that I had family members who had been at Camp Nelson made me really interested in going back and revisiting. This book has kind of grown up around that idea of trying to capture that story that’s not singularly about the Civil War, but it’s about the challenges black families faced before, during and immediately after the war, and it tells a different story than the story than textbooks have put forth.

The dedication in “Load In Nine Times,” by Frank X Walker

Courtesy photo

Adams: So, Mary and Randal Edlin and Elvira and Henry Clay Walker are family members to whom you dedicate the book, and they also appear in the book at times. Can you tell us a little bit more about what you learned about them in the course of researching and writing this?

Walker: One of the things that first made an impact for me when considering that question is that my name is Frank X Walker, and the “X” in my name is not my birth name. That became my nickname in college, and then became my legal name when I became a practicing artist and writer in the world. I wanted to be known as Frank X Walker because the “X” stood for the unknown in the traditional Malcolm X, and that unknown meant I don’t know my original African name, and that’s where I traced my lineage to. And that unknown also had to do with the period of enslavement, when census records did not include the names of individuals who were enslaved — just to age, occupation, and maybe the color. So, the “X” represents all that history. When I’m going through these files, I kept coming across Mary Edelen’s name, and I noticed one day that her handwriting kept being a little bit different each time. I took the chance to zoom in on one of her signatures and realized that in between her name, in between Mary and Edelen, it just said, “her mark,” and there was an “X.” And a bell went off. I pulled back from that image and realized in that document, there were two signatures to the left of that that vouch for her signature. It took about two more steps in my head to realize that she was illiterate, and so somebody else wrote her name, and she had to put an “X” in the spot, and then that spot had to be identified as her mark, you know. So, she was Mary X Edelen, and I was Frank X Walker, and I thought I’d been the first “X” in the family, but here was this woman for almost the same reason, reaching across time to her third great-great-grandson, to communicate something. To me, that was a really powerful moment.

Adams: This is a poetry collection, but it really feels not so much as a collection of poems, as this widescreen experience of the pivotal moment in American history — immediately before the Civil War, during and then picking up the pieces after. We see this moment through all these different perspectives — enslaved people, their former masters and some historic figures as well. How were you able to squeeze your brain into all these different perspectives to tell this shared story?

Walker: What I learned, having written five previous collections of historical poetry, is that the more points of view that are present, the closer to the truth the entire narrative feels. This was a chance to talk about something that everybody knows about. There are literally thousands of books about the Civil War, but I was trying to come at it from a point of view that challenges traditional narratives. Kentucky’s neutrality and then joining the Union, it almost presents a romanticized notion of what the Civil War was in Kentucky, but almost none of those historical accounts share a point of view that’s from the black families, the soldiers and their family members, as far as the Civil War was concerned. I wanted to approach it from that direction, and I knew that I’d have to have villains and heroes. I wanted to make sure women’s voices were present, and the children were also included. If I was going to discuss enslavement, I needed to have the individuals who oppress the other people and their victims in the same space.

Adams: The first section really bracingly drops us into pre-Civil War slavery, and then the book progresses. Can you describe how it’s kind of constructed into three parts, and how it flows and why you chose that construction?

Walker: I wanted to make sure I told a full account of the Civil War through these soldiers’ eyes, which meant I’ve had to really unfold how they all came to be soldiers, and what the motivation may have been. The biggest motivation was when they changed the law and not just allowed soldiers in Kentucky to join up, but guaranteed that once they signed their names, their children and their wives and their mothers also became free. But I also wanted to make sure that the soldiers had a chance to tell their story. So the middle part of the book is mostly in the voices of soldiers who participated. Then once the war was concluded, I think a story that’s undertold is how much effort Kentucky, as an institutional space using legal means, tried to reinstate some of the benefits of having enslaved free labor available. There was a period of almost 10 years where there was this effort to put newly free people back in their place, and a whole period of domestic terrorism that was rendered upon free Black people by former Confederate officers. As you know, there were 25,000 African American men who joined the Union army. There were also as many Kentucky white men who joined the Confederate Army and then returned to Kentucky after the war. For 10 years, groups of them, sometimes up to 200 former calvary men on horseback rode around central Kentucky terrorizing newly freed Black men and their families and chased them off their new farms that they were able to purchase with their $300 that was earned money from having been soldiers.

Load in Nine Times, by Frank X Walker

Courtesy photo

Adams: When you were working on this book, what did you learn about the Civil War in Kentucky that most surprised you?

Walker: A lot of people think the Civil War is not over, and there’s evidence of those same battles for the same reasons are being fought every day, especially along lines of race and class. The landed, wealthy money corporation entities versus the people who have been dispossessed. Efforts to divide and conquer, divide peoples, particularly poor people, working class people, from each other and make them believe the enemy is that other person. I guess the energy we need to work on if we want to land in a better place is, how do we push against that division and figure out a way to support and push toward a common goal. I hope that people read these poems, and realize that they’re based on real human beings and get caught up and connected to the emotional stuff that’s infused in the poems. I hope they leave this book saying, “I felt something,” and will now think about this period in history differently, and will look for the lessons that I think are very self evident in this retelling.

Adams: Frank X Walker, it’s been an honor. Thank you for speaking with us at Inside Appalachia. 

Walker: Thank you, Mason. I really enjoyed the conversation.

Frank X. Walker’s new book is Load In Nine Times. It’s available now.

Frank X. Walker And Flood Stories Past And Present, Inside Appalachia

This week, Affrilachian poet Frank X. Walker has a new collection of poetry that looks at Black life in Kentucky before, during, and after the Civil War.

We also check in with the people affected by flooding in western North Carolina and eastern Tennessee.

A new collection of essays and poems remembers the 2022 flood in Eastern Kentucky witnessed by writers trapped at the Appalachian Writers Workshop.

And bird watching only sounds relaxing. Sometimes, it can get a little wild.

In This Episode

  • Frank X. Walker Explores The Civil War
  • Witnessing The Historic Flooding Of East Kentucky
  • The Historic Flooding in Western North Carolina and Tennessee
  • Endangered Birds of Appalachia

Frank X. Walker Explores The Civil War

Poet Frank X. Walker returns with his latest collection “Load In Nine Times.”

Courtesy

Kentucky poet Frank X. Walker co-founded the Affrilachian Poets Collective to challenge the idea that Appalachian identity is defined by whiteness. He’s published several collections and now has a new book, “Load in Nine Times.” Mason Adams spoke with him. 

The Historic Flooding In Western North Carolina And Tennessee

Flooding caused by Hurricane Helene has devastated communities across western North Carolina and east Tennessee.
Courtesy Blue Ridge Public Radio

Hurricane Helene left many without water, power or cell service in western North Carolina and east Tennessee. We heard reports from Gerard Albert III at Blue Ridge Public Radio and Riley Thompson at WUOT about communities struggling and coming together in the aftermath of the flood.

Witnessing The Historic Flooding Of East Kentucky

“Troublesome Rising” features writers who witnessed the 2022 flooding in Eastern Kentucky first-hand.

Courtesy photo

Flooding is not uncommon in Appalachia. In 2022, parts of Eastern Kentucky were also ravaged. Annette Saunooke Clapsaddle, an author from the Qualla Boundary, the territory of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians in North Carolina was at the Appalachian Writer’s Workshop in Hindman, Kentucky, when it was struck by the thousand-year flood. Her writing is included in the new anthology, “Troublesome Rising,” which compiles poetry and stories from writers who witnessed the flood. 

B-P-R and Grist climate reporter Katie Myers spoke with Clapsaddle about flooding in the mountains. 

Endangered Birds of Appalachia

Photographer and author Matt Williams hopes people who love watching birds can be encouraged to take a more active role in conservation.

Courtesy photo

Nature photographer Matt Williams hopes a passion for bird watching might lead people to conservation. He’s published three books of photographing wildlife, including his latest — “Endangered and Disappearing Birds of Appalachia and the Southeast.” Producer Bill Lynch spoke with Williams about the book. 

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Our theme music is by Matt Jackfert. Other music this week was provided by Amethyst Kiah, Larry Rader, Jeff Ellis, John Blissard, Sierra Ferrell and Blue Dot Sessions.

Bill Lynch is our producer. Zander Aloi is our associate producer. Our executive producer is Eric Douglas. Kelley Libby is our editor. Our audio mixer is Patrick Stephens. We had help this week from folkways editor Jennifer Goren. You can find us on Instagram @InAppalachia.

You can send us an email: InsideAppalachia@wvpublic.org.

You can find us on Instagram, Threads and Twitter @InAppalachia. Or here on Facebook.

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Inside Appalachia is a production of West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

Hurricane Helene Comes To The Mountains, Inside Appalachia

Hurricane Helene dumped nearly 30 inches of rain in parts of western North Carolina and east Tennessee. Communities are reeling from the devastation. We check-in with Lilly Knoepp at Blue Ridge Public Radio in western North Carolina.

Also, a new book illustrates the tiny worlds of mountain critters, like a lizard that changes color.

And White potters co-opted the African art of face jugs in the 1800s. A modern-day Black potter says his art can’t be replicated. 

In This Episode 

  • Hurricane Helene Hits Appalachia 
  • Rosalie Haizlett Explores “Tiny Worlds”
  • Reclaiming An African Art

Hurricane Helene Hits Appalachia 

Hurricane Helene brought flooding through Appalachia, including southwestern Virginia.

Photo by Roxy Todd

As we were working on this week’s show, Hurricane Helene hit the Southeast. The storm washed away roads and bridges, knocked out power and cell service and left a trail of devastation. Many people are still missing, and the number of confirmed dead continues to rise. Mason Adams spoke with Blue Ridge Public Radio reporter Lilly Knoepp, who lives in western North Carolina, near where the storm caused the most damage.  

Helene also rocked southwestern Virginia. Radio IQ’s Roxy Todd reported.

Rosalie Haizlett Explores “Tiny Worlds”

“Tiny Worlds” is a menagerie of little critters found in the Appalachian Mountains.

Photo by Rosalie Haizlett

In 2022, nature artist Rosalie Haizlett set out on a trip to illustrate some of the tiny “critters” of the Appalachian mountains. Her illustrations became “Tiny Worlds of the Appalachian Mountains, an Artist’s journey.” Producer Bill Lynch spoke with Haizlett about the book.  

Reclaiming An African Art

African Face Jugs came to America through Slavery. Artist Jim McDowell uses the art form to speak about the African American experience.

Courtesy

You’ve probably seen pottery with a face on it. 

There are lots of examples of face-shaped vessels out there — from cheap souvenir shop knick-knacks to museum-quality pieces that can sell for millions of dollars. 

Some are connected to African Face Jugs, an artform made by enslaved people in the deep South in the mid-1800s. 

In 2023, Folkways reporter Zack Harold traced the story of Face Jugs, beginning in the basement pottery studio of West Virginia artist Ed Klimek.    

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Our theme music is by Matt Jackfert. Other music this week was provided by Dinosaur Burps, Sierra Ferrell, Sean Watkins, Joe Dobbs and the 1937 Flood, Paul Loomis, Blue Dot Sessions

Bill Lynch is our producer. Zander Aloi is our associate producer. Our executive producer is Eric Douglas. Kelley Libby is our editor. Our audio mixer is Patrick Stephens. We had help this week from folkways editor Chris Julin. You can find us on Instagram and Twitter @InAppalachia.

You can send us an email: InsideAppalachia@wvpublic.org.

You can find us on Instagram, Threads and Twitter @InAppalachia. Or here on Facebook.

Sign-up for the Inside Appalachia Newsletter!

Inside Appalachia is a production of West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

New Compilation Shows Hip-Hop’s Roots in Appalachia

Appalachian hip-hop is the subject of a new compilation from June Appal Recordings, titled No Options: Hip-Hop in Appalachia

No Options collects 24 tracks of hip-hop from across Appalachia, showcasing the depth and breadth of the regional scene. Inside Appalachia host Mason Adams recently spoke with JK Turner, who produced the album, and Eric Jordan, also known as Monstalung, who appears on the album. Adams started by asking Monstalung how he first heard about hip-hop.

Monstalung:  That would be through my cousins. When I first lived in Cleveland, Ohio, like a lot of families do, the grandmas take care of the cousins while the parents work, so we’d go over my grandmother’s house. My cousin actually lived in Cleveland, but his brothers lived in New York, and they would come from New York to Cleveland and tell us about this up-and-coming art form that they heard about. It had some dancing in it. They did artwork and this thing rapping and freestyling. When we left Cleveland and eventually moved to Anstead, West Virginia, my cousin was still making those trips in the summer, so they were coming down to Anstead, West Virginia, and giving us more detail about the culture of hip-hop. My cousins were pretty involved in all the facets. My cousin, David, he did graffiti art in his notebook, he wrote raps in his book. I was already a dancer, so breaking and stuff. I was locking before I was popping. <laughs> And that’s all we did during those summers they came down, we played athletics and went down to the park and freestyle rapped. Then once I got to college, it kept on going, but I started getting more as hip-hop started to grow. I always related to the punk scene, because the kids in the punk scene, they were going through the same thing we were going through, because hip-hop and punk came up together. We were weird kids wearing weird clothes, us and the punk kids. When I got to college, I started finding people who like DJ Jon Quick. He was a mentor of mine at Marshall University. He’s a world-renowned DJ right now, but just watching him work on his craft. The Tougher than Leather tour coming to Marshall University on Run DMC’s tour. That had a very, very big impact on me. When I committed to music, to becoming an artist, that was after I heard Tribe Called Quest’s “People’s Instinctive Travels and the Paths of Rhythm.” It was that album that I was like, “I’ve got to do this. I’ve got to learn how to make music like this.” And from that on, I was like, “All right. This is what makes me happy. This is what I love. I’m committing to that.” That was like the early ‘90s.

Adams: I think it’s interesting. You mentioned punk and hip-hop coming up together. Not only are they about the same age, but they both have an emphasis on “do it yourself.” You can start a punk band, start a hip-hop group with very little equipment or experience. So in an era where everything is accessible through the internet, and you can hear not just hip-hop from Morgantown, but hip-hop from New Orleans, the East Coast, West Coast. What distinguishes hip-hop in Appalachia? 

Monstalung: The stories for sure. It’s us-against–the-world mentality. Everybody’s counting us out, or do they even know we exist? It’s finding your voice and repping for yours. When I moved back here in 1999 to do hip-hop with my brother, we made a conscious effort to like, “Let’s put it into music. Let’s give these kids something they can call their own.” We called our group 304 Recons. 304 is the area code of West Virginia back then, and we just made sure we talked about Appalachian living. We talked about trailer parks, hollers, you know. Things that’s going on in our world to give these kids something to be proud of. 

Adams: JK, you worked on the No Options compilation. You’re the executive producer. How did the compilation come about? How did y’all end up working with Appalshop and putting this album together?

Turner: Yeah, that’s interesting. It was a really fun time seeing it come together. My father is Dr. William H Turner. He’s probably … actually I checked it on ChatGPT the other day. I asked ChatGPT to tell me, “Who would I go to if I wanted to talk about Black people in Appalachia?” The first three things that came up were stuff my dad had a hand in. He was the premier guy to go to for the stories of Black people in Appalachia, and their history and the culture. He and Dr. Ted Olson from East Tennessee State had a podcast. “Sepia Tones” is the name of that. It’s about the history of Black music in Appalachia. Ted’s an ethnomusicologist at East Tennessee State. As they were doing that programming together and talking about the history of Black music in Appalachia, there wasn’t much chronicled. Especially with Ted being in that genre of Appalachian music, he knew about all kinds of stuff, but didn’t know about hip-hop in Appalachia. As they started talking about it, they do, as those types of guys — lifelong academics — do, and ended up writing a grant proposal to study and to produce an album of Appalachian hip-hop music. They won that grant and were able to take the money and partner with any record label. Appalshop and June Appal Recordings was the right place to go for this sort of work. My dad has a really long history with them, going back as long as I can remember. I came into this because those two guys, Dr. Olson, Dr. Turner, are in their 70s, not as plugged into hip-hop as you might want for someone trying to put an album like this together. So from the start, they asked me to lead the way as to how to connect with people [on] social media, and what to even be listening for as we’re curating the songs, what’s right for this introductory project we’re putting together. It was a very rewarding time to work with them and put it together. Late 2022 is when everything got rolling. It’s been time well spent, and I’m glad the product is out now and people are going to be able to hear this music we put together.

Adams: Can y’all both pick out a track from the compilation and kind of shout it out? For listeners who haven’t heard it, maybe pick one track and tell us what’s compelling about it, why folks should check it out.

Monstalung: geonovah. He has two tracks on there. It’s the first track, I think it’s track four or five,

Turner: Yeah. “S&S.” Number five.

Monstalung: Whew! That production on it, the beat production, is ridiculous, but you can tell he is a master-level MC. Just his flow, his delivery, the way he’s moving in and out of the beat. When it comes to different types of forms of hip-hop, I’m foremost a boom bap artist. I’m from old-school boom bap, and that’s the vibe he gave me.

Turner: I was talking to geonovah about that track. “S&S” stands for spirits and succubus. It’s about those addiction battles that you go through. Talk about Appalachian stories, being introduced to liquor at a very young age, and you know how this can become part of your life. 

Monstalung: I love it! I’m gonna steal another one. I’m sorry. JK. Sister Zock

Turner: Yeah, her track is “LOVE,” number 20. She’s actually a native New Yorker, but came to University of Tennessee, Knoxville, on a track scholarship. That was her introduction to Appalachia. She put together the Kuumba Festival in Tennessee. That was some of the first hip-hop shows they ever had at U.T.-Knoxville, were some of the shows Sista Zock put together years ago in the ‘90s. I’m glad you mentioned those two songs. I would mention the song “Show Up” from Stunna T. It’s number 23. Stunna T is actually incarcerated in Big Stone Gap. He recorded this song over the cell phone to his wife recording on the other end, and has made two full albums doing that that you can find online. We were able to get hooked up with him through June Appal, he and his wife, and had a great conversation with him, as well as some great song submissions. We were able to pick this one, and we’re real excited for him to get home in 2025 and hopefully we’ll be able to put some kind of tour together and feature him and these other artists to showcase his work.

Adams: Hip-hop is modern day folk music. I mean, just from what you all describe, you got it from other people. You got it from relatives. It was passed from person to person, and now y’all are carrying on that tradition. What does this compilation tell us about mountain hip-hop today?

Monstalung: That it’s dope. 

Turner:  Yeah, that’s exactly what I was gonna say. That it’s on the way up. This music is really nice. It’s so diverse, just the sounds of everything, and it’s all dope, like Eric says. It’s so many different voices. This is across states. Some states are more represented than others. Hopefully we get to do another volume and get even more artists on here. But this group we put together this time is just real nice. Some great songs, great perspectives, great storytelling. 

Monstalung: We didn’t get to hear the whole project till it came out. I knew the songs that I submitted, but when I heard the actual whole album, I was blown away hearing some of these other artists from these other areas in Appalachia, I was like, “Oh, we ain’t the only dope ones in here.” It was a really good album.

Adams: What did y’all learn from this album? Is there anything you picked up along the way? Some wisdom to impart?

Monstalung: It makes me think of just how to live and how we all have to work together. We might have differences in beliefs or politics or whatever it be, especially going to this, but shows how we can all, at the end of the day in the holler, if this dude know how to work on engines, it don’t matter what color he is, that’s who we’re going to and we all work and look out for each other. It’s just these little stories. I knew we’ve had these stories, and I’ve always felt like, I know so many artists within my state alone who had these unique stories, and just to hear these other areas like that too? I was like, Appalachia’s got a lot to say.

That was West Virginia rapper Monstalung, and JK Turner, the executive producer on a new collection of Appalachian hip-hop. It’s titled No Options: Hip-Hop in Appalachia. You can also check out Adams’ interview with JK Turner’s father, William Turner, as well as Inside Appalachia’s 2021 folkways story about Big Stone Gap rapper genovah. Monstalung’s newest album is An Appalachian Hip Hop Story Pt. 1

Hip Hop And Black Lung, Inside Appalachia

One of America’s greatest contributions to world culture … is hip hop. A new compilation documents what it sounds like across Appalachia. 

Also people in the region love their local water springs, but in Berkeley Springs, West Virginia, they take that dedication to another level.

And, congressional Republicans are trying to freeze funding for new mine safety rules. Advocates are concerned. 

In This Episode

  • “No Options” Explores Hip-Hop in Appalachia
  • The Watery Allure Of Berkeley Springs
  • The Continuing Battle Over Black Lung

“No Options” Explores Hip-Hop in Appalachia

Rapper Monstalung is one of the artists featured in “No Options,” a CD collection of Appalachian hip hop. Courtesy

Hip hop has been in Appalachia for about as long as the genre has been around, about 50 years. A new compilation from June Appal Recordings, “No Options: Hip-Hop in Appalachia” 24 tracks from across the region. Mason Adams spoke with executive producer JK Turner, and rapper Eric Jordan, also known as Monstalung. 

The Watery Allure Of Berkeley Springs

Fans of spring water come from all over to collect water from Berkeley Springs.
Zack Harold/West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

There are natural springs all over Appalachia. Before indoor plumbing, that’s where most folks got their fresh water. In Berkeley Springs, West Virginia, people still fill jugs with spring water to lug back home. In 2022, Folkways reporter Zack Harold visited the springs and brought us this story.

The Continuing Battle Over Black Lung

Assistant Secretary for Mine Safety and Health Chris Williamson moderates a panel on Black Lung and MSHA’s new silica dust rule.

As Appalachian miners cut into increasingly thinner seams of coal, they’re encountering more silica dust from rock. The dust contributes to an advanced form of black lung disease. Coal miners and advocates have spent decades negotiating with the federal government to add safety rules. When a new rule was finalized in April, advocates celebrated, but before it could take full effect, opponents threw up another roadblock.

Emily Rice reported.

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Our theme music is by Matt Jackfert. Other music this week was provided by Joshua Outsey, Monstalung, Tim and Dave Bing, Deep Jackson and Dinosaur Burps.

Bill Lynch is our producer. Zander Aloi is our associate producer. Our executive producer is Eric Douglas. Kelley Libby is our editor. Our audio mixer is Patrick Stephens. We had help this week from folkways editor Chris Julin. You can find us on Instagram and Twitter @InAppalachia.

You can send us an email: InsideAppalachia@wvpublic.org.

You can find us on Instagram, Threads and Twitter @InAppalachia. Or here on Facebook.

Sign-up for the Inside Appalachia Newsletter!

Inside Appalachia is a production of West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

Through Booms And Busts, Music Builds Hope And Community In Osage, West Virginia

Across the river from Morgantown, West Virginia is a small community called Osage. At one point, it was a bustling town full of people, industry, and nightlife. There have been a lot of changes here over the decades, but one thing’s remained: music. Aristotle Jones is one Osage resident committed to carrying on that legacy.

Jones is a professional musician and storyteller who plays what he calls “Appalachian Soul” – a mix of soul, R&B, doo-wop, gospel, funk, and folk. It’s an eclectic blend that reflects his identity as a Black Appalachian and specifically, his roots here in Osage. 

Roots that he can trace back to his grandfather, Robert Jones or “Brother Jones”, who was a coal miner, farmer and traveling gospel singer. 

“He would travel with his band throughout northern West Virginia to the coal camps, the Black, to the segregated parts of the coal camps,” Jones says. 

Jones lived with his grandfather for three years before he died. 

“He would teach me all these amazing, gospel songs that he used to sing,” Jones says. “He basically just started teaching me his catalog.”  

Aristotle Jones (left) and his grandfather Robert Jones (right) recorded several videos singing together before Robert Jones died in 2019.

Courtesy Aristotle Jones

Jones was raised in Huntington, West Virginia but would spend summers visiting his grandparents in Osage. He remembers playing in the creek, porch picking, and listening to stories about this little town. 

“I had heard these stories growing up, but once I lived here and experienced it, it became much more real,” he says. “We get to hang out in the middle of history here.” 

Living In ‘The Middle Of History’

In the early 1900s, dozens of coal mines sprung up along a tributary to the Monongahela River called Scotts Run. First came the jobs, then came the workers. Soon there were thirteen communities along Scotts Run. One of these towns was Osage. It was the hub.

Al Anderson was born in Osage in 1939. He’s a singer, shoe-repairman and somewhat of a local legend, known as the “unofficial mayor” of Osage. 

Aristotle Jones’ grandfather, Robert Jones, with his performing group “The Gospellaires” circa 1950. (From left, back row: Louis Snow, Robert Jones, Bob Williams. Front row: Luther Gibson, Lloyd Winfrey).

Courtesy Aristotle Jones.

“Up until the ‘50s, the only way to get to Morgantown was through Osage,” Anderson says. 

“The train come down all day long. Buses every 15 minutes, five or six restaurants, two theaters. The Bunny Hop was the dance hall. Everybody came to the Bunny Hop.” 

In its heyday before the Great Depression, there were around 5,000 people living along Scotts Run. And they came from all over. There were Ukrainians, Lithuanians, Mexicans, and African Americans. Jones’ great-grandfather moved here from Alabama as part of the Great Migration. 

In popular memory, there was a distinct culture of integration among the different ethnic groups in Scotts Run. It’s part of the history that many residents take pride in, including Al Anderson. 

“Everybody looked out for each other in this little town, Black and white,” Anderson says. “We had two schools up there, but we didn’t need two schools. The bell rings and we’re all back together. But when you get out of Osage, then everything was different, everything was segregated.” 

Jones says music played an important role in building community that transcended cultural differences. 

“What you get out of that particular time frame was the traditions of sharing music and making music,” he says. “Your blending of raw ethnic music coming from the different populations.” 

A mural in downtown Osage features the legacy of musician Al Anderson (left).

 Clara Haizlett/West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

Although there was a strong sense of community among the towns of Scotts Run, life here wasn’t easy. Since the economy was directly tied to the coal industry, it was boom and bust, up and down, pretty much from the get-go. There were strikes and mine closures, and then the Great Depression. 

Then in the 1930s, Scotts Run attracted national attention–it became a poster child of poverty in the Appalachian coalfields. In response, a New Deal program relocated some Scotts Run families to Arthurdale, a planned community where families would get new homes, plots of land and government sponsored job opportunities. But only white, American-born families were eligible for relocation. 

“See, they didn’t take Blacks or foreigners,” Anderson says. “And I think that’s part of where the stigma started.” 

Anderson says folks from the surrounding area looked down on the communities of Scotts Run, and Osage in particular. 

“It was like literally the other side of the tracks,” Jones says. “So a lot of folks from Morgantown would come over here to have fun in the bars and have fun with the music, but it wasn’t viewed as something that was highbrow across the river.” 

Jones heard these stories growing up, but when he moved to Osage as an adult, he began to question that stereotype. 

“I was like, ‘Why is my history the place you don’t go?’ And then I found the truth,” he says. “And the truth is, it’s a wonderful place that people didn’t want to acknowledge because they wanted to exploit.”

Aerial view of Scotts Run and Osage, West Virginia.

 Clara Haizlett/West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

As the mining industry declined, people moved away to find work elsewhere. Then in the late 1960s, another federal initiative shook the community once again.

A major interstate, I-79, was built right through Scotts Run, forcibly displacing many of the remaining residents–including Anderson’s family and Jones’ grandparents. It was part of a nationwide phenomenon where highway planners would build routes right through Black communities. Since the construction of the interstate, Osage has been nearly swallowed up by development.

Watch This Special Inside Appalachia Folkways story below: 

Finding Community and Building A Future

Today, the downtown of Osage has a familiar look to it — the look of a town marked by the boom and bust of industry-–boarded up windows, empty lots, a highway roaring not through it, but around it. The population of Osage has dwindled to about 80 residents. And while most folks have moved away, Jones has found his way back. 

“I never thought I would live in Osage,” he says. “But living with my grandpa really touched me because he was older. So he was telling these stories and it made me kind of fall in love.” 

After his grandfather passed away, Jones decided to stick around. 

“What you see now in Osage, it’s not the same as what it was,” he says. “But this end of the town is sparking up a lot of energy for those who want to be part of it. And I think it’s those that are seeking out community that see a future for Osage.” 

Just last year, Jones started the Osage Gospel ‘n Soul Community Choir alongside Anderson, with support from the Scotts Run Resonance Project.

Al Anderson says the Osage Gospel ‘n Soul Community Choir is “one of my favorite times of the month.

 Clara Haizlett/West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

Members of the community choir come from all over. There’s a few who grew up in Osage, but many are transplants to West Virginia. At this particular choir meeting, there’s a group of about 15 people, young and old, Black and white. There are even two people wearing onesies–a shark and a duck. At the front of the group is Jones, in a tan bowler hat, playing guitar and leading the choir in song. 

The group sings a variety of songs from different genres and eras, including many of the gospel songs Jones learned from his grandfather. 

“Me, I get to pay a little bit of tribute to the lessons I learned from my granddad, passing that tradition that meant a lot to me, to other people,” Jones says.

Aristotle Jones (right) and choir member Shelley Riley (left) singing “Oh, Happy Day” at the monthly choir meeting.

 Clara Haizlett/West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

The choir members aren’t the only ones making music in Osage today. Down the road, there’s a steel drum factory founded by Ellie Mannette, a musician from Trinidad. His apprentice Chanler Bailey opened up a studio where he teaches the steel drum to students of all ages.

“I do feel the sense of community blossoming,” Jones says. 

Near the end of the choir meeting, Jones leads the group in one of his songs called “Salt Of The Earth.” He wrote it as an ‘anthem’ for West Virginia.

The choir sings it twice, belting out the chorus: “Our roots run deep and we stand tall / We are West Virginia.” 

“I’d searched for a long time for a way to call West Virginia home,” Jones says. “So when I moved here, that gave me an opportunity to not only feel at home in my own skin, but to feel at home in my own state.” 

Jones says Osage has historically been a place where folks came from all over to find a sense of community and belonging. Now, over a hundred years later, Osage is still that place.

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Production assistance for this story was provided by Ella Jennings and Jake Taylor. 

This story is part of the Inside Appalachia Folkways Reporting Project, a partnership with West Virginia Public Broadcasting’s Inside Appalachia and the Folklife Program of the West Virginia Humanities Council. The Folkways Reporting Project is made possible in part with support from Margaret A. Cargill Philanthropies to the West Virginia Public Broadcasting Foundation. Subscribe to the podcast to hear more stories of Appalachian folklife, arts, and culture.

Tags: Real Appalachia, Folkways, WVPB, Arts & Culture, Inside Appalachia, Folklife, Music, Scotts Run, Osage, West Virginia 

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