Source: WV History Film Project
FOURTH. SOUND ROLL 120. RICHARD
GRIMES INTERVIEW.
RICHARD GRIMES INTERVIEW, TAKE 1,
CAMERA 282, SOUND 120.
Q: Richard, tell me, let's go chronologically, for
awhile. Tell me how you encountered an image, or a
stereotype, of West Virginians when you went into the
service.
JJHF 0034
RG: Well, I, a lot of people who would start telling
me that they had this image of the coal miner, you
know they'd see with the coal-covered face and the
hat, and everything like this, and then they'd hear
these stories about the mean strikes and everything,
and they were afraid to come here, you know. And,
of course, I just kind of laughed at that, I said "well,
you know, that's no big thing." And, they thought
that, actually, that people stayed like that. Like
everybody here was a miner and I said "no, they
shower at the end of the day." I mean, you know, but
it amazed me that the feeling, they were very hesitant
to come here.
Q: Let's do that again and, if you wouldn't mind,
starting with "when I was in the service I ran into
some people, fellow soldiers."
JJHF 0112
RG: OK. All right. When I was in the service, I ran
into guys from other states who, they asked you
where you're from and their image was that this was a
dangerous place to live. And, I said "why?" and they
said "well, you know, you've got those mean coal
miners and, you know, they would see these images
of the coal-covered faces and the hats and then they
would read these stories about the pretty mean strikes
that we had. And I said "oh, no." I said "these guys
shower at the end of the day, you know what I mean.
And that they are pretty nice people and everything
like this, but it surprised me the image that
existed.
Q: After you got out of the service and came
back, tell me what your personal experience was in
the 1950's. The 1950's was a time when coal really
collapsed in West Virginia and people started moving
away.
JJHF 0189
RG: Well, yea, they started, machines of course
started to take over for a lot of the miners and
everything like this. And, of course West Virginia
lost some other big businesses, too. The glass
industry, which was big in the central part of the state,
started to give way to the plastics business, and the
steel business, in the northern part of the state. And,
of course, you could find this in adjacent states began
to loose out, also. And, so West Virginia kind of took
it on the nose from about three different ways, and it
was, people, the younger people started leaving the
state to where they could get a job.
Q: Tell me, it's 1960 and a young, Catholic
senator is running for President and West Virginia
emerges as a critical ??. Tell me, if you can, sir, the
essence of the story of Kennedy and West
Virginia.
JJHF 0274
RG: Well, West Virginia kind of became the
representative state of the Bible Belt. And, back at
the time, of course, Kennedy being a Catholic running
for President wanted to prove to the party that he
could win as President, cause there were a lot of
people going into the Democratic Convention said
"no." At that time, a Catholic can't be elected and I
think the thing was that the Pope was going to be
running the country if that happened, see. But, he
used West Virginia as an example of a Bible Belt
state where he could win. And, he came into the state
and, actually, made some promises that they got to
really like the state. A lot of people got to know him
and everything and it turned into a kind of fun
experience for both Kennedy and, I know a lot of the
reporters and everything that were covering it. And,
of course West Virginia went big for John Kennedy
and that was a big selling point that he had when he
got to the Democratic Convention.
Q: A lot of money flowed?
JJHF 0356
RG: Oh, yes, yes. And, of course, Kennedy's father
was fairly wealthy and that was one of the first
elections where "big money" really took over. It
wasn't that they were buying anything illegal, they
were just over-doing it. That was probably one of the
first races where "PR" became a major factor in the
country's politics, and, of course, they had the money
to spend. They were very liberal in how they wanted
to do anything, and people were --
Q: OK. Let's stop for a second.
GRIMES INTERVIEW, TAKE 2
Q: OK. Tell me how Kennedy's people,
Kennedy's money tapped into a way of doing politics
in West Virginia.
JJHF 0426
RG: Well, West Virginia had a system, already, a
local political system where you bought into the
system there, you know, and you bought your way
onto the ticket and you'd make certain contributions.
We didn't have laws that were so strict on what a
person could contribute to something like this, and if
you paid enough and you got on the machine, they
supported you. They ran your campaign for you, and,
usually, the list of eight or ten people went out as to
who was going to be elected. Well, Kennedy came
here and he, probably, would have had a more
difficult time, but, his father had a lot of money.
They were a wealthy family. They bought into the
machines around here and they cranked-up and
Kennedy started seeing the results in all the different
areas of the state. He got to know all the political
bosses and everything and they became great fans of
his and they helped him get elected here. And, --
Q: Do you recall a turning point in that primary
in West Virginia?
JJHF 0512
RG: Well, all right, of course he was running against
Hubert Humphrey. Who, now this is very interesting
in West Virginia. This is a very "labor-oriented"
state. Hubert Humphrey was very very
"labor-oriented" and, this was almost like a betrayal.
How could a Kennedy come in and beat a strong
labor candidate. In fact, there were, I remember some
fistfights, that took place at various places around the
state. And, even if the Democratic National
Convention by faithful labor people who were
supporting Humphrey and, yet, Kennedy got the vote
because he bought the machine vote. And, that's what
delivered in West Virginia.
Q: Now, that labor vote was, in a large part,
created and maintained by John L. Lewis.
RG: Right, and
Q: How big of a figure was John L. Lewis in
West Virginia?
RG: Well, of course, the funny thing is that, of course,
this is a Democratic state. He's, you know, he had
tradition, but he was a Republican, and a lot, a lot of
--
Q: Could you start that sentence over by saying
"John L. Lewis was?"
JJHF 0605
RG: John L. Lewis was a Republican. And, a lot of
very loyal Democrats in the state who swear that
that's the only way that they would vote, were not
aware of that. It was brought out in a, a couple of
years ago, in a race down in the Huntington area, a
Congressional race, where a woman who was running
reminded them that he was a Republican. But, he still
has, I mean his name is still in, kind of in glory in the
state and everything like this. This is a very
"labor-oriented" state.
Q: Why do you think so? Because he was,
really, the one that brought mechanization to the
mines that brought massive layoffs of some miners.
Why has he been able to maintain, sort of --
JJHF 0662
RG: Well, I think he was a strong, he was a very good
at unifying the locals, and that, you know, if you go
back through the history there, some of the locals, and
some of the other unions, like say the AFL-CIO, were
very much at odds with each other because they had
positions and they were jealous of each other. And,
now, of course, they tend to bond together because
management is fairly strong, too. But, there was a
time when they were in a lot of competition with each
other. And, Lewis was the one who knew how to
bring the miners together and made them a fairly
strong union.
Q: Has big labor been good, over the long-haul,
for West Virginia?
JJHF 0727
RG: Well, I think, I think labor had done a lot of
good things for the unions. I think that the image that
goes out about them is, sometimes, not so good. You
know, companies will kind of run as if they are afraid
of unions. And, so West Virginia may be bidding for
a large company or something like this, and, they'll
hear about "uh-oh, that's a tough union." We've had
tough union strikes and we won't even get our name
on the table. You know, maybe, they have limited
from twenty states down to five, or something like
this, and, sometimes, I think it is a misplaced fear.
But, it does exist out there. I remember when the
Saturn Plant was going to be built down in Tennessee
and I ask some of the General Motors people why we
didn't get in the finals, and the said "well, we were
worried about that labor situation over there."
Q: Let's go back to the '60's.
RG: OK.
Q: Kennedy gets in and starts the war on poverty
?? and continues it as part of this great society.
RG: Right.
Q: What was the war on poverty in West
Virginia at this time?
JJHF 0824
RG: Well, I think that West Virginia has some poor
counties and that we did, when the mechanization
took over in the mines and everything, we were hit
with a lot of unemployment. And, at first a lot of
miners refused to be re-trained into other jobs. They
were certain that it was going to come back. It didn't,
really, come back. And, at that time they just didn't,
they didn't want to give up their profession. So, we
had high unemployment and, of course, a lot of
younger people started leaving, they couldn't get jobs,
or something like this. And, then poverty moved, of
course it existed in other places in the country, but,
like in West Virginia and certain areas, it was really
big. And so, workers start a lot, this became kind of a
camp, if you will, to come and do your public service.
Kennedy kind of set that tone, you know, you know,
do for your country. And, so a lot of people started
looking, we had a very active poverty program from
other people coming in.
Q: One of the aspects of the poverty program is
that pictures start going out to the rest of the nation
about West Virginia, its shacks and barefoot kids.
Tell me about that picture and the impact that it
had.
JJHF 0937
RG: Well, of course, that wasn't true for most of the
state. I'm sure that in, you know, I've been to New
York state and outside of New York I've seen some
worse slums, you know, out in the rural areas than I
ever saw here. But, we, this image got very strong
about this was what West Virginia was. And, we
would have people, we would have reporters from all
over the country, coming in here during the poverty
war. It was a fascination, like this is where to go to
do a story. They would --
Q: Excuse me. We ran out of film. We'll start that answer over again, and if you could say --
WEST VIRGINIA HISTORY FILM PROJECT,
MAY 4, SOUND ROLL 121, RICHARD GRIMES
INTERVIEW.
GRIMES INTERVIEW, TAKE 3, ROLL 283,
SOUND 121.
Q: OK. Richard, listen. Tell me about the
image that got shaped and associated with West
Virginia.
RG: OK. The one was that --
Q: Hold it one second. OK. Ready. OK.
Sorry.
RG: One of the things was that like people ran around
in their bare feet.
Q: Tell me. Give me a complete sentence. An
image in the '60's, start to say it --
JJHF 1026
RG: All right. An image started to get shaped in the
'60's that West Virginians, like ran around in bare
feet, that their family structure was kind of
non-existent, that they settled all their problems with
either guns or clubs or something like this. And, that,
in a lot of instances, they were starving. And, this
wasn't so, of course, particularly through most of the
state. There were some people that, maybe, were on
hard times.
Q: Was it a car? It was something, yes. It went
by. I'm sorry. Could you start one more time?
RG: The whole thing?
Q: Sorry.
RG: OK. The image was that.
Q: The image started to get formed.
JJHF 1092
RG: The image started to get formed in the 1960's
that West Virginians ran around in their bare feet, that
they had no family structure of any type, that they
settled most of their problems in violent ways, and
that it was kind of a mean place to come to. They
didn't have any food. Well, of course, this wasn't the
case. Most of the state, people lived just like they did
everywhere else and, in the areas where there was
high unemployment, just like there was anywhere
else. The people, probably, lived a little rougher
lifestyle. But, this attracted young people from all
over the country who started coming here to do their
public service. That is, this was something that grew
out of the Kennedy Administration and was picked up
by Johnson, President Johnson. And, so we had a lot
of people coming here, looking for ways to help. The
state appreciated it, I mean, and they tried to
cooperate, but I think that a lot of people found a
different situation than what they thought really
existed.
Q: Tell me about the VISTAs and the tallest
VISTA?
JJHF 1189
RG: Well, of course, the VISTA Program brought in
people who would look for neighborhoods that
needed guidance. And, of course, one of them was
our famous Jay Rockefeller who came here from New
York. And, of course, the funny thing was he was
here for a number of months and nobody knew he was
here. He didn't, apparently, made a big thing about it.
Rockefeller had known a journalist in Washington
and he said you ought to go to West Virginia. There's
some areas, and so he found this little neighborhood,
out in a rural area outside of Charleston, and, I've
gone back to it several times, and the people still
remember him. What they remember him for was
that he was tall and he had this great appetite. And,
he could just eat and eat and eat, you know, and,
sometimes, he would visit two or three people's homes
every evening out there to eat.
JJHF 1262
So, that was kind of a running joke. But, he did help
and he came up with some ideas. And, we,
eventually, discovered that he was here. And, so we
started doing some stories and, immediately,
everybody starts saying "he's going to run for
governor." And then, of course, he would start out
saying "no, he's not running for governor," and
everything. But, then he ran for the Legislature and
he got elected and there he was a fascination. It's like
every time he sneezed, he was covered. And, then he
became Secretary of State and this started to build up
and then, of course, eventually he became governor.
He got beat, once, running for governor, but, he, then
he was a college president, also here. So, he, at West
Virginia Wesleyan.
Q: Let me interrupt you. I wanted two little
anecdotes about his days as a Vista. One anecdote
about a Vista worker. Tell me about the image that
some people saw of a tall Rockefeller in a pinstripe
suit coming in.
JJHF 1348
RG: Well, that's right. They didn't, they were very
suspicious. And, in fact, his people would say "quit
wearing those fancy suits when you walk up the
hollows" because they see you as somebody else, not
as ?? And, of course, the other thing was that his
grandfather, you know, was in the, back in the early
days, was considered by a lot of people as being one
of those mean mine operators or something like this,
although he was in the oil business more. But, he had
this image of, you know, the suspicious image, and
they couldn't imagine that a relative could come in
here and be kind. On the other hand, they were very
much fascinated by his wealth. And, a lot of people
had the idea, well, just what can he bring us here?
What can he get us? Can he bring this in? Can he
bring that in? And, he was actually, believe it or not,
was a little bit tight with his money.
JJHF 1425
I mean, you know, he didn't throw it around like this.
But, there were a lot of people that thought that, you
know, if he could give us a million for this and a
million for that. And, so he had a hard time, at first,
trying to explain to them "no, I want to be a public
servant, I want to be a leader, but it's not all my
money that I'm going to bring in."
Q: What do you think brought one of the richest
men in the world to one of the poorest states in
America?
RG: Well, he had looked, been looking. He was
caught up, he was a big fan of John Kennedy's. He
was one of these young, young boys who was caught
up in the movement and everything, that. And, he was
looking at a --
Q: Could you start that again and start it with
instead of "he" Rockefeller?
JJHF 1489
RG: OK. Rockefeller was one of these young boys
who got caught up in the Kennedy movement, and he
looked at a number of states and was thinking about
going to California, New Mexico and some places
like this, but he, and West Virginia was one of them.
But, he knew, had a friend in the Peace Corps who
told him that he would, could, really do a good job in
West Virginia and it was handy and everything like
this, and he came over here and looked around and
kind of liked it. Actually, the people here tend to be
very friendly in a lot of the neighborhoods. Contrary
to the "mean image" that some might think they have.
And, they really took him in and he was very
fascinated and really got caught up. And, the funny
thing was when he got married, some years later,
invited all those people from over in the, this little
town where he was and a lot of them went. That was
the first big thing they had ever gone to.
Q: Do you think this whole, the Vista, the war on
poverty, do you think it did anything for West
Virginia?
JJHF 1580
RG: Oh, sure. I think that there were, there were
programs, you know, aside from just like bringing
money in or something like this. There were a lot of
community efforts that were started like, well, in
Rockefeller's case, you know, they built a little
miniature recreation center over there and they got
some kids interested in basketball leagues and stuff
like this. So, these programs, actually, did this and
the neighborhoods were depressed when the program
started because there was no work. So, they did help.
They brought spirit, some spirit back to the
community again.
Q: Did they do anything to West Virginia? Did
it have a downside?
JJHF 1638
RG: Other than the bad publicity that went out that
this was where the poor workers came to. We had
reporters coming in here from all over the country.
And, it was funny, they would come to the newspaper
and say "where can we see a coal mine?" and we
would tell them they drove by four of them or
something like this, you know. But, they would want
to see poor people. And, like they didn't exist
somewhere else, you know. So, this, we were always
kind of fighting this, and I must confess, that we used
to send them, the newspaper, all down to the same
bar, down in Eastbank and the same four miners
would always be there to be interviewed, all the time.
You know, we used to laugh about it because we'd
just say here and the guy appreciated the business,
you know, cause he'd always let us know. But, yea, it
got, that got annoying to people in West Virginia.
They started getting a little sensitive because the same
poverty, the same steel mill that closed down in
Wheeling, closed down outside of Pittsburgh, too.
You could find the same thing.
Q: OK. Going back a little bit. Chip we just got
to live with those. Going back a little bit to a, tell me
about William Marland and his effort to sort of
change the game.
JJHF 1752
RG: OK. Marland, of course, was very, came into the
governorship at the, in the early '30's. And, he was
one of the youngest governors, now he is the second
youngest. At the time, he was the youngest. And, he
was very intelligent. And, he had some interesting
ideas. And, one of the things, of course, in West
Virginia the big coal barons had run the state for
years and were making all the money and most of the
taxes were going on the poor people. Well, he came
in and, right off, called for the Severance Tax on coal
and just about blew their mind. I mean these guys
was a "what in the." It's like they felt that they owned
the Legislature. You know, I mean they would pay
for all this and pay for all that and how dare could
this guy come in and do that. But, and, of course, the
Democratic Machine, this is basically a two to one
Democratic state.
JJHF 1830
So, the Democratic Machine just kind of looked, this
is your time as governor, you do what you're
supposed to do and then we'll have another Democrat
come in. It just blew their mind. They couldn't
believe that this guy was, it's like striking Mom and
Dad, or something like this, you know, and he came
down. The only problem was, he had a personal
drinking problem which he later admitted. And, it
was one of those things that, at the time, a lot of
people didn't know about and he would like take two
steps forward and one back, because he'd like
disappear from the scene or something like this. But,
things, of course, were very loose and easy then and I
can remember one time, right before an election, that
somebody called the newspaper and said "hey, he's
loading, his car's over at the Liquor Warehouse and
they're filling it up full of booze in the back," you
know.
JJHF 1905
And, so we sent a photographer over and, sure
enough, we got the picture and so, we called him up.
We said "what are you doing filling your car up with
liquor?' And, he said "come on, tomorrow's the
election." I mean, you know, it was like it was the
thing to do. Nobody, if for a vote you got a little bit
of booze or something like this, you know. And, I got
the feeling that he really didn't sense he was doing
anything wrong. I mean we look at that now, and say
"what, there's this law," but, he said it was the day
before the election. So, I always kind of, that was the
lifestyle of machine politics. Like, you know, you get
on the machine, but repayment, there was a little bit
of repayment. It wasn't anything big money, but it
was a bottle of booze or something like this, you
expected something in return and that's the way
politics was run at that time in the state.
Q: Describe to me how the professional and the
personal collapsed, just intersected with Marland.
How his programs are defeated and how personally,
he. Describe the sort of tragedy.
RG: Well, of course, the --
Q: Battery?
WEST VIRGINIA HISTORY FILM PROJECT,
MAY 5, SOUND ROLL 122, RICHARD GRIMES
INTERVIEW.
GRIMES INTERVIEW, TAKE 4, ROLL 284,
SOUND 122.
Q: ?? was Marland?
JJHG 0023
RG: Marland did not get most of the things that he
asked for. People were shocked that he would dare
ask for some of those things, but he had good ideas
with what to do with money, but, they were so jolted.
Well, OK, the fact that he had a drinking problem, it
would begin to worsen when he wouldn't get this. He
started to feel like a failure when, in fact, probably, he
wasn't. And, I, you know, somebody who has a
problem like this, this is what they tend to rely on or
something and this is what happened in his case. But,
he would still come up with good ideas and, you
know, people would sit around and say "but, that's
really a novel idea" and everything like this, but the
coal, he never did come to peace with the coal
operators in the state who never forgave him for doing
that. Then, of course, since then, it has been done,
you know. But, he, he's the one who kind of opened
that up and it got worse and his drinking problem
tended to get worse.
Q: What became of him?
JJHG 0109
RG: Well, he ended up going out to, first he was
going to do a local business, then he ended up getting
away and he went out to Chicago and nobody heard
of him for a long time. And, then, all of the sudden,
he turned up one day as a cab driver out in Chicago
and, he needed, he was trying to rehabilitate himself
and everything and he needed steady work, and
everything like this. So, he was trying to work his
way back. And, of course, this went all over the
country, you know, the day that story broke. And, a
reporter had remembered something about him, that's
how it came out, but the sad thing was that he had
cancer. It had already been diagnosed and died an
short time later and asked that his ashes be flown over
the state and sprinkled. And, so they did. But, it kind
of came to an end there real fast.
Q: Tell me about another governor's
administration. One that was famous for some other
things. Wally Barron.
JJHG 0203
RG: Right. Well, now, Barron was a governor,
actually he was a fairly effective governor when he
was in office. The only problem was that corruption
took over. I mean he used to have a jar on his desk
and people would go into see him and he wouldn't tell
you to put money in it, but somebody else would say
"if you go in, you know, you might drop a twenty in
there, a ten or something like this" you know. And,
this was kind of, you know, how you were expected
to do things. There was a lot of corruption in the
Administration in terms of, like, I think the Highway
Department, it was, the money was being used for the
wrong things. We had purchasing, big purchasing
scandal in which certain, only certain people, were
getting state business in return for payoffs and
everything like this. And, it got to be real bad there.
It was just like every time you turned around, there
was like eight or ten different state leaders that were
either charged or gave testimony in return for no
conviction, or something, but we had a number of
people go to jail out of that Administration.
Q: What happened to him?
RG: Well, he served time.
Q: Please, call him Barron.
RG: They tried
Q: They tried to save.
JJHG 0312
RG: Wally Barron went on trial with a lot of other
department heads. They all got convicted and he
didn't. But, then the next day we came to find out that
he had tried to bribe one of the jurors and so, he was
brought back, tried for that and sent to prison. He
served his time in Federal Prison and the last time I
talked to him, it has been several years ago, he was
living down in Florida at a golf, one of these golf
complexes, he loved to play golf.
Q: Let me stop you there. We have a plane. Let's get up for a second and I think.
GRIMES INTERVIEW, TAKE 5.
Q: OK. Where were we? I want to talk about
the two. Tell me about the Fairmont mine disaster.
What you know and what you saw.
JJHG 0385
RG: Well, of course, it was, it just about wiped out a
whole town in the Farmington area there and it was
the, it was just total devastation, of course, and that's
one of those things where you couldn't believe it, it
just happened so fast. And, I think, you know, when
something like, even like a coal mine disaster, or
something like this, you think that well everybody's
going to make a run to be able to get out, but it
happened to fast that they were just all dead. I can
remember going back a couple of years later and, you
know, think about it and I was doing a, kind of a
political survey, door to door, and everything and I
couldn't find any men in the town. It was very
strange, you know. I didn't think about it right off
and then I started saying "can I get, where is there a
man, here, can I talk to." Well, there really aren't any
on this street, or something and it was very jolting.
And, then it hit me again, it's like it hit me a second
time. And, I thought, oh, my gosh, that's right, this
town's without, you know, I guess the boys would
eventually grow up and it would ??, but for, it left it a
one sided town. It was unbelievable.
Q: What was the reaction within the state?
JJHG 0482
RG: Well, I think that people were jolted at the
number of people who died in it and how fast it
happened. You know, you're always thinking that
well's there gotta be time to rescue them. We had had
several mine disasters where workers, some of the
workers were rescued. It was, you know, who was
lucky and who weren't. Some would find the air
pockets But, in this one, bam, it was just, everybody
was gone and it greatly depressed the state.
Q: What are the results of Farmington? Was
that with the Union coming out and really absolving
Console? Was that miners started to turn against the
UMW?
JJHG 0542
RG: Well, yea, there was feelings that, it's like there
was the Union and then there's the Union
Management. And, I, it's a funny thing in some of the
strikes that I covered when I saw the strike starting to
break, wasn't necessarily when Management was
giving-in, more so than when the strikers were at odds
with the Union Management. About, you know, like
the business manager was doing fine back in his office
while they were out on the line, hungry. And, so they
started to see a lot of that and there was, that maybe
the leadership had its own cause. More so than the
miners, you know, it was like a power struggle.
Q: Did you cover any of the Black Lung
Movement?
JJHG 0600
RG: Oh, yes. I can remember they would keep
walking the caskets through the Legislative Hallways,
all the time. And, it was, kind of an eerie feeling.
But, you know, it took about six years to get the
Black Lung stuff. It didn't come just instantly.
Sometimes, I see lobby groups, today, upset because
they work the whole session and nothing happens.
And, I can remember the Black Lung thing, it took
six years to finally bring the Legislature around to
thinking that, you know, what it was going to do.
Q: What was the essence of that whole
movement? The Miners for Democracy and
that.
JJHG 0660
RG: Well, they wanted, I think that was at a time
when miners suddenly realized that there were a lot of
diseases that they were susceptible to. That they were
coming out kind of doomed. They didn't know that,
you know, for a lot of years. Of course, we know a
lot more about health care than we knew before, but
they didn't know that, and it was, the only thing they
were supposed to watch out for was the roof caving in
on them, or something like this. And, suddenly, this
thing hit about that they were being disabled by
merely being there. And, I think this was one of the
first major health care issues. We hear about health
care, today, but this was one of the first major health
care issues that ever hit the Government. These
people were waiting we are getting a disease, we want
cared for.
Q: Was there a good response about that?
RG: Not initially. It was indignant. How dare you
suggest that we.
Q: Would you say that in a complete sentence?
Government.
JJHG 0736
RG: Well, government took the reaction of this as
kind of contemptuous attitude. " How dare you ask us
to pay for your health care." And, the miners though
started saying that "they were doing an important
job." It was very basic. Everybody needed the
coal.
Q: Excuse me. Just start that sentence over
again. "The miners."
JJHG 0771
RG: The miners started saying that "what we are
doing is important to the state," and it was. And, we
need, there's a lot of things depending on it and so, if
you are going to, we want some help. And, the
Government, of course at first, said "no way." But, it
took them about six years and they came around.
Q: Did you ever cover Arnold Miller?
RG: Yes.
Q: What do you know about Arnold?
JJHG 0806
RG: Well, Arnold, it was kind of funny. Arnold was
a product of the, he was a new type of a leader in the
mines. He came out of the coal fields and everything
like this, and was kind of a hero. He had a hero
following there. And, it's like he wasn't some political
boss, or something. He knew what it was to work the
mines and the hours and everything like this. And, he
would go around and a lot of the miners really locked
into his cause there and everything like this. He was
one of them who actually came up.
Q: And, one of their key supporters was Ken
Hechler, wasn't it?
JJHG 0862
RG: Yea. Ken was, Ken's had quite a political career
working for a President and then he got in on the
ground floor of politics here, you know, he was a
Congressman and now is the Secretary of State. And,
goes just as strong today as he did twenty or thirty
years ago.
Q: We're talking to him this evening.
RG: That's good.
Q: OK. Then, boy, in between Farmington and the Black Lung Movement comes Buffalo Creek. Sure.
GRIMES INTERVIEW, TAKE 6.
Q: Could you tell me about going to Buffalo
Creek?
JJHG 0919
RG: Well, Buffalo Creek was caused by a lake up on
a hill that literally broke loose and washed down and
just literally took out a community. I was down there
the day after the disaster, and it was, I've never seen
anything like it. Not only did it wreck the
community, but it threw it other places. People were
running around, who did survive, lots didn't. But,
people were running around looking for their homes.
And, said "well, here's the porch," and "see if you can
match this up" and everything like this. It was, of
course, there was a lot of people coming in to try and
help them, but, not only were people looking for
loved ones that they couldn't find. They were looking
for the house. Maybe, that they are still in it, because
a lot of houses got washed away. And, some people
did survive. Actually, staying within the houses being
washed away. But, people were out trying to find,
"did you see this kind of a house," "did you see that."
Never seen anything like that.
Q: Tell me about encountering a family where the parents had been. Wait. Wait. We'll pick that up.
WEST VIRGINIA FILM PROJECT MAY 4,
RICHARD GRIMES INTERVIEW, SOUND ROLL
123.
GRIMES INTERVIEW, TAKE 7.
Q: Could you tell me about the family you
encountered down in Buffalo Creek?
JJHG 1016
RG: There were several children who they couldn't
find their parents and, of course, you had several
homes where they couldn't find the father was
missing, or the mother was missing. And, there was,
actually, a move in the community, at least for the
time being, to reassemble families like, OK. Well,
you two kids go with her and he'll take care of you
and, it's like, you know, she can cook and, it was just
a matter of redesigning the neighborhood with what
was left. And it was very, I thought about that for
days and nights, after seeing that. You know, maybe
today we would have a smoother method of doing
that, but at that time, the people were trying to resolve
it themselves as to who was going to care for
who.
Q: What do you think the impact was.
Interruption. I'm sorry. You might want to retape
that one. OK. Would you mind telling me that again,
please.
RG: The whole thing. How do you want me to
start?
Q: Start by "there was a family."
JJHG 1113
RG: There was a family, there were only the children
survived. But, there were other children other places
in the neighborhood where just the father survived or
just the mother survived. And, the community was
trying to put itself back together saying "well, OK,
put these two children over here, she can cook for
them and he can cook for this boy here and
everything." Maybe today we would have a smoother
way of doing that, but here the community was
putting itself back together.
Q: Do you think there was some long-term scars
in that community after the accident?
JJHG 1161
RG: Oh, sure. I'm sure that these people will never
forget that and anybody who went through it or was a
relative and came back, you know. There were
people who, like their children lived in Man or Logan
or somewhere close to the area, you know, and they
cam back and, of course, were just devastated by how
much, like I said, it didn't just take people out. It took
everything out. And, they never forgot that. I have
talked to some of them since then and they can vividly
remember every, every hour, every moment.
Q: What do you think the lesson of the Buffalo
Creek disaster is?
JJHG 1210
RG: Well, I think that what a lot of these people do is
dangerous work. Just like we were talking about coal
miners. But, this was a very dangerous set-up in that,
I think one of the lessons that the state learned from
that was that they've got to have some better
infrastructure, better work building up. If you've got
a dump or you've got a lake or something, you've got
to take, invest the money and the time to start with,
make sure it is built right, so that this doesn't happen
again. We haven't had anything like Buffalo Creek
since then.
Q: Has West Virginia always been just a dollar
short from being an average state?
JJHG 1269
RG: Well, West Virginia is a different kind of state in
different places. You can go to the, to the northern
panhandle and I've always, since they kind of lined up
with Pennsylvania and Ohio there, you know, and
everything. The thinking was kind of that way. You
go down into the rural sections of the southern part of
the state and they have a lifestyle of their own that
isn't like southern West Virginia and it isn't like the
northern panhandle. And, then you go down to
southern West Virginia which, incidentally, is very
much like eastern Kentucky and part of Virginia.
And, it's a different lifestyle. I remember the first time
I ever drove through deep, southern West Virginia. I
couldn't even understand the accent of the people
there, you know. They couldn't understand me. So,
it's, I think that West Virginia, actually, is a state
that's made up of some different kinds of
communities.
Q: What do you think has kept it from being that
one step better? It has always been 45th, 46th, 47th,
48th.
JJHG 1358
RG: Because, I think that there isn't a whole lot where
there's a lot of money being made and everything.
There are some advantages and disadvantages to that,
but I think the lifestyle, it's an easy going lifestyle --
save the disasters that we have had. But, I think for a
lot of people who leave here and will come back and
kind of miss the easy going lifestyle. It isn't a way
that you are going to get rich and you're going to have
a lot of things, but I guess we're probably surrounded
by a lot of states that are very busy. And, a lot of
people drift over here. Our population is growing,
now a little bit. People are starting to decide, maybe
this is a half decent lifestyle. Not a rich one, but a
decent one.
Q: What's your personal attachment to the
state?
JJHG 1424
RG: Well, I like, of course, when I came back here
again, I, there was some really interesting political
races that I was really enjoying and, so, I had no urge
to leave that. But, there is something else about the
state that I think is kind of important. West Virginia
is a state that is small enough to deal with most of its
problems. Now that's the good side, the bad side is
you can use that same thing to procrastinate forever
and not solve anything. But, I feel more, when you
see what's going on around the country like with
crime and heavy traffic and pollution problems. Yea,
we've got problems here. I'm not saying that. But, I
always feel like whatever it is, we can deal with it, if
we want to, and I'm not so sure that true in some other
heavy population areas in the country. The statistics
may be in their favor, but, I think, the lifestyle here is,
probably, one I would choose. I feel like I can have a
little more control of my fate here.
Q: Do you think there's a good future for West
Virginia?
RG: Yea. I do.
Q: Describe it.
JJHG 1520
RG: Yes. I think that there are a lot of, this is a state
of small businesses as such, and everything and I
think we have to kind of learn the hard way. But, the
people are, roads are good. They bring people into
the state. We have a good road system. Now, West
Virginia, by the way, was one of the first states that
undertook heavy interstates through high
mountainous areas. A lot of states didn't, until we
did. And, so, we've got good roads coming through
here and people can come in and then I think that we
have to, of course we've got a growing tourism
business, and we have to kind of start inviting people
in and a number of other states, that are like West
Virginia, are starting to succeed, a little bit too. And,
I think, I think we will, too. I think the potential is
here. It's, we've got to have a better infrastructure
system, drainage.
JJHG 1589
We've got to take care of the basic things. But, and
the roads to get in and out. And, suddenly, people are
going to say "hey, I like that." The eastern half of the
state right now is getting a tremendous surge of
population from the crowded Baltimore/Washington
area. The roads are good, they can get there and they
can get back to work. So, I think --
Q: Is West Virginia going to be, continue to be
dominated by coal, though?
JJHG 1620
RG: No. I don't think anymore. I think that
obviously the equip, we have like a fourth the number
of miners as we used to have and the equipment is
doing a lot of the work. And, I think that we are
starting to get a lot of the other plants and everything
like this, that would exist because, a lot of times when
plants want to move into a state, they look at the
lifestyle. Are the schools decent? Are the roads
decent? Do you have, is there decent recreation?
West Virginia has those things, now. It start, and in
some areas, it's starting to improve them. So, I think
that West Virginia has a good future and there are
some people that are even worried in this state that it
may get too good. That people moving in, suddenly,
we will have everyone else's problems.
Q: Cut. Great. Excellent. Thank you.
GRIMES INTERVIEW, TAKE 8.
Q: Richard, if you can, reduce your book to a
paragraph. Tell me, briefly, about Jay's run for the
governor and some of the income ??
JJHG 1714
RG: OK. Well, of course, one of the things, he was a
boy out of the big city and didn't know some of the
"taboos" that existed in West Virginia. And, one of
them was that I vividly remember, you didn't walk, if
you were a politician and you went around to visit the
miners and everything like this, you did not walk into
their dressing room. That is, you could talk to them
outside because, I guess, you know, they were
changing clothes and showering and miners didn't like
that. They didn't want somebody, a crew of reporters,
trooping in with a governor while they were changing
their clothes. This was, you just didn't do this.
Somebody forgot to tell that to Jay, one day, and he
was out in the central part of the state and he gets to a
coal mine around closing time and there they're in
there showering and everything, and he walks in and
in come the reporters and everything like this.
JJHG 1785
Some guys go diving for the shower and everything
like this, and he starts, he's kind of new at the time,
you know, and he makes his speech to them and you
could see that some of the miners are a little bit
irritated that he walked in there on them. And, a lot
of them had no clothes on, you know, they were just
standing there. They had just stepped out of the
shower and, so, some of them, while he was talking,
and it was all men in there, but, still some miners
were kind of, you know, rubbing themselves and
everything, just to torment him. Cause they knew
that he was getting very uneasy. And, then they
would stick their hand out to shake his hand and he
wouldn't want to do it. And the guy would say "come
on, shake my hand governor" And so, he would
shake their hand and then he'd stand there and it just
cracked us up because we knew he wasn't supposed to
be there and they were getting even with him in their
own subtle way.
JJHG 1857
And, this was just one of the things that he had to
learn the hard way, you know, like walking up the
hollow in a pinstripe suit, you know. He started
getting advisors. He had the money to start buying
PR that a lot of people didn't have before that. They
started saying "don't do that, don't ever walk into a
coal mine, again," like that. I remember at that one
when they started teasing him, and saying "you gonna
bring us some of your money down here," and he
would try to talk politics and all they'd keep saying
was "your money."
Q: Good. Good. We've got it. That's it. OK. Are we out of film? Yea. Great. Just put a new battery in.
RICHARD CURRY INTERVIEW, RICHARD
GRIMES, I'M SORRY. ALL QUIET,
PLEASE.
JJHG 1909
Richard Grimes interview page
ROLL 123