Garnett Gilliam

Garnett Gilliam, Local Historian and Collector; Big Stone Gap, Virginia:

“I was born in Big Stone Gap (Virginia) and I grew up across the river since I was age 11. Then, we moved down to one area called, Frog Level. I used to walk to school. When I came out from the side street, here come some boys and girls up from the street below us. By the time we got to school, which was a mile away, we (were), 30-40 people, all of us walking at the same time up this street. There was no library, there were no houses down here, this is where we would sleigh ride. You’d have hundreds of kids up here sleigh-riding off the hill, running into each other. And we had a big old oak tree over here that blew down when we had a tornado hit this area not too many years ago. But in the process, this oak tree, we used to take tires and build us a big ol’ bonfire every winter. Now today, I don’t know where kids go to sleigh ride, I don’t know if they even sleigh ride. But that was just one instance of what we did here. 

It’s a good, little town. You didn’t lock your doors. You didn’t have to around here years ago. It’s not like it is now. We had competition in our stores. We’ve got one grocery store today here in town. We are kind of like Cumberland, Benham and Lynch (Kentucky). We’re dying. This last layoff of coal miners is killing this area. Now, I don’t know what we’re going to do. 

The history of the whole area is fascinating. You go back to the mid-‘50s, the coal industry took a nosedive and they closed the mines. When they opened the mines up, they opened them up with machinery, or the mine company didn’t reopen them at all. Now, we’re going through the same thing again. This time, the last couple of years, people closed up their mines left and right. I saw in the paper just the other day 1800 from up in the West Virginia area (were laid off). One mine from the same company is going to close up here in Wise (County). We’re going through about the same thing, but in the mid-‘50s people could leave here and go to the cities and get jobs. They can’t get jobs now. So they’re staying here, unemployed, welfare and stuff like that. Like I say, it’s just not a good situation. 

A lot of people grow up and they don’t get involved. People used to read a lot. The old-timers still read a lot. What do kids do today? Play games, texting and all that stuff. They’re losing out. Their parents and grandparents don’t bring them around to a lot of stuff that’s going on, like history and local books and stuff. They’re losing out. 

People need to know where they’re from. I think they need to know about conditions growing up. I was born in 1935, Depression baby right there. I have brothers and I’m the youngest one in the family.

If you take Southwest Virginia, East and Northeast Tennessee part of Kentucky and North Carolina, you’re in what we call The State of Franklin. And we are the purest Anglo-Saxon speaking people in the United States, with our accent and everything else. And people who are good on language and so forth, when you start speaking, they can pretty well tell where you’re from. We don’t speak the way they do in Northern Virginia or Eastern Virginia and certain other areas. 

I’m 80 years old, and I’ve had a good life. Got three daughters, they’re scattered all over the United States. That’s the bad thing about growing up in small towns, since they’re dying the way they are, the young people have to leave to find jobs. They come back to visit, but they won’t come back to stay. And you can’t blame them".

Jayden Sturgill

Jayden Sturgill, Age 11, Banjo Player/Student; Neon, Kentucky:

“Been playing the banjo three or four years. I started playing it because my mamaw always played the guitar so I thought I would play the banjo. I take lessons at Neon Middle School. I like to play (the mountain music) because it will get forgotten if you don’t. I like how it sounds. My favorite song I can play so far is ‘Red Lick’. Red Lick just sounds better than the rest.

I like living in the mountains because of all the nature, animals and things like that. I love to whittle, spears and stuff. Learned it from my pappy. I fish and I hunt… but I don’t like to kill ‘em. I go hunting without a gun. I just really like to see them (animals). I killed a squirrel once, didn’t like the killing part so we go out in a tree stand and just watch the animals. 

Wouldn’t want to live anywhere else. I just love it here.”

Dana Fleming

Dana Fleming, Magician; Clintwood, Virginia 

“I have been a magician since I was five. I saw magic on television. Doug Henning did a special on television in 1975, and I was glued to it. I got a magic set for Christmas that year, and I’ve been a magician ever since. I’ve had actual “real” jobs along the way. I studied Engineering and Architecture and Graphic Design, I’ve worked with survey crews, both on the computer end of it, and in the field doing land surveys and stuff like that.” 

“I was born in Wise, Virginia. The main topics of interest (here) are football, fishing and hunting, and I have very little interest in any of those. So, fortunately, I’ve discovered this extended family of artists and entertainers. But growing up in the mountains was fun, and I enjoy it. I love hiking and camping and that sort of thing.”

“There are a handful of (other magicians) in Appalachia. We have a club that meets in Johnson City, Tennessee that I go to every month with a few people from around here. There are only a few actually making money professionally.” 

“The music is what makes Appalachian culture what it is, I think. I love the music, the sounds of the hills…that high lonesome sound, they say. I love to dance and sing. I could learn to play, but I prefer the dexterity involved with cards and coins. I could play the notes, but I don’t really have a feel for music. I’ve got a different calling.” 

“(The music) provides not only a history lesson, but it colors your attitude in your daily life.” 

“I’ve managed to raise two beautiful daughters, that’s a wonderful thing. One of them (just) graduated. I’m just happy to be able to make a living, and stay in this area. That's the real triumph. In today’s economy to be able to enjoy your life, and put your kids through school, keep a roof over their heads and do something you love, and stay here, is the biggest accomplishment I’ve made.”

“I’ve had a lot of really lean times, performing and living in the car, going from one street festival to the next. I spent a lot of my twenties doing that up and down the East Coast.” 

“(Magic) brings out the child in everybody. It’s hard to fool children, not because they don’t understand, it’s because their sense of reality isn’t so set in. A kid doesn’t really get excited when something floats because it doesn’t surprise them that something floats. They see that on TV all the time. But for an adult, it becomes much more of a shock. Performing for children and kids is a weird kind of thing. It’s two different types of magic almost. Adults are my favorite to perform for. Performing for adults, it’s like a window opens onto their reality, and their mind goes into free fall. It’s such a remarkable thing to watch happen to people. They just light up, and it’s so much fun. I really enjoy seeing that sense of wonder in their eyes.” 

“I work in restaurants regularly; there would be people who had seen the same routine seven, eight or ten times. Like the bartender always got to see the same material a lot, and he would start to get in on the joke, and realize where stuff was coming in at. It’s fun to watch people as they catch on, and they become in on the gag. Everybody wants to go, “Show my buddy that thing you showed us.” Then you’ve got to show it to someone else, and eventually, they’ve seen it four or five times and they’re starting to catch on, but they still love it because of the complexity of it or the artistry of it.” 

“My friend, Tom Mullica said you can fool some of the people some of the time, and as far as I’m concerned, that’s enough to show a profit. That’s just the way it is. It’s about the appreciation of the art. I don’t have to fool you, I have to entertain you first.” 

“(In twenty years) I’m hoping I’m still doing what I’m doing now; just enjoying my life and performing for people as much as I can, and making people happy. It’s so much fun.”

April Taylor Barnes

April Taylor Barnes, Singer/Songwriter, Partner/Manager, Bristol Olive Oil Company; Bristol, Virginia:

“I believe confidence is all about being positive concerning what we can do, and not worrying about what we can't do. A confident person is open to learning, because she knows that her confidence allows her to walk through life's doorways, eager to discover what waits her on the other side. She knows that every new unknown is a chance to learn more about herself and to unleash her abilities.”

“Confident people do not concentrate on their weaknesses, they develop and maximize their strengths. Someone once told me the only "losers" in life are those who don't try.”