Appalachia’s Storyteller: God, Guns, & Appalachia

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  • Опубликовано: 3 сен 2022
  • Appalachia’s Storyteller: The incredible true story of one boys struggle to become a man and ultimately survive God, Guns, and Appalachia. #GodGunsandAppalachia #TheAppalachianStoryteller #Appalachia #appalachian #AppalachianMountains #Appalachianstorytelling
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    Photos Courtesy of Lee County Historical Society
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Комментарии • 941

  • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
    @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Год назад +63

    Support the preservation of Appalachian History by Subscribing to this channel. Like, Comment, and Share!
    JOIN- for exclusive member benefits and exclusive access to members only videos
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    • @mikedeko3627
      @mikedeko3627 Год назад +4

      @The Appalachian Storyteller, Hi, First off Excellent story, We fully enjoyed this video. In the beginning of the video the storyteller states that He grew up in Virginia a place called "The Hollow" on the East slope of the Appalachians and right above the N.Carolina Border. Can you tell me where this is located? What town is it near. We are trying to find the area on Google maps. Thanks so much. Mike and Friends.

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Год назад +8

      @@mikedeko3627 later in the video "I walked 7 miles to Mt. Airy NC and bought my first pair of long pants and a pistol"

    • @mikedeko3627
      @mikedeko3627 Год назад +4

      @@TheAppalachianStoryteller Thank You. I did watch the whole vid but didnt remember that.

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Год назад +2

      @@mikedeko3627 no worries my friend

    • @dovely9279
      @dovely9279 Год назад +3

      @@TheAppalachianStoryteller Sounds like Cana, Lambsburg, or Fancy Gap area.

  • @rogieru8796
    @rogieru8796 Год назад +313

    I live in the Appalachian mountains and I always have my revolver close to me , Times have changed since the days of your story but not much . I don’t drink liquor and I don’t play poker and I ain’t never gonna lay my pistol down . Jesus is my best friend and I hope y’all know him too .

  • @itsanelephant5398
    @itsanelephant5398 Год назад +271

    You know with all the BS that's going on today in our Great country, stories like this should be played in every school, maybe, just maybe a whole slew of people would stop taking freedom for granted, possibly see how fortunate we Americans are in today's world... Thanks for the The well done video..

  • @mikeknuckles6430
    @mikeknuckles6430 Год назад +44

    I was born in Harlan county Kentucky. Dad worked in the coal mines. Drinking was part of living and guns was how things got settled. My parents moved us to Indiana so we could get an education and my sister wouldn't be married at 13. It took years before I realized how much courage it took for my parents to leave the hills behind.

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Год назад +6

      It was a different world

    • @mikeknuckles6430
      @mikeknuckles6430 Год назад +10

      I was 5yrs old and my father woke me and got me out of bed. He took my mattress off my bed and the box spring was covered in guns and rifles. He started handing the guns to all the men that were going to fight scabs trying to take over the coal mine they were working in. He worked construction in Indiana for 22 years. The black had already got him and he died at age 54. He started working in the mine when he was 14 yrs old

    • @jamierupert7563
      @jamierupert7563 8 месяцев назад +4

      ​@@mikeknuckles6430That's so sad. They worked so hard to only die so young.

    • @lisalking2476
      @lisalking2476 7 месяцев назад +7

      ​@@mikeknuckles6430I am sorry about your daddy 😢 my daddy born and raised in Southern Kentucky his daddy also died young of black lung,my daddy dropped school at 13 to help his mommy but followed an older brother to Michigan when he was 17 cause he didn't want to work the mines and die young Daddy too wanted. his children to have better education and opportunities 😢 Daddy just died January 27th 2023 at 83 yrs old 💔

    • @bryanestes8558
      @bryanestes8558 2 месяца назад

      My family on my father's side all came from Harlen, the Estes and Hensley family. My mom's side all from Grundy Virginia they too all coal miners..all of the men died of black lung . My grandpa Cledis Estes left Harlen in about 1959 took Frieda Hensley as his wife with him to Ohio to work at Ford motor company. I'm proud of my roots and glad to hear stories from folks like yourself. Hell we might even be related, thanks for your story

  • @williampoff913
    @williampoff913 Год назад +147

    I was born and raised in the southern Blue Ridge Mountains of Floyd Virginia. 1 hour away from North Carolina and 2 from Tennessee. My family has lived here for 250 plus years. This story might as well be the story of my Great Granddaddy. Mountain folk are MY PEOPLE. And I am proud to say so. God bless ya'll all

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Год назад +4

      Indeed, they are good people. Thanks for sharing your story

    • @wesleybarton3871
      @wesleybarton3871 Год назад +7

      My grandma Maude Burnett was born and raised in Floyd County.
      She moved to Roanoke and married Poopy Dannel from Hot Springs Virginia.
      They had a good living until the Depression.
      Poppy built houses and the banks foreclosed on all the ones he built and some half built.

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Год назад +5

      @@wesleybarton3871 thanks for sharing my friend

    • @robertwalker985
      @robertwalker985 Год назад +6

      My family comes from the NC end of Appalachia. I remember uncle Jerds cabin ,outhouse and all from 67 years ago. Ask my aunt about a little cabin in the foothills . I was 2 and remembered the view

    • @robertwalker985
      @robertwalker985 Год назад +3

      . MY family was Mayfields,Brooks mostly

  • @kentpaynter1350
    @kentpaynter1350 Год назад +39

    My kin are from WV and I think they lived a lot like this. Dad left the hills after high school and moved to OH and made a great life for us. He always said he didn't want to work in the mines and live like that. RIP Dad, love you and miss you. Thank you for all you did for us.

  • @dlmullins9054
    @dlmullins9054 Год назад +103

    One of my furst memories is when i was about eight years old, living in a little coal mining community in the Appalachian hills of southwest Virginia. I knew Daddy had some home brew he had made down under the house in our dirt floor house. He was always making it and this one day i decided to sneak down there and drink a sip. I remember taking the first sip from an old cup he had there so he could test it to see if it was done. I ended up drinking about a cup full and to this day some sixty years later i can remember the feeling as i attempted to walk out and come around the house to our front door. Everything was spinning and i am glad i made it to my room and was able to sleep a while. Nobody ever knew about it, but to me it was my first step to becoming a man. It's a good old memory i will forever cherish. Daddy's side of the family were almost all moonshiner's and if we hadn't moved up North when i was twelve i would probably have carried on the tradition. Thank you for these great videos and stories of a simpler and netter time in my life.

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Год назад +12

      I really enjoyed reading your story, what a great memory

    • @darinmalone
      @darinmalone Год назад +5

      What town? My mother was from Grundy
      (Leemaster)

    • @tylerjarrett5979
      @tylerjarrett5979 Год назад +1

      No you didn't... You just watch to many movies

    • @charliepc56
      @charliepc56 Год назад +2

      @@darinmalone I live near Leemaster Virginia, across the mountain in the community of Russell Prater. I can relate to these stories, and my family on my mom's side were moonshiners. I drank it all my life in moderation and love it.

    • @jasonshumate6456
      @jasonshumate6456 Год назад +9

      Been that way long before Scot-Irish came out of those Mountains and sent the British away, they hated the Sharpshooters from Cover but its how you fought in America.
      Tar & Feathering the Tax Traitors also was another favorite thing.

  • @michaelbarnett2527
    @michaelbarnett2527 Год назад +81

    What a great story. Thanks for all the work that went into it.
    I have a similar story : although my parents tried to get me to focus on spiritual things I rebelled from a child getting in many fights and eventually becoming a drunk for 5 years . The Lord Jesus saved me when I was 22 and I’ve not been drunk now for almost 40 years, + He’s made it a wonderful life for me…

  • @tammieculberson3107
    @tammieculberson3107 Год назад +42

    I put my boozing days behind me and found the Lord myself only to find that I was the one lost.God was right there all the time.

  • @DallasBryant-rw1oh
    @DallasBryant-rw1oh Год назад +6

    My family Came to West Virginia Back in the early 1800's , We kids was raised on fat back soup beans and taters , we love the people of Appalachia and the Mountains ! God bless You all !

  • @kennithnieman9130
    @kennithnieman9130 Год назад +56

    This story made me feel thankful for what I have and my heart went out to those who are less fortunate than I am.

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Год назад +3

      Indeed- life in the mountains was a brutal struggle in the early days

    • @demsandlibsareswinecancer4667
      @demsandlibsareswinecancer4667 Год назад +1

      And yet with the struggle that they had they did everything in their power to make it more difficult by being drunks and alcoholics and violent people with no ability to actually cope with their mental stress. It's okay to have sympathy for some but understand that people are where they are usually by their own design and because of their own choices. Many people walked out of those mountains looking for a better life and found it.

  • @johnjessey6955
    @johnjessey6955 Год назад +11

    Jesus isn’t surprised, offended or threatened by the state of man’s condition. His love for us is stronger than our worse offenses or sins. He can break any chain, if we let Him. Thanks JD for all your hard work. You bring joy, comfort, happiness and peace to many of us through the stories and entertainment you share. God Bless my friend. jj

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Год назад +2

      Thank you my friend ❤️

    • @lou_-mg7mb
      @lou_-mg7mb 3 месяца назад

      For those that repent. Be careful offering false hope. Jesus is Good News- for those that Believe. John Chapter 3, Romans 7 &8. Point to scripture friend, be careful just focusing on emotion.

  • @billybarnes9208
    @billybarnes9208 Год назад +13

    Whiskey making in Tennessee was normal for the times. My uncle made it when I was aboy. My Grandpa did and His Dad. In fact he caught t.b. from a old cold jail with no windows and died. My Uncle I'm proud to say found Jesus before passing. He became a Baptist preacher. May God bless everyone!!

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Год назад +1

      God bless my friend

    • @jacquelynjohnson9486
      @jacquelynjohnson9486 Год назад +1

      A few years back my god mother from butcher yaller told my mom for my bad cold to pour me a shot of whiskey, right now sitting here getting over the flu , wish I had some whiskey.. rest in peace mom and god mother.

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Год назад +1

      @@jacquelynjohnson9486 my parents gave me warm whiskey and honey for sickness as a child. they called it a hotty toddy

    • @billybarnes9208
      @billybarnes9208 Год назад +1

      My great grandfather was a very Bi christian

    • @billybarnes9208
      @billybarnes9208 Год назад +1

      @@jacquelynjohnson9486 my great grandpa was a very big Bible reader but ever night .He had a hot toddy before going to bed. That's what my Granny told me
      God bless you all!

  • @MegaRudeBoy69
    @MegaRudeBoy69 Год назад +8

    There is something really pure about the way these people lived.
    It came down to survival, not just blindly consuming or decadently following some fleeting desire. I'm not trying to romanticise it, i'm just thinking there is a simple purity to it.

  • @jaywebb3105
    @jaywebb3105 Год назад +9

    My dad ran shine in an 40 Ford couple, and when he died 15 years ago his copper still was still in used. He never really let any of us 5 sons get involved or even knew about much about it.

  • @Madebymadre
    @Madebymadre Год назад +16

    I am enjoying your channel so much. I was born in the Dominican Republic in the mountains and your stories take me back. We only had one school and dirt roads and similar situations. We came to the USA when I was 7 yrs old, but your videos take me back to my roots. Thank you.❤

  • @joyceedwards9652
    @joyceedwards9652 Год назад +62

    What an amazing story!!! Loved that he got saved in the end!!!

  • @jeffrichards1537
    @jeffrichards1537 Год назад +9

    I can agree at end of video. When he says he wondered upon a church and felt peace at the alter call. I grew up pentecostal and I'm 46. When my mom died 2 years ago I went to church for fist time after 20 years. I cried because I felt a peace I hadn't felt for years.

  • @foghornleghorn262
    @foghornleghorn262 Год назад +10

    I'm a Hatfield and this is everyday life for us in Man, West Virginia.

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Год назад +3

      exactly, its been like this for centuries in many areas, yet most folks now days dont know

    • @SJ-ni6iy
      @SJ-ni6iy Год назад +1

      I’m from Raleigh County, near the Boone county line, where the UBB mining accident happened.

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Год назад +2

      @@SJ-ni6iy Good folks there

  • @hatfieldmccoy0311
    @hatfieldmccoy0311 Год назад +22

    This is my families story to the T. Neither sides of my of grandparents attended school, there was no schoolhouse close to them, my mamaw and great mamaw were the doctors and midwives, one side of my family were Cherokee/Creek runaways from the forced removal to Oklahoma, so they knew the medicine plants and they say they could read by how the moon set who was going to give birth and so they would hop on the mule and ride off. The pot belly stove was used as an incubator for premature babies. Even when I was teenager, my mamaw and papaw didnt have running water but the cleanest people you could ever imagine. The superstition is very real, but i would go to church where they would handle snakes. But both my mamaws at the age of 68 and 69 decided they wanted their highschool diplomas and they went to school and didnt get their GEDS but earned their actual highschool diplomas together. I look at the hill sides they farmed, and wonder how they survived, but 200 years of fighting to survive in that holler and here I am, a proud of who and where I come from. My mamaw said before she passed, it was a hard life to live, they were poor but never knew, but it was loving life. My heart is tied to these hills, and even though life was rough for my family I have had the chance to leave this holler, but i always end up back here

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Год назад +3

      that is a hell of a story. Mind if I share your post on my Facebook page? Facebook.com/theappalachianstoryteller

  • @michaelhuffman6429
    @michaelhuffman6429 Год назад +12

    I grew up poor, but we ate good, had a big garden and truck patch, had hogs and chickens, mom and daddy had a steer to butcher, and a milk cow. Bootleggers were around, I partook until I got saved right after I got married, we still got pot growers and meth heads. For years, people left here for Detroit to make cars, or California to pick cotton, I went to the Army, I'm doing what several do to make a living, I drive a truck and have a small farm, leery of politicians, won't vote for any gun hater or pro choice candidate.

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Год назад +2

      Indeed the hillbilly highway north..

    • @KimmyGibson
      @KimmyGibson Год назад

      @@TheAppalachianStoryteller Interesting. My mother, a Scotch Irish, born and raised in Appalachia, would swear she wasn't a 'hillbilly'....that 'hillbillies' were from the hills of Michigan. :) Thank you for the story and photos....everything reminded me of what I've seen and learned about my family roots.

  • @Dj-ws9rj
    @Dj-ws9rj Год назад +11

    Nothing better than these old mountains, & the people that live throughout them!!

  • @jackielamie8488
    @jackielamie8488 Год назад +6

    I live right in the heart of Appalachian mountains. And how it has changed now adays but I love these ol hills and if wr could live like it use to be is my dream we still grow our food fish and hunt our meat and can our beans and other crop we brew our whiskey to this day and its these skills and dieing arts that I am passing on to my son like my grandpappy and daddy taught me. This country has gotten itsself in such a damn hurry we forgot what this country was founded on and it is a damn shame to see how this country is going to help in a hand basket

  • @suevillagomez2699
    @suevillagomez2699 11 месяцев назад +2

    I have to say again that I love these stories. My daddy used to tell us of swimming in the Clinch River. He was raised in Dungannon and my mom in Scott County. Lord I miss them so

  • @David-dq6kw
    @David-dq6kw Год назад +18

    Being from these mountains, this story done my heart good.

  • @ralfgroh5967
    @ralfgroh5967 Год назад +13

    I am obsessed with Appalachia, especially eastern TN. Keep up the good work & thx!

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Год назад +1

      Thank you my friend, appreciate you

    • @johncline5502
      @johncline5502 Год назад +1

      There's a lot that's happened in Eastern Tennessee,, al Capone stayed here when he wanted to get away for awhile,, look up
      historic Montrose court Johnson city Tennessee

  • @terriejohnston8801
    @terriejohnston8801 Год назад +3

    The Good Lord surely had His Hand on You...WHAT a rough
    life....as a kid HAVING to grow up SO fast & hard. YEP, God SURE had His EYE on you. Thank you for sharing

  • @guysmith1946
    @guysmith1946 Год назад +23

    Thank You for this video! I love the description of life, feeling lost, miserable, and Finding Jesus Christ, O What Peace, that God really does give us. God Bless You and your family!

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Год назад +2

      It’s an incredible depiction of a hard life growing up when Appalachia was still untamed

  • @WillowsGarden
    @WillowsGarden Год назад +37

    What a wonderful story JD. I loved the ending with him being saved. I believe the good Lord does work in mysterious ways in us. I can remember when I was very young and our preacher was one that preached fire and brimstone. He would point around at the congregation while preaching. One day he pointed at me or so I thought. I started having nightmares of dying and going to hell. My mama made me quit going to church because I couldn’t and didn’t want to go to sleep. I was afraid I would die in my sleep. The preacher came to our house one day and wanted to know why I hadn’t been to church and I can remember my momma telling him, you’ve scared her to death, I can hardly get her to sleep because she is so scared. I do believe I had the fear of God in me, but I was way to young to understand. I’m older now and I know the good Lord has been with me every step of the way.
    Thanks for sharing and have a blessed evening!

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Год назад +5

      I remember my feet burning in church when I was a kid- everyone standing with their heads bowed and the preacher saying”your gonna burn in hell forever”

  • @bigiron8831
    @bigiron8831 Год назад +18

    J.D. your stories continue to remind me of my grandparents and my roots.....
    My grandfather was arrested and sent to prison for moonshining. When he got out he named his next child ( my aunt) after the revenuer who busted him. My grandmother had ten kids. Five sons,five daughters that all survived, three who didn't. Thanks for the great stories which bring back great memories. ✌🙏

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Год назад +2

      What was the name of the child?

    • @bigiron8831
      @bigiron8831 Год назад +2

      @@TheAppalachianStoryteller
      When my grandfather was in prison he got reformed and when he got out he became a minister and lived a godly life until he died. My aunts name is Faye.
      Stay safe my friend 🙏

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Год назад +2

      @@bigiron8831 you too my friend

    • @SJ-ni6iy
      @SJ-ni6iy Год назад +6

      That’s an awesome story. My grandparents were as opposite as night and day. My grandpa was a Pentecostal preacher and my other grandparents owned a beer joint, in the same coal mining town.

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Год назад +7

      @@SJ-ni6iy it took god and booze to get thru each week back then

  • @TennValleyGal
    @TennValleyGal Год назад +14

    Thank you. That's one of the most powerful stories to come out of the hills. It could have been written by my Daddy but he met Mom. Sixty days later he left SW VA and the old ways for a pretty little miss and a better way of life. He never looked back.

  • @Mcleodp
    @Mcleodp Год назад +15

    Amazing people..strong, proud,independent, hard working..this reminds me so much of native Indian people in Northern Canada 🇨🇦..from this short video I'm extremely fascinated by how much we have in common with them..even the Scottish, Irish bloodlines..like myself..you just found a new fan.

  • @thefoggymountainwitch
    @thefoggymountainwitch Год назад +28

    Thank you for half an hour of beautiful storytelling! It was really wonderful!

  • @barryrussell4106
    @barryrussell4106 Год назад +14

    Man that is good story. It reminds me of my life in many ways. We grew up so poor we could barley afford whisky. Raised big gardens in the hot sun. I’ve fought more than I know and never ran from a gun. God looks down on us and I wonder how does he even understand his own creation.

  • @2anthro
    @2anthro Год назад +1

    We are from these people. When we left the mountains we did not forget to pack that quick temperedness. Its taken a lifetime for me to get control of it. Mountain Proud.

  • @thelaruefamilyhomestead
    @thelaruefamilyhomestead Год назад +26

    Thank you for another great video! I grew up watching The Heartland Series with Bill Landry. I'm happy to have a new source of Appalachian history to teach my children. Our roots are deep in this land, and our love for it almost unexplainable.

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Год назад +3

      Thank you my friend for your support

    • @Siggyroka
      @Siggyroka Год назад +3

      I feel exactly the same way

    • @DougWeaver1998
      @DougWeaver1998 Год назад +2

      Bill used to be quite a handful! I’m 56 in December and I sure do love, ‘the way it used to be’! Growing up in a small East Tennessee farm community is the best thing that ever happened to me except Christ. It certainly helped shaped me into who I am.

  • @amypaparone55
    @amypaparone55 Год назад +24

    This was an amazing and emotional story. My heart broke for the entire family, but especially for the children. It was filled with so much sorrow, and of strong family ties and so much love at the same time. God certainly works in mysterious ways and he was there thru this mans whole life. Another amazing video and I thank you so much for sharing it with us all! I’m looking forward to all the others to come.

  • @shaunsteele8244
    @shaunsteele8244 Год назад +4

    I'm born and raised in California but I just learned my ancestors came here from Appalachian West Virginia. Looks like a beautiful place with good God fearing people

  • @robertallen7025
    @robertallen7025 Год назад +16

    My favorite episode yet! Please keep doing this. Thank you!

  • @lawson9102
    @lawson9102 Год назад +4

    Great story there is nothing like when a man meets Jesus Christ and Jesus becomes his Lord how many of us have been in fights due to alcohol and cards thank God for His Salvation

  • @Realalma
    @Realalma Год назад +14

    Lord have mercy! How I LOVE this true story. I would love for you to do one about my papaw “Red Onion” Fleming from Dickinson county VA. He was a legend for bootlegging and raising a huge loving family. And yes, the Red Onion penitentiary is on the land where our homestead stood for many generations.

  • @ijetskilc2529
    @ijetskilc2529 Год назад +10

    Greetings from the Appalachian Foothills of South Central Kentucky. What awesome stories these are. I've heard similar ones told by my mom and dad's family. I'm 60 and wonder if any of these awesome stories will pass to my grandchildren as young people today just seem to care about the internet but then again that's were I heard this one....I now have a new favorite RUclips channel!

  • @godschildyes
    @godschildyes Год назад +5

    That Was WONDERFUL! Them days are GONE! Thank you so much for your amazing narration of this man's life and this time gone by!

  • @rolandtomkellam9306
    @rolandtomkellam9306 Год назад +2

    That is a beautiful sunset at the beginning of the video. Also, I love the old bluegrass music. Ralph and Carter Stanley are among my favorites, along with Bill Monroe.

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Год назад

      Thank you so much my friend, this is the longest video on The Appalachian Storyteller and took me a month to make this video. Im happy you enjoyed it

  • @tammyguessbeckham2212
    @tammyguessbeckham2212 Год назад +3

    I love this story!! God has his ways of getting to each heart if we only give him a second.

  • @Bear-kt1pl
    @Bear-kt1pl Год назад +7

    Love your videos, man. Born in WV, raised, of all places in Gary IN. Came back to the mountains after I got out of the Marine Corps. Spent 40 yrs on the road, either 2 wheels or 18, but these hills never quit callin' my name. Keep up the good work. 👍

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Год назад +2

      Thanks brother, appreciate you. Every time I leave, the mountains call me back home

    • @mikeknuckles6430
      @mikeknuckles6430 Год назад +1

      My dad moved us to Gary

    • @Bear-kt1pl
      @Bear-kt1pl Год назад

      @@mikeknuckles6430 weird place fer " hillbillies" to grow up, wasn't it? But US Steel was beckoning...smh..60's and 70's were a trip, there. No doubt about it, man...

  • @user-cl7jw7td5q
    @user-cl7jw7td5q 5 месяцев назад +2

    That was awesome! Praise You Father God

  • @jay34ever54
    @jay34ever54 Год назад +17

    What an awesome story of life in Appalachia. Its amazing how things have changed throughout the years. Very well done documentary!

  • @elizabethbarringer2791
    @elizabethbarringer2791 Год назад +5

    Very moving and an emotional story well told. So very sad but had a very good ending had me crying when you said generosity was a luxury that really hit my heart .. thank you very much

  • @shawntailor5485
    @shawntailor5485 Год назад +4

    1904 ,the year may grandad was 12 and carved the mountain style violin with a jackknife ,I inherited when I was 12 .

  • @McClungMichaell
    @McClungMichaell Год назад +5

    Great story telling! My Dad grew up in Kessler, and went to school in Rupert, Greenbriar Co. West Virginia, we visited there when I was a kid. Dad joined the Army and went to West Point Military Academy. We moved all over the US and world but to this day I call West Virginia my roots. I am a proud Scotch Irish McClung.

  • @tammyevans7333
    @tammyevans7333 Год назад +12

    What a story, thanks so much!

  • @messiahapostle8239
    @messiahapostle8239 Год назад +4

    Glory to DADDYGOD.

  • @mariemanuel4428
    @mariemanuel4428 Год назад +4

    I'm from Richmond, Virginia and I so enjoy your videos. You and Ken Burns are the best.

  • @terriejohnston8801
    @terriejohnston8801 Год назад +2

    DEF. Loved his beautiful Teacher. When she married & moved on...EVEN I FELT THAT heart break.

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Год назад +1

      This story is probably the most powerful story on this channel

    • @terriejohnston8801
      @terriejohnston8801 Год назад

      @The Appalachian Storyteller WOW!! WHO would of guessed.? I LOVED Popcorn Sutton's character. Do you know much about him? Made the Shine..... Would of LOVED hanging out w him...JUST BECAUSE I LIKED HIM. What You See..is What You get. Lived in East TN.

  • @jeanlawson9133
    @jeanlawson9133 Год назад +3

    Always and forever Appalachian... South Carolina...North Carolina....lot of years in Virginia up in Tazwell county Mill Creek Holler 😎 year's after high school...on Sand Mountain... Scotty in Alabama..... Love you All ,,, Praise Jesus Christ he gave us a blessing....

  • @scootermagee6680
    @scootermagee6680 Год назад +6

    I just love this channel and the “Casey Kasem” style voice of the narrator. This is a true WORLD-CLASS channel of content and a not-often-told history of a small slice of Americana. I live in Virginia and plan to spend a few days in West Virginia in July to visit the area and hike some trails, meet some locals and give to the community.

  • @personofinterest8731
    @personofinterest8731 Год назад +8

    I loved this story. I love this history. Appalachian history is mesmerising to me, and I'm in South Africa! I have Irish ancestors who also had these kind of struggles in those days coming to this strange land. Thank you for your channel, it's a real education.

  • @johnsusanfranks8446
    @johnsusanfranks8446 Год назад +5

    I am so moved by this video and I'm so thankful for the life my Lord has given me.

  • @SJ-ni6iy
    @SJ-ni6iy Год назад +4

    I’m from a coal mining town in West Virginia. My grandparents were as different as night and day. I had one grandpa who was a Pentecostal preacher and my other grandparents owned a beer joint, in the same town.

  • @minermikesouthernusa4017
    @minermikesouthernusa4017 Год назад +4

    Wonderful story and story telling 👍🏻🇺🇸 I’m from the piedmont of NC love the history.

  • @benroosa2328
    @benroosa2328 Год назад +9

    My people are from eastern Kentucky,I've lived down south since I was 2 months old,but,listening to these stories I could imagine myself doing some of the same things! So thanks for letting me live a portion of a life I could of had!

  • @demsandlibsareswinecancer4667
    @demsandlibsareswinecancer4667 Год назад +2

    Now there is a valuable lesson learned. Friendship is just a word like other words. You have people you know and people you don't know and that's it.

  • @johnt.chambers4204
    @johnt.chambers4204 Год назад +1

    I was raised in Townsend TN back when Hwy 73 was the only paved road up there. My family, on both sides, had made whiskey as far back as anybody could remember. Before boys ever started school they were working. We'd work in the fields in the warm weather and cut firewood in the winter. There was hardly a week passed without a shooting or a knife fight. Townsend now is about filled up with folks that moved up there from elsewhere in the last two or three decades. They've taken to calling it the Peaceful side of the Smokies. That's kind of funny because those of us that grew up there don't remember it being that peaceful

  • @sheltowee8079
    @sheltowee8079 Год назад +2

    Love these old storys about the places I grew up in.

  • @darlenemartin248
    @darlenemartin248 Год назад +8

    Great wonderful story. Thanks so much for sharing!

  • @dontcarebear3227
    @dontcarebear3227 Год назад +1

    My aunt lives in the foothills. I love my family in TN sooo much. The sweetest, purest souls. Simple but smart and amazing people. My uncle Ray had 9 siblings and lived in the same holler until he joined the military and met my aunt. My aunt and our side are from Louisiana. A Cajun woman and mountain man fell in love. They lived here in la for a couple years but they ended up moving back to that same holler into the same house he grew up until they bought their own trailer and moved it on the land. They had a small farm and over 80 acres of the holler including a creek. The other members of the family had their own land or lived on my aunt and uncles land. I loved visiting them every summer. Fishing, riding four wheelers, swimming in the creek and river. They had their own family cemetery we’d go hangout in. My uncle passed last year and was the second to last of all 10 siblings to die. He always had the best stories and apparently he knew Johnny Cash. I miss him and wish I could listen to his stories one more time. I went and saw my aunt last March and I felt sooo much peace being there. I’m thinking about moving up there because it’s so peaceful and life is slow there.

  • @reedgreen6388
    @reedgreen6388 Год назад +2

    I'm just 60 but I remember a harder time...gravy and biscuits for breakfast and beans for dinner outdoor toilet and wiping with sears catalog..lol...winters were cold with two coal stoves in the house but we we're never hungry and managed to stay fairly warm on the long cold winter nights...and dad's alcohol was always part of the equation..but I survived and still remember some of the good times...not a trace of those old in our modern life now.

  • @debrawright62
    @debrawright62 Год назад +4

    The visual and the audio in this are truly admired by me! Thank you for this channel.

  • @pixi8690
    @pixi8690 Год назад +3

    This one had me feeling a range of emotions from sorrow, gratefulness n all the way up to the chills and everything in between ❤

  • @backyardsounds
    @backyardsounds 7 месяцев назад +2

    This was absolutely fantastic!!! My goodness, this was so good. Thank you.

  • @World-Sojourner.22
    @World-Sojourner.22 7 дней назад +1

    ❤ Thank you! God bless you all! ❤

  • @KathysTube
    @KathysTube Год назад +8

    Wow! Such a captivating story that seldom is told of the hardest side of existence...hard to imagine living a life like that....
    Thanks so much JD 🤗❤️❤️

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Год назад +2

      Indeed a true story of a very hard life

    • @rogermoore3270
      @rogermoore3270 Год назад

      @@TheAppalachianStoryteller as someone who grew up in Boone county West Virginia and my family having lived there entire lives in the appalachian mountains since they immigrated many generations ago they just seen it as living, we just kinda make the best of what you got. It may seem tough but I can promise you they were some of the happiest people you’ll ever meet.

  • @JBowman-ps2ri
    @JBowman-ps2ri Год назад +4

    I'm from southern WV born & raised. I really enjoy hearin these old stories like that... Thanks!

  • @randlerichardson5826
    @randlerichardson5826 Год назад +1

    I can set and listen to your stories all day long Storyteller. Great job to GOD BLESS

  • @antekatetaketna
    @antekatetaketna Год назад +1

    Just had my comment and thank you erased but, I'm going to repost the last part again, GOD Bless you Brother and all who view this wonderful video !!!

  • @eileenmorris3713
    @eileenmorris3713 Год назад +4

    Wow, what a fantastic story, I was with that kid all the way through

  • @richardliles4415
    @richardliles4415 Год назад +3

    Thank you so much for God, Guns & Appalachia.👍🇺🇸👍
    I will of course share for others to enjoy.

  • @Boogleye
    @Boogleye Год назад

    Thankyou Lord for the food ,education and home I received because of the pain my relatives suffered to give me God I know all our heritages are with you, Thankyou Lord 🙏 ❤️

  • @chrislovett6120
    @chrislovett6120 2 месяца назад +1

    What a great story. I live in Mt Airy. Born and raised in Maine but I got here as quick as I could. I even got me a coal miners daughter from West By God Virginia

  • @urbanlumberjack
    @urbanlumberjack Год назад +6

    This episode is excellent. So good. Listened to the whole thing and will probably listen another time or two.

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Год назад +2

      Thank you sir, I appreciate your support. Feel free to share with friends and on any other platforms. Really help me spread the word about this channel. Thanks so much

  • @bretthines1020
    @bretthines1020 Год назад +6

    Wonderful story and story-telling and music!

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Год назад +1

      Thank you my friend, the music is a very important aspect to me, I carefully consider each song, thanks for noticing

    • @mardy0053
      @mardy0053 Год назад

      What is the very last song name?

  • @forrestreed9350
    @forrestreed9350 10 месяцев назад +1

    My grandfather on my fathers side was one of the last of the true Mountain men. Gone for 7 months in the mountains trapping, logging, trailblazing for various folk. The other 5 months would be spent selling the furs, also working with the fire department in the mountains, living inside the ol shacks they put on mountain tops for fire lookouts. My stepfather was a hard driving ranch hand. Late, long, very long hours, he wasnt kind. He was rough, short tempered to bullshit, but knowledgable. Outside of the bottle. Both of these examples are just shown to explain why i cannot turn away from these stories. The foundation of their lifesyles is sewn in these stories

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  10 месяцев назад

      Can you imagine 7 month hunting trip, wow. I say a phrase from time to time in these stories “these men weren’t afraid of the wilderness, because they were the wilderness itself” your grandfather was certainly one of them

  • @GrumpyGenXGramps
    @GrumpyGenXGramps 4 месяца назад +1

    Hello my fellow “Bitter Clingers”! Such a great channel to bring us all together to hear stories many of us have heard 100 times and will sit for another 100! God Bless all my fellow Appalachian Americans!

  • @suzannecrum9702
    @suzannecrum9702 Год назад +4

    What a beautiful story.Ypo do tell them very well.Thank you!

  • @ralfgroh5967
    @ralfgroh5967 Год назад +3

    I am a lover of anything Appalachian. Thx for the share! Keep it coming!

  • @dinahjackson8146
    @dinahjackson8146 Год назад +2

    NOOO WORDS, just tears !!! 😢 GOD BLESS YOU ALWAYS and in ALL WAYS 😘 THANK YOU, SOOO MUCH !!! ❤

  • @cattyshaw8244
    @cattyshaw8244 Год назад +3

    Awesome story. I could have listened to it for hours. Thank you.

  • @stinkeye460
    @stinkeye460 Год назад +3

    I'm 70 now and am thankful I grew up when teachers taught what was necessary to become successful citizens instead of good little communist like today.

  • @shelbywilmoth839
    @shelbywilmoth839 Год назад +1

    I love listening to these stories, I currently have been and still do live here in “the hollow”. Couldn’t see myself ever leaving either. Do all my shopping in Mount airy NC cause that’s the closest for me. It is a big attraction area due to is being Mayberry where Andy Griffith lived.

  • @sisterrose6830
    @sisterrose6830 Год назад +2

    Amen for the mountain and thank the good Lord for my dear ole mountain mama
    Hallelujah for the mountains I have lived to climb
    Thank the glory for my papa and the things that he told
    My song is for the sins same as the faith I behold
    Thank you dear Jesus for the dear mountain woman I cherish and hold
    The mountain is where I’m bound to glory to raise my sons and daughters
    For the bounty of Christs journey has kept me near this mountain closer to thee
    Bless this mountain that God has blessed with me
    Yes Lord I’ll fly away to thee and spend season after season tellin on that mountain
    Cause God give me this mountain knowin it’d sure save me
    #mountainmusicpraise

  • @audramatney1148
    @audramatney1148 Год назад +3

    Great story friend tough people back then they knew how to survive in bad times luv my people God bless those mountains ⛰️

  • @bretthines1020
    @bretthines1020 Год назад +3

    Marvelous photos

  • @dawnmontgomery7075
    @dawnmontgomery7075 Год назад +2

    I love the way that you tell the old mountain/holler stories. I just wish that you could talk a wee bit louder into the microphone. Thanks for the great stories of our very strong and resilient ancestors.

  • @meglaw74
    @meglaw74 Месяц назад +1

    Thank you for your wonderful storytelling. Listening enthralled at your beautiful country with its history all the way from southern Western Australia.

  • @richardhanley3411
    @richardhanley3411 Год назад +3

    the only thing wrong with this is that it ended too soon. just amazing storytelling.

  • @paulacribb56
    @paulacribb56 8 месяцев назад +1

    My Scot/Irish ancestors came in at the Cape Fear River, migrated to the beautiful mountains of NC, Tenn. and Ga. They married Indigenous women and I am proud to carry thier blood and DNA. This story is another one that made my old eyes water. What I wouldn't give to be in the hills!

  • @jeffrichards1537
    @jeffrichards1537 Год назад +2

    Born and raised in West Virginia I agree. God, Guns, and family is what counts. Follow the lords path. Lo e your family and defend against problems. Also hunting and fishing is a way of life. I'm more comfortable in the woods than in a big city.

  • @cadeevans4623
    @cadeevans4623 Год назад +3

    Interesting thanks for sharing

  • @jamesjohnston758
    @jamesjohnston758 Год назад +4

    I'm a Scotsman from Aberdeen and I am really interested in finding out if there were any Of the Johnston clan living in Appalachia and if there was any way of finding out any information on this .

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Год назад +2

      💜

    • @sjohnstond
      @sjohnstond Год назад

      I am one of those Johnston’s that left Scotland by way of N. Ireland and settled in the Mid- Appalachians. I’m proud of where my family came from and even more proud of where I live now( south-western Virginia).

    • @jamesjohnston758
      @jamesjohnston758 Год назад

      @@sjohnstond well hello there fellow Johnston clansman I see you’re spelt the right way ( without an e ) ha ha. So do you class yourself as Scottish , Scot’s Irish or American?

    • @sjohnstond
      @sjohnstond Год назад

      @@jamesjohnston758 The Johnston’s that settled in the New River Valley of Virginia left Formanagh Northern Ireland in the 1700’s. So I suppose we consider ourselves Scot-Irish. However, I competed in the Scottish Highland Games (caber toss) for several years as a proud Scotsman for Clan Johnston of America! I had the pleasure of visiting both Scotland and Ireland in 2022 and felt equally at home in both places.