One Appalachian Potter's Twist On The Craft: Digging Clay

In rural Preston County, West Virginia, potter Mel Sword’s house is located at the end of a gravel road, near a road called “Wildflower Way” and a creek that feeds into the Cheat River. His home nestles rolling fields of green grass, and behind that are mounds of dirt, clay that to Sword is half the reason he bought this property about ten years ago.

In a special report exploring folkways traditions, as part of the Inside Appalachia Folkways Project, Caitlin Tan spent time with Sword to see how he is leaning on an old tradition to create modern day pottery. 

Credit Caitlin Tan / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Mel shows the string he uses to cut his clay. He tries to make all of his tools out of things he has around his shop.

The Pile

Sword practices an old kind of pottery technique – digging and processing his own clay, a practice of pottery that Appalachian’s ancestors did out of necessity for many years. It was a way to create plates, bowls and other ceramic tools. It is rare for a potter to dig their own clay today, but Sword still does it as a way of preserving an old technique.

While building his home, he created a large clay mound, made entirely of the dirt that surrounds his home. The pile is about 7 feet tall, 15 feet wide.

This is not any ordinary looking mound of clay one typically sees — it looks more like heavy dirt. Technically, it is clay soil right now, but it is the timely process of turning that soil into a moldable product that potters had to do before the industry was commercialized.  

“Pottery is just something that is a necessary thing to have in your life.,” says Renee Margocee, a professional potter and executive director of the Tamarack Foundation for the Arts. She says in the early days in Appalachia, people had to source their own clay too, much like Sword. “And clay is something that can be found everywhere. And so you can literally use what is close at hand to create an object that is utilitarian.”

A Potter’s Love Story

Sword has been making pottery for much of his life, but he only started digging clay about 15 years ago. His reason, he says, was love. He took his then girlfriend, now wife, camping outside of Morgantown. 

Credit Caitlin Tan / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Mel’s “West Virginia Pearls.” He first made them for his wife on a camping trip at Cooper’s Rock.

“We were hiking through the rain, and I saw the clay and water coming off the hill. And I knew there was clay there so I just went over there a scooped a little up,” Sword recalls.

And he formed the clay into little round beads and left them in the campfire coals. And in the morning he said, “Here sweetie, here’s some West Virginia pearls.”

And that has become Sword’s side business in retirement. He is the person who can make you “West Virginia Pearls.” 

The Process

Hand digging clay is labor intensive. In fact, Margocee says in her training to become a potter she learned how to process clay, in an effort to appreciate the medium.

“There will be a lot of organic matter in it, like twigs, rocks and burs,” Margocee says.

To break down the larger pieces of dry clay, Sword uses what looks like a very large mortar and pestle he hand made from a garage door spring, pipe and a few other things lying around. The contraption crushes chunky clay into fine sand.

Credit Caitlin Tan / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Mel pours clay soil onto a window screen. He uses it to filter the soil into a five gallon bucket.

He then puts the pulverized chunks of clay through a screen, which filters out twigs and rocks as clay sand is poured into a bucket.

Sword says it takes him about four hours to fill one five-gallon bucket.

“I’m the kind of person who likes to do monotonous jobs, and this is very monotonous,” he says.

Later, he adds water until it created a thick, muddy substance using a drill attached to an old paint stirrer to mix the clay together.

Credit Caitlin Tan / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Mel crushing the chunky, hard clay soil into a fine sand. He made this contraption out of things lying around his garage, including a garage door spring and some pipe.

After several days Sword removes any excess water that does not absorb using a turkey baster.

The clay then sits in a mold that absorbs any remaining moisture. And after that, Sword’s ready to work.

Turning The Clay Into Something

Sword uses the clay to make pots, bowls and mugs, shaped and molded with a foot pedal powered table — or a kick wheel. Although there are electric powered tables these days, that is not Sword’s style.

In his studio, the surface of the table spins around and around, much like a spool. 

The hunk of red clay sits in the middle as Sword shapes it with his hands to make a mug.

He works year-round, and though he sells some of his work, he says it is not his objective. He says he just enjoys the process of it all. 

Margocee suggests that every potter should try working with clay, like Sword, at least once. Although she admits that if one wants to sell pottery on a large scale, processing found clay is not the most efficient. However, it is still a part of our Appalachian history.

“There’s a romantic element to understanding it from beginning to end. And there’s extreme value in that,” Margocee says.

Sword hopes to invite students to his clay workshop, to show them his love for the process.

Credit Caitlin Tan / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
A mug Mel is making. He still uses a kick wheel, which is a traditional way to shape pottery.

And, if you want to try to find some West Virginia clay, Sword suggests keeping your eyes peeled after a rainstorm, especially on muddy backroads. Look for red spines in the banks of rivers and roads. Who knows,  maybe you will even be able to try your hand at a West Virginia Pearl for someone you love.

This story is part of the Inside Appalachia Folkways Reporting Project. Subscribe to the podcast to hear more stories of Appalachian folklife, arts, and culture.  

 

WATCH LIVE: The Mountain Goats, Nellie McKay, Joe Henry and John K. Samson on Mountain Stage

Mountain Stage with Larry Groce will celebrate its 34th Anniversary this Sunday, December 3 at the Culture Center Theater on the grounds of the State Capitol. Doors open at 6:30p.m. and the show starts at 7p.m., but you should make plans to arrive early because we have a couple of special surprises for our ticket holders, so keep reading. We will welcome The Mountain Goats, Nellie McKay, John K. Samson and Joe Henry. As of Friday morning tickets are still available online, by phone at 800.987.6487, and locally at Taylor Books in downtown, Charleston.

While there’s nothing quite like being at Mountain Stage live, those of you who aren’t in the area or can’t make the show can now watch live from anywhere with an internet connection thanks to the WVPB Video Production team and our colleagues at VuHaus. Just point your browser to this post, MountainStage.org, VuHaus.com or NPR Music to watch along.

Joe Henry, who made his first appearance on Mountain Stage in 1991, did an enlightening interview with Rob Byers at the Charleston Gazette-Mail, which even delves into the reason he wrote the song “Hurricane, W.Va.” from his 1986 album “Talk of Heaven.”

But wait. . . there’s more.

The 34th Anniversary is extra special for you ticket holders, and not only for the excellent line-up of live music you’ll enjoy. Audience members will be able to enjoy a 10% discount at the Tamarack: West Virginia Museum Shop inside the lobby of the Culture Center, thanks to the WV Division of Culture & History. The shop is located nearby the Mountain Stage box office and merchandise area in the great hall of the Culture Center and features a wide variety of fine art, jewelry, pottery, glass, quilts, books/CDs, souvenirs, gourmet foods, and many more great gift ideas.

PLUS

  A post shared by Vandalia Donut Company (@vandaliadonutco) on Nov 5, 2017 at 12:30pm PST

You can also grab a complimentary, fresh, hand-made donut outside thanks to the Vandalia Donut Company. This is our way of saying “Thank You” to everyone for celebrating this anniversary with us. Ticket holders can get a FREE “No. 42” donut from Vandalia Donut Company on the North plaza just in front of the Culture Center Theater. If you haven’t heard about this new, delicious offering to the Charleston food community, you can check out the Charleston Gazette-Mail’s recent feature by Jennifer Gardner, and follow the truck on Instagram and Facebook for a glimpse at their tasty treats.

Donuts are being offered thanks to generous support from the law offices of Farmer Cline & Campbell.

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Credit Courtesey of Vandalia Donut Company.
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Both sweet opportunities will be available from 5pm right up until showtime at 7pm.

Mountain Stage recorded its first regularly scheduled episode on December 7, 1983. Produced by West Virginia Public Broadcasting and distributed by NPR Music, Mountain Stage is currently heard weekly on 200 public radio stations across the country. The December 3 show will be scheduled for national broadcast in Spring 2018.

Mountain Stage Remembers Ralph Stanley: 1927-2016

Ralph Stanley, a patriarch of Appalachian music who made four appearances on “Mountain Stage” starting in 1998, died Thursday from difficulties with skin cancer. He was 89. Continue reading to hear performances by Stanley of “Angel Band” and “Pretty Polly” as heard on Mountain Stage.

“Mountain Stage” host and artistic director Larry Groce had this to say:

The skies of Virginia and West Virginia opened last night as Ralph Stanley passed, and poured rain on his home in historic and tragic proportions. Perhaps it’s coincidence.   When you hear a voice that sounds like it’s been here forever, it’s hard to believe it will ever be silenced. Ralph Stanley’s singing was something that seemed to grow out of the ground like the trees and springs. Now his body returns to the land. Death couldn’t “spare him over 'til another year” like he sang so many times. But that voice and that spirit will live on. “Oh come Angel Band, come and around me stand, Oh bear me away on your snow white wings to my immortal home. Oh bear me away on your snow white wings to my immortal home.”

Credit Brian Blauser/ Mountain Stage / Mountain Stage
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Mountain Stage
Singer Aoife O’Donovan, as a member of Crooked Still, shown here in 2005.

Singer Aoife O’Donovan made her first appearance on “Mountain Stage” as a member of Crooked Still on a show that also featured Stanley. She is one of many guests singing backup along with him on the above version of “Angel Band.” O’Donovan sent us this note:

In November of 2005, Crooked Still was lucky enough to play on the Christmas episode of Mountain Stage, broadcast live from Tamarack in beautiful West Virginia. Ralph Stanley and the Clinch Mountain Boys were also on the show – and it was my first time being in the presence of such a legend, such a powerful icon of Bluegrass and roots music. I remember gathering all together for the end of the show, and hearing Ralph sing "Angel Band" from mere inches away – I get chills just thinking about it. We've truly lost a hero. May he rest in peace.  

Here is a favorite memory of ours when Ralph joined us in Bristol, TN as guests of the Birthplace of Country Music. An audience member made a request, as politely as an audience member can, and he honored that request.
“I had another ‘un in mind, but if you want to hear “Pretty Polly” you’ll hear “Pretty Polly.”

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Ralph Stanley obliges a special request for "Pretty Polly" in Bristol, TN/VA on July 23, 2006.

For more on the life and accolades of Ralph Stanley, here is a media release from Webster PR.

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (June 23, 2016) – Ralph Stanley, a patriarch of Appalachian music who with his brother Carter helped expand and popularize the genre that became known as bluegrass, died Thursday from difficulties with skin cancer. He was 89.

Stanley was born and raised in southwest Virginia, a land of coal mines and deep forests where he and his brother formed the Stanley Brothers and their Clinch Mountain Boys in 1946. Their father would sing them old traditional songs like “Man of Constant Sorrow,” while their mother, a banjo player, taught them the old-time clawhammer style, in which the player’s fingers strike downward at the strings in a rhythmic style.

Heavily influenced by Grand Ole Opry star Bill Monroe, the brothers fused Monroe’s rapid rhythms with the mountain folk songs from groups such as the Carter Family, who hailed from this same rocky corner of Virginia.

The Stanleys created a distinctive three-part harmony that combined the lead vocal of Carter with Ralph’s tenor and an even higher part sung by bandmate Pee Wee Lambert. Carter’s romantic songwriting professed a deep passion for the rural landscape, but also reflected on lonesomeness and personal losses.

Songs like “The Lonesome River,” uses the imagery of the water to evoke the loss of a lover, and “White Dove,” describes the mourning and suffering after the death of a mother and father. In 1951, they popularized “Man of Constant Sorrow,” which was also later recorded by Bob Dylan in the ’60s.

The brothers were swept into the burgeoning folk movement and they toured the country playing folk and bluegrass festivals during the ’60s, including the Newport Folk Festival in 1959 and 1964.

But when Carter died of liver disease in 1966, Ralph wasn’t sure he could continue. His brother had been the main songwriter, lead singer and front man, and Ralph, by his own account, was withdrawn and shy, although he had overcome some of his early reticence.

“Within weeks of his passing, I got phone calls and letters and telegrams and they all said don’t quit. They said, ‘We’ve always been behind you and Carter, but now we’ll be behind you even more because we know you’ll need us,'” Stanley told The Associated Press in 2006.

After Carter’s death, Ralph drew even deeper from his Appalachian roots, adopting the a cappella singing style of the Primitive Baptist church where he was raised. He reformed the Clinch Mountain Boys band to include Ray Cline, vocalist Larry Sparks and Melvin Goins. He would change the lineup of the band over the years, later including Jack Cooke, and mentored younger artists like Keith Whitley and Ricky Skaggs, who also performed with him.

Dylan and Grateful Dead’s Jerry Garcia praised his work and, in the case of Dylan, joined him for a remake of the Stanley Brothers’ “Lonesome River” in 1997.

He was given an honorary doctorate of music from Lincoln Memorial University in Harrogate, Tennessee, in 1976, and he was often introduced as “Dr. Ralph Stanley.” He performed at the inaugurations of U.S. Presidents Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton, was given a “Living Legends” medal from the Library of Congress and a National Medal of Arts presented by the National Endowment for the Arts and President George W. Bush. He became a member of the Grand Ole Opry in 2000.

But at age 73, he was introduced to a new generation of fans in 2000 due to his chilling a cappella dirge “O Death” from the hit Coen Brothers’ “O Brother, Where Art Thou?” movie soundtrack. The album was a runaway hit, topping the Billboard 200 chart, as well as the country albums and soundtrack charts, and sold millions of copies.

He won a Grammy for best male country vocal performance in 2002 — beating out Tim McGraw, Ryan Adams, Willie Nelson, Johnny Cash and Lyle Lovett — and was the focus of a successful tour and documentary inspired by the soundtrack. The soundtrack, produced by T Bone Burnett, also won a Grammy for album of the year. The following year he and Jim Lauderdale would win a Grammy for best bluegrass album for “Lost in the Lonesome Pines.”

He said in an interview with The Associated Press in 2002 that younger people were coming to see his shows and hear his “old time music,” and was enjoying the belated recognition.

“I wish it had come 25 years sooner,” he said. “I am still enjoying it, but I would have had longer to enjoy it.”

Despite health problems, he continued to record and tour into his 80s, often performing with his son Ralph Stanley II on guitar and his grandson Nathan on mandolin.

Stanley was born in Big Spraddle, Virginia and lived in Sandy Ridge outside of Coeburn, Virginia. His mother was Lucy Jane Smith Stanley and his father was Lee Stanley. He is survived by his wife Jimmie Stanley – they were to celebrate their 48th wedding anniversary on July 2nd. He is also survived by his children: Lisa Stanley Marshall, Tonya Armes Stanley and Ralph Stanley II; His grandchildren: Nathan Stanley, Amber Meade Stanley, Evan Stout, Ashley Marshall, Alexis Marshall, Taylor Stanley, and Ralph Stanley III; and great grandchild Mckenzie Stanley. Memorial service details are pending and will be announced shortly.

In the Making: Make Art Like WV Artists

Collaborate like artists Dutch and Hammer

  

West Virginia LearningMedia, a free digital resource sponsored by West Virginia Public Broadcasting presents another collection of media resources. 

The collection, In the Making is a collection of short biographical videos, provided by the Tamarack Artisan Foundation, of seven West Virginian artists that profile them making their art.  As companion resources each video is paired with a video art lesson which allows the viewer to create their own art in the style of the particular artist profiled.

No previous art experience is required.  This series is perfect for an art lesson in the classroom or for the individual who wants to explore their own creativity.

http://wv.pbslearningmedia.org/search/?q=In+the+Making&selected_facets=

Youth Art Contest Part of New River Gorge Wildflower Weekend

The National Park Service is holding a youth art contest for students in Fayette, Nicholas, Raleigh and Summers counties.

The Youth Arts in the Parks 2016 Appalachian Spring Wildflower Art Contest is open to K-12 students in the four counties.

Tamarack in Beckley will showcase top entries at an art exhibit in April 2016.

The park service says entries must be hand delivered to a contest art receiving station between Feb. 1, 2016, and Feb. 7, 2016.

The contest is part of the New River Gorge Wildflower Weekend. The annual spring event celebrates the region’s ecology.

Contest rules, an entry form and other information are available here.

Mountain Stage After Midnight: Bela Fleck, Abigail Washburn, Todd Burge

Between the two of them, Bela Fleck and Abigail Washburn have appeared on Mountain Stage over 15 times in the last twenty years. Until the First Family of the Banjo make their next appearance on the show (get to writing, Bela/Abby!), we’ll go ahead and listen back to their past pick’n tunes on Mountain Stage After Midnight.

Broadcast from 1am-5am Saturday and Sunday mornings here on West Virginia Public Broadcasting, Mountain Stage After Midnight takes the best episodes from the show’s 31 year history and shares their memories and songs with our late-night listeners.

Tune in this Saturday July 4 and Sunday July 5 for some great tunes on Mountain Stage After Midnight.

We’ll hear a March 2006 show featuring Bela Fleck & The Flecktones, Lynn Miles, Gus Black, Ricardo Lemvo & Makina Loca and Teddy Thompson.

Credit Brian Blauser/Mountain Stage
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Abigail Washburn & the Sparrow Quartet on Mountain Stage in 2006.

Another show comes from November 2006, this time recorded at the Tamarack Conference Center in Beckley, WV. Guest artists include Abigail Washburn & The Sparrow Quartet, Bearfoot, Jim Lauderdale, Todd Burge, The Klezmatics and Doug & Shelley Harper.

Which archived shows do you want to hear on the next #MSAM? Send us your favorite show memories on FacebookTwitterTumblr and Instagram. Take a walk down (musical) memory lane with our 24/7 Mountain Stage stream, which is supported by music fans like you. Sign-up for our monthly email newsletter for the latest show announcements and come see what live performance radio looks like at one of our live shows. And if Mountain Stage isn’t available wherever you are, contact your public radio station and let them know what they’re missing out on!

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