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theHandpuppet

(19,964 posts)
Sun Jul 13, 2014, 03:27 PM Jul 2014

Prominent Women in Appalachian History

Prominent Women in Appalachian History

I'll start off this thread with a link to the biography of Lenna Lowe Yost. Please feel free to contribute other stories of women prominent in Appalachian history.

Lenna Lowe Yost
Compiled by the West Virginia State Archives

Lenna Lowe Yost was one of the leaders of West Virginia's suffrage movement and became the first woman to preside over a Republican state party convention when she presided over that party's convention in West Virginia in 1920. She was born in Basnettville, Marion County, in 1878, the daughter of Jonathan S. and Columbia Basnett Lowe. Her father died when Lenna was eight and the family of four children was raised by her mother, who ran a store at Fairview...

...By 1908, Lenna Yost had become president of the state WCTU and turned women's suffrage into one of the organization's leading causes. As a member of the West Virginia Equal Suffrage Association, she led the unsuccessful campaign for the state's 1916 public referendum on women's suffrage. From 1917 to 1919, Yost served as the organization's president. In 1918, she resigned as state president of the WCTU to serve as the national WCTU's legislative representative and as the Washington, D.C. correspondent for the group's Union Signal.

In 1920, Lenna Yost returned to West Virginia to lead the drive to ratify the Nineteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, granting women the vote. In March, West Virginia became the thirty-fourth of the thirty-six states needed to ratify the amendment. That summer, after the adoption of the amendment, Yost chaired the Republican National Convention which nominated Warren G. Harding for President. In 1921 and 1923, Harding appointed Yost to represent the United States at an international conference on alcoholism.

During the 1920s, she became more involved in Republican party activities, serving as the West Virginia Women's Activities Director. Yost campaigned actively for the election of governors Ephraim Morgan, Howard Gore, and William Conley, who in turn appointed her to the state Board of Education, the first woman to serve on the board. Yost served on the West Virginia Wesleyan Board of Trustees and was the driving force behind the construction of Elizabeth Moore Hall, a women's physicial education building at West Virginia University. She also used her national influence to place the first federal penitentiary for women at Alderson, Greenbrier County....

Read Lenna's full biography at: http://www.wvculture.org/history/yost.html
For more information on Lenna Lowe Yost, see https://wvrhc.lib.wvu.edu/news/newsletter/1995-2004/v19n1.pdf
"Lenna Lowe Yost Archives Chronicle the Woman Suffrage Movement in State and Nation". This is a thoroughly engaging article.
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Prominent Women in Appalachian History (Original Post) theHandpuppet Jul 2014 OP
A Banjo on Her Knee—Part I: Appalachian Women and America's First Instrument theHandpuppet Jul 2014 #1
Thanks! Bookmarking for later reading, looks interesting! 2banon Jul 2014 #2
You're welcome -- glad to see you stopped in! theHandpuppet Jul 2014 #3
thanks, it's nice to get acquainted with du members who are into appalachian trad.. 2banon Jul 2014 #4
Aunt Molly Jackson: folk musician, midwife, union activist theHandpuppet Jul 2014 #5
I love this thread! brer cat Jul 2014 #6
You're very welcome theHandpuppet Jul 2014 #7

theHandpuppet

(19,964 posts)
1. A Banjo on Her Knee—Part I: Appalachian Women and America's First Instrument
Mon Jul 14, 2014, 06:27 PM
Jul 2014

I thought many of you, including those interested in Appalachian music, will appreciate this fascinating look at how women were an integral though mostly forgotten part of early Appalachian music.
Unfortunately, the text of part 2 of this series does not appear to be available for online reading. If you're interesting in obtaining a copy and/or a copy of "In Praise of Banjo Picking Women", please visit the website of the Old Time Herald, a site which is itself worth bookmarking.

http://www.oldtimeherald.org/archive/back_issues/volume-8/8-2/full-banjo-on-her-knee.html
The Old-Time Herald Volume 8, Number 2
Feature
A Banjo on Her Knee—Part I: Appalachian Women and America’s First Instrument
by Susan A. Eacker and Geoff Eacker

In an article titled "In Praise of Banjo-Picking Women" published over 10 years ago in the pages of the Old-Time Herald, Mike Seeger noted that in his fieldwork with "old-timers" in the Southern mountains, he had been told that their fathers and mothers played the banjo before the turn of the 20th century. Seeger went on to ask, "Why do we not have accounts of this—either visually or in the literature?" This article is a long overdue affirmation of Seeger’s findings and a response to his question. Since I teach women’s history, I was intrigued by the idea of uncovering some of these invisible banjo women. Geoff makes 5-string banjos and plays clawhammer style, but most of our record collection and our knowledge centered around male banjo players. It was only after we began our research that we learned that most of these men had learned to play from a female relative. This list is exhaustive but a partial account includes the following: Ralph Stanley learned to play clawhammer style from his mother, Lucy Smith Stanley. "Grandpa" Louis Jones took his first frailing lessons from Cynthia May Carver, a.k.a. "Cousin Emmy," from Lamb, Kentucky. Northwestern North Carolina banjoist Clarence "Tom" Ashley (who popularized the tune "The Coo-Coo&quot , learned to play clawhammer banjo in 1905 (at the age of eight) from his Aunts Ary and Daisy. National Heritage Fellow and banjo player Morgan Sexton of Linefork, Kentucky, got his first lessons from his older sister Hettie. And Earl Scruggs’ two older sisters, Eula Mae and Ruby, both played the banjo and surely taught their younger brother a tune or two.

The fact that so many well-known old-time male musicians have been inspired and influenced by a female in the family should force us to rethink the ways in which banjo music in Appalachia has been promulgated and preserved. While this might strike a sour note with some, the evidence suggests that it was women who have historically kept old-time music—especially banjo and ballads—alive in the hills and hollers of the Southern mountains. (As case in point, consider the fact that when British ballad collectors Cecil Sharp and Maude Karpeles made their foray into Eastern Kentucky, Western North Carolina and the Virginias in 1916-17, approximately 75% of the 968 tunes they collected and later compiled as English Folk Songs from the Southern Appalachians were sung to them by women.)...

...Yet, the common folk in southern Appalachia had surely been picking the banjo long before this mass appeal began. How the banjo got to the Southern mountains is still a matter of speculation. In fact, the topic has inspired the literary equivalent of "dueling banjos." Some banjo scholars claim that the down-stroke style of playing was picked up by mountain whites directly from slaves. Others see the Civil War—which brought together blacks and whites in both grey and blue—as the mode of transmission. In addition, the minstrel show, especially as it traveled down the tributaries of the Ohio into Eastern Kentucky and Western Virginia in the early 19th century, probably exposed many rural Appalachians to the instrument.

The fact that 19th-century Appalachian women banjo players have remained invisible may be because mountain women and men were largely isolated and on the bottom rung of the economic ladder. As social historians can attest, the marginalized leave few records, which may help to answer Seeger’s question of why such accounts are hard to come by. When "our contemporary ancestors" (as they were called by outsiders) were "discovered" in the mountains in the early part of the last century, part of their supposed quaintness lay in their musical culture. Ballad collectors like Cecil Sharp and Maud Karpeles, Olive Dame Campbell, and the numerous women who started rural settlement schools like Hindman and Pine Mountain in Southeastern Kentucky, were keen on establishing a Celtic connection between Appalachians and their Northern European ancestors. To this end, they sought after unaccompanied ballads with British bloodlines. The banjo was not a link in their musical canon and mountain men and women were discouraged from playing this indigenous instrument, while encouraged to pluck the dulcimer, erroneously thought to have come from Great Britain. (Kentuckian Jean Ritchie, singularly responsible for popularizing the dulcimer during the folk revival, told us in an informal interview that her family considered the banjo a "low instrument.&quot ....

MORE at link provided above.

theHandpuppet

(19,964 posts)
5. Aunt Molly Jackson: folk musician, midwife, union activist
Wed Jul 23, 2014, 07:20 AM
Jul 2014

Last edited Wed Jul 23, 2014, 03:53 PM - Edit history (1)

Aunt Molly Jackson was truly a larger-than-life figure from the Kentucky coalfields. Folk musician/composer/songwriter, midwife, union activist, Aunt Molly was what can be described as an old fashioned rabble rouser whose compassion for the poor and rage at social injustice confounded the coal operators and at times, even her own family. From childhood she had a reputation as a weaver of tall tales, a reputation she carried throughout her life as she was no stranger to embellishing her own history -- as if Molly's life story wasn't colorful enough in itself.

What I've done here is to provide a few links -- first, to a short biography, followed by other links to some videos, testimony and audio recordings. Enjoy!

http://xroads.virginia.edu/~MA05/luckey/amj/kentucky.htm
Pistol Packin' Molly Jackson

Early Years in Kentucky
A ninth-generation Kentuckian, Mary Magdalene Garland (whose name would later grow to include Mills, Stewart, Jackson, and Stamos) was born in 1880 in Clay County and wrote her first song at the age of four. From her great-grandmother, Nancy MacMahan, young Molly acquired a repertoire of more than 100 old songs, which folk collector Alan Lomax would later record her singing for the Library of Congress archive…
…Never one to keep her mouth shut, Jackson often spoke out angrily when she observed instances of social injustice in the community—many times at the cost of her husband's mining job. In one such instance, Jim Stewart was fired after his wife distributed her song "Fare Thee Well, Old Ely Branch" at the spring where the miners' wives came for water. Jim Garland described Jackson's pugnacious nature in this way:
She was at the height of her glory when she was giving someone she thought was no good a hard time. If she believed someone was taking advantage of his or her position in life, whether that was a coal operator, a husband who beat his wife, a man who would not support his family, or a bookkeeper who denied some needy family scrip to buy food with, she made her feelings known. These troublemaking instincts led her to write many a fine song....

For more information on Aunt Molly Jackson, see:
http://encyclopediaofappalachia.com/entry.php?rec=121
http://xroads.virginia.edu/~MA05/luckey/amj/harlan.htm

Videos:
Aunt Molly Jackson Hardtimes In Coleman's Mines



Aunt Molly - Hungry Ragged Blues (pt. 2)


Si Kahn - Aunt Molly Jackson 1 of 2


Si Kahn - Aunt Molly Jackson 2 of 2


Testimony:
Lyrics to “I am a Union Woman” and Aunt Molly’s testimony before the National Committee for the Defense of Political Prisoners, Straight Creek, Kentucky, November 7, 1931
http://www.historyisaweapon.com/defcon1/unionwomanmollyjackson.html

Recordings:
The Songs and Stories of Aunt Molly Jackson
http://www.amazon.com/Songs-Stories-Aunt-Molly-Jackson/dp/B00242VQAK
itunes
https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/songs-stories-aunt-molly-jackson/id274217020

theHandpuppet

(19,964 posts)
7. You're very welcome
Wed Jul 23, 2014, 08:01 AM
Jul 2014

There's a rich history of proud & fearless women in Appalachia and hopefully through this thread we'll be able to introduce folks to many more.

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