Tuesday, December 30, 2008

The WPA at Work in Orlando

The entry just before this one is about the Orlando young men who joined the CCC (Civilian Conservation Corps) during the Great Depression in the late 1930s. Another of FDR's New Deal programs, the WPA (Work Projects Administration), was busy in Orlando during the late 1930s.


by Donna Gloff

Walter and Iva (Paugh) Donaldson lived in the northwest corner of Orlando that is in Gilmer County. Walter was born about 1888 to Hansen and Sarah Catherine (Sandy) Donaldson. The Donaldsons and Paughs were pioneer/early settlers of Virginia's frontiers and served in the Revolutionary War. Iva was born about 1889 to Benajmin and Mary (Sandy) Paugh. Marriage records show the Sandys, Paughs and Donaldsons were close-knit.

During the Great Depression in the 1930s, Walter worked at a quarry that supplied stone for the massive road improvement projects that were part of the WPA. He also took advantage of a WPA program that provided adult instruction in reading and writing. Walter became the subject of a New Deal photo essay when he was chosen the "one millionth person" to learn to read through this program. The essay is at http://newdeal.feri.org/library/h_3s_gp.htm. The photos in this entry are from that essay.

Above left: the caption with this photo reads "Mrs. Donaldson prepares a meal while children watch their father write a letter. Donaldson was taught to read and write in a WPA Educational Class."

Right: the Gilmer County quarry where Walter Donaldson was employed.

Left: Claud Loy Heater, son of Thomas and Sarah (Mick) Heater, was Walter's teacher.

Right: the caption with this photo reads " Before Mr. Donaldson was instructed in educational classes any business to be transacted had to be handled by some one in town. Mr. Donaldson is now able to talk figures and amounts of money with those who wish to buy his crops without fear of being on the losing end of the deal."

Below: the elementary school where Walter's class met and two photos taken during class. Below that, the Donaldson home in the late 1930s in Orlando, Gilmer County.




. . . . .

comment by Joyce Brannon

When my parents, Bruce and Olive (Henline) Brannon, moved to Ohio they sent for Lula Donaldson to come and stay with my brother and me after school. That would have been around 1944-1945. My parents were working at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base. She didn't stay very long because we moved back to WV in 1946 when my mother became ill. The Donaldson name is so familiar, but I was so young and only remember Lula.

Right: back row: Bruce Brannon, Olive Brannon, Lula Donaldson. In front, Joyce and her brother Robert.


Friday, December 19, 2008

Orlando Boys In The CCC

The Great Depression
The throes of the Depression became deeper and more painful with each passing year of Franklin D. Roosevelt’s social and economic experimentations of the 1930’s. Unemployment had gotten worse instead of better. Twenty five percent of Americans workers were unemployed with no prospects. Young men became hobos and were riding the rails from one American city to another looking for greener pastures at the end of the line; “Dust Bowl” Okies were hoping that their patched up jalopies would hold out until the green hills and golden sands of California were in view, only to find that the California hills were not green and the sands were not golden.

Out-of-work West Virginia boys at least had the family farms to sustain their need for food, but there was little else. Families were struggling to keep the family farm from falling on the auction block of the county sheriff for unpaid taxes; small town merchants were struggling with the unpaid store accounts of desperate families who couldn’t pay for the flour and beans bought on credit; and it seemed that every household had more mouths than could be fed.

Sixty-seven CCC Camps were established in West Virginia and over 55,000 West Virginia youth served in them during the period of 1933 to 1942. Most of the camps were located in remote areas of the state along the Appalachian Mountain chain.

Orlando Boys in the CCCs

The railroad and oil and gas field jobs which had been plentiful during the 1910’s and 1920’s had for the most part dried up. Farming was not an alternative because its income producing potential was marginal at best as a sole source of income for the family farmer. Many Orlando boys were desperate to find work and welcomed the advent of the CCC and the opportunity to make a financial contribution to their struggling families. So, with an eagerness to have a job, a little trepidation about leaving home, a desire to see what was on the other side of the mountain, and the best wishes of their families, many Oil Creek valley boys went to the county seats at Weston and Sutton to sign up as CCC boys.

Blaine Riffle

Sometimes things just don’t work out the way we would like for them to; and so it was with Blaine Riffle, the son of James Lloyd and Mary Alice (Blake) Riffle. Blaine had just turned eighteen when he decided he would like to be in the CCC In Weston, Blaine met another Lewis County youth, Bert Norman of Duffy, and the two of them decided to go to Lewisburg to take the test to enroll into the CCC. The two boys made it to Lewisburg and took the test, but both were rejected. Hopping freights to return to their Lewis County homes, the two boys made it as far as Clendenin where they took refuge under a freight car to avoid a heavy rainfall and fell asleep. Failing to awaken when the rail car started moving, Blaine was decapitated by the wheels of the freight. Norman was lucky because the box car passed over his thin frame without touching him. Blaine’s father, Lloyd, was called to Clendenin to identify his remains. There had been some confusion initially with identifying Blaine because Norman thought his traveling companion’s name was Leonard Maxwell, instead of Blaine Riffle. The identity question was straightened out and Blaine was buried in the Peterson Cemetery on Oil Creek. It seems this family was crossed with tragedy. Blaine’s sixteen year old cousin, James Riffle, died about two weeks following Blaine’s death as the result of an accidental shooting while hunting on Red Lick. Blaine’s younger brother, Randall, died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound in 1939 when he was seventeen years of age.

Arden “Jim” Blake

Jim was the oldest son of Vincent and Clara (Posey) Blake and grandson of John Jackson and Ella Mae (Foster) Blake of Orlando. Joining the CCC when he was eighteen in 1938, Jim served his enlistment with Company 1506 at the Preston, Idaho CCC Camp which was located on the Bear River, near Utah ’s northeastern border. After service in the United States Army during World War II, he married a Burnsville girl, the former Mary Virginia Gillespie Chenoweth, in 1947. Jim retired from the Ford Motor Company in Ohio after thirty years service. Actively involved in the Canton Baptist Temple, Jim was a Sunday school teacher and usher at the church. He died in 2005 and is buried in Canton, Ohio.

Left above: Jim Blake with the camp cook.
Right: Jim Blake


Wayne Blake

The son of Marion and Ethel (Skinner) Blake, Wayne grew up on Three Lick Run in a musical farm family. As did many Orlando boys, Wayne joined the CCC when he was eighteen years of age. He enrolled in the CCC with Leo Riffle who was Wayne ’s Three Lick neighbor and classmate at the Orlando School.

Wayne was first sent to Camp Woodbine on the Cranberry River near Richwood. A former logging camp, this camp consisted of approximately eight barracks, a dining hall and various other residences and camp structures. After serving a short time at Camp Woodbine, Wayne was transferred to Camp Cranberry, a new camp built further up the Cranberry River. Wayne received training in mechanics during his tenure with the CCC.

For more about Wayne Blake, see Music In the Hills: Dancing and Music in the Hills: Music Makers


A significant achievement of Wayne’s company was the building of a road from Red Oak Mountain in Webster County to Black Oak Mountain in Pocahontas County.

Also stationed at Camp Cranberry with Wayne was Hugh Brown from Burnsville. According to Ercelyn Parmer Brown, Hugh enrolled for six months and received training on heavy dozers at Camp Cranberry. Hugh put his training to good use and operated heavy construction equipment thereafter during his career in the construction trades.

Left: Hugh Brown

Wayne was fortunate that Hugh Brown had a Model A Ford at Camp Cranberry because he and his friend Leo Riffle rode home with Hugh to Orlando whenever Hugh visited his Burnsville family.

Wayne also recalls that as part of the recreational activity to let the young men “blow off steam,” the Camp Cranberry played baseball with other nearby camps. Wayne recalls going to Camp Caesar in southern Webster County to play a team from Camp Nicholas located at Cowen. Boxing was another activity at Camp Cranberry which was a popular event with the men of the camp.

Wayne enjoys the annual CCC reunions in West Virginia held to commemorate the service of the CCC boys and the good works that they performed.


Leo T. Riffle

Leo was the son of Arch Alonzo and Minnie Jane (Blake) Riffle. Leo, like his friend Wayne Blake, had a similar upbringing on Three Lick Run and was used to hard work. Leo, not at all apprehensive about going away to the mountains of Nicholas County, enjoyed the CCC experience and was also paid a dollar a day for work a lot less difficult than life on the Three Lick farm. Joining the CCC on the cusp of World War II, Leo found himself in the United States Army shortly after his stint with the CCC. During the period of his CCC service and his Army service, Leo’s family moved from Orlando to the Parkersburg area. After his service, Leo followed his family to Williamstown, near Parkersburg, where he found a career with the Wood County Board of Education. Leo frequently visited his family and friends who remained in Orlando. Leo died in 2007.

Leisure at Camp Cranberry: local music, boxing, the barracks, baseball.


Ovie Merlin ‘Mut’ Stutler, Jr.

The son of Ovie and Ennie (Riffle) Stutler of Orlando, ‘Mut’ joined the CCC, according to his widow, around 1934 amd was first located in Greenbrier County at Camp Wood, near Alvon but was later transferred to Camp Anthony on the Anthony River in northern Greenbrier County. Camp Anthony had formerly been a logging camp operated by Huntling Lumber Company and provided a ready-made camp for the CCC enrollees. Besides several forestry-related tasks performed by his Company 2590, ‘Mut’ was also involved in the construction of the Blue Bend Recreation Area on Anthony Creek. While billeted at Camp Anthony, ‘Mut’ met his future bride, Anita Boswell, a daughter of a security guard at Camp Anthony, whom he would marry seven years later. After his CCC enlistment was up, ‘Mut’ worked at the silk mill at nearby Covington, Virginia and the Baltimore shipyards until December 25, 1941 when he received his notice to report for service by telegram when he was visiting his Orlando family. After his service in World War II, ‘Mut’ worked for Life of Virginia, an insurance company. ‘Mut’ died in 1992, a resident of Greenbrier County.

Above right: Anita Bosely and O.M. Stutler Jr.



Burlen Henline

Burlen, the son of Coy Clarence "Frank" and Audra (Reip) Henline, joined the CCC from Doddridge County in February 1941. A frequent visitor to his family home place on Oil Creek in Orlando, Burlen was the grandson of Beham and Samantha (Skinner) Henline. While in the CCC, he was first stationed at Camp Morgan in Berkeley Springs and was involved in the construction of Cacapon State Park. During his stay at Camp Morgan, Burlen and two other CCC enrollees were sent on temporary duty to pick apples at the American Fruit company orchard in nearby Berkeley County. Paid five cents per bushel picked, Burlen said he could earn up to $4.50 per day, which was a considerable amount of money in those days.

Above left: Burlen Henline
Right: Burlin and friends on the bridge they built in Cacpon State Park.
Below right: Burlen Henline in Wyoming

After returning to Camp Morgan from his apple picking experience, volunteers were asked to transfer to a CCC Camp near Kemmerer, Wyoming to work on soil conservation projects. “To see what was on the other side of the mountain,” Burlen volunteered for the transfer. One of the chosen volunteers, Burlen soon found himself in the still untamed West where he worked as a surveyor’s assistant locating and plotting small ponds which had been built by CCC workers to serve as a water source for sheep. Burlen has many tales to tell about the severity of the Wyoming winters. Cases of frostbite were common. Boots, which had frozen to the floor in the night, had to be kicked loose from the barracks floor in the morning. Work details did not cease work because of the weather. Burlen reminisced that he had never experienced a West Virginia winter that even approached the intense cold of a Wyoming winter.

After the CCC Camps were disbanded in 1942 when federal funds were re-directed to the war effort, Burlen attended a drafting school in Huntsville, Utah, near Ogden. After earning 750 hours of drafting experience, Burlen took, and passed, an examination to become a cadet and attend the Army Air Force Flight School in Santa Anna, California. After his service in the United States Army Air Force during World War II and thanks to his CCC experience, Burlen graduated from West Virginia University with a degree in Civil Engineering and retired from the Ohio Department of Transportation as a bridge designer and from a similar position with the State of Texas. He now resides in Canton, Ohio.


Raymond ‘Rim’Riffle
A Clover Fork lad, ‘Rim’ was born in 1912, the son of Eli and Esta (Blake) Riffle. Growing up during the Depression provided little opportunity for employment for Orlando youth so in 1937, ‘Rim’ enrolled in the CCC along with Hollis Henline. Rim was sent to Camp Keith which was located on the Big Coal River in northeastern Boone County. Camp Keith was located on Route 3 between Orgas and Sylvester. It was also known as Camp P-55, Company 1540.

After his CCC days were over and he had reached the ripe old age of twenty eight years, ‘Rim’ married Viola Davisson. Interestingly, ‘Rim’ and his bride-to-be were transported by Glen Skinner and Virginia (McCoy) Skinner to the Commonwealth of Virginia for the wedding ceremony. They returned to Clover Fork to set up housekeeping.

Rim’ never talked much about his CCC days and his descendants today know little of his experiences at Camp Keith. Tragically, ‘Rim’ was struck by a vehicle as he walked along the road near Cowen in 1969 and died as the result of his injuries at the age of fifty-six. His memories of his days in the CCC camp went with him to the grave.

Hollis Henline

When eighteen year old Hollis Henline graduated from Burnsville High School in 1936, employment prospects were slim. The son of Newt and Dora (Posey) Henline, Hollis lived at home and did farm work for a few months until he decided to join the CCC. Joining up with ‘Rim’ Riffle, they both were sent to Camp Keith in Boone County.

After his term of enlistment in the CCC was concluded, Hollis obtained work with the Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone Company where he remained until he received his notification of an all-expense paid trip to England for the duration, courtesy of the United States Army. After his military time was over, Hollis worked for Brockway Glass in Clarksburg for thirty-four years until his retirement. He died in 2004 and the age of eighty-seven.


Oke Strader
A venerable resident of Road Run, Oke Strader served his country in the Great War. He was gassed during the conflict and had to deal with respiratory problems for the rest of his life. Because of his lung problems, Oke periodically went to Hopemont Sanitarium in Preston County for observation and treatment. When the CCC program was established by Congress, special provisions were made for the veterans of World War I. Special camps were established for veterans who often had physical disabilities as the result of their military service.

Oke entered one of these CCC programs in 1937 when he was forty one years of age and was sent to a veterans’ camp at Camp Roane in Spencer. Oke’s daughter, Madge Brown of Burnsville, recalls that her father helped build walks and set out trees during his time at Camp Roane. He usually would come home on weekends to see his family.

After his enlistment with the CCC was concluded, Oke and his family moved to Baltimore where he worked in the shipyards refitting navy warships. After his wartime employment in Baltimore, he returned to Burnsville and lived the remainder of his life with his daughter Madge. He died in 1977 of pneumonia and lung trouble.

Arden Thomas

When he died in 2000 at the age of eighty five, Arden Thomas, an Orlando native, son of Mike and Estella (Henline) Thomas, and grandson of Beham and Samantha Henline, had devoted most of his working life as a locomotive engineer for the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. Before his employment with the railroad, Arden had a memorable service with the CCC beginning in 1936 at Camp Webster, Camp P-74 in Webster Springs. A few months after arriving at Camp Webster, Arden was transferred to Camp Waddington near Wheeling. Arden, along with Company 3529, played a hand in creating Oglebay Park, one of the premier state parks in West Virginia. The fine craftsmanship of the buildings of this park was created by the men of the CCC who were quite proud of their accomplishment. Arden passed away in 2000.

For more on Arden Thomas' parents see the Nov '06 entries Mike Thomas' Family and Peddlers and Drummers
Above left: Arden is 4th from the left with his barrack group.

Right: Arden Thomas

Elmer Pumphrey

As with many Orlando families during the Depression, times were extremely tough for the Pumphrey family of Three Lick. Elmer Pumphrey, the son of Thad and Lettie (Sprouse) Pumphrey, was desperate to make a contribution to his family’s well-being. Misrepresenting his youthful age, he enrolled into the CCC because the pay of a dollar a day seemed beyond comprehension, and the thought of twenty five dollars a month being sent to his family was a dream come true. Elmer requested assignment far away from the worries of home and was accommodated with a trip to Ruby Lake in Wells, Nevada.

While serving two terms in the CCC, Elmer built bridges, cut brush, built roads and trails in the Rocky Mountain West. One unique task carried out by the enrollees at Ruby Lake was to pick conifer cones for the seeds to re-plant. Elmer’s widow reports that he thoroughly enjoyed his service in the CCC.

Above right: Elmer is front left with his his fellow "seed pickers"
Above left and right: Certification of Elmer's hard work.
Below left: Elmer's seed picking crew is in the truck.
Elmer traded his CCC uniform for the draftee uniform of the United States Army in late 1941. After World War II service, Elmer married Wilma Conrad and took up residence on Rag Run and later on Bear Run. Elmer was a long-time employee of the Moran Brothers in the gas well drilling business and later as an attendant at a car wash owned by the Morans in Weston. He died in 2003.

Kenneth Spinks

After a severe case of homesickness, Kenneth Spinks of Three Lick gradually became adjusted to life in a CCC camp nearly three thousand miles from home. With nine siblings back in West Virginia, Ruby Lake, Nevada seemed a world away. Entering into CCC service with Elmer Pumphrey, who also went to Nevada, he at least had someone from home to lean on. The son of Lloyd Spinks and Venia Ware Spinks, Kenneth became accustomed to the alien brown, drought ridden mountains, the towering snow-capped peaks, and the vast unpopulated spaces of Nevada. Being a CCC worker meant a lot of hard work from daybreak until dark and there was little time to think about the checker games with his sisters and brothers back home. After his term in the CCC and in the United States Army during World War II, Kenneth spent the rest of his working life as a timber cutter in and around Lewis County. He died in 2007.

See the Feb '07 entry Alta Mae Blake for more about Kenneth Spinks.

Raymond Skinner
Raymond was the son of W. C. “Bill” Skinner and Lena Graff Skinner and grew up on Clover Fork. Coming of age during the Depression and short on prospects as were most of his contemporaries, Raymond enrolled in the CCC in 1940 and was sent to Camp Cranberry at Richwood. Raymond went to Baltimore after his CCC service and there he met Sylvia Foley, daughter of Grover Foley. Sylvia grew up on Hyre’s Run and attended Burnsville High School. She graduated from Sutton High School in 1942. Sylvia worked for Glen L. Martin Aircraft Corporation during World War II, along with three other siblings. Raymond died in Kent, Ohio in 1968.
Lawrence Sands

Nineteen year old Lawrence Sands found the rural character of Camp Black Mountain in Marlinton not that much different than his Flesher Run home on Route 2, Orlando. The son of George and Mamie (Dennison) Sands, Lawrence joined the CCC and was sent to hilly Pocahontas County in early 1938. This camp had its own string orchestra and a newspaper called “The Skillethead.” In addition to the reforestation work done by enrollees, the camp offered extensive training and educational courses which were taken at night. Good health was an important goal of the camp. A dentist made twice monthly visits to Camp Black Mountain. Lawrence’s enlistment period was up at the end of September 1938. Lawrence died in 1967 at age 49 in Akron.




Charles McCrobie

It would be seven years after he served in the CCC that Charles heard of Orlando. Entering the CCC as cadre from Preston County, he was sent first to Camp Morgan in Berkeley Springs and then was transferred in July 1935 to newly opened Camp Tygart at Valley Head in Randolph County. This camp was in the shadow of Point Mountain and was later re-named Camp Bowers. Charles was initially assigned as a guard at Camp Bowers but later became the pump man and was responsible for maintaining the pump and pumping water from Tygart’s River to the camp. To underscore the remoteness of the camp, while Charles was employed there, a three hundred thirty pound, eight foot long black bear was killed on the camp property. The bear steaks on the menu that night led to growling cases of indigestion. Some seven years later in 1942, Charles met Opal Jeffries of Orlando and decided Orlando was the place for him.


Elton Eugene Riffle

Gene Riffle was the son of Joe and Betty (Skinner) Riffle. In 1936, Gene found himself at CCC Camp Laurel Fork at Glady in Randolph County. This camp was located southeast of Elkins in the Monongahela National Forest in a true wilderness area. With Shavers Mountain to the west and Middle Mountain and Rich Mountain to the east, this camp was among the most isolated of all CCC camps in West Virginia. Much of the hilly terrain had been cut over by decades-old timbering operations and the CCC boys spent a great deal of time in planting seedlings to rejuvenate the forest growth. Working in this scenic area, the boys from Camp Laurel Fork built many trails and campgrounds in this Laurel Fork wilderness on the northern flank of Spruce Knob. After his CCC service, Gene served in an Engineer battalion during World War II. After his war-time service, Gene worked for Western Union as a telegraph operator. He married Delta Mick, daughter of Toney and Minnie Mick in 1948. He died at the young age of 42 in 1958.

Dana Groves

The son of Jedidiah Asberry and Esta (Spaur) Groves, Dana was born at Kemper on Oil Creek, about two miles north of Orlando. In 1935 the CCC assigned him to Camp Anthony Wayne at Missouri Branch in Wayne County. This camp, in addition to reforestation projects and fire fighting tasks, was involved in developing Cabwaylingo State Forest in southwestern West Virginia. In addition to fire trails and a fire tower, the enrollees of this CCC Camp built cabins with stone fireplaces and many other structures in the park. Dana, we believe, served the camp as a cook, an occupation which he followed during his later working career. He operated the cafeteria at a major tire manufacturing plant in Akron, Ohio, operated the mess hall at Camp Caesar in Webster County and also operated the Maryland House restaurant near Washington, D. C.


Frank McCord

Born in Orlando in 1906 to O. P. McCord and Della McCord, Frank was very involved in the restaurant business that his parents operated in Orlando and later operated by his mother in Gassaway. As the Depression deepened, Frank joined the boys in green and was assigned to the CCC Camp Harrison near Clarksburg. After his CCC term, Frank entered the service and died during the Battle of the Bulge in 1945.

Right: Frank McCord

Lloyd Jack Skinner

Jack Skinner was the son of W. O. Skinner and Clara Skinner of Clover Fork. Born in 1913, Jack was seventeen years younger than his oldest brother Austin Skinner who had earned admiration for his interesting service in Siberia during the First World War. Jack was twenty years old when Franklin Roosevelt was inaugurated and the Civilian Conservation Corps was created. We know that Jack was first stationed at Camp Harrison at Quiet Dell near Clarksburg and from there was transferred to Camp Black Mountain in Pocahontas County in January 1937. Jack participated in the construction of the fifty two mile road from Camp Black Mountain through wilderness to Cranberry. This road was vital to control of the chronic forest fires which laid waste to what forest remained after the extensive logging which took place in this area in the early 1900’s. After his CCC experience and his service in World War II, Jack settled in Baltimore and worked for Railway Express along with his brother Pete.

Charles Henline

The oldest son of Polar and Vada Henline, Charles was born in 1914. While his parents were operating the wagon restaurant business in Orlando which had formerly been the domain of Dick Skinner, Charles was one of the “boys in green” with the Civilian Conservation Corps. Although we know Charles served in the CCC, the writer was unable to determine the details of his service because he died in 1978 without children and no records no family left to provide information.

Cousins Fred and Lydle Ocheltree

Two Ocheltree cousins, Lydle and Fred, were also members of the CCC. Fred lived in Orlando and Lydle lived on Clover Fork. Lydle was the son of Samuel and Mary Frances (Posey) Ocheltree. Fred’s parents were Oley H. Ocheltree and Ellenora King Ocheltree. Oley clerked in Charley Knight’s store and also during the early 1900’s operated a store at Blake on upper Clover Fork. Both Fred Ocheltree and Lydle Ocheltree were killed during World War II. Lydle was a crew member of B-29 “Flying Fortress” shot down over Germany in 1943. Among other medals, Lydle was awarded an Air Medal for gallantry in action. He is buried in Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Virginia. Fred was a member of the 301st Infantry Regiment of the 94th Infantry Division when he was killed in action in Luxembourg in February 1945. He is buried in the Luxembourg American Cemetery. Both Fred and Lydle were Orlando musicians and frequently participated in music-making for square dancing at the home of Vaden "Jake" Blake in Orlando during the 1930’s. Fred and Lydle were both single when they died and there are no relatives left to tell their stories about their days in the CCC.

Salute to the Tree Boys

From the darkest days of the Depression in 1933 to the eve of World War II, young men of Orlando and the rest of the nation, served their country well, restoring environmental health to the vast rugged mountains and building a foundation for the recreational areas now so well used in this country. For a dollar a day the young men from Orlando toiled in boiling heat of the Nevada deserts, the freezing cold of the Wyoming plains, and the isolated slopes of the Monongahela National Forest. Their legacies are everywhere we look in this state. Each trip we take to Holly River State Park, Oglebay Park, Kumbrabow State Park, or to Cacapon and use the facilities, we can thank the “Tree Army” of the 1930’s, the boys in green, for their tireless work. In the words of Charlie Maquire:

We were down
But never down and out
We were lost
But never lost in doubt
We were broke
But we were never broken
Got on the March
In March and April ‘33
Bent our backs
Back from poverty
And became a generation
That led a Nation to believe.

My Land, I’ve held you in my hands
In ways, you still can see
Your mountains to the shore
Civilian Conservation Corps
My Land, and the C.C.C.

We were bronzed
Under a golden morning sun
We were rich
Three square meals instead of none
We were three-million strong and more
Sending strength to our families
On and on
To a conservation melody
On and on
Starting with Army “Reveille”
On and on
Proving “We can take it”
Into a new century

Camps Cranberry, Ruby Lake, Woodington, Woodbine and Glady Fork.


. . . . .

comment 1 by Tom Pumphrey

My name is Tom Pumphrey and I now live in Tennessee. During the 1930’s, my family lived in Orlando.

In 1940, I joined the CCC. I took a physical in Weston and then was sent for a short while to Camp Scott at Whitmer to what was called a summer camp. I was then sent to a CCC camp in Mineral County. The closest town was Keyser, but our mail was addressed to Cabins, West Virginia.

When we were in base camp, we were under the authority of the military but when we were planting trees or building roads we were under the authority of the forest service.

The clothing we were issued was military clothing which appeared to have been previously used, but it was serviceable.

I was in the CCC for one year and planted thousands of pine trees which must be very large trees by this time.

I went into the CCC at the same time as a Henline boy from Orlando whose first name I don’t recall, and also my brother, Jim Pumphrey. My brother Jim was in the CCC for six months and was stationed at a camp near Durbin in Pocahontas County. During his time in the CCC, Jim stocked trout in streams and also checked the streams to see how the trout were surviving and kept track of how many were caught.

After my CCC enlistment, I entered the Army and served in the South Pacific in a tank outfit and was in the Philippines, Marshall Islands, and Saipan. My brother Jim was in the Army Air Force after his stint in the CCC and was on active duty when World War II broke out.

For more about Tom & his family see Bill Pumphrey: Blacksmith & Jack of all Trades

comment 2 by Pat Rickhart

My step father Ivan Arron Morrison and his brother William Edward Morrison (better known as Barney) and my Uncle Edward Godfrey were all in the C.C.Cs at the same time, about 1933. Ivan and Barney were the sons of Lee and Ethel (Scarff) Morrison. Ivan was born 1905 and died 1944. He was married to Ruth (Nellie) Godfrey. His brother Barney was born 1913 and died 1968 and he was married to Ruth Peck. She was the daughter of the famous Dr. Peck of Burnsville. M y Uncle Edward was the son of Tom and Bridgett Godfrey. He was born 1913 and died about 1990 and I might add he was one of the nicest people you'd ever know. He was married to Ruth Morrison, the sister of Ivan and Barney and the daughter of Lee and Ethel Morrison. I find it is amazing that all three women had the name of Ruth.

Left: Ivan Aron Morrison at Valley Head in 1933.

comment 3 by David Parmer

Boys who lived on Route 1, Orlando listed as Gilmer County CCC enrollees included Russell Bonnett, Indian Fork, Verle G. Moore, Upper Sand Fork (Orlando), Hugh Bonnett, Orlando, Harley M. Workman, Orlando, Aubra Workman, Orlando, Arden M. Moore, Orlando, Awkland Stalnaker, Orlando, Nelson Workman, Orlando, Euston Sherwood Barker, Orlando, Everett Clarence Pumphrey, Orlando. This information was compiled from the Glenville Democrat.

[Russell and Hugh Bonnett were brothers, sons of James and Lessie (Graynolds) Bonnett. Verle and Arden Moore were the sons of Randolph and Emma (Boilon) Moore. Nelson and Aubra Workman were brothers. Their prents were and Marion Harley and Lela (Heater) Workman, so perhaps Harley M, Workman was their father. -ed]

comment 4 by David Parmer

The Emergency Conservation Work Act
In 1933, the United States Congress passed legislation titled the Emergency Conservation Work Act which established the Civilian Conservation Corps, or CCC, as it became known. This act was designed to put to work American youth from ages eighteen to twenty five whose fathers were unemployed or deceased. Camps were also created for World War I veterans who were out of work. The act provided that eligible youth could enroll for six month terms which could be renewed in six month increments for up to two years. For their labor enrollees would receive the sum of thirty dollars per month, twenty five dollars of which had to be sent home to help support the family left behind. The work involved varied from state to state but in West Virginia, the work generally consisted of reforesting cut over tracts of land, controlling erosion, fighting forest fires, building fire trails, bridges and roads in state and national forests, and building cabins and lodges for public use. While such activity appealed but very little to city boys, rural youth of West Virginia who were used to hard outside work, found it desirable both from the standpoint of being satisfying work but also because it helped feed hungry brothers and sisters. Although organized labor vehemently protested the creation of the CCC because of its competition for scarce jobs, Franklin Roosevelt appointed a labor leader, Robert Fechner, to appease the American Federation of Labor and stifle organized labor opposition to the program.

Sunday, December 14, 2008

Double Ironies: Orlando Sons-In-Law Tragic Traffic Victims


Ethel Daisy Posey, born on Posey Run in 1884, was the daughter of George Jackson and Minerva (Hopkins) Posey and the granddaughter of Oil Creek pioneer son Alfred Posey and his wife Christina Murphy.

When Ethel was ten years old she wrote a letter about the two weeks she spent with her a couple weeks with her grandparents, Andrew J. and Sarah (Dennison) Hopkins in Gilmer County. The letter, which was printed in a church magazine, is in the Apr '07 entry Ethel Posey's Adventure In the comments which follow this entry is a letter she wrote as a young wife and mother.
Right: Ethel (Posey) Bennett

by David Parmer
Ethel Posey Bennett was a gracious, elegant lady, most often seen by this writer during the late 1940’s and early 1950’s in dark silky-looking dresses with “old-lady” lace-up shoes. To the writer’s young eyes, the gray hair, dark pocket book carried over the shoulder, and spectacles, justified the belief that Ethel was a senior citizen, although at the time Ethel was younger than this writer is now. The Order of the Eastern Star and the Rebekahs were popular and well-attended women’s clubs in Burnsville and Ethel was a faithful member of both. Ethel had many friends in Burnsville and she visited the town frequently from her home on Posey Run to see friends and attend club meetings.
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Left: logos for the Order of the Eastern Star and the Daughters of Rebekah.
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Ethel, born on Posey Run in 1884, was the daughter of George Jackson Posey and Minerva (Hopkins) Posey. She was a life-long member of the Mt. Zion Methodist Church of Orlando, which her pioneering Methodist father helped to form shortly after the Civil War. Ethel was also a key member in the Posey Family Reunion which brought many descendants of Edward and Catherine Scott Skinner Posey to Orlando from far and wide for an annual gathering.
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Ethel was married for a short time to Grover Van Horn and they had a son they named George Marion Van Horn. In 1910, at her Posey Run home, Ethel married the Reverend Porter Bennett, a widower, from Tanner, Gilmer County, who was thirteen years her senior. During the course of their marriage Ethel and Porter became the parents of six children: three sons, Porter, Rolfe and Noble; and three daughters, Virginia, Maxine and Sarah.


Maxine and Sarah Become Brides
In 1937, Porter and Ethel Bennett and their family were living in Buckhannon. It was there that daughter Maxine met her future husband, Noble Tallman, and daughter Sarah met her future husband, Paul Eskew. Both sons-in-law of Ethel Bennett were employed in the coal mining industry.

A Visit to Posey Run
The newly wedded Noble Tallman and Paul Eskew and their wives enjoyed spending time at the Posey Run home of George Jackson Posey, who was the grandfather of Maxine and Sarah. During the last week of August 1937, the two couples and Ethel Bennett vacationed at the Posey home. On Sunday, August 29th the last day of their vacation, they made an excursion to the popular Falls Mill for swimming and a picnic before returning to their Buckhannon homes.


Kiser Tenney
Two of Ethel and Porter's girls, Sarah and Maxine, married men who worked in the coal mining industry: Paul Eskew and Noble Tallman. Kiser Tenney was Paul Eskew's cousin. (Kiser's dad Albert and Paul's mother Florence were siblings.) Like his two friends, Noble and Paul, Kiser was also employed in coal mining.
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The First Tragedy
One month after enjoying his vacation on Posey Run and the excursion to Falls Mill for swimming and a picnic, Noble Tallman was a passenger in a vehicle driven by Kiser Tenney when the vehicle left the road near Hodgesville in Upshur County. In 1937, there were no safety features such as seat belts in automobiles and passengers were at substantial risk even in the slightest of accidents. Unfortunately, the fates were unkind to twenty year old Noble Tallman who died in an Elkins hospital of the injuries received in the accident. Noble’s widow, Maxine, was expecting her first child at the time of the accident.
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The Second Tragedy
On November 17, 1940, a little over three years after the accident in Upshur County which took the life of Noble Tallman, Kiser Tenney and his cousin Paul Eskew were working the second shift for the Koppers Coal Company in Northfork, McDowell County. After their shift was over, Kiser and Paul were on their way home in Kiser’s automobile. As Kiser was driving along the Bluefield-Bramwell road near the Woodlawn cemetery, an out-of-state vehicle passed Kiser’s vehicle on the windy road and cut back in sharply to avoid an approaching vehicle. This reckless maneuver resulted in Kiser’s front bumper being hooked by the passing vehicle which swerved the Tenney vehicle off the road and over an embankment. Although Tenney was uninjured, again the fates dealt cruelly with the husband of Sarah and son-in-law of Ethel Bennett. Paul Eskew died nine days later of his injuries. He was twenty eight years of age. Besides his widow Sarah, he was survived by a son, Robert Paul.
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comment by Donna Gloff
Ethel's mother Minerva (Hopkins) Posey kept many of her children's letters in her scrapbook. Following is the letter she wrote to Minerva in 1912, after she and Porter and their young family had moved to the town of Taveres, located in central Florida. We know she was about six months pregnant at the time, as her son Noble was born the following March. Oddly, the letter to her mother doesn't speak of how or what her husband is doing or of her children or her health. A letter she wrote to the editorof the [Braxton?] Democrat in March, 1913, tells of their trip home by ocean steamer.
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Dear Mamma:
We are located here in Tavares; arrived yesterday; have rented a two room house, plastered and newly painted. Pay $5 per month furnished with chairs, oil stove, bed, lamps, washstand, dining table and small wood heating stove, in case we should need it. We had a nice trip, saw lots of nice level country. We have been in seven states since we left West Virginia.
Virginia is a nice level country, has nice towns and good country buildings.
We saw lots of cotton; saw them picking it; saw plenty of peanuts. They stack them and thrash them.We crossed the Potomac river and traveled quite a distance along the river. We passed within a few miles of Nokesville, where Uncle N. W. Hopkins lives. We crossed the state of Virginia by way of Richmond. There is quite a lot of pine timber through the state. The trees are very tall and slim. In North and South Carolina is lots of pine timber. They are not so wealthy as Virginia. The buildings are not good.
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Georgia is level -- lots of cotton and terpentine. We would pass for miles and miles where the trees were tapped and saw them gathering the terpentine. We passed through lots of cypress swamps. Savanah Ga., is a nice place. We passed through most all the capitols of the states we traveled through. We crossed several large rivers. The St. John is a very wide river. It is about ten miles wide at Sanford, Fla. We have not seen any hills since we left West Virginia. Florida is nice and level. We get beefsteak at 8 cents a pound. Butter, milk, and eggs are high. We have seen but few cattle since we left West Virginia. The cows here are small and don't look like the West Virginia stock. We have seen but few hogs in Florida. They are small too.
The fishing is good here on the lake. One can fish from the wharf or from boats.
We have plenty of oranges here. There are three trees in our yard, and they have about 25 bushels of oranges on them. At the orange dump just a little way from our house, we can get all we want just for the picking. They pack here. Men and boys get from $5 to $7 per day for packing them. They bring them in by wagon. Grape fruit is fine here. I saw some yesterday at the packinghouse as large as a child's head. We get fine ones at the orange dumps.Carpenters get good wages. Bricklayers $7 per day. It is nice and warm here; rained today. We have not needed any fire, except to cook with, since we arrived.
Your Daughter,
MRS. ETHEL POSEY BENNETT
December 15, 1912
Thanks to Ron Skinner for including Ethel Posey's letters in his family tree.

Wednesday, December 03, 2008

Denzil Blake's Pappy

by Ralph Denzil "Smeech" Blake, Jr.

My great-great-great grand parents were John Burton Blake and Abigail (Crissmore) Blake, pioneers of Orlando West Virginia.
My great-great grand parents were Ballard Smith Blake and Mary Jane (Riffle) Blake, also of Clover Fork.
My great grand parents were William Henry Blake and Arminta (Williams) Blake who set to farming near Napier.
My grand parents were Walter Lee “Pap” Blake and Mina Jane (Allen) Blake.
My parents were Ralph Denzil “Dutch” Blake and Ruth (West) Blake.

To the left is my grandfather Walter Lee "Pap" Blake, 1885-1954.

My dad had two brothers Maynard and Woodrow and a sister Madeline. There were also two brothers that died soon after birth. Dad’s mom, Mina, died when he was seven leaving Walter Lee Blake with four small children and an infant. Baby Edwin Lee died one month after his mother. My Dad and his siblings called their father Walter Lee “Pap” (I guess short for Pappy).

Pap was caught between a coal wagon and the wall of the mine twisting his body until his neck was broken. A local blacksmith fashioned a device with a steel rod and straps that fastened around his body that Pap wore the rest of his life. A strap slipped in front of his forehead to keep his head up. I can’t imagine how he slept or lived a somewhat normal life under those conditions.

Due to Pap’s disability work was not easy to find but he somehow managed to keep the family together. I know the family was poor but I never heard any complaints about that from my Dad. In fact, it seemed to me he had a happy life based on the stories he told. Some of the stories were so funny we often asked for a repeat performance.


Head Pecking
I never heard it said that Pap beat his children but he did have a form of punishment. He would stiffen his forefinger and middle finger and peck them on the head. Apparently Dad was quite familiar with it and said it hurt. Pap would get his words twisted sometimes but Dad said you dared not laugh or you would suffer the dreaded two finger head peck. Pap would say “you get a feller all bumfuzzled up then laugh at him“.

Right above: Pap with brother James.
Left below: Maynard

Well Water
Dad said Maynard was told to get water from the well. Suddenly he yelled “the bucket came off”. Pap told him to get another bucket but Maynard again cried “that dad blamed bucket fell off too”. Pap yelled “Ahhhh Maynaaard. Why don’t you get two or three dishpans from the kitchen and throw them down the well too”. At that point Dad ran off to find somewhere to “laugh his head off”.

Berry Wine
Although Dad did not finish high school he was very adept at solving almost any problem, even as a young boy. Pap had a job taking care of a shed housing dynamite and blasting caps. Pap had picked some berries and decided they would make a fine wine. He put his berries in a big crock he put in the padlocked shed. Dad somehow got wind of it and had to figure a way to get Pap’s wine. He discovered two boards with a crack big enough to get a stick in to slide the cover over on the crock. He then used a hollow reed as a straw. Sometime later Pap was heard to say to one of has cronies: “Ahhhhh them boys. I had me a berry wine set out in the shed. When I figured it was just about time the wine would be good I raked my cup down in the crock and hit bottom. I know them boys had something to do with it“.

Blake Boys Vs. Bees
Dad decided another time to get the honey from a bees nest. He convinced brother Maynard to let him tie his pants cuffs around his boots and a long sleeved shirt was tied around gloves. To protect Maynard’s face Dad punched holes in a flour sack with a needle big enough Maynard could see out but bees could not get in. Dad assured Maynard he was safe but as Maynard starting to get in the nest he was sure a bee got in the flour sack. Panic struck, Maynard started jumping around causing the flour sack to get turned so he could not see. Dad said Maynard took off running blindly into a wire fence that threw him back several feet on his back. He got up and took off again right into the fence bouncing back again several feet on his back. Dad got control of his laughter enough to get Maynard up and away from there. When he asked Maynard where he was running to Maynard said he was going to jump in Cedar Creek to get away from the bees.
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Dutch Got Hooked on Tobacco
Pap had a new pouch of tobacco on a shelf. Dad used a shoe button hook I think to get tobacco out of the pouch without opening it. When Pap went to get some tobacco he found the pouch almost empty. Pap didn’t say a word but the next day a brand new pouch was on the shelf to replenish the boy’s supply. Apparently Pap knew a whole lot more about what went on than Dad ever knew.
Right: a shoe button hook
Left: an unopened pouch of tobacco.

Making Music
Being a Blake it was natural for Dad to play several musical instruments. He and Maynard would play at dances for ten cents and played music on the radio for a short time. Dad made a mandolin and a fiddle for himself and a dulcimer for a friend.

Right: Denzil Blake and daughter Doris Jean

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Comment by David Parmer
I remember Walter Blake from my youth in Burnsville and saw him many times. I couldn't help but notice the strap on his head. He was the one and only person I ever saw wearing the headstrap apparatus. He frequently wore khaki trousers and a khaki shirt and other times gray trousers and a gray shirt and always with a well-worn broad brimmed hat which he frequently would remove to wipe perspiration his head with a handerchief.