Old School Fly Fishing Rods And Minor League Baseball Lore, Inside Appalachia

This week on Inside Appalachia, we meet a craftsman who builds exquisite, handmade fly rods and shares his love of fishing with others. We also talk about Appalachia’s nurse shortage, and we hear stories about Appalachian baseball.

This week, we meet a craftsman who builds exquisite, handmade fly rods and shares his love of fishing with others.

We also talk about Appalachia’s nurse shortage. Experts say tackling racism could help attract and keep more nurses.

We also hear stories about Appalachian baseball and listen to the story of how a minor league team in Tennessee traded its shortstop — for a turkey.

You’ll hear these stories and more this week, Inside Appalachia.

In This Episode:


The Tao Of Fly Fishing Rods

The path from making the fly fishing rod to using it is long, but still ends in the river.

Credit: Zack Harold/West Virginia Public Broadcasting

Fly fishermen are a different breed. There’s plenty of newfangled fishing gear out there, but some folks prefer to fish with hand-made rods made with traditional materials.

Folkways Reporter Zack Harold takes us along on a trip to the Elk River to learn more.

Nursing Crisis In Kentucky

Health care access is still a major problem in our region. Along with a lack of facilities, there’s a growing need for more nurses — especially nurses who are people of color.

WFPL’s Morgan Watkins reports. 

Reviewing The Story Of West Virginia’s Statehood

Mason Adams hears more about West Virginia’s split from Virginia, which was more complex than choosing to stay with the union.

Courtesy

If you live in and around West Virginia, you’ve probably heard the history of how the state split off from Virginia. But if your history classes didn’t get into it, or if you don’t remember the finer points, West Virginia University (WVU) history professor Hal Gorby explains what people get wrong about the creation of West Virginia.

Inside Appalachia Host Mason Adams spoke with Gorby.

Baseball Lore In Appalachia

“Tales from the Dugout: 1001 Humorous, Inspirational & Wild Anecdotes from Minor League Baseball” explores some of the stories of the minor leagues.

Courtesy

Minor league baseball is back. Through early fall, there’s almost always a game happening somewhere. Veteran minor league baseball announcer Tim Hagerty is the author of “Tales from the Dugout: 1,001 Humorous, Inspirational & Wild Anecdotes from Minor League Baseball.”

Bill Lynch spoke with Hagerty about minor league ball and some of Appalachia’s best baseball lore.  

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Our theme music is by Matt Jackfert. Other music this week was provided by Tyler Childers, Erik Vincent Huey, Jeff Ellis, and Alabama.

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.

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

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

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Inside Appalachia is a production of West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

New Book Explores Minor League Baseball Lore

Announcer Tim Hagerty says there’s more to baseball than just the game. He’s the author of “Tales from the Dugout: 1,001 Humorous, Inspirational & Wild Anecdotes from Minor League Baseball,” which takes a look at sillier parts of America’s favorite pastime. Bill Lynch spoke with Hagerty about minor league ball and even baseball in West Virginia.

Announcer Tim Hagerty says there’s more to baseball than just the game. He’s the author of “Tales from the Dugout: 1,001 Humorous, Inspirational & Wild Anecdotes from Minor League Baseball,” which takes a look at sillier parts of America’s favorite pastime.

Bill Lynch spoke with Hagerty about minor league ball and even baseball in West Virginia. 

The transcript below has been lightly edited for clarity.  

Lynch: Tim Hagerty, tell me a little about yourself. Tell me how you got into baseball.

Hagerty: Well, I was fortunate that my high school had a cable access broadcast station at it. So I got to broadcast games when I was 16 or 17, and I knew this is what I wanted to pursue. 

I grew up in Massachusetts and was passionate about baseball. I loved playing. 

I was the type of kid that, even in Massachusetts, if you asked me to name ten Kansas City Royals, I could do it. I knew the rosters. I knew the statistics. I was the type of kid that would read the box scores every day. 

And now in my job, that helps me, actually, because a lot of those players that I was following as a fan, as a kid, have become coaches and scouts.

Sometimes I’ll be in a press box, and somebody introduces themselves and I’ll say, “Oh, you played for Cincinnati,” and they sort of looked at me, surprised. 

So, I guess my childhood passion has helped me as an adult. 

Lynch: Where did your career take you? 

Hagerty: Yeah, I targeted a college – Northern Vermont University – that had a really specific broadcast program. And what was great about that was in a rural area that I was able to broadcast games for a local AM station. 

First job was in Idaho Falls, Idaho – beautiful city. That’s where the Royals AAA, excuse me, Royals rookie league team is. And it was there that I met a young player, Billy Butler, who went on to be a Major League All Star, and we’ve occasionally remained in touch, and he actually contributed the foreword to my new book.

So, it was fun to reconnect with him.

From there, went to Mobile, Alabama. From there, went to Portland, Oregon, Tucson, Arizona, and now I’m in El Paso, Texas with the Padres AAA team.

Lynch: So, what do you like about minor league baseball?

Hagerty: A lot. I think it’s the ultimate community event. There are so many fans who love the Cardinals or the Pirates or the Braves. 

But in smaller cities – there’s something about Charleston across that player’s jersey. That’s your city. That’s your professional team. 

What I also love about it is that in a lot of minor league cities, I hear from fans who say, “My parents brought me here. Now, I’m bringing my kids.”

And also, just how different it is. I’ve been fortunate enough to broadcast games, and about 60 different stadiums. They’re not all alike. You know, to me, the local ballpark is much like a local community. Each of them has their own flavor.

Lynch: Let’s talk about the book. This is your second book, isn’t it?

Hagerty: It is. Yeah, my first book came out in 2012. That was about the craziest team names in minor league history, including the Wheeling Stogies, named after a cigar. 

But my new book “Tales from the Dugout: 1001 Humorous, Inspirational & Wild Anecdotes from Minor League Baseball,” is about the wildest stories that have ever taken place. 

And speaking of Wheeling, in West Virginia, the oldest story that I found in my book takes place there in 1877. 

Wheeling puts together this promotion in which fans would try to capture a greased pig. And if you got the pig, you got to keep the pig. And what it taught me was that these days minor league teams do all sorts of crazy things to sell tickets and to get media attention. That’s not new. 

Wheeling was trying wild things in 1877.

Lynch: So, the research on this. Where did you find the stories?

Hagerty: I’ve always loved baseball research, and there’s a lot of different sources. 

The origin of this book, when researching something else back in 2012. I found this 1880s newspaper archive and it talked about a Texas league game in Austin that got delayed when a wild bull ran on the field. 

I don’t know about you, but when you see something like that, I want to know everything about this. 

The bull was kicking up dust. Fans are shrieking. It knocked down a fence. And that taught me that hidden in newspaper archives are so many baseball stories that a lot of people don’t know about. 

I went to the Baseball Hall of Fame Library in Cooperstown, which is a great resource. They have a lot of old baseball publications there. 

There was also the Spalding-Reach guide. 

It was an annual publication that baseball fans devoured. It was really the only thing of its kind from the late 1800s through the early 1900s. And it would have a lot of statistics and rosters and basic stuff, but also would have these wild stories. 

So, it was fun to flip through there.

Lynch: With 1,001 stories in your book, do you have one that’s a favorite for you?

Hagerty: Well, probably the one that took the most time to research – in 1978, there was a fly ball that disappeared.

AA Bristol was at AA Jersey City in the eastern league, and I wasn’t able to pinpoint the batter, but a Jersey City batter hit a high fly ball to right field and it vanished. It didn’t land on the field. It didn’t go over the fence. It didn’t land in the stands. And I know that sounds crazy, but I’m talking to players who are on the field at the time I corresponded with somebody who was in the stands and everybody sort of described it the same way, like, just speechless. What happened to this ball?

So, the umpires got together. They understandably don’t know what the rule is when a ball goes up and never comes down. So, they gave the batter a double.

Yeah, in tonight’s game in Charleston or Bluefield, if a ball goes up and disappears, there’s precedent. It’s a double.

Lynch: The book is called “Tales from the Dugout: 1,001 Humorous, Inspirational & Wild Anecdotes from Minor League Baseball.”

Tim, thanks a lot.

Hagerty: Thank you, Bill.

West Virginia Power Joins Atlantic League To Return Pro Baseball To Charleston

The West Virginia Power will take the field on May 28, 2021 as part of the Atlantic League of Professional Baseball.

“To have the Power back in the city of Charleston is monumental,” said Charleston Mayor Amy Goodwin. “And it’s not just for baseball. This community depends upon this facility thriving.”

The Atlantic League is composed of eight teams in two divisions. The West Virginia Power will play in the South Division alongside the Lexington Legends, High Point Rockers and Gastonia Honey Hunters.

The 2021 season will consist of 120 games with 60 of them being played at Appalachian Power Park.

“I am beyond excited to be a part of the Atlantic League and keeping professional baseball in Charleston,” said Andy Shea, managing partner for the West Virginia Power. “There is a very rich baseball tradition in Charleston, and it has been a true pleasure working with Mayor Goodwin and her staff to ensure professional baseball will continue to thrive in a major way,”

Shea also announced that Mark Minicozzi, who played in the Nationals and Giants organizations, will manage the West Virginia Power.

Since its inception, the Atlantic League has sent over 950 players to MLB organizations and more than 160 players have signed Major League contracts. Over 100 ALPB managers, coaches and administrators have worked in MLB organizations.

“Professional baseball is on the way back to Charleston,” said Gov. Jim Justice, offering his enthusiasm to this new deal for the Power during his COVID-19 briefing Wednesday morning. “You’re going to be able to see some of the best players in the world right here in West Virginia”

U.S. Senators Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) and Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.) applauded the decision by West Virginia Power to join the Atlantic League of Professional Baseball for the 2021 season.

“Since November 2019 I’ve fought to save our baseball teams across the state and I am pleased that every team has found a league to call home,” Manchin said. “I am proud of the resiliency of the team and coaches and truly believe that the Atlantic League will give West Virginia Power the opportunity to grow and thrive.”

Added Capito: “I am thrilled that baseball will rightfully be back in Charleston. America’s pastime is West Virginia’s, too, and everyone who played a part in ensuring the team remained a part of our community here should be commended and congratulated.”

Minor league teams in Princeton, Bluefield and Morgantown also lost their major league affiliates, but have been able to join new leagues to keep baseball this summer.

Bluefield Blue Jays, Princeton Rays Part Of New College Wood-Bat Format In 2021

Minor League Baseball detailed plans on Tuesday to reformat its Appalachian League to a summer “wood-bat” program for emerging college freshman and sophomore athletes.

The 10-team “Appy League” encompasses Virginia, North Carolina and both Princeton and Bluefield in Mercer County, where the Rays and the Blue Jays play respectively. Officials for the league, Major League Baseball and USA Baseball said in a statement the teams will drop their names and current logos before the new season begins next summer. “To mark this moment, all of our clubs will go through rebranding, creating names and logos that are unique to their cities,” Appalachian League President Dan Moushon said during a virtual press conference. “So in 2021, every Appalachian team will have its own identity.”

The league said that it’s identifying more than 300 college-level players for the new format. They’ll play a 54-game regular season and an annual all-star game.

“I think we settled on something pretty special here,” said Morgan Sword, executive vice president of finance and operations for Major League Baseball. “Fans are going to get to see top prospects right in their own towns. Communities are going to see an influx of new revenue opportunities. Players are going to receive state-of-the-art training, visibility to our scouts and educational programming that’s designed to prepare them for careers as professional athletes.” There was anxiety earlier this year that the Minor League would end its Appalachian League, which dates back to 1911 and has held more than 30 teams throughout its existence.

Both U.S. Sens. Shelley Moore Capito, a Republican, and Joe Manchin, a Democrat, thanked the baseball leaders during Tuesday’s press conference. “Today’s announcement is great news for Bluefield and Princeton, and frankly for anyone who enjoys watching our nation’s game in a West Virginia summer,” Capito said later in a written statement. “Through this new arrangement, our communities will host the premier baseball players in the country, giving West Virginians a chance to see baseball’s future stars before they reach the big leagues,” Manchin said in another subsequent release.

Emily Allen is a Report for America corps member.

'Batter Up, Baseball In Charleston’ Documentary Told Through Oral Histories

“Batter Up: Baseball in Charleston” features a total of 28 voices that were captured over the course of 25 interviews with each person sharing their memories of baseball games at the two parks. 

Batter Up, Baseball in Charleston is an audio documentary based on the memories of the people who have attended, and played in, the games over the years.

The documentary is based on oral histories recorded during FestivALL 2018. Twenty eight people sat down for 25 interviews to talk about baseball at Watt Powell Park and the new Power Park. The text of a few of the oral history excerpts are included below.

Stories in the documentary include the very first bat boy at Watt Powell Park with the Charleston Senators, tales of the Charleston Charlies in the 1970s and the advent of the Toastman — where it came from and what it all means.

Batter Up: Baseball in Charleston looked at baseball over five different periods:

  • Early Baseball
  • The Charleston Charlies
  • The Wheelers and Alley Cats
  • The struggle for a new ballpark
  • The West Virginia Power

Early Baseball

Watt Powell Park scoreboard dedication – Gov. Okey Patteson, Mayor Carl Andrews, Charleston, West Virginia, 1949, Mrs. Dave Cleland Collection, West Virginia State Archives

Baseball really took off in 1949 when the city of Charleston built Watt Powell Park in Kanawha City. It was named for Walter “Watt” Powell, who managed the Charleston Senators in the 1930s and served on the city council. He convinced the city to build the park, but died shortly before it opened 70 years ago.

The opening game when the senators baseball came back to Charleston, and my dad and the whole family went to the opening game. Hoby Landreth hit a homerun and someone else hit one. Joe Biggs was the manager, Hobie Landrith was only 19 and a great prospect for the Cincinnati Reds. He did make the majors later on. But it was an exciting night. And it was a full house. I mean, we used to draw throngs of people here full stadiums all the time and maybe average 4000 or 5000 people a game. It was it was just great to see the color of the grass. To hear the horse hide meet the hickory and to see all the happenings of that,  I fell in love. Harry Wallace

That Marlins team I was speaking of which was a triple A team for the Cardinals. That was like 61 I think and in 64 they won the World Series over the Yankees and several of the guys on that team had been on that Charleston team. Probably the most famous for not only playing but  broadcasting was Tim McCarver he was like 19 years old and the catcher for Charleston and he ended up with the Cardinals long for major league career and announcing career and there was a pitcher named Ray Washburn, which was one of their top pitchers for Cardinals for years. And they had a couple infielders named Dal Maxvill and Julián Javier who played for years with the Cardinals. They were all on that Charleston team. Jeff Dent

The Marlins only lasted one year. The owners moved them back to Miami. In 1962, Charleston  fielded a new team known as the Charleston Indians. They played for three seasons until Charleston was left without a baseball team in 1964.

The Charleston Charlies

After nearly a decade without a baseball team, baseball returned to Charleston, West Virginia in 1971. The Charleston Charlies were a Triple A affiliate of several teams, but started out with the Pittsburgh Pirates.

I spent the year getting an autographed baseball of the Charleston Charlie's team — Bruce Kison, Richie Zisk, Charlie Howard, Renny Stinnett. There's a lot of players on here that played up and down in the major leagues; Gary Kolb. This is all from the 1971 year, yeah, you can see the different color of pens used. May 24 1971, Charleston Charlies versus the Pittsburgh Pirates. You got Hoylman Huffman advertising on it, official scorecard $0.25 cents. And you got the regular programs. There's all kinds of they're interesting to look at from regular season. There's all kinds of ads in there. And there's actually a couple businesses that are still in business, you know, but most of them are long gone. Terry Hess

Dave Parker was playing with the Charlies and they took someone up. And it might have been Al Oliver. I don't know. I don't remember that. But they took somebody big leagues and he got mad and went home. And so when the big shots in Pittsburgh called him and told him to get back down there he said he wasn’t coming. If he played any more ball he was going to play in the big leagues. They said, "Alright. We'll take ya," and he never came back. He played 15 maybe 18 years. Cal Bailey

The Wheelers and Alley Cats

Next-to-last Charleston Alley Cats baseball game at Watt Powell Park, Photograph by Summers, Charleston, West Virginia, August 2003, Dan Summers Collection, West Virginia State Archives

The Charleston Charlies moved to Maine following the 1983 season. After again going without baseball for three years, a new team arrived in Charleston in 1987. Named for the historic riverboats that plied the rivers, the Wheelers were a Single A team. In 1995, the team changed its name to the Alley Cats and continued playing in Watt Powell Park until 2004.

The 90 team, and remember, Dan Wilson was a catcher and probably the most highly touted player, one of the first games he threw someone out at second from his knees. And I said, this guy might work out okay. The 90 season was a lot of fun although I believe that was also the first season of toast man. So not everything great happens in the same year. Phil Kabler

Speaking of the Toastman, he explained the origin story.

So somebody said you are toast. I thought, that’ll cheer because it’s, "You. Are. Toast." And so we just started saying it. And I made a little signs so people would join in. And that was 1991. And by 1992, we were doing it all the time and that's what 1992 is when we're heading back to the playoffs again. In '91 we made the playoffs,  '90 we won the championship, swept through the championship started counting down the outs at nine more outs for every game that we had a league we started doing nine more outs all the way down to one. And at one point, the hitting coach from the other team asked the Bat Boy Jason Caufield to come over and get a piece of toast. So I actually handed him around the corner and then went back to my business. Later I said, "What was that all about?" Well, he took it and he threw it in the lap of some guy who had been struggling and said, “Do you want to keep hearing about this. Or are you going to work on your swing?” Rod Blackstone

The Fight for the New Park and Power Park

Credit Courtesy photo
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Watt Powell Park during the Alley Cats period.

In 2003, after more than five decades of baseball, Watt Powell Park was to close its doors for good. The owners of the team wanted to build a new ballpark in Charleston. But not everyone felt the same way. Many had fond memories from the last season and last night at Watt Powell. Others dealt with the fight over the new park.

So I was, I guess, kind of the leader of a vocal group that was advocating for keeping the park where it is. Now, in hindsight, I still in my heart believe that with less money that the old park could have been rehabbed and it could have become a kind of interesting mix of history and new updated facility, you know. But given that, I'm really glad that the new park ended up where it is, you know, in midtown. Because there were some discussions about other locations that would have put it further west. I just can't imagine myself going to ball games driving from Charleston out there to go to a ball game. So I'm glad it ended up where it is, and it is a nice facility. Russ Young

When it came time to play the first game in the new park, some minds were changed.

We were totally against closing down the ballpark. Totally, totally, totally against it until I stepped in to Power Park for the first time. In less than 30 seconds I went, “I was wrong. This is awesome.” You know, things change, you know I missed the nostalgia of Watt Powell of course, but there are so many more pluses now because of Power Park. Danny Boyd

In 2005, safely at home in the new ballpark, the team changed its name to the West Virginia Power. They hoped to represent the entire state, not just the city of Charleston.

For many fans, baseball is the basis for lifelong memories, remembering time with family or friends, special moments watching the game.

Baseball is about the players and the friends you make. I just love the game, the way it's played. I love batting, I love fielding and I love everything about the game. I would rather watch it live than I would on TV because you get the atmosphere of the ballpark and everything. Gene Barker

Batter Up, Baseball in Charleston includes 25 interviews with 28 different people. They took time out of their own schedules to record their interviews. They are (listed in the order the interviews took place):

  • Alan Fleishman
  • Terry Haas
  • Jim Strawn
  • Phil Kabler
  • Rod Blackstone
  • Danny Boyd
  • Terry O’Fiesh
  • Mike Shock Jr.
  • Charles Morris
  • Russ Young
  • Danny Jones
  • Charles Houck
  • Jeff Dent
  • Jim Berner
  • Cal Bailey
  • Mike Shock Sr.
  • Robin and Jason Black
  • Lyle Sattes
  • Harry A Wallace III
  • Jim Workman
  • Gary Kolb/Lisa Hughes
  • Gene Barker and Karl Priest
  • Dick Noel
  • Andy Richardson
  • Jason Caufield

Each of these complete recordings are housed at the West Virginia Archives and History Library, West Virginia Department of Arts, Culture and History for public access, along with the other oral histories recorded as part of FestivALL.
This project was made possible with support from FestivALL, a city becomes a work of art; The West Virginia Archives and History Library, West Virginia Department of Arts, Culture and History; Ray, Winton and Kelley PLLC; and West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

Organ music courtesy of Matt Jackfert. Baseball crowd sounds were recorded at Power Park in Charleston, West Virginia. Roxy Todd edited the script and Patrick Stephens mixed the sound.

WVU To Host NCAA Regional Baseball Tournament

West Virginia University will host an NCAA Baseball Regional tournament this weekend for the first time in 64 years.

The 15th-seeded WVU Mountaineers (37-20) earned a spot in the NCAA Championship this past weekend. That’s despite losing, 5-2, to Oklahoma State in the Big 12 Championship final on Sunday.

It’s the 13th time in school history that the Mountaineers have made it to the NCAA Baseball Tournament, and the first time since 2017, according to WVU. The school last hosted an NCAA event in 1955, when Wake Forest won a best-of-three series, 2-1, in the NCAA District III Championship.

According to a WVU news release, the four-team NCAA Morgantown Regional will take place Friday, May 31, through Monday, June 3, at the Monongalia County Ballpark.

“We are super excited to host an NCAA Regional and welcome everyone to Morgantown,” WVU coach Randy Mazey said in the release. “This is a great opportunity for our program and all of Mountaineer Nation, and I know our team can’t wait to play in front of a packed Monongalia County Ballpark on Friday night.”

Texas A&M and Duke will meet in Friday’s first game, at 4 p.m. WVU will play Fordham at 8 pm. That game airs on ESPN3.

The winners of Friday’s games will meet at 7 p.m. Saturday, while the losers will play at 2 p.m. in an elimination game. On Sunday, the winner of Saturday’s elimination game and the loser of Saturday’s winner’s bracket contest will square off at noon, with the winner advancing to the Regional Final to face the winner of Saturday’s winner’s bracket game at 6 p.m. If necessary, a seventh game will be played at 4 p.m. on Monday.

According to WVU, due to extremely high volume of priority ticket requests for the Morgantown Regional, the general public sale of all-session tickets has been delayed until 9 a.m. Wednesday, May 29.
 
Additional information regarding general public ticket options will be announced later this evening at wvusports.com.

Tickets for full-time WVU students will be available on game day at the Monongalia County Ballpark ticket windows. Tickets will be free for WVU students with a valid student ID only to games that WVU plays in. Tickets to all other games will be $10. Students from other participating schools presenting a valid student ID from their institution can purchase a $10 general admission ticket at the Monongalia County Ballpark ticket windows on game day.

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