Southern W.Va. Publication Ends After 50 Years And KY Play Explores Land Loss In Coal Country, This West Virginia Morning

On this West Virginia Morning, the Ol’ Mountain Trader, a free classified ad publication that serviced southern West Virginia, has closed after a 50-year run. Briana Heaney has the story.

On this West Virginia Morning, the Ol’ Mountain Trader, a free classified ad publication that serviced southern West Virginia, has closed after a 50-year run. Briana Heaney has the story.

Also, in this show, we listen to the latest story from The Allegheny Front, a public radio program based in Pittsburgh that reports on environmental issues in the region. Their latest story is about a stage production out of Kentucky discussing land use and loss in coal country.

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 Concord University and Shepherd University.

Eric Douglas is our news director and produced this episode.

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

The Legacy Of The Upper Big Branch Disaster

Ten years ago, the Upper Big Branch Mine exploded in West Virginia. Twenty-nine men died and an investigation uncovered that a legacy of overlooked safety measures contributed to the disaster.

A new play called “Coal Country” focuses on the stories of the men and their families. It aims to put a spotlight on prejudice against the rural working class — to bridge a divide between city dwellers and those who work with their hands underground.

Co-creators Jessica Blank and Erik Jensen interviewed the families and the production weaves their words with the music of Grammy-award winner Steve Earle to help people understand another America.

This episode of Us & Them is presented with support from the West Virginia Humanities Council and CRC Foundation.

Subscribe to Us & Them on Apple Podcasts, NPR One, RadioPublic, Spotify, Stitcher and beyond. You also can listen to Us & Them on WVPB Radio. Tune in on the fourth Thursday of every month at 8 PM, with an encore presentation on the fourth Saturday at 3 PM.

Coal Country: Can A Play About A Mine Disaster Help Bridge A National Divide?

 

The actors deliver their lines from a sparse stage — just a few benches around them and 29 modest lights above. For the most part they speak directly to the audience, sharing memories of the lives of husbands, sons, fathers and nephews, some of the 29 men who died on April 5, 2010, when an explosion ripped through the Upper Big Branch Mine in West Virginia.  

It’s a powerful performance, made even more so by the realization that nearly all of the actors’ dialogue is drawn directly from court transcripts and hours of interviews with about a half dozen people who lived through that tragic day and the many long days that followed.

“Coal Country,” which opened in New York’s storiedPublic Theater, introduced New York theater-goers to the real lives of families affected by the tragedy.

The coronavirus pandemic forced the early closure of the play. But shortly after its opening I visited the playwrights, Jessica Blank and Erik Jensen, at their Brooklyn home to learn more about their approach to documentary theater. The wife-and-husband writing duo say they hope their work will help urban audiences better understand life in the real coal country, where people have long sacrificed to help build and power America’s cities.

Credit Joan Marcus / The Public Theater
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The Public Theater
Jessica Blank, Erik Jensen and Steve Earle in rehearsal.

 

Blank explained that the work starts with outreach to potential subjects, a delicate job given the grief and need for privacy among family members. At first, Blank said, she wondered if she would get people to agree to talk. They were not returning her calls.

“I finally figured out after a couple of weeks of this, I said, ‘You know, I think that this is a community where you have to show your face,’” she said. “Just getting a phone message from some person in New York being like, ‘Hey, I’m doing a project, do you want to talk to us?’ That isn’t going to do the trick.”

So in April, 2016, she traveled to a Charleston, West Virginia, courthouse. She sat with family members of victims as Massey Energy’s CEO Don Blankenship was sentenced for conspiracy to violate mine safety rules.

“And then I think what happened is that word got around that we were okay,” she said. “Because then we started sitting down with more and more folks.”

Blank and Jensen recorded hours of interviews during extended visits with people who had worked in the Upper Big Branch Mine and who had lost family members there. Despite being long-time New Yorkers they found an instant bond with the West Virginia families they met.

“I’m from the rural Midwest, and, you know, grew up in a small town,” Jensen said. “And so like, I immediately related to people kind of on that level.”

“Every experience we had sitting with every person we sat down with was incredibly powerful and incredibly eye opening and incredibly moving,” Blank said. She recounted learning details about long-wall mining — something she’d never heard of before — and the way that long traditions of union mining gave way in West Virginia over the past couple of decades. 

“And we learned a lot about humanity, as we often do, when we do this kind of project,” she said. 

Blank and Jensen have the very married couple’s habit of finishing each other’s sentences and picking up on their spouse’s thoughts. Jensen continued with the thread Blank had started. 

“My thing about it was, I learned a lot about grief.” He said that during the course of the project he lost both his father and uncle. His own grief helped him relate to what people in the West Virginia community were experiencing.  

“I think that was when I finally understood what we were writing. Because I multiply that by 29 and, my heart couldn’t take it,” he said. “I finally understood what it was like to be in that community, and it broke my heart open.

“And thank God for Steve’s music,” he added. “Because his songs address grief in such a beautiful way.” 

Greek Chorus Of One

“Steve” is singer-songwriter Steve Earle, who sat in on some of the interviews and wrote songs which he performs to accompany the play. “Steve, to me, is the heir to Woody Guthrie,” Jensen said. “He tells real stories with his songs, you know, stories of the heart.”

Credit Joan Marcus / The Public Theater
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The Public Theater
Steve Earle performs during “Coal Country.”

 

“Coal Country” is not a musical. The characters rarely sing and the songs do not propel the narrative, as in a musical. Rather, Earle sits on stage with a guitar or banjo and listens intently to the actors, then adds a song that might echo a characters’ loss or hint at deeper themes. Jensen described his role as akin to a Greek chorus of one.  

“He’s there to kind of hold down the play and to orient us when we need it, or to, to break our hearts when we need that.”

In a reworking of the traditional ballad of John Henry, for example, Earle weaves in allusions to the decline of union representation among miners.

The Union come and tried to make a stand

West Virginia miners voted union to a man

You wouldn’t know it now but that was then

The Union come and tried to make a stand

And in the lovely, simple “The Mountain” (a song he first recorded with the Del McCoury Band in 1999) Earle sums up the conflicted feelings of people who are both tied to the natural world and to an industry that wreaks great natural destruction.  

I was born on this mountain, this mountain’s my home

She holds me and keeps me from worry and woe

Well, they took everything that she gave, now they’re gone

But i’ll die on this mountain, this mountain’s my home

Earle is pulling together several of the songs from “Coal Country” into a new album, “Ghosts of West Virginia,” which is scheduled for release in May.

Bridging Divides

I grew up in West Virginia, and my family roots there go back several generations. As with many West Virginia natives, I greet any outsider’s depiction of the place and its people with a degree of wariness. We’ve been burned more than a few times by hurtful stereotypes, even by those who meant well.  

That is perhaps why I was surprised at my very emotional response to “Coal Country.”

[At the time I saw it, the coronavirus threat was just beginning to emerge in public awareness to the degree that I knew not to touch my face. Reader, it is hard to avoid touching your face while weeping.]

It is, of course, deeply emotional content to begin with. This is, after all, the story of one of the worst mining tragedies in recent history. But beyond that I was struck by, and grateful for, the simple details about West Virginians that Blank and Jensen recognized and relayed to their New York audience.  

Their commitment to deep listening brought some deep truths to the stage. 

“I think it’s our job in making this kind of work,” Blank said. “Find the people who lived that story, sit down with them, and then get out of the way.”

It occurred to me, watching their play in an audience mostly made up of New Yorkers, that this is an opportunity to perhaps help overcome, in some small way, the great divide between urban and rural America. 

“Well I certainly hope,” Blank started. “It would be a privilege,” Jensen finished.

“This is a really big blind spot in communities that I move in, where people are so conscious about their politics,” Blank continued. “The things that people say sometimes about the rural working class — otherwise, really thoughtful people — are shocking to me. And I think it’s a really big blind spot that mostly comes from not having any contact with folks who come from a really different place and a really different lifestyle.”

“People have dignity, people have history,” Jensen said. “And whether you’re pro-coal or against coal, coal miners helped build this country, and they should be treated as such.” 

“Built these buildings here,” Blank interjected, gesturing at the street scene outside the window.

“And right now what they’re doing isthey’re blocking trains with their bodies in order to get their benefits or in order to get their last paycheck,” Jensen said. “And I just think workers should be treated better than that.”

 

 

 

PREMIERE: Watch Robert Tinnell-Directed Video for “Coal Country” by Charles Wesley Godwin

Get a first glimpse at the new video for “Coal Country.”

West Virginia native singer, songwriter and performer Charles Wesley Godwin appeared on Mountain Stage in March of 2019, supporting his full-length album Seneca. His song “Coal Country” has a new video, directed by “Feast of the Seven Fishes” filmmaker Robert Tinnell, that West Virginia Public Broadcasting is premiering exclusively here.

"I consider "Coal Country" to be one of the cornerstone songs on Seneca. I'd wished for a long time to have the ability to make a music video for it and thanks to Robert Tinnell, Jason Walker and Franz Vorenkamp, that wish became reality. This has been a very special project and I believe it packs one hell of a punch in four and a half minutes." – Charles Wesley Godwin

https://youtu.be/M7YwYGG1XNw”,”_id”:”00000174-a7c3-ddc3-a1fc-bfdb67260001″,”_type”:”035d81d3-5be2-3ed2-bc8a-6da208e0d9e2″}”>https://youtu.be/M7YwYGG1XNw”><brightspot-cms-external-content data-state="{"url":"https://youtu.be/M7YwYGG1XNw”,”_id”:”00000174-a7c3-ddc3-a1fc-bfdb67260001″,”_type”:”035d81d3-5be2-3ed2-bc8a-6da208e0d9e2″}”>https://youtu.be/M7YwYGG1XNw

Director Tinnell had this to say regarding the video:

“The moment I started hearing tracks from the Seneca album I knew I wanted to try and work with Charles.  I was finishing up my feature film, FEAST OF THE SEVEN FISHES, and readying it for release and was looking for a passion project.  By chance I met Charles and we hit it off. Given our shared respect for both our families’ involvement in mining it was only natural that we chose Coal Country for the film. My director of photography, Jason Walker, is a driven perfectionist, and was pushing me at the time to find a project that would enable him to experiment with some looks and techniques he wanted to try, and so I very much had his ambitions in mind when I was plotting out my approach to the video.  I immediately reached out to editor and image specialist, Franz Michael Vorenkamp, to see gauge his interest in the project and to my relief he jumped in enthusiastically.  He worked obsessively not only on the cut but on the imagery itself to great effect.”

Tinnell is a writer/director/producer with experience in a variety of media. He most recently adapted his Eisner Award-nominated graphic novel, FEAST OF THE SEVEN FISHES, into a feature film starring Madison Iseman, Skyler Gisondo, Joe Pantoliano and Paul Ben-Victor.  His West Virginia-based production company, Allegheny Image Factory, creates content across a variety of platforms, including feature films, television programs, commercials and branded content.

Godwin credits the many locations for helping shape the video’s character. “We simply could not have pulled this film off without the support of the West Virginia Tourism Office and the good folks at Cass Scenic Railroad, The Exhibition Coal Mine in Beckley, Ben Townsend of Questionable Records Studio in Elkins, The Durbin and Greenbrier Valley Railroad, and Thurmond in the New River Gorge. Access to those locations allowed us to develop a vibe for the film that is both epic and authentic.”

Godwin has some East Coast tour dates scheduled through January before he heads overseas for a month-long run of shows in Denmark, Sweden and Norway. View his entire performance schedule here.

You can hear Godwin’s performance on Mountain Stage in Episode #942.

Bernie Sanders Event Sunday in West Virginia

Former presidential candidate and Vermont U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders is coming to the coal country of southern West Virginia for a Town Hall meeting about the needs of rural Americans.

Sanders will speak Sunday afternoon at Mount View High School in the city of Welch. The event is being hosted by MSNBC, which plans to broadcast it later, calling it “an unscripted, no-holds-barred conversation” with people from McDowell County about the issues facing them and communities like theirs.

“I think for too long the federal government has ignored the needs of rural America,” Sanders told The Associated Press on Friday. “All over this country: What we’re seeing right now in rural America is unemployment rates that are too high, health care that’s inadequate, infrastructure that’s in deep trouble. … And in addition to all of that is the opioid crisis, which exists all over, in my state and West Virginia, which has to be dealt with as well.”

Sanders lost to Hillary Clinton in last year’s Democratic presidential primary, though he easily won in West Virginia with nearly 124,000 votes. Republican candidate Donald Trump had just a few more than 156,000 votes. Trump later won in the general election against Clinton with 69 percent of West Virginia’s vote, promising to help bring back its slumping coal mining industry.

“What we are seeing in West Virginia, in Vermont, in rural America, is a decline in living standards for rural America,” Sanders said. “I think it’s important that people in rural America begin to have a voice to talk about the reality of their lives and to talk about what they think their communities need to go forward.”

He believes obstacles include the lack of quality broadband and cellphone service, and roads and bridges in disrepair. Sanders expects to visit other areas around the country to try to put rural needs high on Congress’ agenda, he said.

West Virginia and other states also could be hurt if Congress repeals the Affordable Care Act, which extended health care coverage to many people and helps support rural hospitals, Sanders said. “Unless there is a substitute plan that is as good or better, I fear very much that many, many people in West Virginia will A, lose the health insurance they have recently gotten, or B, if they’re on Medicaid, the kind of services they can receive on Medicaid will be diminished.”

House Republicans have drafted a substitute health care law. West Virginia’s U.S. senators, Republican Shelley Moore Capito and Democrat Joe Manchin, have expressed concerns about the possible change.

Sanders’ scheduled February appearance at the West Virginia National Guard armory in Welch was canceled. The Guard cited a U.S. Defense Department policy prohibiting the use for political and election events.

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