'Growing Up Black In Appalachia': How One Storyteller Is Changing The Narrative

W.I. “Bill” Hairston is a professional storyteller. He spins tales about a number of different topics  —  some made up and some real. 

During a recent talk at the West Virginia State University Economic Development Center on Charleston’s West Side he devoted his entire presentation to the topic “Growing Up Black in Appalachia.”

Hairston was originally born in Phenix City, Alabama in 1949. He describes the area of the town where he lived as being predominantly black. 

“My dentist was black. My teachers were black. The lawyers were black. The pharmacists were black  —  everybody was black,” he said. “White folks sort of showed up here and there, and they were in town, but they were in another part of town for one thing. And other than the mailman and the potato chip guy that came to the store and the store owner, we really didn’t see a lot of white folks on a regular basis.”

That all changed for Hairston when his father announced he was retiring from the military and they were moving to join Hairston’s grandfather in the predominantly white town of St. Albans, West Virginia. Hairston said his family was the only one of color in the area. 

As kids do, Hairston and his younger sister spent that first summer in West Virginia playing with the neighborhood kids. As summer came to an end, it was time for Hairston and his sister to go to school, and unbeknownst to them West Virginia’s schools were desegregated.

“We noticed that the little white kids that we played with all summer long were walking with us and we sort of said to ourselves, “Well, maybe, maybe they use the same bus stop.” And we got on the bus and right behind us came these white kids. We said, “Well, maybe they use the same bus,”” Hairston said.

Sixty years later Hairston considers himself a West Virginian, and although he said he has faced racism, it is because of those difficult experiences that he became a storyteller. He added that growing up storytelling was a form of entertainment.

“It goes all the way back to St. Albans. People would just sort of sit on their porch and share all kinds of stories,” he said. 

For his last two years of high school, Hairston moved to Charleston’s West Side. 

“There was a place right over here. There was a VFW club with a big ol’ oak tree outside. On Saturday night, the men would gather there,” he said. “As a kid you couldn’t say anything, but they would pass the bottle and tell each other some of the biggest stories in the world.”

However, not all of his stories are as fond of memories. In his talk, Hairston told a story about lifeguards that did not want to desegregate a pool in 1960s Charleston. They sprayed Hairston and his friends with water hoses to forcibly remove them. 

But he also told a story about encountering a more subtle form of discrimination at an event more recently. Some things were said that had implied racial bias. That evening, he used a story from the main stage to point out what had happened and why it needed to change. 

Hairston said he uses stories, often laced with humor, to help people understand the issues, especially when it comes to race, that surround us. 

“I realized that in West Virginia  —  as much as I love it, and I love it to death  —  there are issues that we don’t deal with. There’s some things that we need to work on always,” Hairston said. “I hope this message keeps conversation alive, keeps people talking, making people aware so that when they hear something among their friends or their fathers or their uncles or whatever, they at least challenge it a little bit. I think we all become better.”

Hairston travels the region telling stories about his childhood that, he hopes, give his listeners a better understanding about what it means to grow up ‘Black in Appalachia.’

The Moth Mainstage Show Will Feature A West Virginian

If you love West Virginia Public Broadcasting’s The Moth Radio Hour, you’ll love The Moth Mainstage, which is bringing a troupe of storytellers from across the country to the West Virginia Culture Center in Charleston this Thursday, March 5, at 7 p.m.

The theme of the night will be “We The People” and will feature a Mountain State storyteller. W.I. “Bill” Hairston has been a storyteller since 1985 and many of his stories are based on his experiences growing up on the Coal River in rural West Virginia. They embody the rich Appalachian culture and authentic African American culture he was exposed to as a child. Hairston has performed at concerts, festivals, libraries, corporate meetings and schools throughout the region and across the country.

The production will be hosted by Jon Goode, an author, poet, and playwright who hails from Richmond, Va., and currently resides in Atlanta, Ga. He has been a featured performer on HBO’s Def Poetry, TVOne’s Verses & Flow, and BET’s Lyric Café. His stage play Khalas was showcased in the 2013 International Festival of Arts and Ideas. In 2006, Goode’s work with Nick @ Nite earned him an Emmy nomination alongside the Promax Gold for best copyright North America. Goode’s debut collection of poems and short stories, Conduit, was published in 2015; has received to date 47 five-star reviews; spent 12 weeks as the No. 1 title in its category on Amazon.com and is the best-reviewed book of poetry on Amazon.com for 2015-2016. He is the host of The Moth StorySLAM in Atlanta.

Other storytellers include: 

  • Jackie Andrews. She was raised in Western Nebraska in the 1970s. After college, she served as an Army officer and now lives in Columbus, Ohio. She is a glass artist and tutor and spends her days building her home next door to her daughter and grandchildren.
  • Andrea Collier. She is an award-winning author, journalist and photographer based in Lansing, Mich. She has been married to Darnay Collier for 38 years and is the mother of two adult children. Her favorite title is “GoGo” to her two grandsons.
  • Muneesh Jain — Originally from Kalamazoo, Mich., Jain has lived in New York City for 12 years. His biggest passions in life are baseball and Broadway. Between the months of April and October, you will most likely find him in one of the 30 MLB ballparks across the country, catching a ballgame, talking to strangers and eating ice cream out of a mini-helmet. During the offseason, he’s probably at a musical or a play. He is the co-host of The Clubhouse Podcast where he and his friend, Anthony Rapp, interview celebrities about why they love baseball. Follow him on Twitter and Instagram @RoundingThirdMJ. Jain was recently nominated for a 2020 Emmy Award.
  • Trevor Nourse — He grew up on the Kentucky side of the Tennessee border in a little place called Tuckessee. By day he is busy climbing trees as a forestry technician in Louisville, Ky. By night, he is a ramen noodle connoisseur. During travels to new cities, he loves to hunt down the perfect bowl of pork tonkatsu. And just for kicks, he is also an expert at misplacing his slippery iPhone and frantically dashing around new cities tracking strangers down to retrieve it with the handy dandy Find My Phone app. Nourse says he’s the luckiest man alive.

Tickets are available at themoth.org. For those unfamiliar with The Moth Radio Hour, you can catch it every Saturday on WVPB radio or streaming here at wvpublic.org.

Exit mobile version