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Scotts
Run: An Introduction
By
Ronald L. Lewis
In
this issue, West Virginia History focuses on Scotts
Run, America's symbol of the Great Depression
in the coalfields and a major philanthropic concern
of First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt. As a case study,
the rise and fall of King Coal in this Monongalia
County hollow condenses the life cycle of coal
communities from birth to death as well as the
perennial booms and busts which convulse this
industry. Scotts Run's history is a reminder that
the unrestrained capitalist development of the
late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries
led to explosive growth but also to unrelenting
human misery.
Coal
companies and speculators began to accumulate
mineral rights on Scotts Run in the late nineteenth
century, but the transition from agricultural
to industrial economy did not make any significant
headway until World War I stimulated the demand
for coal to fuel the national war machine. Monongalia
County produced a mere 57,000 tons of coal in
1899 and only 400,000 tons in 1914, but by 1921,
tonnage soared to nearly 4.4 million. Most of
this expansion is attributable to the development
of Scotts Run where, during its peak in the mid-1920s,
coal companies owned 75 percent of the taxable
acres, and between thirty-six and forty-two mines
were shipping coal.
As
in southern West Virginia, development of the
coalfields required more workers than available
in the local labor market, forcing companies to
rely on imported immigrants and blacks. In fact,
one of the distinguishing characteristics of the
population of Scotts Run during the boom years
was its diverse composition. An exact calculation
of the population is not possible because the
Run is a geographical rather than a political
subdivision of Cass District, and the census does
not always indicate the exact location of residents.
Also, the decennial census for 1920 and 1930 did
not record the surge in population, which peaked
at about four thousand during the 1920s. That
does not tell the whole story, however, as the
number of workers who commuted to jobs at Scotts
Run mines remains unknown, but it represented
a significant proportion of the work force.
As
in other West Virginia coalfields, the importation
of workers produced a racially and ethnically
diverse population. The 1920 manuscript census
identified the following foreign-born nationalities
among the adult (voting age) residents of Scotts
Run: Austrian, Bohemian, Canadian, Croatian, English,
Finnish, Greek, Hungarian, Italian, Irish, Lithuanian,
Polish, Rumanian, Russian, Scottish, Serbian,
Slovak, Ukrainian, and Welsh. Ninety-three percent
of these immigrants were from southern or eastern
Europe, and approximately 60 percent of Scotts
Run's population was foreign born, with native
whites and blacks divided about equally for the
remaining 40 percent.
The coal boom beginning during World War I and
continuing into the early 1920s was the first
and last high mark for the industry on Scotts
Run. By the late 1920s, coal entered the downward
spiral, which ultimately led to the depopulation
of the hollow. During the economic collapse of
the 1930s, Scotts Run became America's symbol
of the Depression in the coalfields, setting the
standard measurement for human suffering among
miners. A writer for the Atlanic Monthly declared
that Scotts Run was "the damndest cesspool
of human misery I have ever seen in America. "
To what degree life was worse here than in other
coal hollows is difficult to determine, but there
was plenty of misery to go around. Scotts Run
received so much attention because it was far
more accessible to the outside photographers,
reporters, social workers, and government officials
who aimed the media spotlight into this particular
corner of the coalfields.
This begs the question of just how "isolated"
Scotts Run actually was in the 1920s and 1930s,
a perspective closely associated to the Run's
public identity. It should be noted that the Run
was easily accessible by bus, auto, trolley, or
train during this period, and it was only a few
miles from the county seat of Morgantown. The
commercial center of the county, Morgantown itself
was linked to national transportation centers.
Even though outside observers usually portrayed
Scotts Run as "isolated," its spatial
relationship to the rest of the world is more
accurately understood as "stranded, "
a term most frequently employed by professional
workers to describe conditions there. Most of
the people were trapped not by geography but by
the lack of resources, employment options, and
by their culture—many could not speak English
and had customs which imposed a social distance
between them and native-born residents. A significant
percentage were African Americans, and racism
must be added to culture as an explanation of
the "stranded" condition of the people.
Undoubtedly,
the personal attention of First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt
did more than anything else to focus national
attention on Scotts Run. In 1933, early in her
husband's first term, Roosevelt toured the mine
camps of Scotts Run and elsewhere in the county.
She returned several times during the 1930s to
commiserate with residents and developed long-lasting
relationships with both residents and social workers
on Scotts Run. Even before she threw her considerable
influence into the struggle to improve living
conditions on the Run, others had long been busy
in that same enterprise. The Coal Relief campaign
of the American Friends Service Committee (AFSC)
already was on the scene when the first lady called
Clarence E. Pickett, Executive Secretary of the
AFSC, about inspecting conditions in the coalfields
firsthand. Pickett and Alice O. Davis, Director
of the Morgantown District, met with Roosevelt
and helped to establish the itinerary which brought
her to Monongalia County and Scotts Run. With
her came the inevitable corps of newspaper reporters,
soon followed by some of America's most famous
photographers, such as Walker Evans (who spent
months on Scotts Run), Marion Post Wolcott, and
Ben Shahn (subsequently a famous painter and sculptor).
Their images captured the human face of poverty
which heightened the nation's consciousness about
Scotts Run, making it much easier for social workers
to justify their work and to raise scarce resources
for the relief effort.
The
AFSC and various federal relief agencies brought
a strong presence to Scotts Run, but it would
be a mistake to interpret the appearance of these
national organizations as the first demonstrations
of interest in the miners' plight. In fact, local
agencies, particularly the Council of Social Agencies
and the County Welfare Board, had struggled for
years to improve the human conditions on Scotts
Run. The burden proved too great for local agencies
alone, and Monongalia County was virtually bankrupt.
The earliest relief efforts drew their inspiration
from the Bible School Movement and the Settlement
House Movement. The Bible School Movement depended
on trained lay workers and volunteers to teach
the principles of Christianity to the "religiously
needy" but gave primary attention to the
children. Most of the workers were young women
who followed this avenue to leadership roles unavailable
to them within the conventional structure of the
church. Young women also played a major role in
the Settlement House Movement, the best known
example being Jane Addams's Hull House in Chicago.
Settlement houses attempted to assist in the "Americanization"
of newly arrived immigrant workers independently
of mainstream charities by promoting English literacy,
citizenship, hygiene, and other basic social and
life skills.
The
goals of both movements converged on Scotts Run
during the 1920s when Methodist and Presbyterian
churches in Morgantown undertook to deliver assistance
to the mining families on the Run. The Scotts
Run Settlement House began in 1922, when the Woman's
Home Missionary Society of Wesley Methodist Church
established a Bible school for children under
the direction of Deaconess Edna L. Muir and Mrs.
Frank Shriver. In addition to Bible school and
Sunday school, the Settlement House gradually
expanded its programs to include classes on naturalization,
cooking, motherhood, and other life skills. A
permanent building for the Settlement House in
Osage was completed in 1927 and continues to this
day to offer community assistance to those in
need.
Morgantown's
First Presbyterian Church also sent a Christian
worker, Mary Behner, to establish its own missionary
project on Scotts Run. She began her work at Pursglove
in 1928, almost exactly one year after the Methodist
Settlement House was completed. Programs similar
to those at the Settlement House were initiated
in a local school, but in 1931, a mine building
was converted into a community center for Behner's
work. Local residents called it "The Shack"
and the name stuck.
In
1938, the Reverend Frank Trubee, the first ordained
Presbyterian missionary to be stationed on Scotts
Run, became director of The Shack. He built a
new and larger Shack and readily adopted the methods
and philosophical approach of the APSC in developing
local leadership and promoting rehabilitation
through cooperative exchanges of labor and goods.
The unemployed needed no cash to participate in
the Scotts Run Reciprocal Economy, The Shack's
co-op. Most residents could not practice supplemental
farming or extensive gardening as they did elsewhere
in the coalfields because acrid fumes from the
smoldering "gob" piles killed all vegetation
in the hollow, and congestion from over-development
precluded other uses of the land. However, through
the co-op, they exchanged their labor for produce
raised in cooperative gardens which were planted
on the hilltops, or for reconditioned clothing
from the recycled clothing shop. Now in its third
building, The Shack, like the Settlement House,
has adapted to modern problems and continues to
serve people who are in need.
The
residents of Scotts Run survived the Great Depression
through such imaginative coping strategies, but
the 1930s marks the beginning of a long slide
into historical obscurity for this once teeming
hollow. A number of explanations account for Scotts
Run's short life and long, slow demise. The Great
Depression, of course, was a national calamity,
and Scotts Run residents probably suffered more
than most Americans from the maladies of unemployment,
ignorance, ethnic and racial prejudice, and the
other corollaries of abject poverty. Many left
the area in search of a better life, and a number
of families were chosen for the new resettlement
community of Arthurdale in neighboring Preston
County. Spearheaded by Eleanor Roosevelt, Arthurdale
was the first of over one hundred experimental
communities established by the federal Rural Resettlement
Commission to relocate redundant industrial workers
into the countryside. As elsewhere in rural America,
World War II took many of the young men from
Scotts Run, and most of them did not return after
the war.
Technological
change also played a role in the decline of Scotts
Run. The development of diesel engines for locomotives
eliminated one major market for Scotts Run's famous
steam coal, and competition from other sources
of energy also helped to insure that most of these
mines would not be reopened. In the face of changes
in the markets, the entire industry began a long
process of restructuring. By the 1950s, the numerous
coal tracts on the Run had been consolidated into
a few large parcels, most notably those controlled
by Consolidation Coal Company. Mechanization of
the mines took a heavy toll on the labor force
everywhere, and Scotts Run was no exception. With
little chance of employment, miners and their
families moved on, the exodus facilitated by the
construction of better roads, and with widespread
automobile ownership after World War II, workers
no longer needed to live next to their place of
employment.Finally, the construction of Interstate
79, which was opened in Monongalia County in 1974,
wrapped around the once crowded Connellsville
Hill, eliminating the remaining company housing
before dissecting Scotts Run above Pursglove.
Not much physical evidence remains of Scotts Run's
former prominence as a coal-producing community.
Nevertheless, for West Virginia historians it
provides an excellent mirror of the larger processes
which transformed the state's economic forces
and have been restructuring the coal industry
since the l950s. Scotts Run also helps illuminate
many of the dark corners of the state's history.
As a field of research, for example, women's history
in West Virginia is in its infancy even after
two decades of maturity nationally. Similarly,
the history of immigrants and African Americans
in the Mountain State is still rudimentary, granting
a few exceptional studies. The New Deal is a cottage
industry in the historical discipline, but there
is no single study of the period in West Virginia.
Other subjects, such as health care and local
versus absentee ownership, also are important
but neglected state topics reflected in the history
of Scotts Run. Intensive local studies should
be encouraged throughout the state and, when taken
cumulatively, could provide a basis for a much
needed statewide synthesis of these neglected
subjects. The essays on Scotts Run in this volume
of West Virginia History represent one small step
toward achieving this larger undertaking.
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