Source: WV History Film Project
MARGARET HATFIELD INTERVIEW,
SOUND ROLL 51
MARGARET HATIELD, TAKE ONE, CAMERA
ROLL 179, SOUND 51
Q: Margaret, tell me who was Devil Anse
Hatfield?
JJDB 0491
MH: Devil Anse Hatfield was probably one of the
most colorful, charismatic ... Devil Anse Hatfield
was probably one of the most color and charismatic
characters in West Virginia history, and for that
matter in American folklore. But unlike a lot, well of
legendary figures, somebody bit Paul Bunyan, ? ?
there was somebody that existed that that story started
from. There's a kernel of truth in the biggest leading
detail in the world. But Devil Anse, he existed. He
was real and actually who he was he was the son of
Ephraim? Hatfield and Nancy? Vance. He came
along at a time in history when it was possible to be a
character ten feet tall. He fulfilled all the
requirements. ...
MARGARET HATFIELD, TAKE 2, CAMERA 179, SOUND 51
Q: Margaret, start that up again.
JJDB 0613
MH: Devil Anse Hatfield, he was the son of Ephraim
Hatfield and Nancy? Vance. But he came along at
the time in history when legends were being built and
he had all the material for it. He was witty; he was a
practical joker. He was a very tough, crusty old
character. Now, all legends start with a kernel of
truth. Johnny Appleseed was a real person, so was
probably was Mike Fike 'Paul Bunyan.' And for all I
know Pecos Bill. A lot of things got built on to Devil
Anse that he just didn't do, but an awful lot of it was
true. Some of it -- he let people believe what they
wanted to believe about him; he didn't bother to deny
it. I mean there were stories that were told that you
should have had better sense than to believe. If you
did, then that that was your problem. He'd let you go
along with it.
Q: What was he like a person though and what
was he like to his grandsons and --
JJDB 0721
MH: He was one of the most popular people that I
have ever heard of or done any research into. They
said you could tell when Devil Anse Hatfield was
coming to town because every dog and kid in the
country would be out following him. ... Children
loved him. I've never heard anyone who personally
knew the man say a hard word against him.
Q: How was it that he became at the center of
this storm that we call the Hatfield-McCoy feud?
JJDB 0773
MH: For one thing, Devil Anse and several of the
other Hatfield were at the center of that storm simply
because the tallest pine tree gets struck by lightning.
They were property owners; at one time the Hatfield
family owned the biggest part of the Tug valley.
Well, they owned both sides of the river from over
around ?? Beach at Knox? Creeks all the way down
to almost to Williams and a lot of the watershed
creeks, Mate? creek where we are now. This creek
from one end to the next was Hatfield country, Pigeon
creek, Blackberry creek, from the mouth of
Blackberry all the way around the river, what the
called the big bend of the river, clear into the head of
Blackberry creek.
JJDB 0862
This was Hatfield country; these people owned
tremendous enormous tracts of land, the Hatfields and
their near relatives, the Vances, also the Farrels,
Musicks, Davises -- all these people were closely
related. They were first cousins, double first cousins.
Some of them so close, some of them related so
different ways that they didn't know how they were
related.
Q: So how did that land ownership relate to the
trouble?
JJDB 0907
MH: The land ownership -- at that time you've got to
remember at the time of the Hatfield and McCoy feud
which some of the trouble may have started in the
Civil War -- my research leads me to believe that it
probably didn't. The land ownership at that time in
the 1870's and 1880's, people were in here, agents in
here buying enormous tracts of mineral. They were
also buying timber for big outside holding companies.
And of course the people to get to, the people that you
wanted to buy the mineral off of, you had to deal with
the Hatfields and as I said their near kin. If you could
run those people off, if you could run those families
off, you could get that land very, very cheap or
especially the mineral, they weren't interested in the
land. If you get the mineral -- well they brought it in
some instances for twenty five cents an acre.
Q: How did the McCoys, McCoy family get
involved in land speculators and the Hatfields. Pull it
all together.
JJDB 1026
MH: The McCoy family had no intent of ??? or
anything like that. The McCoy family was used by
land speculators. There was trouble going on and
hard feelings going on and land speculators. My
mother always said there was never a lawyer so
ignorant or worthless that he couldn't cause trouble
for people. And lawyers in places like ? there's a
book, the lady's name is Miller, she's from WVU,
there's a book about that particular, the economic
aspects of that area, that sometime -- You see the
Hatfields and the Vances came in here in the late
1700's. The first white man he may have been half
Indian, the first white into this area was a man named
Abner Vance. He came from Abbington. He killed a
man in Abbington, Virginia. Shot him off a horse ? ?
river and he came down here hiding from the law.
Now he was related to the Hatfield family. He may
have been -- you get into frontier genealogy in that
time, it is harder than -- you can't imagine because the
census were inexact.
Q: What's important to know about the kind of
people the Hatfields came from.
JJDB 1172
MH: The Hatfield that came down here, Ephraim
Hatfield came from Virginia. Now Ephraim Hatfield
I was told at one point in my life -- I don't know if this
is true or not -- but Ephraim Hatfield was a drummer,
continental drummer at the Battle of Kings Mountain.
His father, I do know this for a fact, his father Joseph
Hatfield was chief scout for Campbells Virginians at
Kings Mountain in ?. And they came down in here a
lot; it was possible. You know that they paid
Revolutionary War soldiers in land patents cause the
government had no money. ...
HATFIELD INTERVIEW, TAKE 3, Camera 179, SOUND 51
Q: Was this really a family feud that we've heard
so much about -- this Hatfield-McCoy feud?
JJDB 1251
MH: It wasn't the whole family on either side. It was
really a couple of families out of two big clans. Now
there were parts of the McCoy family that had
nothing whatsoever to do with it, just as there were
parts of the Hatfield family. People write about the
Hatfields leaving Tug river by the flocks, herds and
gaggles. They didn't. One family or two families of
Hatfields moved away from Tug river and that area.
That's like saying 'I dipped two soup ladles out of the
sea.' They're still over there; look in the Matewan
phone book.
Q: I want you to tell me about some of the characters involved in the feud. I'm just going to give you some names. ...
HATFIELD INTERVIEW, TAKE 4,
Q: Tell me why the story is a tragic story.
JJDB 1345
MH: It's a tragic story ... The story of the
Hatfield-McCoy feud is tragic in that neither family
caused that feud. It was incidents that wouldn't have
happened if they hadn't have been instigated from
with out to a great extent. It was done by self-serving
people who had their own little particular ax to grind
who wanted to gain control of property or
what-have-you. They used people to -- for example,
let me tell some of the McCoy family, Ranel McCoy's
family in particular who were really the only ones
that were deeply involved in it. Those people didn't
have the money to patent? the Hatfields. They didn't
really have the political base or anything else, and
they were just, they were prodded into something that
was totally -- as I said messing with people that they
knew better than to mess with, that these people were
dangerous as a cocked pistol.
Q: The Hatfields were that dangerous?
JJDB 1447
MH: ... If you pushed. Normally, they were the
friendliest, most generous hospitable people on earth.
But if you pushed them, it was very, very risky
business. They wouldn't let their own push them,
much less somebody else. And that's what
happened.
Q: Let's talk about some of these players. Cap Hatfield.
WEST VIRGINIA, MARGARET
HATFIELD
HATFIELD INTERVIEW, TAKE 5, SOUND
ROLL 52
Q: Margaret, let's talk about some of these folks.
Cap Hatfield
JJDC 0025
MH: Cap Hatfield was sort of a debt? unto himself.
From all I have been able to find out from research
and talking to people, I think Cap really enjoyed a
bad hat, a bad character. Now when he died in the
early 30's, he died in Johns Hopkins Hospital in
Baltimore, Maryland. They operated on him and they
found that he had a bullet fragment in his skull
pressing on his brain, which may have accounted for
some of his shall we say "antisocial" behavior. What
happened to his eye, there's all kinds of stories goes
around about why Cap only had one eye and his name
was William Anderson Hatfield, Junior.
JJDC 0096
Why they called him Cap that it because Devil Anse's
rank in the Confederate army. There was no such
thing. When Cap was about nine or ten years old, he
put his own eye out. He did what every kid in the
country had been told to do at least told not to do at
least fifty thousand times. Pistols and rifles used to
load them with a percussion hammer. ...
Q: How'd Cap Hatfield put out his eye. Give it to me in brief form.
HATFIELD TAKE 6
Q: Tell me how Cap lost his eye?
JJDC 0145
MH: A percussion cap like what was used on a pistol
or a rifle to set off the charge of powder, Cap got one
and he put it one rock and he smacked it with another
rock and naturally it blew up. That's what put his eye
out. He didn't shoot his own eye out. Though
McCoy shot his eye out. His brother didn't put his
eye out. He put, he accidentally doing a greenhorn
kid trick, put his eye out. That's why he was also
called 'Cap.'
Q: What about Ellison, who was killed on
election day.
JJDC 0199
MH: Ellison Hatfield was probably had one of the
best reputations ? ? none? of the Hatfields. He wasn't
a trouble maker. He had no bad reputation for liquor,
women, or anything else that some of the other men
unfortunately were pre-disposed to. Course they
didn't know anything about it and they said people
made up deliberate slanders.
Q: One of those might have been Johnse
Hatfield?
JJDC 0250
MH: Now Johnse was a ladies' man, and he wasn't a
bad character really. He wasn't considered to be
dangerous or anything of the sort. He was supposed
to have been extremely good looking. If he looked
anything like some of the others, I can understand
why women had the problems staying away from
Johnse. But he was also a very strong and a very
brave man because that's how he got out of the
Kentucky Penitentiary. He killed a man with a ?
--
Q: That's a little far afield for us. Let's keep
going. Uncle Jim Vance?
JJDC 0317
MH: Now Jim Vance was known. A lot of the people
who knew him called him Crazy Jim. Jim Vance's
family when he was about fourteen or fifteen years
old, they lost tremendous tracts of land. He didn't
own land until he was up in his sixties, till Devil Anse
took the Grapevine Tract back from Perry Cline and
his associates. Jim Vance evidently must have
sharecropped or something like that. Jim Vance was
an old, bitter man, and he blamed the Clines and the
McCoys for the loss of all that land; and he was
determined to make them pay for every rock, clod,
and gravel, and every deer the Vance family had ?
?.
MARGARET HATFIELD, TAKE 7
Q: Let's switch to the other side of the fence.
JJDC 0406
MH: Do I have to?
Q: Yes, you do. Let's talk about the three
McCoy boys that stabbed Ellison.
JJDC 0418
MH: The three McCoy boys, the oldest one -- that
would have been Tolbert, and then there was Pharmer
-- I think they called him Dick -- and the young one,
Bob. The young one, Bob, was about fifteen, sixteen
years old. Tolbert McCoy was in his late twenties.
Now Tolbert had a reputation as a trouble maker,
especially when he was drinking. They got over there
on that election ground and like a lot of other people,
Tolbert was the one who started it. Pharmer and Bob
jumped into it. What happened -- really what they did
to Ellison Hatfield was a very, very foul dirty trick.
Ellison Hatfield was not armed. They jumped on
him; they shot him once. They stabbed him about 32
times. Tolbert had a pistol; the other two had knives,
and when three men jump on one, now granted,
Ellison Hatfield was six foot four and he weighed
about, probably about 230 pounds. But three armed
men on one unarmed man, is pretty sorry
behavior.
Q: Further downstream, actually before that,
Roseanna McCoy.
JJDC 0554
MH: Roseanna McCoy. Roseanna back then -- I get
this from people who knew her, had seen her
personally -- she was a very pretty girl. She was up to
an age -- now we hear about what Roseanna did.
Roseanna's ride and what have you, and we think of a
fifteen or sixteen year old girl. Roseanna McCoy was
in her early twenties. She was older than Johnse
Hatfield. These mountain girls -- getting on a horse
and riding of a night -- that was nothing. They'd
grown up riding horses, mules, and billy goat if they
could catch one. Very few people rode saddles
because saddles are expensive. Now what Roseanna
did was tore a strip off the end of her petticoat, made
a hackamore? bridle, which most of us knew how to
do by the time we were old enough.
JJDC 0642
Made a hackamore bridle, which means she tied a
slipknot in the end of it, put it over the horse's jaw and
came across the mountain from Burwood? There's a
well marked road across through there. As a matter
of fact, that road we called it the sledge road. It was
there until I was a good sized child in the fifties. It's
across the river down there in the shoals, in the ol'
Hatfield bottom and went down about to where
Cumberland Village is now, Matewan High School,
down there at the logging camp where Devil Anse and
Ells?? Elias and all of the rest of the Hatfields were
down there cutting timber.
JJDC 0704
She went down there to them. Now once she topped
that ridge and hit down the Tug river side of it, she
was going go across McGinnis Hatfield's corn field
and across the river into another Hatfield bottom and
down that road. As far as Hatfields were concerned,
she was in danger of anybody getting her per se was
minimal. But now the fact that she did do what she
did was pretty -- it took -- because she knew that her
daddy was going to take a hide of her and feathers off
of her when he caught her for what she had done.
Q: Do you think that Devil Anse objected to that
romance?
JJDC 0776
MH: Devil Anse objected to that romance because of
who she was. Not because she was a McCoy, but
because she was Ranel? McCoy's daughter because
the parents and brothers and sisters have been known
to have, especially in this area, undue influence on
one partner in a marriage. Well, that later found that
out when Johnse married Nancy McCoy, who was
Roseanna's first cousin. I think they wished he'd have
married Roseanna because if he had, Roseanna's
family wouldn't have anything to do with her.
Q: You hear a lot about all the men in the
Hatfield and McCoy's feud, but you seldom hear,
aside from Roseanna's story, about Nancy and
Roseanna and Vicy Chafin. What was the role of
these women?
MH: Now Nancy apparently, her chief role was
trouble.
MARGARET HATIFIELD, TAKE 9
Q: Margaret, tell me about these women.
JJDC 0875
MH: The women of Appalachia, and this is still true
in a lot of cases, they're much stronger than the men.
This happens all over the south, but especially in
Appalachia. The men, in facing sickness,
unemployment, something like that, generally they'll
cave in. The women don't. The women -- you
couldn't kill one of them with a hammer. The old
women were very soft spoken. They appeared to be
subservient, but you didn't have to be around them
very long until you found out who crowed and who
laid the eggs. You knew who ran that place. So
many of them were natural born ladies. These
women -- they didn't survive, they prevailed.
Q: And they prevailed against some pretty tough
conditions here in these mountains?
JJDC 0960
MH: They prevailed against horrible conditions. The
ones -- an awful lot of them died in childbirth. An
awful lot of them died, lost babies to ailments that a
dollar's worth of medicine would have cured.
Sometimes it was from lack of proper food, lack of
proper sanitary conditions and as my grandma always
said, 'Poor people had poor ways.' They couldn't do
any better than they did. They didn't have the
where-with-all that -- as I said they not only survived,
they prevailed. There's an old lady up here that's sent
about five kids to college digging ginseng.
HATFIELD INTERVIEW, SOUND ROLL
53
HATFIELD INTERVIEW, TAKE 10, ROLE 181,
SOUND 53
Q: ... we forgot a couple of folks, one of your
favorites, Frank Phillips.
JJDC 1017
MH: Frank Phillips had a chip on his shoulder. Now
his family had one time owned a considerable amount
of property. He was raised as an orphan from
somewhere over on the John's creek, over in that area.
He just had -- he lost a good part of that property
through fraudulent dealing of lawyers who were
entrusted as his guardians. Frank Phillips had a bad
attitude. Frank was possibly would have been willing
to fight with anybody, but as I said, it was a chip on
his soldier. And he was another one that was used.
They knew he had a bad attitude.
Q: But did he have sort of a life long vendetta
against Devil Anse.
MH: He had no reason to, aside from the fact that he
married Nancy McCoy after Johnse left and Vance
took up with her.
Q: But another player in this did and that was
Perry Cline.
JJDC 1116
MH: Perry Cline did have sort of a life long vendetta
and the thing that people say: 'Why would Perry
Cline want two or three hundred acres of property that
belonged to Devil Anse when he owned so much
more of his own?' But the thing of it was where that
was accessed the mouth of Peter creek and all of that
through there, and that property -- where as the rest of
that property was up the creek -- that property was on
the river. Now on the river was where the wanted
logs grown; you get the two hundred foot trees out of
there -- the hardwood furniture. The furniture great
wood and it sold better then than it does now. And
that's what he wanted with that property.
Q: One of the things that was said about the feud
that it was a series of mountain justice events, where
justice was meted out at the end of a Winchester.
Was that really the way it was?
MH: In some instances, it was.
HATFIELD, TAKE 11,
Q: Let's pick up that train of thought, which was
that it was reported that this was mountain justice at
the end of a rifle, but there is actually another side to
it. There were --
JJDC 1244
MH: Well, there was another side to it. Very often it
was, I have heard members of the Hatfield family
refer to a Winchester rifle as a Hatfield lawyer, which
to a point, that had a tendency to happen every once
in a while. But now you go back in the old court
records and you find a whole series of actual law
suits, like where Devil Anse took back the Grapevine
tract of land.
Q: Say that again for me shorter. Say ... I've
heard ...
JJDC 1321
MH: It has been said by members of the Hatfield
family that a Winchester rifle, a yellow boy carbine,
was a Hatfield lawyer. They also said that a 38
special was a discussion ender. But all the way down
through the feud years you also find records in the
court houses of where there were actual litigations
where these people actually went to court and tried to
do it the right way. Now, very often the courts
disappointed them.
Q: This is another case of the actual and what
was reported being really different and all throughout
this feud you've got newspapers in the big cities in the
east writing one thing, and another thing is happening.
Tell me about this yellow journalist?
JJDC 1410
MH: For one thing it sold newspapers. ... The yellow
journalism sold newspapers, and these people would
come down here and they wrote stories. They were
looking at the people of Appalachia from their own
cultural bias from what sociologists call
'ethnocentrism' and the Appalachians were different.
They only way that a bigot has to look is down his
nose. He can't look straight ahead. That was part of
the problem there. But the wilder the story, the more
yellow-back novels you sold, the more newspapers
you sold. It continued up until, even today sometimes
you'll find some of the wildest stories I ever saw in my
life. There wasn't no possible way that it could have
happened.
Q: What effect did that all mis-reporting on the
feud have for the people who lived here?
JJDC 1499
MH: It caused the Hatfields in particular to be very
bitter. It caused them not to talk. The people who
knew what happened, who actually knew what
happened were very reluctant to talk about it. Also,
you've got to remember that some of those people
lived into the forties and fifties, and outs? murder one
doesn't have a statute of limitations. Those warrants
were still out. As a result they were hesitant to talk
about it.
Q: What are some of the lessons of the Hatfields
and McCoys. What do they tell us about this place
and these people?
JJDC 1562
MH: That, as I said earlier, it is an older culture. It is
a different culture. Appalachians meet every
qualification for being a minority group. They
always have been. As my grandma said, 'We've
always been here and we've always been different.'
Culturally different and because of that, we deal with
things differently. ... that was the way on the frontier,
and remember these people had been more or less
isolated in this area since the late 1700's. On the
frontier, that was the way you handled things because
you didn't have courts and formal structured
government to deal with it for you. And these people,
their memories of formal structured government in the
stories that have been passed down went back to the
Revolutionary War.
JJDC 1657
Why did we fight the Revolution? Because of strong
central government. They were against it, and the
same thing with the Civil War. I think that had a lot
to do with why so many people in this area were
Confederate sympathizers. It certainly wasn't because
of slave ownership, because they didn't own them. It
was because of the idea of strong central government
they didn't like. They really still don't.
Q: Why have you been so drawn to the
Hatfield-McCoy feud?
JJDC 1706
MH: Because I am one. But also because when I was
growing up in the late forties and fifties, there were
still a lot of people around. I've talked to people who
knew Roseanna McCoy personally. They grew up
with her; I've talked to people who were on the
election ground when Ellison Hatfield was killed.
I've talked to three people many years ago who were
on the river bank when the McCoys were shot. And
these stories you would hear them, you'd hear them
and it just caught my attention.
MARGARET HATFIELD TAKE 13,
Q: Margaret, there's been a lot of people moving
away from the southern coal fields in the last 20-25
years.
JJDC 1772
MH: It goes back farther than that. From right after
the end of World War II up until the mid-1970's, I'd
say somewhere around four-fifths of every high
school graduating class, left. They didn't do so by
choice, but there was no employment; there was
nothing here, and nothing to come back to. They left
to go -- a few of them went to college, they left to go
into the service or find work. And as I said, there was
no other choice, no way for them to come back here.
Now some of them in the last few years as we're
getting older, they've retired from jobs here and there,
they drift back to live here after they retire.
Q: What impact has that out migration had on
this area?
JJDC 1859
MH: ... The out migration has taken the seed corn out
of this area. We don't have the people that the
population base, the young population base, that are
having families and raising them here, that produce
the strength in government, in schools, in your
society. We just don't have -- the older people tend to
be more conservative. Younger people tend to be
more liberal an progressive. We don't have that
young population base.
Q: What will that mean for this area in the
future?
MH: I can only speculate. Now some of the people
who left out of here, who had to go because of
employment ...
MARGARET HATFIELD, TAKE 14
Q: Margaret, look in your crystal ball. What's
the impact of that out migration?
JJDC 1950
MH: As I said before, a lot of the people that left here,
they kept their ties and their children do come back.
But the out migration means decreasing population, a
continually decreasing population; and it also means
an increasingly large number of people who stay here
simply because they can't make it any where else.
They're not -- they don't have sufficient educational
level; they're --. In the face of change you got three
choices: adapt, migrate, or die. They're not adaptive
enough to be able to migrate, so they stay here even
though there's nothing to do except maybe draw
welfare or whatever. And at the rate it's going unless
something drastic happens, I don't see it getting
...
PRESENCE FOR MARGARET HATFIELD
INTERVIEW
JJDC 2081