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Appalachianhistorian.org

Appalachianhistorian.org
History of the Appalachia Region
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Appalachian FiguresWhitley County KYEnglisch
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Autor Alex Hall

Appalachian Figures Corbin, Kentucky, does not usually appear in histories of Motown Records. On paper it is a small railroad town on the Whitley and Knox county line, remembered more often for a 1919 racial expulsion and for Colonel Harland Sanders than for rhythm and blues.

Appalachian FiguresWhitley County KYEnglisch
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Autor Alex Hall

Appalachian Figures Most people who grew up with the Blondie movies or the Blondie radio show remember the sound first. A crash, a yelp, and then Dagwood Bumstead tumbling into the mailman again, arms and legs everywhere. For mid twentieth century audiences he was the most famous flustered husband in America, sprinting for the streetcar with his towering sandwich, forever late for work and forever forgiven at home.

Appalachian FiguresPike County KYEnglisch
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Autor Alex Hall

Appalachian Figures Lois LaVerne Williamson came into the world on July 9, 1923, in rural Pike County, Kentucky, the daughter of coal miner Joseph Williamson and his wife Hester. Like many mountain families along the Tug Fork in those years, the Williamsons lived close to the seams that fed the postwar coal boom and just as close to the insecurity that came with it. From the start, music was the family’s other livelihood.

Appalachian FiguresMadison County KYEnglisch
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Autor Alex Hall

Appalachian Figures On a weekday morning in Corbin the traffic along Roy Kidd Avenue tells its own story. School buses swing into the Board of Education offices at 108 Roy Kidd Avenue. Parents turn in toward the Corbin Educational Center and elementary school, both listed at the same address.

Appalachian FiguresPike County KYEnglisch
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Autor Alex Hall

Appalachian Figures When people talk about the old Tug Fork coalfields, they often end up talking about a place that is gone. For forty years the Red Robin Inn sat just above the river at Borderland, West Virginia, a neon roadhouse filled with homemade banjos, antique guns, and stories.

Appalachian FiguresWhitley County KYEnglisch
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Appalachian Figures On a cold December afternoon in 1940, the Chicago Bears humiliated Washington in the NFL championship game by a score of 73 to 0. Somewhere in the blur of blue jerseys and leather helmets, halfback George McAfee took an interception and sprinted thirty four yards into the end zone, one more score in a game that still stands as the most lopsided title contest in league history. Sportswriters liked the spectacle.

Appalachian FiguresWhitley County KYEnglisch
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Autor Alex Hall

Appalachian Figures When Ohio historians talk about Madam Lizzie Lape, they usually start in Marion or Akron or Stow. They talk about the White Pigeon, about raids on “houses of ill fame,” about an early test of the Winn Law and the Married Women’s Property Acts. Very few start where the paper trail actually begins, in the hill farms of Whitley County, Kentucky, with a girl the census takers called Amy or Elizabeth Rogers.

Appalachian FiguresWhitley County KYEnglisch
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Autor Alex Hall

Appalachian Figures If you stand at the mouth of the hollow where Packard once sat, there is no marquee and no sign that an Academy Award winner first opened her eyes there. The coal tipple is gone. The company houses are gone. What remains is a quiet Whitley County hollow above Big Patterson Creek where, for a few decades in the early twentieth century, several hundred people tried to make a life in the shadow of a mine.

Appalachian FiguresKnox County KYEnglisch
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Autor Alex Hall

Appalachian Figures When racing fans see the red and white Ramsey silks flash past the finish line at Churchill Downs or Keeneland, they are watching a global operation that grew from some very small places on the Cumberland. The story of Kenneth Lee and Sarah Kathern Ramsey usually gets told in the language of purse money, Eclipse Awards, and Breeders’ Cup wins. It is also a Knox County story.

Appalachian FiguresBell County KYEnglisch
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Autor Alex Hall

Appalachian Figures On a stretch of Cumberland Avenue in downtown Middlesboro, the traffic signs suddenly change. For a few blocks the road becomes the Leonard F. Mason Medal of Honor Memorial Highway, a reminder that one of the most celebrated Marines of the Pacific war began life within sight of Yellow Creek and the surrounding Bell County ridges.

Appalachian FiguresWayne County KYEnglisch
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Autor Alex Hall

Appalachian Figures On a fall night in Bluefield, Virginia, a Graham High School senior named Bill Dudley lined up for what everyone in the stands understood as a desperate kick. The ball sat on the Princeton forty yard line, too far out for most high school kickers of the late nineteen thirties. Dudley swung his leg, the ball sailed through the uprights, and an underdog team from the coalfields stunned a favored rival.