We have a conversation with Marshall University's Turning Point USA chapter president. We also learn about a recently released horror film shot near Huntington, and the population decline in central Appalachia that may be getting worse.
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Appalachia’s Folkways: Handmade and Passing It On
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This week on Inside Appalachia, we’ll hear from Appalachians who have a knack for making things with their hands — people who make the essentials of life in the old ways.
“And when I sit down at one of those looms and I start creating a piece of cloth, I feel connected to the place of my ancestors, the people who have come before,” said weaver Jane Gilchrist.
Credit Caitlin Tan, WVPB
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Jane weaving a pot holder. She said she is drawn to weaving because it is a relaxing, repetitive movement that still requires focus.
Back in 2017, as part of a partnership between West Virginia Public Broadcasting and the West Virginia Humanities Council’s Folklife program, we aired a story about a West Virginia broommaker Jim Shaffer, who has been practicing his craft since 1946. Since it aired, a video of Jim went viral online, and people from New York to Florida decided to come visit Jim and get one of his special handmade brooms.
Credit EMILY HILLIARD/ WV FOLKLIFE PROGRAM
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Jim Shaffer
But the broommaking business has changed drastically over the years, and Shaffer says he foresees a day when stores stop stocking straw brooms altogether.
“Walmart, Kmart, and Kroger’s have took all that over now, and you don’t have any mom and pop stores to buy from the wholesale distributors, so they all went out of business,” Shaffer said.
Recently, Shaffer decided to close his shop after seven decades of hard work. But he found a new broommaker, Wanda Hott, who wanted to buy his equipment and learn his craft. Her broommaking business is based in Hampshire County, West Virginia. We’ll hear how she — and even some of her younger family members — are pitching in to keep the art of sweeping alive in Appalachia.
Credit Caitlin Tan, WVPB
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The sponge stage of the salt rising bread starter. Once the starter is in this stage one can mix it with flour to make a dough.
We’ll also hear from a new generation of Appalachian makers dedicated to keeping these traditions going. A few years ago, the West Virginia Humanities Council launched the West Virginia Folklife Apprenticeship Program. Emily Hilliard, the state folklorist, says the program is designed to encourage traditional artists to teach their crafts to a new generation. The master artists each receive a $3,000 dollar stipend to spend a year teaching an apprentice.
Kara Vaneck and Marion Harless focused their study on the craft of making teas, jellies and other value-added products out of herbs and other ingredients you can find right in the woods. Vaneck uses the training she received with Marion to make handmade products through her business, Smoke Camp Crafts.
Another folklife apprentice, Amy Dawson, is learning the art of salt rising bread. The recipe grew out of the distinctive quality of life on the Appalachian frontier.
Making salt rising bread is a labor-intensive proccess, but it’s a tradition Dawson wants to help keep alive. “Growing up I didn’t realize how special it was, and I just thought it was something that people had everywhere, just a type of bread. But it wasn’t until I moved back home in my thirties that I realized that it was really only in this region, and that you really couldn’t get it anymore.” Dawson is a chef at Lost Creek Farm, a farm-to-table traveling restaurant.
Credit Jessica Lilly
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Mike Sizemore, Athens, W.Va.
Also in this episode, host Jessica Lilly travels to Mountain Artworks, a studio in Mercer County that houses the unique flair, personality, passion and dreams of metal sculptor Mike Sizemore. In his art, Sizemore uses copper in addition to other found materials, even recycled glass ashtrays. Some of his work, which can tower as tall 30 feet, is often inspired by petroglyphs from ancient drawings.
Do you know someone in your community or family who still makes things with their hands? What traditions are still out there? We’d love to tell more of these stories before the knowledge is lost. Send us an email or reach out on Twitter or Instagram. #MyAppalachia.
Inside Appalachia is produced by Roxy Todd. Jesse Wright is our executive producer. Catherine Moore edited our show this week. Our audio mixer is Patrick Stephens. We’d love to hear from you. Send us tweet @InAppalachia.
More than 500 residents of Mercer County are about to find out if they have been chosen for a rare opportunity. They have applied for a Guaranteed Minimum Income program through the nonprofit Give Directly, which uses funds from wealthy benefactors to give cash benefits to those in need.
We have a conversation with Marshall University's Turning Point USA chapter president. We also learn about a recently released horror film shot near Huntington, and the population decline in central Appalachia that may be getting worse.
This week, the region is known for exporting coal, but it’s losing people, too. Also, folk singer Ginny Hawker grew up singing the hymns of the Primitive Baptist Church, but she didn’t think of performing until she got a little boost from Appalachian icon Hazel Dickens. And, the chef of an award-winning Asheville restaurant was shaped by memories of growing up in West Virginia.
High winds Wednesday fanned more than 20 fires across the state, and the largest of those fires is still burning. Also, we speak with a journalist who has been covering population decline in central Appalachia.