No Longer ‘The Bridge to Nowhere’: Ribbon Cutting Opens New Section Of King Coal Highway

Gov. Jim Justice held a ribbon cutting ceremony at the previously constructed Christine Elmore West Bridge, located near Bluefield. The bridge was commonly called ‘the bridge to nowhere’, because the road ended with the bridge. Now as part of a $2.8 billion Roads to Prosperity program, the King Coal Highway extends past the bridge for three miles. The new completed stretch of highway connects Airport Road to John Nash Boulevard near Bluefield. 

Gov. Jim Justice held a ribbon cutting ceremony at the previously constructed Christine Elmore West Bridge, located near Bluefield. The bridge was commonly called ‘the bridge to nowhere’, because the road ended with the bridge. Now as part of a $2.8 billion Roads to Prosperity program, the King Coal Highway extends past the bridge for three miles. The newly completed stretch of highway connects Airport Road to John Nash Boulevard near Bluefield. 

Randy Damron, events coordinator for the West Virginia Department of Transportation (WVDOT), said this bridge is the beginning of an economic boost for southern West Virginia. 

“This bridge to nowhere, now goes somewhere,” Damron said. 

Damron said the three top Justice priorities for the WVDOT, have been the King Coal Highway, the Coalfields expressway, and the Appalachian Corridor H. King Coal Highway, and the Coalfields expressway both go through southern West Virginia. The King Coal Highway is planned to pass through Mingo, Wyoming, McDowell, and Mercer counties.

Gov. Justice invited classic car clubs to be some of the first cars to cross the new bridge and drive down the new highway.

Briana Heaney/West Virginia Public Broadcasting

Justice said this highway, once completed, will connect many areas of southern West Virginia to surrounding areas and shave off hours of transit time.

“This is your bridge to so much economic development and prosperity,” Justice said. “I hate to say it, but in many, many, many ways. We ran off and left southern West Virginia — well, that’s not going to happen on my watch.” 

Noah Staker lives in Princeton, and worked on the crew that built the connecting stretch of the King Coal Highway. He said that this bridge has gone nowhere since he was a kid. He said so much of the towns in Southern W.Va. are only accessible by winding backroads. Staker said the investment in this roadway will help tie southern communities together, and connect communities with safer, straighter roads. 

“The thing is, it’s just a tough state to drive through naturally,” Staker said. “So the more straight line you can get, it will just allow people to get somewhere in 30 minutes versus an hour. That’s a big deal, gets people out and moving and traveling.”

The roads were funded through tax revenue and bonds. The economic impact of the construction was $7.5 million dollars in paychecks to West Virginians, $23 million to contractors, and $4 million in induced revenue to local business. 

Teamsters Strike Against Coca-Cola

Workers are picketing in St. Albans, Bluefield, Logan, Parkersburg and Clarksburg and are supported by other Teamsters locals who have set up picket lines across the state.

Members of the Teamsters Local 175 are striking against Coca-Cola over the company’s alleged refusal to compromise. 

Workers are picketing in St. Albans, Bluefield, Logan, Parkersburg and Clarksburg and are supported by other Teamsters locals who have set up picket lines across the state.

Teamsters Local 175 President Ken Hall said the company won’t compromise on several grievance issues and employees have been without a contract for more than a week. 

He accuses Coca-Cola of backtracking on signed agreements, including one over health insurance.

“After signing off on that language within an hour, their attorney called and said, ‘We can’t agree to that now. We have a person in our Charlotte office who doesn’t agree,’” Hall said. “We’d negotiated for over a week, it’s not like someone tricked them, they’re represented by council.”

Hall said Coca-Cola is trying to take away work from their members. 

Last month workers rejected a contract offer after the company reached an agreement with the gas station chain Sheetz to use its warehouses and employees to transport products to their convenience stores. 

“They want to direct ship their product from one of their bottling stores in somewhere like Roanoke, Virginia or Charlotte, North Carolina,” Hall said. “They want to direct ship it to a warehouse that’s owned by Sheetz and eliminate our drivers who go there, check to see what their order is, put their drinks on the shelves and merchandise it. They want to eliminate what they’re paying our drivers which will eventually result in layoffs. It’s bizarre.” 

Hall said his experience with Coca-Cola’s competitor, Pepsi, is just the opposite. 

“They don’t want to do that and they’re not doing that,” Hall said. “And they sell more drinks in West Virginia, so I think they have some idea of how to negotiate.”

Hall explained that the last time workers went on strike against Coca-Cola the volume of lost sales was high enough that two years later the company was still struggling to recover its numbers.

“This company’s mentality is unbelievable,” Hall said. “And part of that is driven, I think, that prior to them acquiring the West Virginia operation in the late 80s, they had maybe 100 unionized employees out of 4,000 and that was in Alabama. So they’re not accustomed to working with unions, frankly they despise unions, so every so often they decide, ‘We’re just going to take you on.’ So far they have not been very successful at it.”

Coca-Cola declined a request for an interview with West Virginia Public Broadcasting but in a statement said the company is disappointed the union initiated a strike.

“We’re disappointed the union decided to take our teammates out on strike but remain committed to working with them on an equitable resolution. We have a solid plan in place to continue serving our customers.”

Cookies For A Nativity Fast: Recipe With Ancient History Makes Annual Appearance In Appalachia

To prepare for Christmas, many Orthodox Christians fast for 40 days from eggs, meat and dairy. But that doesn’t mean they don’t enjoy something a little sweet. Ginny Chryssikos’ melomakarona fasting cookie brings a bit of ancient history to Appalachia.

We’re all familiar with recipes for a Christmas feast but what about recipes for a Christmas fast? For many parishioners of St. Mary’s Orthodox Church in Bluefield, West Virginia, the 40 days before their Christmas feast are spent fasting. It’s basically a vegan fast, excluding eggs, meat and dairy. But that doesn’t mean they don’t enjoy something a little sweet.

“I’m sifting six cups of flour and four teaspoons of baking powder,” said Bluefield native Ginny Chryssikos, as she started the first step of a special cookie recipe. Chryssikos is Orthodox Christian, and she’s also Greek American. She makes these cookies every year for her church’s St. Nicholas Day bake sale.

Connie Bailey Kitts
/
West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Three generations of Ginny Chryssikos’ Greek family have made meals in this same kitchen, where Chryssikos watched her grandmother make melomakarona.

The recipe she uses for these fasting cookies is from a Greek cookbook. But it’s a variation of her grandmother’s cookie.

“This particular cookie is a fasting cookie,” said Chryssikos, as she mixes plant-based margarine, sugar and peanut oil. “In the Orthodox tradition, we fast before we feast. We prepare ourselves for the Nativity of Christ by some abstinence from dairy and meat products. It’s a kind of self-emptying in a way, in preparation for bringing Christ into our lives at Christmas.” 

Connie Bailey Kitts
/
West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Chryssikos’ melomakarona recipe comes from a cookbook recommended by a Greek American friend in Bluefield. Chryssikos was browsing through it with her godmother and they spotted a picture of the godmother’s brother in Greece, preparing lamb. “She was so excited. He had never been able to come to America,” Chryssikos said.

“The people in Asia Minor have a different name for it but in Greece we call them Melomakarona.”

She said the name is a synthesis of the Greek word ‘meli’ which means honey, and ‘makaria’ which was the word for a bulgar wheat mixture served in ancient Greece at a meal for the departed, after a funeral.

In Chryssikos’ small home kitchen, a dish towel embroidered with “Thessaloniki” hangs above the kitchen sink. It’s a reminder of the years Chryssikos lived and worked in Greece. She recently retired as a social worker and is presently in the middle of translating a book from Greek to English.

There’s not much counter space, so her cookbook is propped up in the window sill, in front of lace curtains and alongside several Orthodox icons. This is the house where Chryssikos and her brother grew up with their parents and grandparents — three generations cooking and eating together.

As she added orange zest to the flour, she said, “Recipes that don’t have the dairy ingredients in them, you have to put some flavoring in it like a citrus, to sort of compensate for what’s missing in the dairy.”

A Holistic Fast — More Than Just Abstaining From Food

These cookies are part of Chryssikos’ fasting tradition, an ancient practice and something she sees in a holistic way to prepare for the Nativity. “It’s more than just a fasting from food. It’s a fasting from anger, you know, the passions that make our lives difficult in a relationship with God and our relationship with others.”

And thus it goes hand-in-hand with other practices of prayer and giving to those in need, she said. “The good things in life don’t always point us to God. Sometimes you have to restrain or empty yourself to see the true value of things,” she said.

Connie Bailey Kitts
/
West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Explaining the Nativity icon, Chryssikos said, “We use the paradigm of the cave because holy tradition says Christ was born in a manger, and the manger was actually in the cave. So the cave is like our hearts. We have to empty our hearts to prepare ourselves for Christ to enter.”

Reaching for a circa 1960s hand-cranked nut grinder her mother used, Chryssikos starts making the walnut filling that will go into the cookie. She’s also kept the cast iron grinder her grandmother used, and demonstrates how it attaches to the countertop.

Connie Bailey Kitts
/
West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Circa 1960s hand-cranked nut grinder used by Chryssikos’ mother.
Connie Bailey Kitts
/
West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Cast iron grinder used by Chryssikos’ grandmother about 70 years ago.

Chryssikos used to sit on a stool in the kitchen and watch her grandparents cook many Greek dishes, including this cookie. “My grandmother’s admonition was ‘Watch me, watch me. Watch what I do and that will help you learn,’” she said.

Immigrant Greeks Drawn To Southern West Virginia

Chryssikos’ family brought their skills with them when they immigrated from Greece.

“My grandfather came to McDowell County in 1910. He was a baker in Greece in the village area, so I always think of him when I’m doing some of these recipes,” Chryssikos said.

Her grandfather went back to Greece to fight in the Balkan Wars in 1912 but returned again to this country. He married Chryssikos’ grandmother when she arrived from Greece at Ellis Island. They moved to Welch, the county seat, where Chryssikos’ mother, Alexandra, was born. Chryssikos’ grandfather, Demetrios Gianelos, helped run the popular Capitol Lunch restaurant with a fellow Greek.

Courtesy Jay Chapman
Demetrios Gianelos, Chryssikos’ grandfather, at the Capitol Lunch restaurant in Welch.

“There’s a joke — when Greek meets Greek, they open a restaurant,” Chryssikos said. “I don’t know if it’s in the genes or what, but that’s something we’re known for.”

In fact, Chryssikos’ father, Paul Chryssikos, also worked in restaurants as a young man.

“He came here under very different circumstances because he was in the Greek army. And when the Nazis invaded and occupied Greece, he went with the government into exile,” Chryssikos said.

Courtesy Ginny Chryssikos
Paul Chryssikos (left) in uniform, helping prepare meat on a spit in Greece, circa 1940.

He traveled from Egypt to South Africa and to Argentina but eventually arrived in America, where his brother lived, in Bedford, Virginia.

He got jobs as either a cook or manager at five of Bluefield’s numerous Greek-run restaurants: the Spanish Grill, the Ideal Lunch, the Matz Hotel Grill, the Pinnacle, and Paul’s Grill, which he owned.

Courtesy Ginny Chryssikos
Ginny’s father, Paul Chryssikos, manager of the Ideal Lunch in Bluefield in 1951.

It was the owner of Jimmy’s Restaurant in Bluefield who introduced him to Chryssikos’ mother. They married and she taught elementary school and he eventually became a language and literature professor at what is now Concord University. His interests were always academic, Chryssikos said, but he also cooked Greek specialties for faculty picnics.

In their south Bluefield home, fruit trees and a backyard garden supplied the family cooks with plenty of fresh produce for their Greek dishes. Chryssikos learned Greek early, before she entered grade school.

Courtesy Ginny Chryssikos
Paul Chryssikos with partner Nick Katsoulis at the Spanish Grill.

“Lessons were in that little breakfast nook with my grandmother on Saturday mornings. We had lessons, my brother and I. It was the Greek version of ‘Tom, Dick and Harry,’ you know. I have the book in fact,” said Chryssikos.

Courtesy Ginny Chryssikos
Chryssikos’ maternal grandmother, Virginia Gianelos, standing by her rose trellis bordering the vegetable garden of her Bluefield home.
Courtesy Ginny Chryssikos
Alexandra Chryssikos, Ginny’s mother, was well-known in the community for her home hospitality.
Courtesy Ginny Chryssikos
Chryssikos’ grandmother, Alexandra Gianelos, (right) visiting her Bluefield Greek friend, after comparing who grew the largest tomatoes.

Back in the kitchen, Chryssikos takes the chilled cookie dough out of the refrigerator and kneads it by hand. She pinches off small pieces to flatten into oval shapes. She puts a teaspoon of the nut mixture in the middle and folds them closed. She crimps the top for decoration, and puts them on a cookie sheet and into the oven.

Connie Bailey Kitts
/
West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Melomakarona with walnut filling.
Connie Bailey Kitts
/
West Virginia Public Broadcasting
This crimping tool was a gift from an Egyptian friend, said Chryssikos. “A lot of the cooking that we have in Greece is very much part of the Middle Eastern cuisine.”

The front porch door is open and it conjures up a memory of Chryssikos’ grandfather. He learned his baking skills as an apprentice in the Pintas Mountains of Greece, she said.

“I think he liked West Virginia because it was all mountains here. And he felt at home. You know, he would sit on the porch — it faced East River Mountain — and he would say, ‘Look, just like my village.’ He enjoyed the mountains here. He loved this area,” Chryssikos said.

Cultural Diversities Come To Appalachia Alongside Orthodox Faith

Shortly before Ginny’s grandfather immigrated from Greece, another group of immigrants with Orthodox Christian roots had come to these southern West Virginia mountains. They came from the villages of the Carpatho-Russian mountain range, in eastern Europe and parts of Ukraine. They came to work in the coal mines. They made a home in McDowell County and they organized the first St. Mary’s parish.

“Families arrived there in the late 1800s, and they built this little church, which had to be rebuilt in 1913 because of a fire,” said Chryssikos. The Elkhorn parish had more than 100 families.

Courtesy
Artist’s painting of the original St. Mary’s structure, still standing in Elkhorn, West Virginia. Although the church congregation has moved to Bluefield, Father Michael Foster sometimes does parts of the service in other languages “just to again connect us to our ancestors and our departed family members and to remember again what all they went through to find themselves here where we are now,” Foster said.

The onion-shaped gold dome of St. Mary’s was easily spotted by cars and coal trucks traveling in and out of the coal fields on Route 52. Services were in the old-church Slavonic language.

The church became part of the Carpatho-Russian Orthodox diocese in America and in 2000 moved to Bluefield, West Virginia. The three gold domes of the new St. Mary’s are silhouetted against East River Mountain. The parish has become more multi-ethnic, and its services are now conducted in English.

Over the decades, the parish has added converts with Anglo-Saxon roots in the Appalachian region, to those members with roots in Slovakia, the Czech Republic, Belarus, Serbia, Georgia, Ukraine, Romania, Lebanon, Palestine, Ethiopia, Greece, and Russia.

“Many of these are countries that have historically had an Orthodox presence,” Chryssikos said.

“It’s interesting that St. John Chrysostom, who wrote the liturgy, lived in a time when there were many cultures and languages,” Chryssikos said. “He spoke often about the commands to love your neighbor. So there’s always been that aspect of orthodoxy, with language and cultural diversity.”

Bringing Ancient Practices And Patron Saints To The Present

Father Michael Foster, priest of St. Mary’s, announced the beginning of the Nativity fast in a Sunday service in mid-November.

Connie Bailey Kitts
/
West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Many of the Orthodox liturgical practices, embodied in such objects as the seven-branch candlestand, metal incense burner and bells, icon panels, and altar area behind a screen, date back to ancient times, Father Michael Foster said.

Fasting, prayer and almsgiving are seen as complementary spiritual “pillars” he said.

“One of the things I always try to tell people, the money that you’re saving from your fasting, give it as alms; the time that you’re saving, worried over food, use it for prayer,” Foster said. The intention of fasting, he said, is to reorient our hearts toward a love of God and others.

One historical figure who serves as a model for many Othodox, Foster said, is the beloved St. Nicholas. This early Christian bishop was Greek, lived in Turkey, and is known for his secret gift giving — which might be why he is considered the early model of Santa Claus.

He’s the patron saint of children, travelers and prisoners, and is commemorated on Dec. 6, Foster said.

“I think the thing that I’d love people to remember is he’s more than just a stand-in for Santa Claus,” Foster said. “But instead, he means so much to all of us. In almost all Orthodox churches, there’s a special part of the wall that’s dedicated to a saint that means a lot to that community. And in almost every single church that spot is reserved for St. Nicholas, because he is so beloved and respected.”

“I think one of the most impactful things was just how much giving that he did to the poor and to prisoners,” he said. “And this was out of his heart, as well as his pocket, to be able to help these people that were disadvantaged and had never gotten any sort of help before.”

Connie Bailey Kitts
/
West Virginia Public Broadcasting
St. Mary’s Orthodox Church sits at the foot of East River Mountain.

And to let the community learn more about the true identity of this real St. Nicolas, the parish began holding a dinner and bake sale several years ago. Every year, Chryssikos makes her fasting cookies. As we’re waiting for the cookies to brown, Chryssikos pulls an icon of St. Nicholas off the window shelf and tells me its story about St. Nicholas.

Connie Bailey Kitts
/
West Virginia Public Broadcasting
The icon depiction of St. Nicholas (left), patron saint of children and sailors. The story icon (right) depicts him saving three sisters from prostitution, when their father was completely destitute, by putting bags of gold at their window. “Sometimes we see during the holidays, chocolate coins wrapped in gold paper. And it’s possible that comes down from this,” Chryssikos said.

“He helped save three sisters from prostitution when their father was completely destitute by putting bags of gold at the window sill of their room,” and that act, she said, may be the origin of the Christmas tradition of wrapping chocolate coins in gold foil.

Chryssikos then offers to sing one of the hymns of the season. “There’s a beautiful Greek Orthodox hymn that I know in Greek, that talks about the birth of Christ,” and she began to sing it in Greek.

The timer goes off, and the cookies are done but Chryssikos will hold off on the last step — dipping them in hot honey syrup — until she’s ready to take them to the church. “That’s really what gives it its character,” she said.

Connie Bailey Kitts
/
West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Connie Bailey Kitts
/
West Virginia Public Broadcasting
After they’re baked and cooled, the last step is to dip the cookie in a honey syrup.

Her treats will join a tablespread of others that show the ethnic roots of the parish: Romanian truffles, Greek baklava, Slavic nut horns and — not to be forgotten — Appalachian fried apple pies. On Christmas Day, the day of the Nativity, the fast ends and the special feast begins.

Connie Bailey Kitts
/
West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Connie Bailey Kitts
/
West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Melomakarona alongside Greek/Turkish coffee, made in a traditional briki coffee pot. Two vintage brikis used by Chryssikos’ family are in the background.

You can learn more about St Mary’s traditions of community, culture and faith in their recently published Savor the Flavor of St. Mary’s cookbook. It includes family memories of ethnic ways, special prayers, and fasting recipes, including Chryssikos’s recipe for melomakarona.

Cookie Steps In Pictures

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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 Projectis 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.

Funding Secures Postsecondary Education And Entertainment For Downtown Bluefield 

The Bluefield Arts and Revitalization Corporation has big plans for a portion of a Bluefield building that’s been vacant for decades. The space on Raleigh Street that previously housed a tire and auto center will soon be used for entertainment and education.

The Bluefield Arts and Revitalization Corporation has big plans for a portion of a Bluefield building that’s been vacant for decades. The space on Raleigh Street that previously housed a tire and auto center will soon be used for entertainment and education.

The Granada Theater was renovated and reopened in 2021. The new project will renovate a former auto center which is located on the lower level of the Granada and accessible in the rear of the historical theater. The level will be remodeled to host New River Community and Technical College teaching labs.

“New River welcomes the opportunity to make its affordable and high-quality workforce training programs accessible to people in the Bluefield area,” said Dr. Bonnie Copenhaven, President of New River Community and Technical College.

The project will also provide two more theaters, each with fifty seats and new amenities. The space will also be available for community events, film festivals, and more.

“The project’s creative use of underutilized space will create opportunities for entertainment, employment, and education in downtown Bluefield, benefiting residents throughout the city and across the region,” Executive Director of the Bluefield Arts and Revitalization Corporation Brian Tracey, said.

Courtesy
Raleigh Street space before construction.

The project comes with a $1.65 million price tag. The Bluefield Arts and Revitalization Corporation secured a portion of the funds through a program called New Markets tax credits and the U.S. Department of the Treasury.

“The use of New Markets tax credits to finance this project will act as a catalyst for economic development in Bluefield, contributing to the positive momentum already present downtown and demonstrating the value of tax credit programs for the revitalization of the city,” said Ron Martin, Mayor of Bluefield.

The Bluefield Economic Development Authority, Community Ventures, and Hugh I. Shott, Jr. Foundation, are also financial supporters of the project.

W.Va. Man Accused Of Possessing Fake Explosive Devices

A West Virginia man was arrested on several felony charges Monday after police said he claimed to have explosive devices at a federal building and a church.

A West Virginia man was arrested on several felony charges Monday after police said he claimed to have explosive devices at a federal building and a church.

The devices turned out to be fake, but James Dean Fowler, 50, of Bluefield, faces two counts of possession or use of a hoax bomb in the commission of a felony, one count of false reports concerning bombs or explosive devices, and two counts of threats of terrorist acts, Police Chief Dennis Dillow said at a news conference.

Dillow said U.S. marshals at the federal building in Bluefield indicated Fowler wanted to speak to someone about national security and indicated he had an explosive device. The device was dismantled with a police explosive and was determined to be fake. An X-ray showed another placed at the church contained no explosives.

A search of Fowler’s nearby apartment turned up no devices, Dillow said.

Fowler was scheduled to be arraigned later Monday. It wasn’t immediately known whether he has an attorney who could speak on his behalf.

Construction Begins To Upgrade A Bus Station In Bluefield, W.Va. 

The bus station will offer riders a safe indoor facility with restrooms along with heating and air conditioning while waiting to transfer to another bus. Riders, who are mostly elderly, currently use an old open-air shelter.

City, state and national officials celebrated the beginning of construction projects expected to upgrade a public transportation system in southern West Virginia.

Swope Construction will work to build a $2.6 million bus transfer station for the city’s Bluefield Area Transit (BAT) bus system. The new state of the art facility will be named after Larlyn Patrick McKinney, BAT’s director for more than two decades.

The bus station will offer riders a safe indoor facility with restrooms along with heating and air conditioning while waiting to transfer to another bus. Riders, who are mostly elderly, currently use an old, open-air shelter.

Gov. Jim Justice and U.S. Senator Shelley Moore Capito spoke during a groundbreaking ceremony in Bluefield, West Virginia.

“There have been a lot of people turning the wheels on this; doing amazing work to make this day a reality,” Justice said. “It’s unbelievable how important, how vital Bluefield Area Transit is to this community. Really and truly, all I can do is thank you — all of you that have made it happen. It’s been a real honor to be along for the ride.”

Former City Manager of the City of Bluefield, Dane Rideout also took to the podium. Rideout left the position in April 2021 but was credited for economic development projects in the region, including many of the BAT upgrades.

“Over the last several years, Bluefield has been on a transitional movement; a rebirth, a revival, a renaissance,” Rideout said. “This city has been the change agent for the region. In a nutshell, the city has taken charge of its destiny.”

The new facility is funded with a $527,000 in grant from the West Virginia Department of Transportation as well as funds from the U.S. Federal Transit Administration and local funding.

BAT buses serve more than 200,000 annual passengers on routes in Mercer and McDowell counties.

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