It doesn’t have Brad
Pitt or Selena Gomez; the movie isn’t even premiering in Hollywood. But a new film promises to shed some light on Appalachia and its people. Due to have its initial showing this Saturday in Welch, West
Virginia, a new documentary called Hollow focuses on the people of McDowell County, West Virginia.
McDowell
County is in the middle of coal country, and Welch is a typical coal town of
Appalachia. I went to college with folks from Welch, as well as other West
Virginia coal towns, such as Iaeger and Bluefield. At the time, in the mid
seventies, the relative prosperity that coal brought to mining towns had
already started to wane.
And
things have not improved in McDowell County. As this article in the Seattle
Post Intelligencer on the new documentary sums up:
More
than a third of its 22,000 residents live in poverty, and median incomes are
less than half the U.S. average. McDowell also ranks last in the state in
many health areas, with a premature death rate nearly double the state average
and high rates of physical inactivity, adult smoking and obesity. It leads
the state in teen pregnancies and has led the nation in fatal prescription
painkiller overdoses.
Pretty grim. As I said
earlier, McDowell County is right in the middle of coal country. If you go to
Google Maps and take a satellite view of McDowell, you can see a number of the
mountaintop mines strewn about the landscape.
At
one time, Welch was a prosperous working class town, and McDowell County the
home to 100,000 residents. Today, only about a quarter of that number remains
in the county. The mines have not shut down, and coal production in West
Virginia remains at levels that have comparable to past decades. The decline for
McDowell County, as it is for many other areas of Appalachia, is in part due to
the union busting of the UMW by some to the big coal companies, such as Massey
Energy. In the fifties almost all coal mining in West Virginia was performed by
union miners. By 1998 membership in the UMW was down to 240,000, half or what
it was in 1946,[i] when the
union may have been at the height of its power under John L. Lewis. Mountaintop
removal exacerbated the economic decline. A traditional coal mining operation
requires dozens miners. In some cases, a huge mountaintop removal mine might
employ as few as nine men.
Other industry has left McDowell County. A little over 25 years ago, US Steel
closed down its factory in McDowell County, leaving over 1,200 workers jobless.
In the mid to late eighties, an otherwise prosperous time for the United
States, personal income in McDowell County plummeted by two-thirds.
Though
the coalmines keep the coal coming out of the ground, the people of southern
West Virginia don’t benefit from the mining. The situation in McDowell County
is particularly bleak. It’s hard to get my head around this—it baffled me when
I was growing up in West Virginia, and I still can’t make sense of it—how can a
state with such mineral wealth have people who are so poor?
[i] Fox, Maier B. United We Stand, The United Mine
Workers of America 1890-1990 United Mine Workers of America 1990
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