Corrie Hill Price

Corrie Hill Price, Educator and Maker; East Tennessee and Asheville, North Carolina:

“I have driven down HWY 1 from Oregon to Southern California. I have sailed from Auckland to Whangarei, backpacked across Europe, married and honeymooned in Central America and scaled the Rockies looking for gemstones. After all of that, I realized that the wonders of East Tennessee, my home, surpassed each destination I had yearned to see in my traveling days. It is only now that I plan to put roots down that I am truly grateful to be born and raised in Appalachia. Someday I hope my family will enjoy the same beauty, kindness, and comfort these hills offer.”

Tina Taylor Rose

Tina Taylor Rose, Cowgirl/Solid Gold Dancer/Campfire Singer; Alter Ego: Legal Assistant; Clintwood, Virginia:

“I am not the poetic or writer type, I am more of a hands-on country girl, self-sufficient. That is what we are; we are strong, tough resilient and able. We take care of our own.”

“Growing up we had few neighbors, no cable TV, but lots of room to roam and to ride horse and skinny dip in the creeks. Never wearing shoes, I left my footprints on that mountain and the mountain left it's footprint on me.”

“No place that I have traveled offers the peace I find here. My mind is still and quiet. I can appreciate God's gifts. I am just a country girl, Appalachian, and proud of all that I am and all that we are as mountain people.”

Julie Boggs

Julie Boggs, Mother of two teenage boys, Bank Teller/Customer Service Rep; Clintwood, Virginia:

“I’ve never had a burning desire to leave these mountains like so many others I've known. I guess not wanting to leave family or fear of change has kept me here in the past.”

“Everyday on my drive to and from work I pass by this one spot that I swear has to be one of the prettiest places in the world. I almost always remark on how beautiful it is as if I'm seeing it for the first time. There are breathtaking spots like that nestled all in the hollers and along the ridge tops of these mountains I call home. You may discover them on a walk through the woods or an evening drive. These mountains offer shelter, tranquility and a kind of beauty you won't find anywhere else.”

“That's why I stay...that's why I'll never leave. These mountains are my home.”

Leniavell Trivette

Leniavell Trivette, Age 71, Retired Textile Worker, Current - Yarn Spinner, Quilter and Author; Zionville, North Carolina:

“I grew up on old Beech Mountain. We lived in a small five-room house. My dad was sick a lot. Before he got sick, he worked in Akron, Ohio. He got hurt while he was up there and back then you could never get no help. He was sick most of his life. My mom was always there with us, taking care of us. We did a lot of hard work. I had three sisters and two brothers. They are all gone now except my oldest sister.”

“We had a small farm and we raised tobacco just to have a little extra money. We would all work in the garden in the summertime. We would can all the fruits and vegetables we had. We had the tobacco to buy the few things we needed. There was only so much tobacco you were allowed to have on the farm. We could only put out four or five tents. We bought our plants from folks who lived down on Beech Creek. Me and my sister would go down there, pull up the plants, put them in a big washtub and carry them back. In the fall, we would cut it and hang it in the barn. Right before Christmas we would grade it and take it to market. As kids we had a good time with that… Something to do. On the way to market, mom and I would shop at Smithies’ Store. Mom would go ahead and put back what she was gonna get us for Christmas. She would tell the clerk we were heading to market. Once we were paid, we would stop on the way back and pay for it. ”

“I graduated in 1958… Graduated on Friday night and went to work on Monday morning at Newland Knitting Mill. After working in several textile mills, we formed an artist co-op over here in Western North Carolina. I worked at the co-op for 19 years, traveled all over to arts and crafts shows from South Carolina to Cincinnati. Did a lot of shows on my own as well… make quilts, sock monkeys, bonnets and things like that. I do spinning too, on an old fashioned spinning wheel. My mom done spinning and I learned from her.“

“A few years back, can’t remember the year, Kurt Russell was doing a movie over in Avery County. He had bought Goldie Hawn a spinning wheel, and he wanted somebody to teach Goldie to spin on that spinning wheel. He called us. He came out to the house, brought the spinning wheel and wanted to see where she was gonna be taking lessons. So Goldie and Kate Hudson came out… My mom taught Goldie and I taught Kate to spin. They came about three different times. They were so nice and we really all just had a good time. Me and mom used to get letters from them all the time.”

“Now let me tell you about making apple butter with Old Crow Medicine Show. They are a fine bunch of young men…”