Source: WV History Film Project
TOM CHAFIN INTERVIEW, SOUND ROLL
48, TAKE 1, CAMERA ROLL 147
... CHAFIN INTERVIEW, TAKE 2, CAMERA 147,
SOUND 48
Q: Tom, tell me what kind of a man Devil Anse
Hatfield was?
JJDA 1278
TC: From what I've always heard and been told that
he was a good man. That he didn't want to ever hurt
anybody or do anything that wasn't right. Now, I've
been told that all my life.
Q: But that's not what people say about him, is
it?
JJDA 1306
TC: No, no. They think that he was an outlaw, that
he wanted to kill. He never did kill anybody. He had
a son, now, that did kill I believe five. His name was
Cap, the oldest member of Devil Anse's family was
Cap Hatfield. He killed one in Matewan there that I
know of because the one that he killed in Matewan
had shot his first cousin, my uncle, my daddy's
brother. He had shot him and crippled him, and Cap
decided that he'd get even with him; and he killed
him. He killed him in Matewan right where you turn
up the river there where they tore the old school
down.
Q: Now, as a boy you knew Cap Hatfield; you
met him. Tell me about that.
JJDA 1400
TC: Yes. I had took a trip with my grandfather, Mose
Chafin. We would ride a horse up to the head of
Mate? Creek and across into the head of Pigeon
Creek and down in the head of Island Creek. Now
that's where Devil Anse's home is; that's where he was
buried, where they have the cemetery there. Cap then
would come over to see my father, Allen Chafin. He
came over one day, you know where Ellison Hatfield
cemetery is, that hollow is called Pat's? Branch. Cap
was Ellison Hatfield's brother and Dev? Lance's
brother. He came over and got me to go up Pat's
Branch with him and he was showing me a spring
where they used to get water and just different things
in Pat's Branch. He wanted to go back to his old
stomping ground, he called it.
Q: Do you remember what he was like and
where did you hear about what kind of a person he
was.
JJDA 1500
TC: He was a very friendly person, very friendly
person that seemed -- he was just a very likable
person. Cap was, yes.
Q: But in his younger days he was a terror wasn't
he.
TC: Yes, in younger days now he was really mean.
He had killed. I have been told that he had killed
five. I know of one that he'd killed down there in
Matewan. I could show you right on the street where
he killed him.
Q: Tell me about your trip up to Devil Anse's
house when you were a boy.
JJDA 1553
TC: I took a ride over there with my grandfather,
Mose Chafin. We didn't stay all night. We stayed
two or three hours and talked with Aunt Vicy.
Q: Could you start over Tom and tell me that
...when I was a boy ... could you start with that
sentence?
JJDA 1592
TC: When I was a boy I went up to Devil Anse's with
my grandfather, Mose Chafin, to see Devil Anse and
Aunt Vicy. Devil Anse was gone; he wasn't there.
He didn't get to see him. We talked with Aunt Vicy a
long time. Devil Anse died a long time before Aunt
Vicy died. They had a big family. I believe they had
eleven children. I'm double cousins to all of
them.
Q: I thought you told me last summer you
actually went up and sat on Devil Anse's lap one time.
Is that true?
TC: No. I don't think so.
Q: Tell me the story about Devil Anse even in
his later years putting boys at the window and what
Aunt Vicy said.
TC: Yes. First, I'd have to say that I took a ride in a
small plane from.
Q: Don't tell me that story yet. First tell me the
story that you heard about Devil Anse putting boys in
the window.
TC: Well, this is it. He decided that he would take
him a good long nap, you know, rest awhile. He
would put two of his boys. He ...
CHAFIN INTERVIEW, TAKE 3 CAMERA 177, SOUND 48
Q: Okay, Tom pick up that train of thought
again. Tell me about Devil Anse.
JJDA 1743
TC: We went over to see Devil Anse, my grandfather
and me, and he was gone but we stayed with Aunt
Vicy awhile, say three or four hours and came back.
And Devil Anse's shoes, she was telling my
grandfather Devil Anse decided that he was going to
take a nap the evening before that. He put Willis, one
of his boys was Willis, and the other one I forget his
name, at the windows. He lived in a log cabin and
they had two windows in it, one in each end of the log
cabin. He would give them a rifle and they would
hold this rifle on their lap and would look out that
window and he would tell them: 'Now don't take your
eye off that window. You look out that window and
watch because your dad's gonna take a nap and I don't
want to take a chance.'
JJDA 1824
Aunt Vicy would get mad, and she would ball him
out and say, 'Anderson -- she called him Anderson --
Anderson, why don't you go on in there and go to bed
and sleep. Those McCoys are not coming all the way
over here in Logan County to Island Creek. Why
don't you go on in there?' He said: 'Oh, Lord, honey,
no. I can't do that. I love you too much.' And he
would put one at each window in the house and they'd
stay right there as long as he slept.
Q: What was your aunt like, Vicy?
JJDA 1880
TC: Aunt Vicy was very strict on everything; she was
more strict than Devil Anse was. When she said she
was the boss; she was the boss. I can tell you that.
That she was the boss at their own. The boys and the
girls, all of her girls and all of her boys. She had
about eleven children.
Q: A lot of things have been said about Devil
Anse. That he was a violent man, that he loved his
Winchester rifles that he wanted nothing but revenge
from the McCoys for the killing of his brother,
Ellison. What's the real story?
JJDA 1939
TC: I don't think Devil Anse was like that. What I
know about him and what my father knew about him
and would tell me about him -- that he was a good,
good peaceful, wanted to be a peaceful fellow. But
Cap and those two bad men -- they had Vance, Jim
Vance on the Hatfield side and they had a Phillips -- I
can't think of his first name -- on the McCoy side in
Kentucky. And Phillips and Vance kept up the fight
with them all the time. Hadn't been for those two
probably the Hatfields and the McCoys would never
had a fight. Those two.
CHAFIN INTERVIEW, TAKE 4, CAMERA 177, SOUND 48
Q: Tell me, what you just told me about Devil
Anse on the one hand and Cap on ? ?
JJDA 2025
TC: I've been told by my father and by my mother
and other people too that Devil Anse never killed
anyone and wanted always to have peace. But Cap
and two of his brothers, Cap for sure I've been told,
killed five different people. I know of one that he
killed down at Matewan. I know of the others if I
could think of their names, but I can't think of the
names right now.
CHAFIN INTERVIEW, TAKE 5, CAMERA 177, SOUND 48
Q: Tom, tell me about what Matewan was like
during the trouble?
JJDA 2089
TC: Back in the trouble, when they called the strike
and they began to put them out of the houses, it wasn't
safe to go through Matewan. You just couldn't go
through Matewan safe. Blackberry City, down below
Matewan or up at north Matewan where I was
showing her were Stony Mountain Camp is, it wasn't
safe to go through there at all. You just had to be
careful when you did go or you had to take your
friends with you. Cap Hatfield, he was the chief of
police, and he -- I guess he was one of the best
protectors that they had of the people. He would
protect the people day and night. He wasn't just there
in the daytime; he was there at night too.
Q: Why wasn't it safe? What was the danger
coming from, the miners, the Baldwin Felts or
what?
JJDA 2166
TC: The Baldwin Felts coming in on the miners and
the miners getting ready to kill them. Them, the
Baldwin Felts coming in to kill the miners. They
indicted two of the United Mine Workers up at
Welch. You know about that. When they was going
up the steps, why the Baldwin Felts was standing up
on top of the steps. Steps are still there; you can see
them. And when they was going up the steps, Ed
Chambers and Cap Hatfield they were going up the
steps, why the Baldwin Felts killed them. Cap's wife
took her umbrella, it was raining a little bit, and beat
one of them over the head with the umbrella when he
was shooting Cap.
Q: What did your father tell you about the
union? Was he a strong union man?
JJDA 2237
TC: He was a strong union man, and he said if we
didn't, if we didn't organize ... My father told me that
if ...
WEST VIRGINIA, TOM CHAFIN
INTERVIEW, SOUND ROLL 49
CHAFIN INTERVIEW, TAKE 6, CAMERA 178,
SOUND 49
Q: Start your answer with my father, but tell me
what your father told you about the role of unionizers,
the union?
JJDB 0026
TC: My father would tell me before I was old enough
to go in the mines. Don't never be against the United
Mine Workers; always be for them cause they're for
the working people. And if we don't have the United
Mine Workers, we're going to be in trouble; and
they're going to drive you to stay after dark, get there
before daylight, pay you what they want to, pay you
nothing, hardly, and if we have a United Mine
Workers and do the right thing we can live better.
Now, that's what he'd always tell me. Be sure that
you do that, and I was sure that I did. I stayed with
the United Mine Workers.
Q: Tell me about what you did in the mines,
when you went in and what you do?
JJDB 0097
TC: I went in the mines on the 9th day of March,
1928 as a trapper. They called it trapper. A trapper
is to open the door when they hear the motor coming
and close it after the motor gets through and to be
alert all the time, to be watching for everything. You
got other things that goes through, has to go through.
People has to go through and all that works in the
mines.
Q: Let me ask you to start over and say that
again, but I want you to tell me how old you were too
.. I went into the mines at such and such ...
JJDB 0150
TC: I went into the mines ... I went to work in the
mines, got a job and went to work in the mines on the
9th day of March 1928, I wasn't sixteen until the last
day of April, 1928, almost two months. Lacked nine
days of being two months. I was a trapper then. I
stayed a trapper for about a year and then I began to
get a bigger job, bigger job. Finally, I got that motor
and I had the world's best I thought then. I was really
happy with it.
Q: Tell me a little bit more about what Matewan
was like in the 20's.
JJDB 0214
TC: Matewan was a nice town. Had plenty of people,
plenty of people working. You mean in the '20's
now? ... Yes, they were working then, but the
Baldwin Felts when they come there and begin to
move them out of there. Well, they tried to organize.
They wanted to organize the United Mine Workers of
America. That's what we needed and that's what we
wanted. That's want they tried to get, but they come
down there and they got into this fight and they got
killed and they killed some. It just all blew up, and it
wasn't worth what had happened.
Q: What was the town like, aside of all the mine
trouble, what was the town like?
JJDB 0278
TC: Well, the town was a good place. ... Matewan
was a good place to live and had some of the best
people that you could find anywhere. The mayor, the
chief of police, all of them was good people and good
to people, wanted to be good to people. But they sent
those Baldwin Felts down there to kill them and put
them out of the houses. Well, just tell you what to do
when they come. That's what they came for.
Q: Was Matewan a different looking town back
in those years? Tell me about that.
JJDB 0330
TC: Yes. It was really nice looking. I hope they
build it back like it was. Both sides of Matewan, the
buildings, they were beautiful, beautiful buildings at
that day and time.
Q: What kind of places were they? Stores
--
TC: Stores, stores, and apartments. Living
apartments where they live in them.
Q: There were quite a few saloons weren't
there?
JJDB 0376
TC: Yes. No, they wasn't. In Matewan they had one
saloon; one saloon in Matewan. Then after the saloon
days were over they had one liquor store; that's all I
can ever remember. But back then, back then when
the Baldwin Felts they had a saloon at that day and
time.
Q: Do you remember anything about the
saloon?
TC: No, I can't remember, but they had a saloon
then.
TOM CHAFIN ROOM TONE
JJDB 0430
Chafin Interview