Community to Get Sneak Peek of National PBS Coal Wars Film

If you’re a West Virginia history buff, West Virginia Public Broadcasting and the National Coal Heritage Area had you in mind as they arranged a preview of a national documentary in southern West Virginia. A special sneak peek of The Mine Wars, a new documentary from the PBS AMERICAN EXPERIENCE series, is scheduled Thursday, Jan. 21 at 6:30pm, in the Hulett C. Smith Theater at Tamarack.

The evening will include extended program excerpts, refreshments, and conversation led by the series’  Executive Director and former West Virginia Public Broadcasting filmmaker,  Mark Samels.  The idea for the film came from Samels, who spent a significant period of his career in West Virginia.  He says he learned firsthand how deeply the Mountain State is connected to coal mining.

“This is a truly American story about people fighting for their dignity and the rights they believed had been promised by their government, but which had been denied by their employers,” said Samels, now at WBGH-TV in Boston.

The Mine Wars shows a different side of the miners, who were willing to do a back-breaking and dangerous job, yet who were often dismissed and denigrated by the rest of the country,” he said.

At the dawn of the 20th century, coal was the fuel that powered the nation. Yet few Americans thought much about the men who blasted the black rock from underground and hauled it to the surface. The Mine Wars tells the overlooked story of the miners in the mountains of southern West Virginia — native mountaineers, African American migrants, and European immigrants — who came together in a protracted struggle for their rights.

Credit Library of Congress
/
Labor Organizer Mary Harris “Mother” Jones came to West Virginia to convince coal miners to join the United Mine Workers of America. Photo circa 1910-1915.

“We are proud to bring back Mark Samels, who cut his teeth doing award-winning work while he was at WNPB, our station in Morgantown, like West Virginia: A Film History, the Different Drummer series, and several co-productions with the BBC,” said Scott Finn, Executive Director of West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

“We know those in attendance will find the evening both informative and fascinating.”

The Tamarack preview event is free and open to the public.

“The Mine Wars” brings the history of the struggle to unionize the southern West Virginia coalfields back to life,” said Christy Bailey, Executive Director of the National Coal Heritage Area.  “We are so pleased to co-sponsor this preview event and honored that some of the local historians who are featured in the film will be joining us to share their perspectives as well.”

The 2-hour AMERICAN EXPERIENCE film The Mine Wars premieres on PBS stations Tuesday, Jan. 26 at 9p.m.

W.Va. Mine Wars Story Spreading Fast, Thanks to this Guy

West Virginia is expected to be in the national spotlight on January 26 in an episode of the PBS documentary series, American Experience.

“The Mine Wars” is a two-hour feature that sheds light on a bloody yet pivotal time in West Virginia’s history that has often been mostly overlooked. But a class at Shepherd University aimed at West Virginia History teachers provides a personal experience with southern West Virginia and knowledge for those educators to take back to their classrooms.

“This is part of who we are, and it’s a history that’s kind of been suppressed, it’s been lost for a long time,” said Doug Estepp, an adjunct professor who works in Shepherd University’s Lifelong Learning Program.

The Lifelong Learning Program at Shepherd provides continuous education to teachers and community members.  Estepp is teaching a class on the West Virginia Mine Wars for the second time during the spring 2016 semester. 

Credit Courtesy of Kenneth King and the WV Mine Wars Museum
/

“I grew up in Mingo County, in a family of coal miners; my family didn’t talk about it, my grandfather didn’t talk about it; they would just kind of brush it off. I would see little hints; I would see stories about tent colonies and strikes, and they just didn’t want to talk about it, and that was kind of the way people reacted all around the state.”

The Mine Wars were a period of two decades at the beginning of the 20th Century when coal miners and coal companies clashed in a series of brutal conflicts over labor conditions and unionization.

And until the 1980s, major pieces of these historic clashes were left out of many West Virginia classrooms and textbooks.

Claire Webb is an eighth grade West Virginia History teacher at Wildwood Middle School in Jefferson County. Webb has been teaching history for six years, but this will only be the second time she includes the Mine Wars into her lesson plans.

Webb took Estepp’s class in the spring of 2015, when it was first offered. As a lifelong Eastern Panhandle resident, Webb wasn’t familiar with the stories of the southern West Virginia conflict, but when she found out, she insisted on sharing them with her students.  

Credit Liz McCormick / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
/
West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Claire Webb writes on her white board in her West Virginia History class.

“I did not realize how pivotal a role West Virginia played in the labor movement,” Webb noted, “and some of today’s fair labor practices were implemented upon the literal backs of West Virginia miners, and so I did not understand how crucial some of these boycotts, the strikes, the uprisings, the battle of Blair Mountain; I did not realize how formational they were to today’s labor practices.”

Doug Estepp takes his classes of educators on a three-day tour of southern West Virginia provided through Coal Country Tours. Estepp is also the owner of the touring company.

Eighth grade teacher Webb says actually visiting the region was the most beneficial part of the class and is even considering going back on the tour again.

“My first experience was taking the tour with Coal Country Tours,” Webb said, “We took the Mine Wars, the Coal Heritage Tour, and we visited about half a dozen spots around the southern part of the state that were relevant to our mining history, and prior to taking the tour, I hate to say it, but I honestly knew so little about this part of West Virginia History, and so taking the tour was eye-opening.”

Coal Country Tours formed in 2010, when Estepp took the first group through the coal fields. It’s something he’s passionate about and Webb says it showed in the classroom.

“It was so packed full of solid information,” Webb explained, “Doug is so knowledgeable about this subject and passionate, and so it was just an easy listening for two hours each week to all of his knowledge from the kinds of weapons that the Baldwin Felts detectives would bring, to the relationships between some of the townspeople, to the dates and of the struggles and the uprisings, and exactly things transpired in this part of the state.”

Credit Liz McCormick / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
/
West Virginia Public Broadcasting

Now, Estepp is hoping to reach an even wider audience with this class. Students can meet physically on Shepherd’s campus in Shepherdstown or in Martinsburg, but Estepp has also created an online element so that folks can participate virtually via webcam in real time.

“I’ve been getting the story out there for quite a while. When I got the chance to kind of roll it over into the Lifelong Learning Program that was even better, because now instead of three days with a few hours on the bus, I’ve got, you know, eight weeks, two hours every week to talk about this,” Estepp said.

Estepp will also be featured in the upcoming episode of the PBS documentary series, American Experience called, “The Mine Wars.”

The premiere will no doubt bring more attention to West Virginia’s critical role in the country’s labor movement.

Quick Facts on 2016 W.Va. Mine Wars Class:

  • Class begins on February 9, 2016
  • Any teacher in or out of state may sign-up at any time before the class begins
  • Classes are held either at the Shepherd University Shepherdstown campus or at the Martinsburg location. Classes will also be held online simultaneously.
  • The cost of the class is $147 (through Shepherd University)
  • There is a three-day tour component that is a requirement of the class.
  • The cost for the tour is $340 per person double occupancy, $379 single. Cost covers transportation, lodging, meals, and all admissions and tours.
  • The dates for the tour are April 23-24, 2016. Teachers may join the tour either in Shepherdstown or at Tamarack in Beckley.
  • Awards 3 credit hours toward professional development requirements.
  • The class is not open to regular students.

W.Va. Mine Wars Class Offered to Teachers

The West Virginia Mine Wars is a period of our state’s history that until around the 1980s was often censored or left out in classrooms across the state. But a new class through Shepherd University’s Lifelong Learning Program will offer tools for history teachers in West Virginia and beyond.

Coal Country Tours is a company that hosts individuals on trips to southern West Virginia. The history of the mine wars is something owner and tour guide, Doug Estepp covers during the trips.

Starting next academic semester, Estepp will get the word out to even more folks with a class through Shepherd University.

“I grew up in Mingo County in a family of coal miners,” Estepp said, “My family didn’t talk about it; my grandfather didn’t talk about it, they would just kind of brush it off when I would see little hints, I would see stories about tent colonies and strikes, and they just didn’t want to talk about it, and people, that was kind of the way people reacted all around the state.”

Estepp’s class is designed for teachers to learn about the mine wars and get the tools they need to bring the stories into the West Virginia History class.

Quick Facts on 2016 W.Va. Mine Wars Class:

  • Class begins on January 12, 2016
  • Any teacher in or out of state may sign-up at any time before the class begins
  • Classes are held at the Shepherd University Martinsburg campus and online simultaneously.
  • The cost of the class is $147 (through Shepherd University)
  • There is a two-day tour component that is a requirement of the class.
  • The cost for the tour is $340 per person double occupancy, $379 single. Cost covers transportation, lodging, meals, and all admissions and tours.
  • The dates for the tour are April 23-24, 2016. Teachers may join the tour either in Shepherdstown or at Tamarack in Beckley.
  • Awards 3 credit hours toward professional development requirements
  • The class is not open to regular students

Estepp says there will be projects and reading assignments for the class, and the first assignment will be to watch, “The Mine Wars” on PBS’ American Experience, which premieres the same day as the first class.

Don't Miss This Tribute to Walt Disney

Watch American Experience: Walt Disney, a two-part presentation Monday, September 14 at 9:30 p.m. and Tuesday, September 15 at 9 p.m.

Walt Disney was uniquely adept at art as well as commerce, a master filmmaker who harnessed the power of technology and storytelling. This film examines Disney’s complex life and enduring legacy, featuring rare archival footage from the Disney vaults, scenes from some of his greatest films, and interviews with biographers, animators and artists who worked on early films, including Snow White, and the designers who helped turn his dream of Disneyland into reality.

RSVP for a Preview of 'Last Days in Vietnam'

Join a live online screening event featuring the Academy Award-nominated documentary Last Days in Vietnam. A special guest appearance by filmmaker Rory Kennedy kicks off a 50-minute preview of the PBS film.

Chat with a live panel of veterans and Vietnamese Americans from the film that escaped hours before the fall of Saigon 40 years ago this April.

Panelists include senior director Ron Pierce, South Vietnamese native and American immigrant Binh Pho and U.S.S. Kirk Commander Hugh Doyle (retired).

Follow this link to RSVP for the screening and a live chat with the panel.

Last Days in Vietnam, directed and produced by Rory Kennedy, recounts the chaotic final days of the Vietnam War and follows the unlikely heroes as they attempt to save as many South Vietnamese as possible.The program premieres on Tuesday, April 28 at 9 p.m. on West Virginia Public Broadcasting.  

Special Programs Look At The Impact Of The Vietnam War

On April 27 and 28, West Virginia Public Broadcasting presents two nights of programs that look back at the era of the Vietnam War, 1964 through 1975. From the politics of the time, the protests, the casualties and finally the fall of Saigon, these programs reflect on the impact of the events that saw about 36,578 West Virginians serving, and ultimately reporting the highest death rate among all states. 

Watch these programs at the scheduled broadcast times on WVPB, or afterward for a limited time at wvpublic.org. You can also download and print a flyer about these programs.

The Draft    Monday, April 27 at 9 p.m.    The question of who serves in America’s military has shaped battle strategy and foreign policy and stranded Americans in uniform for years on distant battlefields. From the Civil War to the conflicts of the Vietnam era, forced military service has torn the nation apart — and sometimes, as in WWII, united Americans in a common purpose. Hear how a single, controversial issue continues to define America.

Dick Cavett’s Vietnam    Monday, April 27 at 10 p.m. 

On the 40th anniversary of the official end of the Vietnam War, this program examines the war and impact on America through the prism of interviews conducted by the iconic host of “The Dick Cavett Show,” which featured thoughtful conversation and debate from all sides of the political spectrum. The program combines interviews from Cavett’s shows with archival footage, network news broadcasts and audio/visual material from the National Archives to provide insight and perspective on this controversial chapter of American history.

The Day the 60’s Died    Tuesday, April 28 at 8 p.m.

Credit Courtesy of Howard Ruffner
/
May 4, 1970. Students retreat up Blanket Hill as guards advance with tear gas.

In May 1970, four students were shot dead at Kent State. The mayhem that followed has been called the most divisive moment in American history since the Civil War. From college campuses to the jungles of Cambodia, to the Nixon White House, The Day the 60’s Died returns to that turbulent spring 45 years ago.

Last Days in Vietnam: American Experience    Tuesday, April 28 at 9 p.m.

April 1975. During the chaotic final days of the Vietnam War, as the North Vietnamese Army closed in on 

Credit American Experience
/
American Experience

  Saigon, South Vietnamese resistance crumbled. City after city and village after village fell to the north while the few U.S. diplomats and military operatives still in the country contemplated withdrawal. With the lives of thousands of South Vietnamese hanging in the balance, those in control faced an impossible choice––who would go and who would be left behind to face brutality, imprisonment, or even death.  

This Academy Award-nominated film, directed and produced by Rory Kennedy, is scheduled in conjunction with the 40th anniversary of the fall of Saigon. The broadcast will contain additional footage not seen during the film’s theatrical release. 

Exit mobile version