Legends Of Lore Marker Dedicated To Banjo Player Aunt Jeanie Wilson

Aunt Jeanie Wilson was recently honored with a Legends of Lore sign in Chief Logan State Park.

Aunt Jeanie Wilson was usually playing her banjo somewhere along the road in Logan County, surrounded by a crowd of neighbors. 

Her granddaughter Beverly Smith was part of that crowd as a young girl. Recently, at the age of 73, she stood with dignitaries in Chief Logan State Park for the unveiling of the Aunt Jeanie Wilson Legends of Lore sign. 

Smith said, while growing up, her grandmother’s house was like a never-ending holiday, where friends and family were always coming and going.

“Her door was open to anyone,” Smith said. “The kids that grew up down there, where we lived on Crooked Creek, would hear her music play. And she would be on her front porch in the swing, playing her banjo. You would hear the music all over the neighborhood. She invited all these artists and different people to come and sit on the front porch and play with her anytime they wanted to.”

Smith flew in with her husband to attend the dedication. She said flying was something her grandmother was very afraid to do, and turned down an invitation to be on the Jack Paar show because she did not want to fly. However, when invited to the United Mine Workers Convention in Denver she decided to fly because she so strongly supported the union.

Credit: Briana Heaney/West Virginia Public Broadcasting

Smith grew up singing and dancing along to her grandmother’s music. She said anywhere Wilson played there would be a crowd. 

Roots of Blues

Wilson played old mountain music  —  which predates bluegrass music. Old mountain music is a blend of Scottish and English ballads and African Dance and hymnal music from the enslaved African people. 

The Claw hammer style of playing originates from enslaved African American musicians who made the earliest banjos out of hollowed out gourds with animal hyde as strings. 

Kim Johnson plays the banjo claw hammer style.

Credit: Briana Heaney/West Virginia Public Broadcasting

The music was distinctive of early southern Appalachian mountain music. It’s different from a bluegrass banjo style, where the strumming hand of the player is pulling upward.

Claw hammer got its name from the claw-like shape the player makes with their strumming hand while playing. The banjo player strums downward, often using the tips of their fingers and nails. 

“She always just used your fingernails and she trimmed up like you would for a harp. It was a very unique style,” Smith said. 

West Virginia Woman

Friends said Wilson was a mountain woman through and through. She would hike up into the mountains to find poke and creasy greens, and mushrooms to feed her family. She was a sharpshooter with a shotgun and hosted big dinners at her house every Sunday. 

Bobby Taylor met Wilson at the 1950 Mountain State Art and Craft Fair in Ripley, where Wilson had become a regular. They played together often after meeting. 

“She just did what was pure and old from the mountains,” Taylor said. “I always considered her tops as far as the heritage,and the music. She had the most beautiful right hand on the banjo, smooth as a ribbon.” 

Bobby Taylor plays the fiddle.

Credit: Briana Heaney/West Virginia Public Broadcasting

West Virginia Suffering

Wilson married at age 18, and had four children with her husband James Dewey Wilson. In 1939 she lost her seven-year-old child to pneumonia and later that year her husband died in a coal mining accident. 

“You had to suffer to be able to play the music and have the feeling and soul in it like she had. There’s real feeling and real soul,” Taylor said. 

He said her understanding of pain and true sadness is what made her such an enlightened musician. 

“People that really suffered. You can feel the chill in the music. All of that comes through. The sorrow, the pain  — but also the good times. The light, the dancing. It’s beautiful,” Taylor said. 

Legend and Lore

Wilson went on to play for Ronald Reagan in the White House, and often played for Arch Moore, the former governor, who wrote her letters from prison after he was convicted for mail and tax fraud, according to her grandchildren. 

Smith said Wilson changed her political affiliation from Democrat to Republican after meeting Ronald Reagan. 

Wilson won the 1984 Vandalia award.

Credit: Briana Heaney/West Virginia Public Broadcasting

She became a fixture at festivals around the state, appeared on the show “Real People.”. 

Wilson died at age 92 at Logan General Hospital. Her family members said she was playing the banjo with friends and family up until her last days.

Now, nestled in Chief Logan State Park sits Aunt Jeanie Wilson’s legends and lore marker.

The marker was created with help from Logan County Chamber of Commerce, West Virginia State Parks, the National Coal Heritage Authority, and the West Virginia Folklife program at the West Virginia Humanities Council. 

Clawhammer Banjo Player Aunt Jeanie Wilson And Our Song Of The Week, This West Virginia Morning

On this West Virginia Morning, dignitaries recently gathered to honor clawhammer banjo player Aunt Jeanie Wilson with a Legends and Lore signpost unveiled in Chief Logan State Park. Briana Heaney was there and has this story.

On this West Virginia Morning, dignitaries recently gathered to honor clawhammer banjo player Aunt Jeanie Wilson with a Legends and Lore signpost unveiled in Chief Logan State Park. Briana Heaney was there and has this story.

Also, in this show, our Mountain Stage Song of the Week comes to us from fiddle man Jason Carter, who joined us with his all-star band of friends. We listen to their performance of “Queen of the Nashville Night,” from Carter’s 2022 album Lowdown Hoedown.

West Virginia Morning is a production of West Virginia Public Broadcasting which is solely responsible for its content.

Support for our news bureaus comes from Shepherd University.

Our Appalachia Health News project is made possible with support from CAMC and Marshall Health.

West Virginia Morning is produced with help from Bill Lynch, Briana Heaney, Caroline MacGregor, Chris Schultz, Curtis Tate, Emily Rice, Eric Douglas, Liz McCormick, and Randy Yohe.

Eric Douglas is our news director. Caroline MacGregor is our assistant news director and producer.

Listen to West Virginia Morning weekdays at 7:43 a.m. on WVPB Radio or subscribe to the podcast and never miss an episode. #WVMorning

March 2, 1992: Musician Virginia Wilson Dies at 92

Musician Virginia Wilson died on March 2, 1992, at age 92. She was born in 1900 in what is now part of Chief Logan State Park.

Wilson was a master of the clawhammer-style banjo but was little known outside of her native Logan County for much of her life. That changed at age 58, when she was discovered by West Virginia University folklorist Patrick Gainer.

During the 1960s and 1970s, “Aunt Jennie,” as she was affectionately known, became a regular on the festival circuit. She also recorded traditional music for the Library of Congress and released an album produced by West Virginia native Billy Edd Wheeler.

Wilson was equally beloved for her wit and insights into life. One of her favorite sayings was ‘‘don’t take more on your head than you can kick off your heels’’—challenging people to enjoy life to its fullest. She also loved to recount stories from Logan County history. In 1984, Wilson received the Vandalia Award, West Virginia’s highest folk-life honor. And each Labor Day weekend, Wilson’s grandson, Roger Bryant, hosts a music festival in her honor at Chief Logan State Park.

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