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Tolkien Studies: An Annual Scholarly Review

Tolkien Studies: An Annual Scholarly Review presents the growing body of critical commentary and scholarship on both J. R. R. Tolkien’s voluminous fiction and his academic work in literary and linguistic fields. The founding editors are Douglas A. Anderson (The Annotated Hobbit), Michael D. C. Drout (Beowulf and the Critics), and Verlyn Flieger (Splintered Light: Logos and Language in Tolkien’s World).

Current Editors: Michael D. C. Drout, Yvette Kisor, and David Bratman
E-ISSN:1547-3155
Frequency: Annual

Tolkien Studies is available on Project MUSE (https://muse.jhu.edu/journal/299) and in paperback. 

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Individuals may purchase electronic access to individual issues and articles on Project MUSE (https://about.muse.jhu.edu/individuals/purchase-muse-content/).

Institutions seeking electronic subscriptions or electronic & print packages should order from Project MUSE (https://about.muse.jhu.edu/librarians/).

Print Subscriptions

Individuals may order volume 20 (2023) and preorder volume 21 (2024) from our partner Duke University Press Journal Services: 

Institutions seeking print-only subscriptions should subscribe through their agents or contact Duke University Press Journal Services. For electronic & print packages, order from Project MUSE.

Questions about print subscriptions, including claims for replacement copies, should be directed to Duke University Press Journal Services.

Print Back Issues

To order print back issues (vol 18 or later), call Duke University Press Journal Services at (888) 651-0122 or +1 (919) 688-5134. Click here to order print back issues of volume 17. Volumes 1–16 are no longer available in print.

Digital Editions

Click here to order digital editions (vols. 2 through 11 only). (Vol. 1 and later can also be purchased on Project MUSE as indicated above.)

A special supplemental issue to volume 19 has been published: J.R.R. Tolkien, "The Chronology of The Lord of the Rings," edited, with introduction, notes, and commentary by William Cloud Hicklin; a preface by William Fliss; and a special introduction by the editors. The supplement is available in paperback and is available electronically on Project MUSE. Individuals who wish to receive the supplement in print should purchase a print subscription to volume 19 (which can be ordered as indicated above). Print subscribers to volume 19 will receive both the supplement and the regularly scheduled volume.

 


Reviews

“What else can one say? The reviews are full, numerous, by respected hands, and informative. . . .another magisterial addition to the growing corpus of Tolkienian scholarship.”
David Doughan, Mallorn

“A welcome addition to the growing library of Tolkien criticism.”
Mark Hooker, Mythprint

“A very important and highly readable addition to Tolkien scholarship.”
Carol A. Leibiger, Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts

“The best anthology of Tolkien criticism and commentary.”
Mike Foster, Mythopoeic Society  

 

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Essays in Medieval Studies

Editor: Michael W. George, Millikin University
E-ISSN: 1538-4608
Print ISSN: 1043-2213
Frequency: Annual

This is an online-only journal and is available to libraries through Project Muse. Essays in Medieval Studies is an interdisciplinary journal of medieval studies. Contents for each volume are selected from papers delivered at the annual meeting of the Illinois Medieval Association. The annual volume appears in late spring each year and carries articles focused around the conference topic from scholars of both the literature and history of the period. Each volume focuses on the theme or topic of the annual meeting. Recent themes have included children and the family, medieval communities, and emotions in the Middle Ages. For more information on submitting papers to the annual conference, visit the website of the Illinois Medieval Association.

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Education and Treatment of Children

Education and Treatment of Children is no longer published by West Virginia University Press. Please direct inquiries for volume 43 and later to Springer.

Volumes 30 (2007) through 42 (2019) are available through Project MUSE.
 

E-ISSN: 0748-8491

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West Virginia University Press Journals

The West Virginia University Press publishes peer-reviewed journals in the humanities. For information on submitting articles for publication, please follow links to the individual journal. All of our journals are available electronically to institutions through Project Muse.

Journals

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Uncommon Vernacular: The Early Houses of Jefferson County, West Virginia, 1735-1835

Uncommon Vernacular

John C. Allen, Jr.
September 2011
384pp
HC/J  978-1-933202-87-7
$49.99

Summary

Within the picturesque borders of Jefferson County, West Virginia remain the vestiges of a history filled with Civil War battles and political rebellion. Yet also woven into the historical landscape of this small county nestled within the Shenandoah Valley is an unusual collection of historic homes. 

In this fascinating architectural exploration, John C. Allen, Jr. details his expansive seven-year survey of Jefferson County’s historic residences.  By focusing on dwellings built from the mid-eighteenth century to the arrival of the railroad and canal in 1835, Allen unfolds the unique story of this area’s early building traditions and architectural innovations. The 250 buildings included in this work—from the plantation homes of the Washington family to the log houses of yeomen farmers—reveal the unique development of this region, as Allen categorizes structures and establishes patterns of construction, plan, and style.

Allen’s refreshing perspective illuminates the vibrant vernacular architecture of Jefferson County, connecting the housing of this area to the rich history of the Shenandoah Valley. Varying features of house siting, plan types, construction techniques, building materials, outbuildings, and exterior and interior detailing illustrate the blending of German, Scots-Irish, English, and African cultures into a distinct, regional style.

Adorned with over seven hundred stylish photographs by Walter Smalling and elegant drawings, floor plans, and maps by Andrew Lewis, Uncommon Vernacular explores and preserves this historic area’s rich architectural heritage.

2011 ForeWord Book of the Year Award Finalist

Contents

  • Preface
  • Chapter One
      From Settlement to Refinement: Houses in Context
  • Chapter Two
      Early Farmhouses, 1735–1815
  • Chapter Three
      Later Farmhouses, 1815–1835
  • Chapter Four
      Outbuildings: Farm Structures Serve the House
  • Chapter Five
      Town Houses, 1780–1835
  • Chapter Six
      Siting and Construction
  • Chapter Seven
      Exterior Features
  • Chapter Eight
      Interior Detailing
  • Chapter Nine
      The End of Local: Arrival of the Railroad and Canal, 1835–1850
  • Conclusion
  • List of Houses Surveyed
  • Notes
  • Acknowledgments
  • Contributors
  • Index

Author

John C. Allen, Jr. works as a preservation coordinator and architectural historian near Shepherdstown, West Virginia. He serves as the chairman of the Historic Landmarks Commission of Jefferson County, West Virginia.

Andrew Lewis, the illustrator, is a licensed architect living in Rectortown, Virginia. His architectural work has been recognized with many awards over his twenty-four-year career.

Walter Smalling, Jr., a Washington architectural photographer,began his professional career with the National Park Service and has worked as a freelance photographer since 1988.

Reviews

During my career at the West Virginia State Historic Preservation Office I have realized that while great architecture exists within the state’s boundaries, not many people knew about it.  Now they will.  And, although I have visited many buildings included in this book or read their National Register of Historic Places nominations, I could never turn to a reference volume that provided a comprehensive review through floor plans, drawn elevations and photographs. Now I can.  John Allen has captured the wonderful architecture of Jefferson County in this, the first publication that documents in great breadth the character and quality of architecture found in West Virginia’s eastern panhandle region of the Shenandoah Valley.  Focusing on the period 1735-1835, Allen confirms that architecture found in Jefferson County embraced the popular architectural styles of the era.  Each building’s description and analysis is accompanied by meticulous drawings and rich photographs. Walter Smalling, Jr., photographer, and Andrew Lewis, illustrator, have created a wonderful record of this architecture. Both serious student and casual reader will enjoy exploring these pages.  I look forward to adding this volume to my collection and sharing it with others.
Susan M. Pierce, Deputy State Historic Preservation Officer

Within this handsomely presented book, author John Allen shares his rapture for the eighteenth and early nineteenth century architectural gems he has uncovered in Jefferson County, West Virginia. Some known, others discovered; some sophisticated for their time and place, others a unique marriage of English precedents from coastal Virginia and German influences that flowed south through the Shenandoah Valley. Beautifully supported by Walter Smalling’s handsome photographs and Andrew Lewis’s excellent elevation drawings and abundant floor plans, Uncommon Vernacular opens for the casual reader and scholar alike a rich though largely underappreciated vein of America’s architectural heritage. In so doing, Allen has struck pure gold."
Dr. William J. Murtagh, First Keeper of the National Register of Historic Places

“Detailed text, extensive photographic documentation, and meticulously drawn plans and renderings collectively present early and extant conditions in a manner that provides a comprehensive historical record.”
Joan M. Brierton, Historic Preservation Specialist

“This book is beautifully and engagingly written.”
Keith D. Alexander, Historic Preservation Program Coordinator, Shepherd University

Gallery

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The Shenandoah

The Shenandoah

Julia Davis
Introduction by Christopher Camuto

October 2011
400pp
HC/J  978-1-933202-95-2
$24.99
PDF 978-1-933202-96-9
$24.99

Summary

In 1945, West Virginia author Julia Davis penned The Shenandoah as part of the Rivers of America Series, a landmark collection of books written by literary figures over a period of thirty years. In this classic reprint, now with an introduction by Christopher Camuto, Davis tells the history of the Shenandoah Valley and River, drawing on her own research and the experiences of ancestors who settled and lived in the area. Her book provides a poetic vision of both the river and the valley, preserving a fragment of America’s landscape.

Contents

  • Introduction
  •   Christopher Camuto
  • Map
  •   George Annand
     
  • Part I: Promise
  •   1. Song
  •   2. The Unrecorded Past
  •   3. Exploration
  •   4. Settlement
  •   5. Pioneers
  •   6. Washington
  •   7. Massacres
  •   8. Fort Loudoun
  •   9. Revolution
  •   10. Expansion
  •   11. Inventions
     
  • Part II: Holocaust
  •   12. The Fateful Lightning
  •   13. The Swift Sword
  •   14. Marching On
  •   15. The Invaded
  •   16. Valley Campaign I
  •   17. Valley Campaign II
  •   18. Valley Campaign III
  •   19. The Long Year
  •   20. The Burning
  •   21. The Starving Crows
     
  • Part III: The Recovery
  •   22. The Hero
  •   23. The Fait
  •   24. Fool’s Gold and True Gold
  •   25. Past Into Present
  •   26. Valley Tour I
  •   27. Valley Tour II
  •   28. Valley Tour III
  •   29. Epilogue
  •   30. Postscript
     
  • Acknowledgments
  • Bibliography
  • About the Author

Author

Julia Davis Adams (1901–1993) was born in Clarksburg, WV, attended Wellesley College, and graduated from Barnard College in 1922. She began her career as a reporter for the Associated Press in New York City, where she also headed the adoption service of the Children’s Aid Society in the early 1960s. She authored two dozen books.

Christopher Camuto is the author of a rough-hewn trilogy on the southern Appalachians—A Fly Fisherman’s Blue Ridge, Another Country: Journeying Toward the Cherokee Mountains, and Hunting from Home: A Year Afield in the Blue Ridge Montains—as well as Time and Tide in Acadia: Seasons on Mount Desert Island. He manages a biodiversity perserve, an 80-acre eco-restoration of old farm fields, woodlots, and wetlands, in Pennsylvania.

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Ugly to Start With

John Michael Cummings
October 2011
144pp
PB  978-1-935978-08-4
$16.99
PDF  978-1-935978-09-1
$16.99
ePub 978-1-938228-34-6
$16.99

Summary

Jason Stevens is growing up in picturesque, historic Harpers Ferry, West Virginia in the 1970s. Back when the roads are smaller, the cars slower, the people more colorful, and Washington, D.C. is way across the mountains—a winding sixty-five miles away.

Jason dreams of going to art school in the city, but he must first survive his teenage years. He witnesses a street artist from Italy charm his mother from the backseat of the family car. He stands up to an abusive husband—and then feels sorry for the jerk. He puts up with his father’s hard-skulled backwoods ways, his grandfather’s showy younger wife, and the fist-throwing schoolmates and eccentric mountain characters that make up Harpers Ferry—all topped off by a basement art project with a girl from the poor side of town.

Ugly to Start With punctuates the exuberant highs, bewildering midpoints, and painful lows of growing up, and affirms that adolescent dreams and desires are often fulfilled in surprising ways.

Contents

  • The World Around Us
  • Two Tunes
  • Ugly to Start With
  • The Fence
  • We Never Liked Them Anyway
  • The Wallet
  • Rusty Clackford
  • Mountain Wake
  • John Brown the Quaker
  • Carter
  • Indians and Teddy Bears Were Here First
  • The Scratchboard Project
  • Generations

Author

John Michael Cummings is a short story writer and novelist from Harpers Ferry, West Virginia. He is the author of The Night I Freed John Brown, which won the 2009 Paterson Prize for Books for Young People (Grade 7-12) and was recommended by USA Today for Black History Month. His short story "The Scratchboard Project" received an honorable mention in The Best American Short Stories 2007. His novel, Don’t Forget Me, Bro, was excerpted in the Chicago Tribune. Mr. Cummings taught English at Seminole State College and was a reporter for The Fairfax Times.

Reviews

“Beautiful and gut-wrenchingly raw.”
Blake Nelson, author of Paranoid Park, Destroy All Cars, and Recovery Road

"The linked stories inUgly to Start With invite us into one boy's life on the margins of historic Harpers Ferry. With an appropriate balance of grit and wonder, John Cummings crafts a coming-of-age narrative of a son striving for the truest expression of his identity in the midst of a family and a place where he often feels like an outsider. These stories have a hard edge to them and a hard-earned wisdom, the sort we only get in retrospect if we're lucky."
Lee Martin, author of The Bright Forever and Break the Skin

"By turns tender, witty and unsettling, Ugly to Start With is a strong and memorable collection.  The stories are carried along by Cummings' graceful prose and pacing, and are charged with the class and racial tensions encoded in the DNA of the United States.  As a group they sketch a compelling portrait of a boy [adolescent?] trying to make sense of his town, his father, and ultimately himself."
Brendan Short, author of Dream City

"John Michael Cummings' prose is anything but Ugly to Start With - I read this book in two sittings, and  it was hilarious and melancholy and singular.  I've never read about a Harpers Ferry, or a family, like this, and their conversations, their houses, and their lives deserve a wide audience.  I can't wait to pass this book along."
Susan Straight is the author of seven novels, including Highwire Moon, a Finalist for the National Book Award and a Distinguished Professor of Creative Writing at University of California, Riverside.

"John Cummings’ collection of short stories, Ugly to Start With, breathes in the atmosphere of  Harper’s Ferry, West Virginia, which plays a central role in many of the conflicts over innocence and experience, development and preservation, insider and outsider, and nature and community.  In this lively and sufficient landscape are a trio—a young boy, his mother, and  his father, who face the complexities of  knowledge of place. Sometimes knowing is painful.  In other stories, there are momentary reprieves or insights provided by the boy’s sharp and wry view of life where “clocks had stopped long ago,” “one big tree” suffices to hide a multitude of sins, and in his crying he can hear his own future unhappiness echo through his body.  This a lovely, funny, melancholy, and important collection of coming-of-age stories."
Maxine Chernoff, author of A Boy in Winter

“In Ugly to Start With, John Michael Cummings has gathered a baker’s dozen of stories full of the warmth, innocence, and holy terrors of childhood. An auspicious debut.”
Peter Selgin, author of Drowning Lessons

“Pitch-perfect West Virginia voices.”
Enid Shomer, author of Tourist Season: Stories

“Like Faulkner, Cummings knows the strong undertow that blood exerts on ambition and self-preservation.”
Charlotte Holmes, Associate Professor, Penn State University. Her stories have appeared in many journals including Epoch, New Letters, Story, and The New Yorker

“Sparkling, deeply intelligent, and often heartbreakingly funny.”
Eileen Pollack, Director, MFA Program in Creative Writing, University of Michigan and author of The Rabbit in the Attic, In the Mouth, and Paradise

“Like Huck Finn and Holden Caulfield, John Michael Cummings’ teenage narrator reveals the troubled and tender and tough heart of a place both split and knit by class, race, and family.”
Wayne Karlin, author of Wandering Souls: Journeys With the Dead and the Living in Viet Nam and Prisoners

"In Ugly to Start With John Michael Cummings tells the story of a uniquely unhappy family with a gracious but disgruntled mother and an idiosyncratic, autocratic, sometimes brutal father who doesn’t believe in having guests or letting anything go to waste. The father with his extremism in self-reliance binds the family together for a while, but then is the cause of its flying apart. The stories embrace other painfully failed families and individuals– all richly human and somehow, seen though the eyes of the young main character, hopeful even in despair."
Meredith Sue Willis, author of Oradell at Sea

“John Cummings is a prolific American short story writer and among the most talented of the rising generation of new regionalists  who have inherited the mantle of Bobbie Ann Mason, Barry Hannah and Larry Brown.  In Ugly to Start With, a series of thirteen interrelated stories set in the eastern panhandle of West Virginia, he tackles the challenges of boyhood adventure and family conflict in a taut, crystalline style that captures the triumphs and tribulations of small-town life.  Not since John Brown's raid has Harpers Ferry generated such excitement for readers.   Cummings has a gift for transcending the particular experiences to his characters to capture the universal truths of human affection and suffering--emotional truths that the members of his audience will recognize from their own experiences of childhood and adolescence.  Cummings is a gifted author who has paid his literary dues, publishing numerous short stories in the nation's most prestigious journals.  As readers, we are fortunate that he has waited so long to produce a first collection, as he is now able to gather together the very best of his short prose  Needless to say, none of his stories disappoint.   Each story is a riveting psychological journey, a reminder of what it's like to be young and hopeful and uncertain.  This collection has defined West Virginia's eastern panhandle as Cummings country, as much as the Salinas Valley belongs to Steinbeck or working-class Albany belongs to William Kennedy. “
Jacob Appel, author of “Dyads” and “The Vermin Episode”

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West Virginia: Its Farms and Forests, Mines and Oil-Wells

West Virginia

J.R. Dodge
Introduction by Kenneth R. Bailey

October 2011
304pp
HC/J  978-1-935978-11-4
$24.99
PDF 978-1-935978-12-1
$24.99

Summary

West Virginia: Its Farms and Forests, Mines and Oil-Wells celebrates the state of West Virginia. Originally published in 1865 as a series of studies on mineral resources, observations on agriculture, and interviews with businessmen, West Virginia details the industrial statistics, terrain, and population of a state during its infancy.

With no record of natural wealth or reported transactions of agriculture or geography prior to this overview, West Virginia sparked the curiosity of non-residents, enticing investment and settlement through descriptions of abundant natural resources and an agreeable industrial condition.

With an introduction by Kenneth Bailey, this new edition of West Virginia reminds us of the state’s alluring beginning and rich, yet often exploited development.

Contents

  • Introduction
  • Preface
  • CHAPTER I
  •   west virginia.—cradled in convulsion.—a sturdy race.—old jealousies.— reorganization.—new laws.—finances.—her boys in blue
  • CHAPTER II
  •   original settlement.—where virginians emigrate.—tobaccoand the blue laws.—lands.—the “tomahawk right.”—how thepioneers lived.—getting married.—progress.—population.
  • CHAPTER III
  •   location.—value of lands.—stock growing.—fertility.—no waste areas.— comparison with maryland, minnesota, andnew hampshire.
  • CHAPTER IV
  •   climate.—altitude.—temperature.—rain-fall.—salubrity.—scenery.
  • CHAPTER V
  •   topography and statistics of counties.—the valley group.
  • CHAPTER VI
  •   survey of counties continued.—the mountain group.
  • CHAPTER VII
  •   survey of counties continued.—the “panhandle.”
  • CHAPTER VIII
  •   survey of counties continued.—the river district.
  • CHAPTER IX
  •   survey of counties continued.—the kanawha valley.
  • CHAPTER X
  •   survey of counties continued.—the southern group.
  • CHAPTER XI
  •   survey of counties continued.—the central group.
  • CHAPTER XII
  •   statistics of production.
  • CHAPTER XIII
  •   internal improvement.—roads and turnpikes.—slackwaternavigation.—ohio and chesapeake canal.—baltimore and ohio railroad.—other railroads.
  • CHAPTER XIV
  •   mineral wealth.—coal.
  • CHAPTER XV
  •   iron. — salt.—limestone.—other minerals.
  • CHAPTER XVI
  •   petroleum.—its wide distribution.—discovery in west virginia.
  • CHAPTER XVII
  •   how originated.—popular and unpopular theories.
  • CHAPTER XVIII
  •   where found.—how to find it.
  • CHAPTER XIX
  •   uses.—quantity used.
  • CHAPTER XX
  •   well boring.—oil distillation.—refining.
  • CHAPTER XXI
  •   the era of oil wells.—the burning springs district.—the little kanawha.
  • CHAPTER XXII
  •   the hughes’ river region.—oil run of goose creek.—horseneck and cow creek.
  • CHAPTER XXIII
  •   the central and northern oil region.
  • CHAPTER XXIV
  •   the great kanawha oil basin.—the valleys of the guyandotte and big sandy.
  • CHAPTER XXV
  •   petroleum companies of west virginia.
  • CHAPTER XXVI
  •   petroleum prospects.

Author

Jacob Richards Dodge (1823–1902) was born in New Boston, NH. He was the first statistician for the US Department of Agriculture. When he began his work he had one clerk, and when he retired in 1893, there were sixty. He became known for his ability in gathering and presenting statistics. The government sent him on two trips to Europe to observe how other countries gathered data and to share his knowledge. He was given responsibility for compiling agricultural statistics for the Tenth Census in 1880, and in 1889 he was recognized by the international community of statisticians when he received a gold medal at the Paris Exposition for his illustrations of agricultural statistics. After retiring, Dodge became an editor of the Country Gentleman and wrote numerous articles and books. He died at age eighty at Nashua, NH.

Kenneth R. Bailey is professor emeritus at West Virginia University Institute of Technology, where he served as dean of the College of Business, Humanities and Sciences.

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No.9: The 1968 Farmington Mine Disaster

No.9

Bonnie E. Stewart
Cover Photo by Bob Campione

November 2011
288pp
PB 978-1-933202-77-8
$22.99
PDF  978-1-935978-22-0
$27.99
PDF (120 Days)
$20.00

Purchase the Kindle Edition at Amazon

 

Summary

Ninety-nine men entered the cold, dark tunnels of the Consolidation Coal Company’s No.9 Mine in Farmington, West Virginia, on November 20, 1968.  Some were worried about the condition of the mine. It had too much coal dust, too much methane gas. They knew that either one could cause an explosion. What they did not know was that someone had intentionally disabled a safety alarm on one of the mine’s ventilation fans. That was a death sentence for most of the crew. The fan failed that morning, but the alarm did not sound. The lack of fresh air allowed methane gas to build up in the tunnels. A few moments before 5:30 a.m., the No.9 blew up. Some men died where they stood. Others lived but suffocated in the toxic fumes that filled the mine. Only twenty-one men escaped from the mountain.

No.9: The 1968 Farmington Mine Disaster explains how such a thing could happen—how the coal company and federal and state officials failed to protect the seventy-eight men who died in the mountain. Based on public records and interviews with those who worked in the mine, No.9 describes the conditions underground before and after the disaster and the legal struggles of the miners’ widows to gain justice and transform coal mine safety legislation.

Contents

    1. Introduction
    2. Good Night, Dad
    3. Dangerous History
    4. How Such Things Happen
    5. Rules of Survival
    6. A Beautiful Mine
    7. Methane Madness
    8. Dry and Dusty
    9. Warning Signs
    10. The Last Shift
    11. The Disaster Hits Home
    12. A Paralyzed Community
    13. Bungled Investigation
    14. Widows and Wildcat Strikes
    15. Body Production
    16. In Search of Justice
    17. Three More Men
    18. Hidden Evidence
    19. Ungodly Work
    20. Inundated by Death
    21. Who Can Stop Us?
    22. Business Is Business
    23. Widows’ Last Stand
    24. Acknowledgments
  • Appendices
    1. U.S. Coal Mine Deaths 1900-2009
    2. Victims of the No.9 Disaster Nov. 13, 1954
    3. Victims of the No.9 Disaster Nov. 20, 1968
    4. Chronology of Disasters and Federal Laws
    • Notes
    • Glossary
    • Bibliography
    • Index
    • About the Author
  • Photographs
    • Emilio Megna and Family
    • Frank Matish and Family
    • Mine Goats
    • Nails Illegally Driven through Shuttle Car Trailing Cable
    • Continuous Mining Machine
    • Methane Check
    • No.1 Fan Shaft and No.9 Preparation Plant
    • No.9 Preparation Plant
    • Shuttle Car
    • Coal Miners in Locomotive
    • Smoke from Llewellyn Portal on November 20, 1968
    • Gary Martin and Bud Hillberry in Rescue Bucket
    • Media Briefing in Consolidation Coal’s Company Store
    • Frank Matish
    • Pregnant Wife of Trapped Coal Miner
    • Woman Waiting for News
    • Red Cross Volunteers
    • Tony Boyle, UMWA President
    • William Poundstone, Consolidation Coal Executive Vice President
    • Bill Evans, Fairmont Times Editor
    • Letters to Mary Matish
    • Widows in Charleston
    • Workers Unseal Fan Shaft
    • Recovery Crew
    • Sara Kaznoski and Mary Matish
    • Uprooted Railway Tracks in Mine
    • Jeep Swept off Mine Railway
    • Larry Layne and Inspectors
    • John Brock and Recovery Team
    • David Mainella, Mine Foreman
    • Fallen Roof in No.9 Mine
    • John Toothman’s Possessions
    • Debris-covered Machine after Explosions
    • Families of Miners Killed
    • John Toothman’s Grave
    • Memorial to No.9 Disaster Victims
  • Maps
    • The No.9 Mine in 1954
    • Origin of 1954 Explosion
    • Central Marion County, West Virginia
    • Consolidation No.9, 1968
    • Consolidation No.9, 1Right-6North
    • Consolidation No. 9, 3Right-7North
    • Consolidation No.9, 4Right-8North
    • Consolidation No.9, 5Right-8North
    • Consolidation No.9, Llewellyn Run Shaft
    • Consolidation No.9, 3Right-7South
    • Consolidation No.9, 6Right-7South

Author

Bonnie E. Stewart  is an investigative reporter covering the environment for EarthFix at Oregon Public Broadcasting. Before moving to Portland, she taught journalism at West Virginia University, where she earned tenure and the rank of associate professor. She spent most of her reporting career at the Indianapolis News and the Indianapolis Star and reported in California for the Press-Enterprise in Riverside and was a copyeditor for the Business Journal Serving Greater Sacramento. She earned a master’s degree in English from California State University and earned a George Polk Award for metropolitan reporting and the National Society of Professional Journalists’ Sigma Delta Chi Award for Public Service.

Reviews

“Riveting. Chilling. Revealing. The story of Farmington Mine No.9 belongs on everybody’s book shelf. Seventy-eight miners died during a disaster that rocked West Virginia’s coal fields forty-three years ago—propelling front page headlines across the USA and a trail of safety concerns across the globe. Bonnie E. Stewart, a brilliant investigative reporter and university professor, refused to let the headlines fade away. Hail her tenacity.”
Bob Dubill, former Executive Editor, USA TODAY

“Bonnie Stewart has written a remarkable book which deserves wide circulation. She has exhaustively researched all the documentary evidence, bolstered with scores of personal interviews. Her evidence proves without a shadow of doubt that the seventy-eight coal miners who lost their lives in the November 20, 1968, Farmington Mine Disaster were killed because management ignored repeated personal testimony by the Farmington miners that the mine would blow up unless dangerous methane and huge collections of explosive coal dust were curbed. Those miners who repeatedly pointed out these dangers were humiliated for their efforts, and management in its greed for the almighty dollar put on intense pressure for increased production, even disabling alarm and warning systems. This book also provides fuel for those protesting mountain-top removal, by proving that the pressure for more coal must not over-ride the health and safety of human beings.”
Ken Hechler, former Secretary of State, West Virginia

“With seventy-eight dead and nineteen never recovered, the sheer magnitude of the Farmington mine disaster focused national attention on mine safety deficiencies and led to the enactment of the first major corrective legislation in several generations. In the wake of 2010’s Upper Big Branch disaster, Bonnie Stewart’s comprehensive account is a timely reminder that all mine explosions are preventable.”
Cecil E. Roberts, International President, United Mine Workers of America

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They’ll Cut Off Your Project: A Mingo County Chronicle

They'll Cut Off Your Project

Huey Perry
Foreword by Jeff Biggers

March 2011
288pp
PB  978-1-933202-79-2
$24.95
HC/J  978-1-933202-80-8
$74.95
PDF  978-1-933202-93-8:
$23.99

Summary

In old England, if a king didn’t like you, he would cut off your head. Now, if they don’t like you, they’ll cut off your project!

As the Johnson Administration initiated its war on poverty in the 1960s, the Mingo County Economic Opportunity Commission project was established in southern West Virginia. Huey Perry, a young, local history teacher was named the director of this program and soon he began to promote self-sufficiency among low-income and vulnerable populations. As the poor of Mingo County worked together to improve conditions, the local political infrastructure felt threatened by a shift in power. Bloody Mingo County, known for its violent labor movements, corrupt government, and the infamous Hatfield-McCoy rivalry, met Perry’s revolution with opposition and resistance.

In They’ll Cut Off Your Project, Huey Perry reveals his efforts to help the poor of an Appalachian community challenge a local regime. He describes this community’s attempts to improve school programs and conditions, establish cooperative grocery stores to bypass inflated prices, and expose electoral fraud. Along the way, Perry unfolds the local authority’s hostile backlash to such change and the extreme measures that led to an eventual investigation by the FBI. They’ll Cut Off Your Project chronicles the triumphs and failures of the war on poverty, illustrating why and how a local government that purports to work for the public’s welfare cuts off a project for social reform.

Author

Huey Perry, a native of Mingo County, WV, and the son of coal miner, was named Director, Mingo County Economic Opportunity Commission project at the age of twenty-nine. Later, he became the director of the Low-Income Housing Project for Tech Foundation of West Virginia Institute of Technology. He holds a BA from Berea College, KY, and an MA in Political Science from Marshall University, WV, and is an author, entrepreneur, teacher, student, volunteer, chairman, business owner, and farmer.

Jeff Biggers is the American Book award-winning author of The United States of Appalachia, and Reckoning at Eagle Creek: The Secret Legacy of Coal in the Heartland.

Reviews

“This is a wonderful account of the poverty wars of the 1960s as they unfolded in Mingo County, West Virginia. Inspired (and funded) by the federal war on poverty, the presumably apathetic Appalachian poor mobilized with gusto. And so did the challenged local power structure. Read this book to learn about this moment of American history.”
Frances Fox Piven, professor of political science and sociology, City University of New York, and author of Poor People’s Movements: How They Succeed, Why They Fail

“Huey Perry’s account of the War on Poverty in West Virginia is a classic. Nothing I have read gives such an insider’s account of both of the promise of LBJ’s initiative, and the way this hope was largely subverted by state and local politicians and coal companies. The book is, as well, a quirky, funny page-turner. I was hugely indebted to this book while writing my novel The Unquiet Earth. WVU Press is to be commended for keeping this important account available both to historians and the general public.”
Denise Giardina, author Storming Heaven and The Unquiet Earth

Praise for the first edition:

“Perry’s story, told simply and without polemics, shows how hard it is to do something that seems simple—get funds into the hands of the poor.”
Edward Magnuson, Time magazine

“This book is one of those unexpected delights that comes along every once in a while, but not often enough.”
 New Republic

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