Remembering Elaine Purkey: W.Va. Social Activist, Musician

COVID-19 has taken the lives of nearly 300 West Virginians, and earlier this month, the state lost one of its most powerful and vocal social activists and musicians.

Elaine Purkey passed away Sept. 2 in Ranger, West Virginia at 71 years old.

Purkey grew up a coal miner’s daughter in the mountains of Lincoln County. She was a coal miner’s wife, a mother, grandmother and great-grandmother. But much of her life was spent as a musician activist – taking part and writing songs for many of the major union strikes over the past 50 years. 

Purkey was internationally known. One of her performances was featured in a PBS documentary. She played in the 2003 Smithsonian Folklife Festival, and she is included in a folklife collection in the Library of Congress. But all her inspiration came from the Mountain State.

“I used the term hillbilly as a compliment,” said Rick Wilson, a native West Virginian who works with the American Friends Service Committee, a Quaker social justice group. “She’s hardcore Southern West Virginia. And, West Virginians, you know, are almost tribal in some ways. There’s just like this real visceral connection to place. I’d have to say it wasn’t just a connection to place, but a connection of solidarity and sympathy for the poor and disadvantaged.”

Purkey learned to play guitar and sing from her family. Legend has it that as a young girl her father would put her on top of a rock to sing to whoever happened to walk by, Wilson said.

Credit Unknown
/
An early photo of Elaine Purkey.

“You didn’t want to hear Elaine sing in a small room because she could just blow you away,” he said.

Wilson and Purkey were friends for over 30 years, first meeting at a coal worker strike and later bonding over their love of music. 

Her song ‘One Day More’ is about the 1990-92 Ravenswood Lockout, where nearly 2,000 United Steelworkers Union members demanded safer working conditions. It became one of her most famous songs, featuring in the 2006 Smithsonian Folkways Recordings album ‘Classic Labor Songs.’ 

It is about union workers outlasting companies by “one day” to get their demands met.

“If the company holds out 20 years, we’ll hold out one day more,” according to the lyrics.

mp3one_day_more.mp3
Listen to Elaine's introduction and performance of the song 'One Day More' at a West Virginia Folklife Program event in Kimball in 2017.

Purkey focused much of her time and songs on issues like clean water, police brutality and teacher strikes, but also lighter things, like teaching Appalachian folk songs to kids at the Big Ugly Community Center and being an active member in Leets Church of Christ in Lincoln County.

She was absorbed by her passions and had a random, yet charismatic sense of humor, Wilson said.

“We used to have a joke that her brain worked like an old-fashioned car with an AM radio driving on curvy mountain roads at night and you never knew what station she was gonna pick up,” he said.

Another friend of Purkey’s was Jeff Bosley, a recording event production engineer based in Huntington. He met Purkey through the music industry 10 years ago and described her as “fire and vinegar.”

“She never stopped, and for us to be in a position here talking about Elaine being stopped, it just, it doesn’t really compute at this point, it just doesn’t,” Bosley said. “She was like an elemental force of nature.”

Bosley recorded Purkey singing the old Hazel Dickens’ song ‘Fire in the Hole’ at the opening of the Mine Wars Museum in Matewan in 2015. Her voice echoed through the building that still bore bullet holes from one of the many labor union strikes during the mine wars years in the early 1900s.

“You can tell them in the country, tell them in the town, the miners down in Mingo laid their shovels down,” according to the ‘Fire in the Hole lyrics. “We won’t pull another pillar, load another ton, or lift another finger till the union we have won.”

ElaineTellItWVMWM.mp3
Listen to Elaine sing 'Fire in the Hole.' Recorded by the Friendly Neighbor Show.

“I think Elaine was really singing about what she felt, what her thoughts were and what her experiences were,” Bosley said. “It’s just so sincere and come straight from the heart.”

Purkey truly believed in West Virginia and its ability to persevere, much like her song says in ‘One Day More’, Wilson said.

“I think Elaine’s advice to us in these days, which are really dark in more ways than one, would be to hold out one day more,” he said.

If you have a loved one who has passed away from COVID-19 and you would like us to remember them, reach out at news@wvpublic.org.

The West Virginia Folklife Program at the West Virginia Humanities Council provided audio for the songs ‘One Day More’ and ‘Keepers of the Mountains.’

Reopening Of Mine Wars Museum Includes Uncovered History

The West Virginia Mine Wars Museum reopened Sept. 3 in a new location in Matewan, West Virginia featuring more detailed and researched exhibits about Appalachia’s labor union history in the early 1900s.

The museum originally opened in 2015 in an old hardware store in downtown Matewan. The small building still bears bullet holes from the Matewan Massacre – one of the many strikes that took place from 1900-1921. It was a prominent time in West Virginia’s history where labor workers began to unionize, fighting for basic rights from their companies, which at the time controlled the economy, politics and even entire towns.

According to the West Virginia Mine Wars Museum webpage, it is a history that is often overlooked. After generating worldwide interest in the Mountain State’s miner history, the museum founders agreed to move the museum to a larger spot across the street that could host more exhibits. 

Chuck Keeney, a founding board member of the museum, spoke with our southern coalfields reporter Caitlin Tan about the new additions. 

**This story has been lightly edited for clarity.

Caitlin Tan: So, Chuck, for those who don’t know, tell us a little bit about the Mine Wars Museum.

Chuck Keeney: The purpose of the museum was to create a grassroots people’s history museum that focused on a very overlooked and even suppressed history in the state that highlights the labor struggles, and also highlights the underlying conditions that created the Appalachia that we know today.

Tan: Can you walk us through a little bit about the start of the mine wars in the best way you can? I know that’s a lengthy question.

Keeney: Yeah. Without getting into a lecture, the mine wars really were the struggle not just for unionization, but for basic constitutional rights, in which the American dream was denied to them because of this system that they were living under, completely and totally controlled by corporate interests. So, they were living in towns and communities in which everything was owned by absentee corporations, from the houses that they lived in to the stores that they bought in, they were not allowed freedom of assembly, they were not allowed freedom of speech. 

Tan: So, something that stood out to me was that the redesign includes more information on the Treason Trials. In the press release, it was described as the labor turmoil after Blair Mountain, which, of course, was the largest labor uprising in America taking place in 1921.

Chuck, can you tell us more about the Treason Trials and why we might not have heard of them? 

Keeney: Well, of course these people’s lives did not end after the Battle of Blair Mountain. Those people that fought, the union movement, the socioeconomic and political order in West Virginia all continued on, so it’s important to look at what happened after. There was a series of trials revolving around treason, murder, conspiracy to commit murder all around the Battle of Blair Mountain, that actually went all the way into 1924. And so these trials constituted one of the few treason trials in American history, because it was a serious constitutional issue. And it was also about to what lengths can workers go to challenge the power structure in America? When do they have a right to stand up and fight for themselves? And that’s really significant. You know, when you look at what’s happening in contemporary America with lots of protests, with lots of unrest, the legality of that, what is the individual’s right to protest? 

Credit West Virginia Mine Wars Museum
/
Outside the new location of the West Virginia Mine Wars Museum. The change of location was due to a need for more space for new exhibits.

Tan: And in that same vein, do you feel like some of the history offered at the museum is relevant or even applicable to modern day events right now?

Keeney: It all is applicable to modern day events for a lot of different reasons. First of all, minority issues of race and immigration, which are of course big topics right now. You look at the Battle of Blair Mountain. As the miners march toward Blair Mountain, they actually desegregated company towns when they went through on their way to Blair Mountain, which is not something that’s associated with this region.

When people use the word redneck, they often think of a racist, right? Or that stereotype regarding that. However, when you look at the rednecks of 1921, they were doing something that was very opposite of that. It was immigrants, African Americans and poor white people all working together for a common cause to better their working and labor conditions. And that’s very relevant to everything that we’re undergoing today.

The economic issues surrounding coal, and the influence of the fossil fuel industry is also a primary concern. Not just in this region, but when you’re talking about climate change, understanding those power structures and why fossil fuels are so permanently embedded into our economy and political system go back to these labor struggles that happened 100 years ago. And it’s also about learning from this past that we’re able to kind of forge a better way to the future, in my opinion. 

Tan: The redesign includes more research on the roles of women and minorities during the mine wars, kind of like what you were just talking about. And I feel like those are two groups that typically aren’t part of the narrative that we hear about. Can you expand a little on that and what people might expect to see if they go to the museum? 

Keeney: We now have a women’s resistance exhibit in the museum to look at the extraordinary role that women played in all of these strikes, and also women’s everyday lives in the coal camps. Catherine Moore, who’s one of our museum founding members, her research really focuses on women and minorities looking at African American organizers in Mingo County, and in the Paint Creek Cabin Creek strike. And so she’s really focusing on that in her research, and she was able to take a lot of that research and really give us a much broader look at these specific groups that have even been overlooked in previous histories of the mine wars. 

The new West Virginia Mine Wars Museum is open 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays in its new location in downtown Matewan. 

How W.Va. Miners With Black Lung Disease Are Navigating The Pandemic

Jerry Coleman, a third-generation coal miner, worked for 37 years, mostly underground, near Cabin Creek, West Virginia. But at 68 years old, he has complicated black lung disease, meaning, his lungs are permanently and irreversibly scarred by coal dust.

“Black lung, it doesn’t get better, it gets worse,” Coleman said.

Black lung is in a way, a death sentence — the lungs gradually deteriorate until the person can no longer breathe. 

And in the middle of a pandemic, it is only more complicated, Coleman said. He is also the president for the Kanawha County Black Lung Association. 

“You gotta wear a mask, and with your breathin’ problems and stuff, it’s hard to walk around and breath through the mask. It’s like sucking in hot air,” he said. “But I don’t have no choice, with the condition of my lungs and stuff, I can’t take a chance.”

COVID-19 is classified as a respiratory virus. It can affect and even be deadly to the healthiest of people, but the most vulnerable are those with high-risk conditions, such as lung disease and old age — which represent much of West Virginia’s former coal miner population.

“Each different lung disease kind of takes away some of your lung function,” said Carl Werntz, an occupational medical specialist in southern West Virginia.

Werntz administers black lung exams, a crucial step to apply for federal black lung benefits. 

“So that person if they get COVID it bothers their lungs,” he said. “They’re going to run out of usable lung much faster than somebody who starts out with healthy lungs.”

Since the pandemic began, Werntz said black lung exams were put on hold at the clinic he works at in Cabin Creek. Exams slowly resumed in July, but at half capacity.

Typically, he sees six to eight patients a day, but with new COVID protocols, Werntz said he sees three to four — creating a backlog of patients waiting for their black lung exam.

“The longer you wait to do the testing to show that they really have the disease, the longer it is until they can get the benefits, including, you know, potentially medical care if they don’t have some other way to pay for their breathing care,” Werntz said.

Federal black lung benefits include monthly payments and medical coverage for lung treatment – medical care that is expensive, said Jerry Coleman, the former coal miner with black lung.

The fight for benefits can be long even without a pandemic. Coleman said he fought for seven years to receive his benefits. 

“Until you get awarded it, anything that pertains to you breathing, you have to pay for everything,” he said. “And you’re not going to, you know, spend exactly what you have to spend, because you don’t have the money to waste. You know? It’s a shame to say but that’s the way it is.”

With COVID severely limiting the number of patients who can come in for their black lung exams, the wait to get benefits keeps growing for some miners. 

Mickey Pettry, who is 63 years old, worked in the coal mines much of his life. Although his personal doctors have diagnosed him with black lung, he has fought in the courts for his federal benefits for three years, and he fears the pandemic will only draw out this process.

“But the entire focus is on the battle going on up in DC. So, there’s very little attention being paid to anything else,” Pettry said. 

In fact, the coal excise tax, which is the primary money for the Black Lung Disability Trust Fund, is set to expire at the end of this year. This means funds for black lung benefits could dry up quickly. 

This issue is a priority for black lung advocacy associations, said Coleman. He and other members from local associations went to Washington D.C. last year and helped secure the funding through 2020. But with COVID, Coleman said it is harder for the associations to hold meetings and to advocate for the renewal of the legislation. 

“Because our voice is what’s gotta be heard, you know,” Coleman said. “If we don’t speak out, it’s gonna be forgotten.”

In the meantime, things are a lot less social for those with black lung disease. Coleman said he has spent most of his spring and summer at home, trying to social distance. 

Pettry added that not being able to go to the monthly black lung association meetings takes a mental toll. Many of the members are his neighbors, friends or former coworkers. There is a therapeutic aspect.

But now, even going to the store is a risk Pettry said.

“I don’t have a lot of tolerance for people now. There’s so many people that think wearing a mask is a joke. It’s highly, highly stressful,” Pettry said. “People have a right to their opinion, but we can’t afford to say that it’s not real. When they infringe upon our protection, you know I get really upset.”

Pettry does not know what the future holds for him as someone with black lung disease during a pandemic, but he said he is making do with what he has — mowing the lawn, grilling meat on his back porch and occasionally putting on a mask and getting a hot chicken sandwich from Chick-fil-A. 

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting, with support from Marshall Health and Charleston Area Medical Center.

This story is part of West Virginia Public Broadcasting’s Southern Coalfields Reporting Project which is supported by a grant from the National Coal Heritage Area Authority.

 

The Southern Coalfield Airports: Where Did They Go?

Amid the rolling hills and strip-mined mountain tops that stretch through Logan County, West Virginia is Route 10 — a newer highway that was 20 years in the making. It made road travel in southern West Virginia more accessible, but it also replaced the McDonald airfield.  

And like most airports in the coalfields, the McDonald airfield is but a faint memory, recalled only by a few who used to fly there. 

“We loved our little airport, and so we always took good care of it,” said Andrew York, a professional pilot from southern West Virginia.

York learned to fly at McDonald airfield in the 90s. It was known by locals as Taplin airfield, for its proximity to the unincorporated town of Taplin.

“It always looked good in the spring and summer in the fall,” he said. “It was always nicely mowed and trimmed and we’d have cookouts, and it was a throwback airport. There was nothing new there.” 

The Way It Was

In the mid-1900s, the southern coalfields were once home to at least 40 airfields, or landing strips for airplanes, but today there are 28.

York’s grandfather, Edsel Varney, a legendary WWII fighter pilot, helped found Taplin airfield after the war. At that time, Taplin was a big deal.

John F. Kennedy flew into Taplin for a campaign stump speech before he was elected president. Also, actor Lorne Greene who played Mr. Cartwright on Television’s ‘Bonanza’ flew into the small Logan County airport. 

In fact, local airfields popped up across southern West Virginia in the 1900s. At least 12 were opened between the 1930s and the later 1960s. They were used as training facilities, military fields and as a way to get around West Virginia. 

Flight revolutionized travel in the Mountain State, said Merle Cole, Raleigh County Historical Society marker program officer.

“It took 50 minutes to fly, what would take you almost seven hours on a train and nearly as long by car,” Cole said.

Two Industries Intertwined

Many of these historic airfields have disappeared, much like Taplin. They have been replaced by highways, strip malls and some have been overtaken by the forests.

There are not many people left who still know the history of these tiny airports, and very little history was written down. Like so much else tied to the once prosperous coal towns throughout Appalachia, many of these stories have been forgotten with time. 

But the airfield history that we do know, Cole said, is partly related to the boom and bust cycle of coal mining.

“Flying is an expensive business. You gotta’ have a lot of money invested in airplanes, and airports and runways and staff and crew,” he said. “If you’re operating a small, private or personal strip, you still got to have the money to keep that plane in the air.”

While the coal industry soared in the mid-1900s, financing the airfields was not an issue, Cole said, adding that flying was relatively new and exciting, only invented a few decades earlier.

“People had extra cash on hand, people got their pilot’s license and learned to fly,” Cole said. 

Pursuing his passion for flying, Edsel Varnie, Andrew York’s grandfather, used his fighter pilot experience to work his way up from being a coal miner to flying coal barons through the southern coalfields. 

“If you’re a coal president or you’re in charge of the coal mines or something, I guess you don’t want to drive, you know, an hour and a half, two hours depending on what part of the southern coalfield you’re coming from,” York said. “But you had all these little communities that had their own airport, and it gave them access out of the coalfields.”

An “Uphill” Battle

Although flying was more efficient than driving, the topography still made flying difficult. To land a plane one needs long stretches of flat land, something the mountain state, especially the southern coalfields, lacks.

Runways have to be built either on top of flattened mountains or in flat land near the rivers, Randy Coller, pilot and airport inspector, said. Coller has inspected airports all over the country, including West Virginia.

“Generally, they’re shorter runways. And if they’re built in a valley it makes it extra difficult because there’ll be fog in the valley meaning it takes a while for the fog to lift out of the valley for it to be used,” Coller said.

The Taplin airfield, remember the little Logan County airport, was listed as ‘hazardous’ even while it was still open. It was about 2,600 feet of unpaved, grass runway. For comparison, a more typical runway is paved and around 6,000 feet.

West Virginia Route 10 cuts through half of what used to be the McDonald, or Taplin, Airfield.

Taplin was also in a valley and shaped in a curve, or what pilots call a ‘dog leg,’ making it tricky to land, York said.

“You might be able to see some of the airfield but not a lot of it because you had a ridge between you and the airfield. So, you followed the river, a windy river,” York said. “So, you wasn’t really flying straight to the runway. And then all of a sudden you get around at one point at Rich Creek, and bam, there’s the runway and you would land. That’s not normal.” 

Within the regional pilot community, it was thought that if one could land a plane at Taplin, one could land a plane most anywhere, York said.

The End Of An Era

With the decline of the coal industry and along with it, West Virginia’s economy, Cole, the historian in Raleigh County, said the smaller airfields were no longer used. 

“When the coal industry started dying off, many went away, and people simply didn’t have the money to pay for their hobbies or their transportation in some cases,” Cole said.

But the decline was not solely related to the coal industry. Randy Coller, the airfield inspector, said there are several other factors not specific to West Virginia.

“After WWII there was kind of an upsurge in pilots because a lot of the veterans had access to the GI Bill and they learned to fly, but that generation of pilots is dying out,” he said.

Also, the opening of larger regional airports and more stringent regulations made it harder for local operations to stay open, Coller said. But some communities hold out, Coller added, hoping to one day reopen their airfields. 

One in Wyoming County is not used much for flying these days, but it is still maintained for other reasons.  

“I myself have walked at the airport or ridden my bike as a young child. And now I enjoy taking my kids up there as well,” said LeAnn Biggs, a West Virginia native.

The airfield is a long strip of empty pavement, much like a running track, great for recreating. 

“We take long walks up there, my children ride their bikes, splashing the mud puddles, and just enjoy the scenery,” Biggs said.

Many of the airfields in West Virginia’s coalfields have disappeared with time, taking with them much of the rich history. Some have turned into strip mines or chemical factories, others reclaimed by the forests. But there are some clues left behind.

In Welch there is a locked gate, with an old metal sign that reads, ‘Welch Airport.’ Along Route 10 in Logan County, there is a turnoff that is called, ‘Airport Road.’ It takes you to what is left of Taplin Airfield – an overgrown field lining the banks of a windy river, that offers a glimmer of what it once was.

This story is part of West Virginia Public Broadcasting’s Southern Coalfields Reporting Project which is supported by a grant from the National Coal Heritage Area Authority.

**An earlier version of this story misquoted Merle Cole. The correct version is, “It took 50 minutes to fly, what would take you almost seven hours on a train and nearly as long by car,” instead of, “It took 15 minutes to fly, what would take you almost seven hours on a train and nearly as long by car.”

Coalfields To Receive $7 Million For Job, Infrastructure Growth

Federal grants of about $10 million from the U.S. Department of Commerce were awarded to four West Virginia projects Monday to help with infrastructure maintenance and economic development in the state.

Two of those projects are in the southern coalfields where the need for a more diversified workforce remains crucial.

“These projects will support business growth in West Virginia, diversify the state’s economy, and create new jobs for West Virginia residents,” said U.S. Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross.

The largest award, $5.2 million, will go to the Huntington Stormwater Utility to repair the Huntington Floodwall, which officials said was structurally damaged in the 2015 and 2018 floods.

The goal for this project is to reroute sewer and storm drainage systems to protect downtown businesses, according to a press release. The project is expected to create and retain 750 jobs, the commerce department said.

The Coalfield Development Corp., a nonprofit dedicated to revitalizing coalfield economies, will receive a federal grant for nearly $1.7 million. Three buildings in Matewan will be renovated to create a job-creation and training facility.

In 2019, West Virginia had the fourth-highest unemployment rate in the country. The new Matewan facility will specifically be geared toward unemployed coal miners – ideally creating 90 new jobs.

The Putnam County Public Service District and the Benedum Airport Authority also received federal grants for increasing water capacity to serve industrial needs and to renovate airport facilities, respectively. 

National Park Tourism Results In Millions Of Dollars For Southern W.Va.

A new report shows that tourism in southern West Virginia’s national parks injected more than $70 million into the local economies in 2019, which was before the coronavirus pandemic impacted the business in the state. 

In 2019, more than 1.3 million visitors came to the New River Gorge National River, Bluestone National Scenic River and Gauley River National Recreation Area, according to a newly released National Park Service report. 

Local economies in Fayette, Nicholas, Raleigh and Summers counties benefited from a $70 million boost, supporting 846 jobs. Similar numbers were reported in the 2018 Park Service report. 

However, it is unclear if the 2020 numbers will reflect those of the past couple years. Due to COVID-19, the national parks have been operating at limited capacity, said Eve West, Chief of Interpretation for the southern West Virginia national parks. 

“We do have people coming into the area more now and, you know, the businesses are showing some visitors and customers now, but, you know, undoubtedly numbers are going to be down some next year,” West said.

The three national parks are open for hiking; however, West said the campgrounds are closed and special programs have been cancelled. 

Exit mobile version