Following
is Walt's piece written about his experiences as a student volunteer
Êin the Southern Appalachians in the 1960's. ÊIt was written as
part of a book of memoirs by members of the Student Opportunities
Service (SOS) and HINGE at Western Maryland College, now named
McDaniel College. ÊThe book, "The Journey Outward - Service and
Protest in an Uncommitted Generation," may be purchased by calling
Common Ground on the Hill 410-857-2771.
Of
These Hollers I Sing
Roots
Ê
I
suppose that my interest in Appalachia and its people was initially
kindled by my motherÕs interest in true frontier life.Ê She read
about the subject voraciously, most likely as a result of her
many visits as a young girl to her parentsÕ childhood homes in
southern Illinois.Ê She spent many hours with her grandparents
on the farms there, growing up with a sense of family oral history.Ê
She knew that her maternal grandfatherÕs people had originally
come from Kentucky, and that they were Scotch-Irish immigrants
at some point in the dim past. Other ancestors were Roger Williams
and the Wright brothers, but it seemed that my motherÕs fascination
was with the Appalachian folk. Ê
I
remember her showing me an article in the Washington Post about
the people of Appalachia.Ê I was struck by the look of these peopleÉ.their
high cheekbones, plain dress and rough-hewn features.Ê What interested
me most was the fact that they played mountain music, something
that I was obliquely aware of as a result of playing folk music.Ê
I, like so many others of my generation, played the popular folk
music of the day, the music of the Folk Revival . . . Kingston
Trio, Pete Seeger, Joan Baez, Bob Dylan and the rest. I had learned
to play the guitar and banjo while working as a page in the US
Supreme Court and attending the Capitol Page School, located in
the Library of Congress.Ê In that same building were the Folk
Archives of the Library of Congress, the repository of great collections
of folk music.Ê I passed by them every day, aware of their existence,
but didnÕt do any research there until my freshman year of college.
Ê
In
1960, my father, Marion Michael, was appointed District Superintendent
of the Washington East District of the Methodist Church.Ê We worked
across the street from one another during this volatile era of
change.Ê Dad was a major player in facilitating the merger of
the Washington and Baltimore Conferences of the Methodist Church,
in essence, the racial integration of the Methodist Church.Ê I
witnessed the excitement of the Kennedy Administration and the
Warren Court as I fulfilled my duties as a page.Ê My high school
years were filled with the issues of the day, both on Capitol
Hill and around my familyÕs dinner table.Ê It is only recently
that I have come to fully understand how very different my raising
was from so many of my WMC classmates. Ê Ê
SOS
on Campus Ê
At
Western Maryland, I was lucky to be placed in the freshman English
class taught by then Associate Professor Ray Phillips.Ê After
a semester of composition, we studied American folklore.Ê My term
paper that semester was on folk-blues artist Huddie Ledbetter,
known as Leadbelly.Ê I made a trip to the Library of Congress
and was shown around by Joe Hickerson, the head of the Archive.Ê
The academic, scholarly world of ÒrootsÓ or ÒtraditionalÓ music
opened to me at that time. Ê
In
my sophomore year, it was announced that there would be an SOS
project in Appalachia.Ê I believe that I first heard of it from
David Carrasco, and he urged that I get involved.Ê As well, Dean
Ira Zepp encouraged me.Ê I had known of David before coming to
WMC, as he was baptized by my father at the Marvin Memorial Methodist
Church in Silver Spring.Ê He encouraged me to write for the Gold
Bug early in my sophomore year and I took on sports writing under
his tutelage.Ê David later became Editor in Chief, I assumed his
sports editor position, and was later appointed Editor in Chief
in my junior year.Ê Dean Zepp was a household name in my family,
as he attended my fatherÕs first parish appointment in Belair,
MD.Ê I first met Ira when he spoke at my fatherÕs church in Bethesda
in the late Ô50Õs.Ê Dean ZeppÕs presence in the student life of
WMC was essential to the SOS experience, as he exposed us to the
difficult issues of the day.Ê Being named to an SOS team meant
that I would be working with Dean Zepp, and that fact was reward
and reason enough to be involved. Ê
At
the same time, I remember feeling quite apprehensive about being
involved in SOS, as it appeared to be the project of some very
intelligent, powerful and eloquent upper classwomen. I was a lowly,
struggling sophomore, and had a hard time imagining myself in
such a peer group, Encouraged by Carrasco and Zepp, and excited
about the announcement of a new SOS Appalachian venue, I applied.
SOS was highly respected on the campus, and a student/faculty
committee reviewed the applications.Ê I remember hearing the announcements
at supper in the dining hall.Ê It was as if I had been nominated
for the Nobel Prize. Classmates congratulated me; it was perceived
a big honor to be chosen.Ê Fact is, a group of us were chosen
to go to not the exotic tropics of Puerto Rico or the Philippines,
but to the mountains and hollers of Appalachia where we would
confront rural white poverty.Ê I was excited, knowing that I would
be bringing my guitar and banjo along.Ê It was also a huge plus
that my best buddy, Will Davis, would be going too.Ê We shared
a love of the outdoors, basketball and a sense of adventure.Ê
WillÕs sister, Carol Davis, was one of the founding students of
SOS, having graduated prior to my arrival on campus. Ê
My
freshman and sophomore years included classes in sociology and
anthropology with Dr. Griswold.Ê I remember enjoying his use of
films in the classroom, and his keen interest in other cultures.
I was excited about being involved with Dr. Griswold and Dean
Zepp in a project taking us into the larger world, away from the
confines of the campus. ÊÒDr. GÓ and ÒIgzÓ were our mentors, and
offered different varieties of guidance and support.Ê Dr. G knew
the sociology of our projects, knew how to connect our goals and
work to resources, and had an infectious Òcan-doÓ attitude, believing
in our youthful abilities, perhaps more than we did ourselves.Ê
Igz was the heart and soul of our work.Ê In short, he was interested
in our hearts and souls and the effect our experiences would have
on us as human beings.Ê Dean ZeppÕs chapel services at WMC were
both the well from which we drank and the classroom challenging
us to understand and heal a wounded world. Ê
The
Appalachian team was led by Dan Bohi, another WMC student I had
known from before coming to college.Ê ÊDanÕs father was a Methodist
minister and a member of the Baltimore-Washington Conference,
the same conference my father served.Ê Dan had taken part in a
non-SOS Appalachian project the year before, and helped prepare
us for the realities of mountain life.Ê During the semester prior
to our departure, our team helped in the collection and cataloging
of books to be included in the library we would take with us.
We read Harry CaudillÕs Night Comes to the Cumberlands, the definitive
book on southern Appalachian history and culture. Other team members
were Casey Henson, Linda Sullivan and Jan Hazelton. On a hot July
morning, we departed for southwest West Virginia in my red Volkswagen
beetle and a U-Haul truck and trailer, dangerously overloaded
with books. Somewhere, we found room for my banjo and guitar.Ê
LindaÕs guitar was safely on board as well. Ê
IÕd
Rather Be in Some Dark Holler Ð Traditional Song
Ê
At
the end of a mountainous and winding twelve-hour drive, we arrived
in Welch, WV, and put up in the Hotel Carter.Ê Night had fallen
and we were exhausted. ÊIt was said that Welch, the business center
of the coal fields, had more Cadillacs per capita than any other
town in the USA.Ê Meanwhile, the outlying hollers were filled
with the disenfranchised, the poor, the ignored. The next morning,
we met with our contact agency, The Council of Southern Mountains.Ê
We were told about the two-room school house in Mohawk that had
been allocated for the library.Ê We met retired Army sergeant,
ÒSargeÓ Baker, a Vista Volunteer, who would be our contact person,
as he rode around the hollers in his jeep, checking up on various
projects, making sure that people had food, housing and medical
attention. Sarge was a great spirit; it was inspirational to see
a military veteran switch gears and continue to serve his country
in this way.Ê The staff at the Council warned us to be careful,
to stay away from juke joints, to be aware of potential violence.
Our area, Panther-Mohawk-Bull Creek-Isaben was in a remote part
of McDowell County, in short, a dangerous place to be.Ê
After
the meeting, we unloaded the cartons of books, storing them temporarily
in the Council office.Ê Dan and I drove back to Bluefield to return
the truck and trailer to the U Haul franchise. ÊIn Keystone, on
the way back to Welch, we encountered an enormous funeral procession
for a fallen black soldier killed in Vietnam. This was a chilling
reminder that no matter how deep into the mountains we had come,
Vietnam was with us.Ê It would be with us for a long time, and
we were just beginning to fathom its ramifications. Ê
Later
that day, we drove to Panther, where we met up with our community
contact, Chick Lockhart, the principal of Panther Elementary School.Ê
He led us back into the remote hollers of Panther, Mohawk and
Bull Creek, introducing us to our host families. We first stopped
at my destination, the home of Roland and Anna Bailey. Roland
was not home, and Anna had just returned from a funeral, and was
very distraught. This was my first encounter with the sometimes,
mournful and tragic nature of the Appalachian people. She told
Chick that she had no recollection of agreeing to be my host family.Ê
I would not be welcome in the Bailey home.Ê Ê
Rejected,
our entourage left, continuing on our way to the other host homes.Ê
Casey Henson was greeted warmly by matriarch store-owner Corey
Collins in Mohawk, and taken in to her comfortable home.Ê We wound
our way down the mountain, crossed the east fork of the Tug River,
and met Woodrow and Josephine Cline.Ê This was to be the home
of Dan Bohi and Will Davis. Woodrow was a Òlow-coalÓ miner, meaning
that he worked on his hands and knees in seams of coal oftentimes
lower than three feet high. ÊJosephine was a school librarian,
and their two teen-aged children were college bound. The Clines
were very friendly and took in Dan and Will with open arms.Ê Continuing
up Bull Creek, we topped the mountain and settled Linda and Jan
with their hosts, the Blankenships. This older couple, custodians
at Chick LockhartÕs Panther Elementary School, was another good
fit for our volunteers.
There
I was, on top of a mountain, at the end of the road.Ê Night was
coming on, and I had no place to stay. Chick Lockhart told me
to drive back to Anna and Roland BaileyÕs, that it would be okay
for me to stay there.Ê I was very apprehensive, and asked Chick
if some other arrangements might be made for me. He insisted that
I would be fine at the BaileyÕs.Ê He drove off, leaving me to
find my way back to Panther.Ê By the time I arrived, it was dusk,
and I was very uneasy about approaching the Bailey home. ÊI was
a stranger in a strange land. In front of the BaileyÕs general
store, I encountered Roland, still in his mining clothes.Ê I told
him about my dilemma, and asked if I might spend just one night
in his home until I could find other housing.Ê After a pregnant
pause, which I later discovered was merely RolandÕs quiet way,
he told me that I was welcome to stay.Ê He grabbed a TV dinner
from the storeÕs freezer, and walked me across the tracks to their
home. Ê
The
BaileyÕs home lay between the tracks of the N&W Railroad and the
Tug River.Ê It was a two-story block home, with a rather suburban
appointment upstairs.Ê However, the unfinished basement was where
the family lived, ate and relaxed.Ê I sat at the Formica table,
ate the TV dinner and made conversation.Ê I learned that Roland
was a private Òsmall coalÓ operator.Ê He employed about six men,
mining coal in drift mines, carved out of the mountains with sweat,
dynamite and small machinery. Private coal truck operators transported
the coal from RolandÕs mine to railroad tipples, where coal cars
were filled with the black gold.Ê Twice a day or more, the N&W
pulled 150 or more coal cars past the Bailey home enroute to steel
mills, electric plants and other major industries throughout the
nation.Ê A myriad of mining operations, big and small, supplied
the trains with this prehistoric cargo.Ê Roland told me that two
hundred years worth of coal remained in the mountains around us.Ê
I wondered why so much poverty existed in the midst of such vast
natural wealth. Ê
As
we talked, an explosion from outside rocked the house.Ê Shaken,
I asked what hadhappened.Ê Roland calmly, slowly replied ÒJust
some fellers playinÕ around with dynamite, I reckon.Ó He returned
to our conversation.Ê Twenty minutes later, there was a slow knock
on the basement door, and an old man poked his head in and said,
ÒRoland, thereÕs a man dead up on the railroad tracks.Ó Ê
We
rushed out of the basement and scrambled up the bank onto the
railroad tracks.Ê A hundred yards down the tracks, a demolished
car lay upside down.Ê The driver, a relative of Chick Lockhart,
had put a stick of dynamite under his belt, lit a slow-burning
cigarette fuse, and gone for a drive.Ê It was said that he and
his wife were having difficulties and that he was depressed.Ê
The car passed the BaileyÕs store, rounded the bend and climbed
the mountain above the tracks when the dynamite exploded, blowing
the man in two and hurling him and his car off the mountainside
onto the tracks below. Ê Soon, it seemed that the entire community
gathered in the night.Ê Teenage boys spit tobacco and smoked cigarettes
that had been blown out of the car onto the road. Violence and
death hung heavy in the damp air.Ê It was my first night in the
mountains.Ê Ê Ê
Keep
on the Sunny Side Ð The Carter Family Ê
During
that first summer, we experienced the cultural wealth of the Appalachian
people.Ê Although mired in poverty, they were people with profoundly
deep roots, reaching way back to a time before the lumbering and
mining industries had decimated their land. ÊThese roots continued
to sustain the mountain folk after the plundering. Ê Ê
As
we put the library in place and developed its routine, we took
part in and initiated a number of activities in the community,
enjoying the spirit, joys and traditions of the mountain people.Ê
We visited many homes as we developed a campaign to petition the
state government to invest in road improvements.Ê The petition
went with us to Charleston, ultimately falling upon deaf ears.Ê
We fished for catfish in the fouled water of the Tug River, played
basketball, volleyball and baseball in the coal dust, ran art
and literature classes with the children at the library, held
box supper fund raisers, rode the ridges and abandoned strip mines
in a borrowed jeep, played music for a ÒhootenannyÓ and worshipped
at a number of mountaintop churches, where the unaccompanied singing
would echo and resound through the hollers below, striking an
ancient tone.Ê We listened to the hellfire and brimstone sermons
of fierce preachers, had dinner on the ground, and went on picnics
at the Panther State Park, savoring Woodrow ClineÕs fresh-caught
bass and Anna BaileyÕs unparalleled stacked-apple pies.Ê Some
nights we drove to the ever-burning slag heaps in Isaben, peering
into vague gas-lit hollers that appeared to be gateways to Hell.
We went deep into Roland BaileyÕs mine, feeling the weight of
the mountain above us, and ducked behind a pillar as he touched
off the dynamite, shooting a seam of coal. ÊWe delivered groceries
with lead-foot Bobby Collins in his V-8 Chevy pickup truck, always
fearing for our lives.Ê People bought food with cash, food stamps
and credit.Ê We delivered everything from corn meal to cracked
corn while people cooked everything from corn bread to moonshine.Ê
Every house had a pot of pinto beans on the stove. Dried apples
and string beans were strung up and hung on front porches.Ê Every
house had a framed picture of JFK on the wall, the man who made
good on his promise to feed these hungry people.Ê This champion
of the poor had been slain less than three years prior to our
arrival in the mountains. Ê Ê
One
Sunday, we went with Anna and Roland to a beautiful state park
and heard the Revelators, a seasoned itinerant gospel group.Ê
On the way home, we stopped at Jolo, attending a church where
poisonous snakes were handled. On the winding ride home, will
Davis and I chewed tobacco in the back seat of RolandÕs car. It
was an ill-advised activity.Ê Some Saturday evenings we flat-footed
to the juke box and drank weak 3.2 beer at a bar-club in Iaeger.Ê
We were barely 20 years-old.Ê We were, at once, student-volunteer-activists,
and children. Ê
Dr.
Griswold and Dean Zepp visited us that summer.Ê The purpose of
the visit was to assess our work and shoot some film footage for
a promotional film about SOS.Ê Dr. Griswold piloted down in a
private plane and I met them at the Welch airport.Ê My car had
blown its engine on the mountainside below the airport, so Dr.
G. flew us to Bluefield where he rented a car.Ê As we flew above
the mountains, I was shocked and sickened to see how extensive
the strip mining was throughout the region. The team was bolstered
by our mentorsÕ visit, and we managed to shoot a good deal of
effective footage.Ê Back on campus in the fall, I worked with
Dr. Griswold and David Carrasco to edit, script and narrate the
film entitled The Journey Outward.Ê This film became an effective
fundraising tool as we spoke to civic groups and churches throughout
the ensuing school years. Ê
Little
Birdie, Come Sing to Me Your Song Ð Traditional Appalachian Song
Ê
My
richest experience in the mountains centered on its traditional
music.Ê As soon as the library was in place, we wanted to have
a gala opening, and thought that a ÒhootenannyÓ would be a fun
activity for the community, and an opportunity to help organize
the community in to a year-round support system for the library/community
center.Ê Linda and I would play, but we thought it important to
find some local folks to play music as well.Ê We had heard that
Zink Bailey on Bull Creek was a fine mandolin player who had played
on radio shows.Ê So, we drove to his store and introduced ourselves.Ê
Zink was a very friendly and humble man, but told us that he would
be driving his coal truck on the evening of the opening and could
not play music for us.Ê We were disappointed, and as we turned
to leave the store, a short-stooped old man winked and asked me
if I Òpicked the banjer.ÓÊ I replied yes, whereupon he asked if
I would like to see his Òbanjers.ÓÊ I could hardly contain myself,
for I knew that I had hit the jackpot. I had found what I had
hoped to find in these mountains: roots music inextricably linked
to the rich past of the oral tradition. Ê
This
old man was William Christian Bailey, brother of Zink Bailey.Ê
We climbed the hill to his home and he showed me into his living
room, where hung seven or more hand-made fretless banjos.Ê They
were relatively crude instruments in appearance, made of oak,
maple and cherry woods and fox, squirrel and groundhog skins.
Christian took one from the wall, walked to the front porch and
commenced tuning the banjo while he introduced me to his mother,
who was 89 years old.Ê I learned that she had witnessed the hanging
of famous outlaw John Hardy in Welch many years before.Ê She was
born on this very spot back before the timber and coal industries
had ravaged the land.Ê She remembered the great canopied forest
before its mammoth trees were clear cut and floated downriver.
She remembered Bull Creek when it ran clear. Christian brought
his banjo into tune and played an old modal tune.Ê This was the
first of many visits to his home, where I listened to stories
of the union wars and the Baldwin Thugs, moonshining and jail,
and adventures of local hero Matt Justice.Ê Over the next two
years, Christian sang ballads dating back to 18th Century England
and played banjo tunes of antiquity.Ê Joe Hickerson, of the Library
of Congress, provided me with reel-to-reel tapes upon which I
recorded ChristianÕs music and stories.Ê These recordings now
reside at the Library of Congress. Ê
In
subsequent summers, I discovered that there were two traditional
musicians in Mohawk who were equally interesting.Ê Alex Cline
was a wonderful harmonica player and dancer, elf-like in appearance
and always of great humor.Ê He often hung around the CollinsÕ
store in Mohawk and survived by doing odd jobs.Ê Eventually, we
discovered that his 84 year-old brother, ÒCripple CleveÓ Cline,
lived with him in an old abandoned company house near the tracks
below the library.Ê Cleve had not owned a banjo for 15 years or
more because his daughter had been ÒsavedÓ and believed that traditional
music was the work of the Devil. Russ Cottingham and I drove to
Bluefield, and using SOS funds, bought an inexpensive but adequate
banjo and gave it to Cleve.Ê He was a masterful claw hammer style
player, and even though he had suffered a stroke, he played and
recorded a number of old tunes which now also reside in the Library
of Congress. I will never forget visiting Alex and Cleve in their
home.Ê They had no possessions except the worn clothes on their
back, a couple harmonicas, a shotgun, two ancient, dilapidated
beds and two chairs.Ê An old pot of pinto beans sat on the stove.Ê
And now a banjo hung on the wall.Ê AmericaÕs aged rural poor:
ignored, isolated and uncounted.Ê Their music, to this day, rings
vividly in my memory, and ranks among the best music I have heard
anywhere. Ê
Will
the Circle Be Unbroken?- The Carter Family
Ê
During our first summer in Appalachia, it eventually became apparent
to us that our time and effort could be best spent in providing
programming and activities for the children and teens.Ê There
were wonderful children in those hollers, with great, colorful
personalities and senses of humor.Ê In the next two summers, our
efforts were directed almost entirely at childrenÕs activities.Ê
I was the only original team member to return in the summer of
1967, and was joined by Frank Bowe, Joyce Ferguson and Ellen Von
Dehsen, a wonderful artist who had as well, a superb gift for
teaching.Ê We continued to run classes at the library, lead outdoor
activities and focus on broadening the scope of the childrenÕsÕ
world. ÊMany children had never been further away from their homes
than nearby Iaeger.Ê The end activity of that summer was a trip
to Hungry Mother State Park, a 3 hour drive away.Ê It was an exciting
event for some kids who had never been out of their local holler.Ê
One young boyÕs highlight moment was to call his mother from a
pay phone!Ê It was as if he was calling her from the moon. Ê
That
summer we decided that we could have a lasting, positive impact
on the kids by arranging for on-going year-round activities, giving
them opportunities to get out of the hollers and experience a
broader world.Ê We developed a relationship with the Isaben Baptist
church, arranging for the church bus to take the kids to high
school football games during the school year. It seemed like a
good plan that the community was excited about.Ê We left at the
end of the summer, feeling positive about the activities and focus
of our second summer in Appalachia. Ê
The
call came to my apartment in Westminster on a cold fall evening
in 1967.Ê After the final football game of the season, the bus
carrying the kids of Panther, Mohawk, Isaben and Bull Creek had
been sideswiped by a logging truck, killing 16 year-old Debby
Cline and hospitalizing 32 others. Our kids. We were devastated.Ê
We called Dr. Griswold and he assured us that we were not at fault
nor responsible for this outrageous tragedy.Ê Certainly, we werenÕt
responsible for the fact that the truck driver was drunk, and
running without his lights. But we knew better. We were, in the
ultimate sense, responsible. ÊAs outsiders, we had imposed our
values on this community. Will, Ellen and I drove the somber,
winding road to West Virginia, attending DebbyÕs wake, and mourning
with families, friends and survivors.Ê Will and I were among the
pallbearers who carried Debby to her resting place in the mountainside
graveyard.Ê Anna Bailey collapsed on her fatherÕs grave, sounding
a low-pitched, mournful wail that spoke for us all. Ê Ê
In
the dead of the night, in the still and the quiet, I slip away,
like a bird in flight, back to the place that I call home. Ð Hazel
Dickens
Ê
Upon
my return from my first summer in West Virginia, I remember being
asked by a classmate how I enjoyed my SOS experience.Ê I could
not summon words that would adequately convey the experience or
how I felt about it.Ê I realized at that moment that I was changing
in profound ways, impossible to define, and ultimately incommunicable.Ê
By 1968, My SOS field experience had transformed me from a goal-directed
college student to a student of a different sort.Ê I had witnessed
the violence of poverty and classism.Ê As a voter registration
volunteer in South Carolina, I had witnessed the ravages of racism.Ê
As an advanced ROTC cadet officer and as Editor in Chief of the
student newspaper, the Gold Bug, I had wrestled with the issues
of the war in Vietnam. In the midst of a fine and demanding liberal
arts education, I was directly exposed to the realities of an
extremely troubled, violent world. The very same institution that
was sending me to Appalachia to help eradicate poverty and isolation
was grooming me to lead draftees into battle in a war against
peasants in Southeast Asia. I was receiving extremely conflicting
messages from the dual personality of my college.Ê The only thing
I knew for certain was that I must return for another summer in
West Virginia.Ê I knew that we would return to continue our work,
and in doing so, bear witness to the tragic school bus accident
and our complicity in it. Ê
In
the wake of the assassinations of Martin Luther King and Robert
F. Kennedy, we fielded two Appalachian teams in the summer of
1968. WMC students were joined by students from William and Mary
College. Ellen Von Dehsen and I were the only returning volunteers.Ê
Ellen and Lin Lin Chen, a WMC student from Burma, lived with Anna
and Roland Bailey in Panther. WMCÕs Judy Harper, Cathy McCullough
and Doug Smarte set up living quarters in the library in Mohawk,
along with Steve Wilson (brother of WMCÕs SOS Puerto Rican team
member Ralph Wilson) and fine banjo picker, Russ Cottingham, both
of William and Mary.Ê Jeff Davis joined me in living at Christian
BaileyÕs home in Bull Creek, up the hill from Zink BaileyÕs store.Ê
This was an energetic and gifted group of individuals, functioning
really as one large team. Ê
Our
work that summer, as I can best remember, focused mostly on the
children in the communities.Ê We mounted a very successful swimming
instruction program, which took place at the swimming pool in
Panther State Park. Providing transportation for over 90 individuals
proved to be quite a task, but packing kids and volunteers into
barely adequate vehicles became part of our daily routine.Ê A
daily morning wagon train of Volkswagen bugs and vans wound its
way through the hollers up to the Park.Ê Steve Wilson headed up
the swimming classes as we offered a wide range of instruction
including life guard certification. ÊThe afternoons consisted
of art and literature classes (I can remember leading a riverside
class on The Grapes of Wrath), basketball and volleyball games,
and more laid-back unorganized activities, oftentimes at Juck
and Merlene KirkÕs new juke joint at their house across the river.
ÊJudy and Cathy went from house to house, offering health care
information to expectant young mothers. Ê
One
evening, we put on a square dance at L.E. ClineÕs barn in Mohawk.Ê
A wonderful old string band showed up, consisting of a fiddler,
banjo player and guitarist, all from another county.Ê I wish to
this day that I had gotten to know these musicians.Ê They really
knew what they were doing.Ê I was busy making up square dances
and keeping the evening moving along.Ê I regret that I was not
more active in collecting traditional music during those years,
when mountain music was drawn from the well of anothertime. Ê
Ê
One
afternoon, a coal truck driver fell asleep at the wheel and careened
over the side of the mountain in Mohawk.Ê He was thrown from the
huge truck and killed as it rolled over him.Ê Some of us witnessed
the aftermath of the event, another grim reminder that in Appalachia,
the specter of violent death was always waiting in the wings.Ê
Ê
A few of the teenage boys had formed a rock band over the winter.
They asked me for ideas for a good band name.Ê I humorously suggested
The Lincoln Tunnel because there was a popular band at that time
called The Brooklyn Bridge.Ê I remember being pleasantly surprised
as I drove into the region the next summer to hear a radio announcement
of an upcoming appearance by The Lincoln Tunnel!Ê I joined them
on several occasions at the Iaeger skating rink.ÊÊ It wasnÕt mountain
music, but it was their mountain music. Ê During my three summer
seasons and many other visits to West Virginia, I maintained a
good working relationship with Chick Lockhart.Ê We maintained
a presence in his Panther Elementary School, and he valued our
leadership abilities, our respect for the mountain culture, and
our shared belief in the value of education. Chick was a decorated
veteran of the Battle of the Bulge.Ê One day he proudly showed
us his extensive battle scars as we stood outside his modern school.
He also showed us the paddle he used to keep students in line.Ê
It had air holes in it so as to attain optimum speed.Ê On many
occasions, Chick asked us to consider leaving WMC to teach at
Panther Elementary.Ê It was in my mind to finish college, move
to West Virginia and take Chick up on his offer.Ê I would teach
in his school, spending my days with these fantastic mountain
children. As well, I would continue to collect and play mountain
music, and I would pursue my growing interest in photojournalism.Ê
It was a plan of the heart. Ê
I
donÕt remember too much more about our project work that final
summer in the mountains.Ê I do remember watching the Democratic
Convention on television and seeing the Chicago Police bust the
heads of protestors.Ê I do remember that L.E. ClineÕs dance barn
was burned down by two boys I had befriended and worked with for
three years. And IÕll never forget the night that Debby ClineÕs
father got drunk and fired his shotgun at me from across Juck
KirkÕs cornfield.Ê Jeff Davis and I ran to my car and frantically
backed across the Mohawk bridge. ÊÊLater that night, we sped past
DebbyÕs house on our way back up Bull Creek to our beds at Christian
BaileyÕs. ÊThe school bus wreck still lay heavy on everyoneÕs
hearts. Ê
But
thereÕs no light in that window that shone long ago where I lived.Ê
Bill Monroe Ê
Upon
my return to Maryland, I took a teaching job with the Board for
Fundamental Education in Baltimore.Ê I taught reading, writing
and arithmetic to black steelworkers employed at Bethlehem Steel
in Sparrows Point.Ê During that time, I wrestled with my convictions,
and came to the difficult conclusion that I had become a conscientious
objector and could not, in good conscience, take part in the armed
services.Ê I notified the ROTC department at WMC that I would
refuse my commission as a Second Lieutenant.Ê I would be the first
cadet in the history of WMC to do so. ÊI was informed that the
Army would issue me an honorable discharge as they did not want
anyone of my convictions in a leadership position.Ê I was immediately
vulnerable to the draft.Ê With the assistance of the American
Friends Service Committee, I prepared my conscientious objector
claim, but also began to prepare myself to be sentenced to federal
prison. ÊIf my CO claim was denied by my draft board, I would
refuse induction and go to prison. Ê
As
part of my CO claim, I needed letters of support from community
and religious leaders. I wrote to Chick Lockhart to ask his support,
so that I might spend my alternative service as a teacher-volunteer
in the Panther Elementary School.Ê His response was to write a
letter to the editor of the Welch daily newspaper, asking that
no one in McDowell County ever hire me for any type of work. ÊÊHis
desire was that no child in West Virginia ever hear the term nor
understand the meaning of conscientious objection. His letter
was printed. ÊI was no longer welcome in McDowell County. ÊThe
plan of the heart had been sabotaged. The dream was over. Ê
Epilogue
IÕve
a short time to be here, and a long time to be gone. Ð Little
Birdie, Traditional Song Ê
In
the fall of 1968, Jeff Davis arranged for Christian Bailey to
come to WMC and spend a week on campus, playing banjo and telling
stories.Ê It was, by far, the furthest Christian had ever been
out of the mountains.Ê ChristianÕs mother had passed away the
prior spring, and he had been very depressed.Ê We were concerned
that if given the chance, he would drink and go into an alcoholic
tailspin, as he had done in the past. But the thinking was that
Jeff could control ChristianÕs environment during the visit and
things would go well. After all, Christian had never been to a
town of this size, and wouldnÕt know where to go to find liquor,
and he had no mode of transportation.Ê On the second morning of
ChristianÕs visit, Jeff told Christian to stay put while he left
his apartment and went to class.Ê When he returned, he found Christian
drunk in the midst of a number of wine bottles.Ê This old mountain
man had merely called a cab company and asked to be taken to the
nearest liquor store.Ê Jeff called me in Baltimore and asked for
my help.Ê Larry Eisenberg and I drove Christian back to Bull Creek
throughout that night, arriving at dawn. He was in sad shape.
Ê
Some
weeks later, we drove once again to Bull Creek to attend another
funeral. Christian had put an end to his despair with a self-inflicted
gun shot. We had a floral arrangement made up in the fashion of
a banjo. We lost a real friend.Ê In a sense, I lost the most tangible,
human element of my entire SOS experience. Ellen Von DehsenÕs
painting of Christian and Cleve hangs in my dining room.Ê I say
hello every day. Ê
At
some point in time after 1969, the Mohawk Library was burned down
on a Halloween evening.Ê The books we catalogued have long since
gone up in smoke. Ê Ê
As
the years have passed, I have learned not to dwell on the tragedies
I was a part of in themountains.Ê Memories, good and troublesome,
spring forward into my consciousness and dreams at unpredictable
times. I will always carry with me the faces and spirit of the
children we attempted to serve. Ê
The
plan of the heart has changed.Ê The music of Appalachia lives
within me.Ê I have gone on to learn much more about it, and have
played it throughout the United States, Canada, the British Isles
and Europe.Ê It has nourished my soul, and put food on my familyÕs
table.Ê It is the wellspring of Common Ground on the Hill, the
program which now flourishes at McDaniel College, seeking peace
through the traditional arts. ÊÊIn the spring of 2000, 34 years
after my first trip to Appalachia, I returned to the hollers with
Don & Ellen (Von Dehsen) Elmes and five of my WMC students. We
visited Roland and Anna Bailey and then drove to Bull Creek, where
I was delighted to find Zink Bailey.Ê We sat on his front porch
and played music for the first time in over thirty years. We played
together better than ever. Ê Ê Ê Ê
Walt
Michael SOS Appalachia Teams 1966, 67, 68 Team Leader 1967 & 1968
Ê