Stuff You Should Know - The Matewan Massacre
Episode Date: December 12, 2023The Matewan Massacre was a pivotal moment for the US mining industry and the labor movement as a whole. Learn about what happened in this sleepy West Virginia town today.See omnystudio.com/listener fo...r privacy information.
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Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of iHeartRadio.
You should know, a production of I Heart Radio. Hey and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh and Chuck here too and Jerry's here too.
We're here in solidarity together.
The trio of us ready to put up our dukes in this episode of Stuff We Should Know.
The trippas.
Sure.
It's a trio right? Yeah. Okay, you were just messing
around your horse and around. I was running with it. How are you doing? I'm good. Quick shout out to
the city of Mexico City, by the way, I meant to mention it the other day when we recorded, but I know
that some place you've been and Jerry's been, I finally, Emily and I made our first trip.
And as you know, I can verify Mexico City is amazing.
It's a pretty cool town for sure.
Boy, I feel really at home there.
You do.
I do.
I feel very at ease.
I was just like, this is, I don't know.
I don't know if it's a past life thing or what.
That's what I was going to be. That's what I was going to be.
I was like, this is like a New York and a tropical forest. I loved every bit of it.
In the past life, you were a Diego Rivera, but not the famous one. Just another Diego Rivera.
Another big ol' fat guy. We did go to a free to South, which was a lifelong dream for both
of us, but really for Emily.
So that was amazing and just all kinds of great stuff.
So that and that's it.
Can't wait to go back.
We just shout out a city right out of the gate.
That's right.
And this was my idea.
And I don't know.
It may have been at the Bonnie Prince Billy shows that I went to an
Arizona.
We may have been talking about the fact that Will Oldham as a teenager was in the John
Sales movie, Mate 1.
And I think that's where it came to me because I saw that movie back then and have not seen
it since then.
But I was like, hey, that sounds good.
Good topic to chew on.
Man, he was all over the place.
John sales?
Yeah, he wrote and directed,
mate Juan, he wrote and directed,
brother from another planet.
Like he, whatever he interested him, he just did.
Yeah, he was also a writer for hire.
Like he wrote as great in the geniuses John sales is.
He wrote the piranha movie.
Oh, yeah, I think I need that.
And a couple of other like writer for higher things,
but yeah, I always been a big John sales guy,
and mate one is awesome.
I kind of want to check it out after I know more about it now.
Yeah, he wrote a lot of episodes of Spencer for higher two.
And BJ and the bear.
Yep.
So, yeah, I'm glad you said mate one because I had never heard that word out loud before,
and I looked it up and I heard a one.
Can you use mate one?
Yes, I heard a resident say mate one, and I immediately came up with a great namanic
device for it.
You ready?
Oh boy.
If you want to remember how to pronounce mate
Juan, it's a small town in southern West Virginia. You just say, hey, who's that guy
from West Virginia over there? You say who him? That's my mate, Twan. Works like a
charm. I am here to tell you. Twan? Yeah, you could say one, but I think Twan has a greater ring to it to really drive home
how to remember it.
Mate Twan.
Mm-hmm.
Okay, sure.
Although you would say mate one.
Is that Josh Clark's spin?
Mate one.
That's it.
I love it.
I want to see how quickly I can derail things this early in the episode.
Well, I mean, I talked about Mexico City for goodness' sake. That's it. I love it. I want to see how quickly I could derail things this early in the episode.
Well, I mean, I talked about Mexico City for goodness' sake.
So we are talking about Maitwan.
And I didn't know much about it.
Again, I saw the word before.
I knew it was kind of a thing.
But specifically, the Battle of Maitwan is what we're kind of talking about,
although that's just one kind of island and an archipelago of incidents
that took place in southern Appalachia,
southern West Virginia, in coal mining country, just across the river from Kentucky, and right
near its border with Virginia as well.
And all the events we're about to talk about took place in the early 20th century.
And I knew nothing about any of this until we started
researching this episode.
So kudos to you because this is a pretty interesting
chapter in not just American history,
or even West Virginia history,
but labor union history as well.
Yeah, for sure.
And this was Olivia Jam and she did a great job.
One thing I'm sure you knew before we started this is that West Virginia and coal have
always been linked.
And as coal went, the history of America has gone because of that robust, by two-manus
coal industry that has been around there since, geez, probably like the mid-19th century.
It allowed America to grow not only with their factories and railroads and things, but
just people and heating homes and businesses and that kind of thing.
Yeah, because you can get some hot, hot heat from coal.
Hot, hot heat.
And you don't get quite as much from wood from what I understand.
So just right there, you have more energy at your fingertips.
Plus also, I didn't realize this, but I saw it somewhere that it also kept cities from
having to cut down all of the forests around them and rely on that wood, right?
It just makes it, it was just a better way to grow as an industrializing country.
And so because America was, you know, booming, thanks to coal, I think people just kind of
assumed like the coal miners are probably doing great.
They must be richer than astronauts for mining this stuff that's become so valuable.
Coal companies were.
Yes.
And the problem is, all of these events came from would have been totally
avoided probably had the co companies shared in the wealth less than jelly. Yeah, but that's
the continuing story of, you know, at the world, right? Sadly, yes, I don't know how long
that's going to go on for. I don't think it's think it has to be the way, but yes, that is so far the story of capitalism.
Yeah, but it was a pretty brutal existence as a minor back then.
I mean, it's still a very, very tough job.
There are still dangers to be had, even though they've cleaned it up quite a bit.
But it's nothing like it was back then.
It was dozens of miners died every year.
There were all kinds of accidents all the time.
Big, big events where hundreds of people die
in a single disaster, or just the daily work
of dying on the job, or dying,
because you just do that job and you breathe in that air
uh... that kind of thing and to add insult to injury
a lot of these towns
the whole companies sort of ran everything uh... you know sometimes they
own the houses that the people that worked their lived in sometimes they
owned all the businesses in town sometimes they ran the
the law offices there,
legal offices, but the chair of department and police and stuff like that. So it was a
sort of monopolistic control in a lot of these towns. Yeah, and even when they,
whether or not they had the local sheriff for Constable in their pocket, they also found out that they could really supplement
their whole, their grip over their workers
by hiring private police forces, as we'll see.
And they were really good.
That's always a great idea, the private police force.
That all worked out.
Yeah, for sure.
And they were really deliberate about keeping their workers
from unionizing.
A good example of that, that Oliviaivia turned up, there was a minor
owner named Justice Collins.
And he, I don't want to say caught, because I'm sure he really didn't care
whether you heard this or not.
But he was basically saying, you want to keep a, quote,
judicious mixture of men as workers from groups like European immigrants,
the Appalachian folk that have lived here for generations,
and then black southerners, I guess, de-aspirating from the Jim Crow South in search of better lives
who are showing up in the area. You want some of each, because these people don't naturally
necessarily get along, and you can make it, you can ensure it even further that they're not going to get along by paying some better than others for the same exact work that
really keeps people from getting along very well.
And so if you've got groups of workers who aren't really interacting because they don't
really mix well together, they're probably not going to be able to successfully form
a labor union.
Yeah, but as we will see, in many cases, the union, in fact, it worked the opposite way,
and they brought together people of different ethnicities in a way that was not common at all at the time as a whole, you know?
No, it's true, and I saw there's a great Smithsonian article about all this and the historian they talked to was saying
I don't want to paint the picture like I think I think he said everyone was just holding hands around the campfire
but they came together in ways that were just
unseen outside of this area, outside of the mining industry, outside of the mining unions and
I'm they did probably get along better than people in other unions,
black and white workers and other unions,
just because they integrated.
There's a really great scene that happened at one of the mine cafeterias
during one of these strikes, black and white workers held the cafeteria workers
at gunpoint until they were seated together eating
in an integrated cafeteria room.
Like they integrated themselves at gunpoint essentially.
Amazing.
Yeah, it was pretty cool.
So the union did get going, although, you know,
as we'll see is this story goes not quite yet in mate one
and what county was that again?
Me, go county.
Yeah. I have a great
and a monic device for that.
Do you really?
Oh, man.
So, the union did get going
and other parts of the country
sort of late in the 19th century.
The United Mine Workers of America
was founded in 1890.
And it was a real, as far as unions go
at the time, it was a real all encompassing
union in that there were other unions around that sort of, you know, if you, if you're like
a smithy or you had some really skilled specific craft, you might be represented, but they
may not represent, you know, black workers, Chinese immigrants, stuff like that. But the
miners' union kind of from the beginning, was like,
you know what, we're stronger with more people. We're going to represent all the miners who want
to jump on board. And they realize that, you know, strikes were early on a real, in, you know,
still today, a real big way that you can make change. But they were bloody affairs back then.
can make change, but they were bloody affairs back then. Oh yeah, like people would get shot and killed on both sides.
The government forces would show up and sometimes shoot people
like it was a really, really violent era in labor history
for sure.
Murder.
It was murder, yeah, for sure.
Killin' people.
Yeah.
For wanting to organize for better working conditions
and better pay, like you could get you murdered back then.
So the United Mineworkers of America, they kept at it.
I think they were founded in 1890, did you say that?
Yeah, can we call it momwa?
Sure, sure.
You know how to remember that.
Sure.
So within seven years, they held a strike, a major strike in Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, and
Pennsylvania.
And it resulted in an eight-hour workday for union miners.
The thing is, is that it didn't necessarily spread across the country, especially in southern
West Virginia, which was almost entirely non-unionized,
as far as coal miners went.
And I think from what I understand
is like the biggest pocket of non-union miners
in the entire country.
So, Umwa said, we need to start trying
to make some inroads in there,
because there's a lot of people who could use our help.
And one of the, I think the first big confrontations that came to be known as the West Virginia
Mine Wars took place in 1912.
And Ummwa didn't actually bless it, I guess, is the way to say it.
So it was considered a wildcat strike, but as soon as the strike began and it grew very
quickly, um,
Um, was said, we're, we're behind you guys 100% whatever you need.
Yeah, for sure.
This was the, uh, the paint creek and cabin creek, uh, coal mines in Kanawa County.
And they struck and these, these people will really factor in here, uh, in a second to the,
to the mate one affair.
But the Baldwin Feltz detective agency, which we'll tell you all about here in a second to the to the mate one affair, but the Baldwin felt
detective agency, which we'll tell you all about here in a sec, they were hired to come
in. These sort of hired, quote unquote, guards, also known as thugs, if you were one of the
unionists, they came in and had literal machine guns and shot up the homes of miners when
their families were there.
These minors, I mean, they called them wars for a reason.
These minors were heavily armed.
They fought back.
And the governor at the time, the venerable William E. Glasscock came in, declared martial
law, and sent in the state militia to break this strike up and a couple of hundred and it wasn't
just, you know, throwing all the Union leaders in jail.
They were, I think some of the, some of the Baldwin felt people went to jail, but it was
mainly strikers in Union leaders that were sort of under the thumb of glass cock at
the time.
So, Mother Jones was, which by the way, I think Mother Jones should
be a total topic. That the person, not the magazine. Sure. Or both. We'll talk about the magazine
a little bit. You have to. Right. Because like you could do an episode on people of the world,
but you'd have to talk about the magazine. Yeah. For sure. You know, or anytime we talk
about us, we should probably react to the nod to that magazine t
uh... mother jones was arrested though along with a lot of the leaders and
strikers
uh... they had military tribunals
and this sort of
clothes that the the first chapter
of the west virginia wars because world war two came along
and distracted everybody for a while
the things would kind of kick back into action in 1920.
Yeah, and the Paint Creek Cabin Creek Strike or War
followed a pattern that would become pretty regular.
The miners would stop working, go on strike.
The company would send in goons to come evict them
from their company homes without any kind of warrant
or anything like that. The families of the people ev them from their company homes without any kind of warrant or anything like that.
The families of the people evicted from those company homes would set up a tent city.
The goons that the mine operators employed would go attack the tent city.
That would be a site too far for the miners. They would rise up armed
and a real bloody clash would begin.
And then the state or federal government would send in
essentially troops to quell this uprising, and then the organizers would be unfairly arrested,
often again without warrants, and tried and held, and eventually things would kind of
subside for a little while.
That was the pattern that was, if not established there, certainly was followed by all of the wars after that one.
Yeah, absolutely. What should we take a break?
Yeah, I think we should.
All right, we'll be right back.
When Walter Isaacson set out to write his biography of Elon Musk, he believed he was taking on a world-changing figure.
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But I want the reader to see it in action.
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So we promised to talk a little bit more about this company that figures into the Mate 1 affair
or the Mate 1.
I mean, there's a lot of different names, the war, the battle, and Mate 1, stuff like that.
The Baldwin Feltz Detective Agency.
This was 1892.
They were founded by a guy named William G. Baldwin in Rono, Virginia.
A year later, he hired a guy named Thomas Feltz to run the
place with them, so it was the Baldwin Feltz agency.
And they were modeled very much after the Pinkerton agency, and that they were hired as sort
of at first before they were, even though they had a feeling they were going to get into
Union Busting like Pinkerton did.
At first, they were one of those private police forces you were talking about. And they were charged depending on where they were and
what town they were in with everything from kicking hobos off trains or killing hobos
that were on trains to sort of supplementing local police forces when they were small
towns to eradicating what they called black crime in
the south like really sort of casting on black people in the south and going after them.
And they were, you know, they were thugs.
They were, the guys that they hired were, their backgrounds were pretty, pretty rough
and tumble.
And they would use any means necessary to do what they wanted to do.
They kind of had free reign to do what they wanted.
Yeah, part of the reason why is because again,
a lot of these towns were quite literally run by the mining company.
So if the mining company brought in an outside police force,
the actual police force would work with them.
And at the very least, the courts would turn a blind eye
or they just couldn't get arrested.
And there were a lot of murders like in broad daylight that happened during this time
that the private police force detectives I guess carried out and just were not even arrested for.
So it was really lopsided if you were a minor, not only did this company basically own you,
but if you got out of the line, there was a chance that you or your family
were going to be beaten and or killed.
So as the UMWA, also known as Umwa,
really started to try to make inroads
into Southern West Virginia
to organize this largest pocket of non-union miners.
The coal mine operators push back by hiring more and more private police forces,
especially the Baldwin Felt's detective agency. They became not the only one, but probably the most
prominent in southern West Virginia as far as the amount of work they got and then the dirtiness
that they got their hands into. Yeah, and they were called the Pinkerton and the South. They were very effective,
at least at first, because I think between over like an eight-year period at
the turn of the century and the end of the last century, they prevented these
unions from organizing in West Virginia. And you know, I think there were some
strikes that happened and they kept West Virginia out And, you know, I think there were some strikes that happened
and they kept West Virginia out of it.
So they were successful for a while at least.
Like you said, they would beat up organizers
if you're pro union, you know,
you might get kicked out of your house,
you might have your house burned down.
They place moles, they place spies among the miners
and also just in town, as we'll soon see.
They had one guy open up a restaurant, a spy in mate one, and we'll meet him later as
well.
But I think it was the paint creek and cabin creek strikes that we talked about a few
minutes ago, where all of these guards came in.
Hundreds of these dudes killed up a bunch of people.
The same thing happened in Colorado in 1914,
what was called the Ludlow Massacre,
where 11 literal children were killed
because sometimes these miners were kids.
Like, you know, I don't know how young they got,
but they were children.
These kids that were killed weren't even miners.
They were miners' children.
So they were really like not, they were really out of bounds.
And the fact that 11 of them were killed because the, the, um, Bulbim Felt's detectives came
and burned the tent city down that they were living in.
That was, that was it.
That really caught the nation's attention as well.
And they gave a really terrible name to the Bulbim Felt's Detective Agency, which they managed to trade on very heavily in southern West Virginia.
Yeah, and Tent City because they were kicked out of the homes that were owned by the mining companies.
Exactly. So not only did that whole process take place in southern West Virginia,
it also happened in Colorado too. That's just what happened. You got kicked out of your home,
you go set up a tent city, and then imagine setting up a tent city that's nowhere near the miners land or
the mine companies land. And the mine company still comes and burns your tent city down because
you're still trying to organize. It's just some of the most important, almost unimaginable
acts that just were carried out constantly between, I guess, probably basically the 1890s until
the 1930s when Franklin Roosevelt came into power. That's just what happened. That's what people did.
That was the risky ran. If you didn't just keep your mouth shut in your head down and take whatever
abuse they heaped on you in the mine as owners. Yeah, and it was only a hundred years ago, which
in the mind as owners. Yeah, and it was only 100 years ago, which 100 years is a long time, but it's not that long.
No, it's not, which actually, I mean, like, there's still plenty of reasons to organize
and unionize, and there's still plenty of grievances that need to be addressed.
But just the actual process that happens, it's just, we've come quite far at the very least in removing
generally violence from that kind of process.
Yeah, for sure.
So things are heating up in West Virginia.
End of 1919, there's a big, a while it launched a nationwide coal strike, where they got
a big fat raise.
They got a 27% raise if you were a mine worker. But again,
West Virginia was still almost completely non-union at this point. So they didn't get the benefits
from that, but get the feeling that it really sort of rallied them to organize. Yeah.
At the same time, Amwa was really mounting an effort in West Virginia. So they launched a campaign
there in 1920 in the southern part of the
state in MacDowell, Logan and Mingo County where mate one is to really get them together
and say, hey, look, we got big fat raises for people all over the country here. You really
need to unionize. And mate one was right there in the middle of Mingo County. I'm sure someone
is going to say, actually, it's toward the outside of Mingo County, I'm sure someone's gonna say, and actually it's toward the outside of Mingo County. I think it actually is.
Okay, it's just to you, if I'm isn't like, you know,
smack dab in the middle.
Yeah, I get ya.
I'm just saying I was being the lone emailer
or the masked emailer.
Yeah, the, well actually person.
Exactly, that's me.
No, it's not you at all.
Thank you.
So, mate one, you know, we described these towns that were literally run by the mining companies.
Mate one was not one of them.
The mining company did have their fingers in some operations, but there were real legit
local businesses owned by locals.
There was a real independent sheriff there.
Sorry, police chief.
His name was Smiley and said hat field of those hat
fields I think his his grandfather the best is it always gets so confusing with me in genealogy
as you know that was a grandfather devil ants no his grandfather was half brother of the grandfather
half brother of devil ants I was right. I saw he was the direct grandson of devilance, but okay.
He's still, he's still keen.
I don't know, no, no.
He can't focus far as the,
as he was one of those Hatfields.
And we did an episode on Hatfield, McOis,
if you wanna check that out.
That was a good one.
It was like a Appalachian Romeo and Juliet story.
Yeah, it totally was.
But that is to say, Sid Hatfield was not in the pocket. He was a pro
Jungin guy and not in the pocket of the cool companies, which was kind of unusual. He was such a pro
Jungin guy. He was, he stood trial once for blowing up a coal tipple, which is the structure that a
freight train car drives under and gets filled with coal.
And it's entirely possible he did that. That's how sympathetic he was to the coal miners cause.
Yeah.
So he was, he was not the sheriff in town, there was a sheriff and I get the impression that the sheriff
was a law and order kind of guy. Like his allegiance was to law and order. So, you know, no matter what
side you're on if you needed his protection or needed his protection or the law is being broken,
he took that seriously.
He seemed a little more even keel.
I can't remember his name.
Sid Hatfield was 100% in the miner's camp.
And the fact that this town existed and it wasn't in the pocket of the mine operators
is I think the reason why these things happened because there was a power
structure that could start to take on these Baldwin felt detectives who were coming to town
and causing trouble.
Yeah, absolutely.
I think you're totally right.
Thanks.
The look.
The company inmate one, the mining company was called the Stone Mountain Coal Company.
Also, where it was born?
You were born at the same mate one?
I was born in Stone Mountain, Georgia.
Different place.
I didn't know that.
I knew you like you worked there, but I didn't know you were born in Stone Mountain,
why don't we?
Well, I mean, I was born.
The hospital was the cab general back then, now it's the cab medical center, which is
Decatur.
Okay.
But I had a Stoneom out in the dress,
even though it was not near,
you know, kind of downtown stom out in the stom out in park.
I understand, that's fine.
That's still count to stom out.
I'm not questioning your bonafide.
No, no, no, it's just a little weird though,
because if you're from around here
and you say you grew up in stom out
and people probably think like, oh, you grew up in Wichita, Stone
Mountain High School and live right near the park, but it was addresses were just
different back then. I get you. You sounded a little defensive. No, no, no, no,
I'm not defensive at all. Broward Stone Mountain guy. I remember when I was a kid,
Steve Martin, reference Stone Mountain, and I think the man with two brains.
I thought you were like,
it was a very big deal,
because Stone Mountain didn't get a lot of shouts,
and I remember those one line where he said something
about Stone Mountain, Georgia during like a rant,
and it was just like, what?
Steve Martin?
Why is his hair gray?
I guess the good thing about that is Steve Martin looks
about the same. He does very much so. 40 years ago.
All right, so workers did, even though they weren't under the thumb necessarily as a town,
the Stoamountain Cole company, a lot of the workers did live in company housing and sometimes they were paid in dividends instead of money, like real American money. And they did use, they employed
the Baldwin Feltz company to kind of come in and keep things quilled.
Yeah, they had a spy too, who was, I mean, in an episode full of really terrible people,
this guy might be the most terrible of all. His name was Sea Everett Lively, Sea E. Lively. And he was involved in that
Ludlow massacre in Colorado. He had killed at least one person for sure. And he moved
to Southern West Virginia and set up shop as a spy. Ostentably he was a minor who or he had mining experience but had gotten into the
restaurant business and opened a cafe. And he opened the cafe and basically put out
the welcome mat for the local miners union to come have their meetings at. So he could
keep tabs on what they were saying. And you know, you wanted to say like, wow, they
really fell for that. Yes, this guy, he befriended Sid Hathfield.
He made the right kind of friends to make himself seem legitimate.
So it was not hard for him to get some of these organizers, leaders and otherwise, to cough
up details because they trusted the guy.
And they even very smartly, the organizers for the, like, Mingo County area.
They did not have an elected leader. And if they did, they kept it secret. So you didn't
know who was actually running the show, which, oh, no, no, no, local union head.
Right. Oh, interesting. Even behind the scenes, a lot of people didn't know who was actually
calling the shots, which actually, from what I understand, led to a kind of people didn't know who was actually calling the shots, which actually from what I understand
led to a kind of a just a byproduct democratization of the whole process as well, which I think brought
people in even further because they had a real stake in what happened and had a real say in what
happened. Was there a leader? Like do we know who it was now? Yeah, his name was, I think Frank Keeney.
leader? Like do we know who it was now? Yeah, his name is I think Frank Keeney. Okay. He was his one of his descendants as a local historian who knows all about this stuff, but he was he was
definitely the guy in charge of the the Mingo County area umwa chapter. He was the one who was
organizing it and he was doing it at a time when no one else would
do it. And actually, they sent Mother Jones to come in who would she would have been about 80 at
the time. She'd been a labor organizer for at least 50 years since then. And she helped big time
for sure, but but it was Frank Keeney who was the guy who was in charge.
I thought you're going to say they kept Keeney's identity
a secret and they were like,
you know, he's just sweeping up around the restaurant
and they're like, oh, oh, Keeney lost his tongue
about 30 years ago and he can't even talk anymore.
Yeah.
No one opened his mouth to check.
They just took it out of him.
But he really had.
That's right.
And he literally kept his mouth shut.
So remember, C.E. Charles Everett Lively. Yeah, he's a terrible person. Yeah, he's the spy. So we mentioned that
tent city that happened in other places. This did happen in mate one. A lot of the families
were kicked out of their homes relocated to live together on land in tents. And in the spring of 1920, Mingo County, the mate one workers finally
said, we're going to go on strike, mainly to protest the fact that these thugs, these
Baldwin felt thugs, as they were called, came in to bust up their organizing efforts,
which culminated in, I guess, what we'll call round
one of three rounds of events on May 19, 1920, when about a dozen of these guards from Baldwin
Feltz came in to mate Juan. They went to a victim from Tent City. A lot of people say that
they were just kicked out of their homes,
but the National Park Service is on record saying that, you know, like you said earlier,
they actually went to a place that they didn't even have jurisdiction and said, you got
to get out of your tent city as well, even though we have no power here. And those, we
already mentioned Lee Feltz, right? Or did we?
No, we've only mentioned his brother.
Okay.
So, a couple of the guards were Albert and Lee Feltz and their brothers of the co-owner
of the company Tom Feltz.
So he has literal family members sort of on the ground as one of these local thugs.
And Albert, his brother, and another one of the guards named CB Cunningham.
And this was a guy that was in that Colorado massacre.
Another one of the guys in the Colorado massacre, in addition to CE lively.
I hope this isn't getting too confusing with all the names.
Just mad for doubt everybody.
They had a shootout in town, like just sort of a good old-fashioned,
you know, meet in the middle of town
and had guns drawn.
So there's a lot of variations on exactly what happened.
And we'll give you two of them.
One, according to the West Virginia Department of Culture, said that after they evicted people
from the tent city or the company homes. Those Baldwin Felt's detectives actually went into town and had dinner
and they were on their way to the train station
and they were gonna catch the five o'clock train out of town
when they were approached by Smiley and Sid Hatfield.
And Hatfield said, hey, you didn't have any right,
whatsoever to evict those people.
I have a warrant for your arrest.
And Albert Felt said, you know what, I've got a warrant for your arrest.
He might have even said, uh-uh, first, right?
It just so happened that the mayor of mate one, Kebel Cornelius Testerman, C.C. Testerman,
again with the double C initials.
He was on the scene.
He was a good friend of Sid Hatfields and he said,
let me see that. He said, this is a fake, this isn't actually a warrant for
Sid Hatfields arrest. And by the way, you can't arrest the chief of police here. So,
so get out of here. And while this was happening, a bunch of minors who were
armed had taken notice of this confrontation that was taking place in the
middle of the street between a bunch of Baldwin felt detectives, their mayor and their chief of police.
And so they kind of armed themselves to see what happened.
Somebody fired a shot in all heck pro-Cloose.
Yeah, and that's from the mouth of J.M. Clark, legendary podcaster.
You ever gone by J. M. Clark, legendary podcaster. Right.
You ever gone by J. M. I tried it, you know, once or twice, it felt, I felt wrong.
I like that. J. M. Clark, do you? I don't like those two letters together. They're not great.
Oh, I think it's good. You know, the guys are ring. No, it's like, it's like missing a vowel, like Jim, J. M,. Something like that J.M. It's not they're not CC CB
JB all those are pretty good
J.M. is not good and I'm sorry all the J.M.s out there. I think J.M. Clark sounds like a high-end
pant maker
Like a clotheier or a habidashar. I make only tatters all vests
a clotheier or a habidashier. I make only tattersall vests.
CW, I would think that doesn't sound great,
but my dad called me CW,
so it sort of has a ring in my mind.
It does.
I don't think they flow really.
CW does.
CW, all right.
Yes, J.M. does not.
Well, at any rate, I'm gonna come over
and have you fit me for a pant.
Well, that's fine.
I'm gonna start calling you C-Dubs from now on.
C-Dubs.
So, they're surrounded by the minors.
This is, as far as the different accounts go, this sort of became a grito shot first deal.
And that someone fired a gun, shootout happens.
Seven of the detectives were killed, including Albert Feltz, the brother of the founder
of the agency.
And Lee, I think too.
Are they both died?
Yeah.
Okay.
And Mayor Testiman was killed and two minors.
And again, depending on who you talk to,
there's a historian that Livy a found,
named Rebecca Bailey, that told the Smithsonian
that Hatfield probably shot first
or the miners.
Other people say that contemporaneous accounts at the time, at least from the Williamson
news, is like the day after.
They said that detectives took, said, Smiley and Sid into custody.
And that when Mayor Testerman came up and said,
no, no, no, you've got to release him,
that that's when things broke out,
and that Testerman and Feltz were shot first.
Yeah.
And then the ball went Feltz thugs kind of got out of there.
Some of them tried to get across the river to Kentucky,
some made it, some got shot there,
some supposedly were shot while they were running away, not across the river, and then some of those that did make it came
back later, like under the cover of night to catch a train and secret.
So who knows how it actually went down, we do know who died though.
Yeah, and there's still bullet holes in some of the brick buildings on Maite Street where the shootout happened.
Yeah. I think they preserved them by putting brass plugs in them.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah. So however it happened, there was definitely a shootout and a bunch of
people died.
And we're left in the street until, you know, everybody, I mean, you've got
like the dead mayor, the chief of police is involved.
There's just so many dead people laying around
that it took a little while to get everything cleaned up
and orderly again, apparently trains of people
had started arriving and we're like,
okay, and we'll get back on the train.
And that night actually, they redirected trains
through mate one.
They ordered the trains not to stop in mate one
as usual until the next day.
So it was a really, really big deal.
And rumors started flying very quickly.
Oh, yeah.
Probably the biggest one was that it was actually Sid Hatfield who shot Mayor Testament.
And that the reason he shot him was because Sid Hatfield had eyes for Testament's wife,
Jesse.
And they traced this rumor to Baldwin Felt's detectives.
Yeah, right.
And so apparently Hatfield's trial for this, by the way,
he was acquitted by a very sympathetic jury,
as was all of the miners involved.
A lot of people stepped up and said,
no, this is totally wrong.
These guys were really close friends.
Of course, he's not going to shoot them.
In retrospect, from my view, to execute your romantic rival in the broad daylight in
the middle of the street, anticipating a gunfight, would be pretty brazen and just hoping for
the best.
So I think just, you know, the fact that there was no one who even said, yeah, he actually
did this. I saw him
do it.
I think he probably didn't.
But there is a little bit, there's a strange post script to this story that does make
you wonder a little bit.
Yeah.
Sid Hatfield married the mayor's wife, Jesse, less than a month after this all went down.
Yes.
And it does make you wonder. And to make it even more interesting,
Jesse was a direct descendant of Randolph McCoy.
No way, really?
Yeah, for real.
I mean, this took place like right across the river
from where the Hatfields and McCoys lived in Kentucky.
Wow, Smiley said he just,
he didn't give a crud, did he?
He didn't give a root and toot and Crab.
He didn't.
I believe even after the wedding,
they were getting their marriage license,
and they were in Huntington staying at a hotel.
So this was pre-wedding, staying in the same room.
So you could get arrested for that kind of thing back then.
It was called cohabitation and the police arrested them and of course it was Tom
Feltz who had tipped them off. But apparently the judge said no don't worry about
it. You guys were getting married today and and who wants to mess that up. Right.
The judge. The judge's famous quote was, Mazel Topp. Right.
You want to take a break?
Yeah, let's take our other break and we'll finish up what happens right after this.
When Walter Isaacson set out to write his biography of Elon Musk, he believed he was taking
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That night he was deciding whether or not to allow Starlink to be enabled to allow a sneak
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I'm thinking it's idiotic to buy Twitter because he doesn't have a fingertip feel for
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When I sat down with Isaacson five weeks ago,
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They had Kansas spray paint,
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And then like Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde,
he doesn't even remember it,
getting the bars, done, excuse being a total f***.
But I want the reader to see it in action.
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Oseh County, Oklahoma is getting a lot of attention right now.
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So like I said Hatfield was acquitted his deputy Ed Chambers was there too. He was acquitted 17 miners all acquitted
Because they were tried in Mingo County,
which was again not run by the coal companies. So that really didn't sit well with
Baldwin Feltz, with the coal operators. Around one to the miners, basically. For sure. That's a
really great way to put it. And like I said, Sid Hatfield, and it turns out also Ed Chambers, were tried for blowing
up a coal tipple, like I mentioned, and they were actually dealing with this case.
And this one had been set in McDowell County.
And they had petitioned Chambers in Hatfield for a change of venue because they're like,
we're going to get the death sentence for this thing here. And it was actually granted. For it to be granted,
they needed to show up to court in McDowell County one more time before it was transferred
over to I think Mingo County. And on that day, they went to court with both of their wives
came out and they were gunned down and brought daylight by no less than CE lively the anti-union spy who was supposedly sit
Hatfield's close friend.
Yeah, and get this.
Round one goes to the miners because they were in a, like you said, the local jurors were
more friendly to them.
Round two goes to the other side because the assassins said it was self-defense and they weren't convicted
because it was in McDowell County and it was more friendly toward the coal company.
Exactly.
So these juries are just biased on both sides basically.
As far as Jesse goes, she's now been widowed twice and she remarried in January of 22, but
not to a hat field or a Pinkerton of the South.
Nobody was a state constable.
So she liked the elected officials.
Men in uniform.
Sure.
She should have made a baker then.
For sure.
I'm going to do something different this time.
So this all, that's round two, which was pretty quick. This kind of instigated
round three, which was the big one, which were the March on Logan County and the Battle of
Blair Mountain. Because of these murders, the Unionist and the Miner sent some demands
to the governor, Ephra from morgan at this point
and said hey this bald one felt
group of thugs are violent and they're doing things that are illegal
and this can't stand uh... but morgan of course everyone was in the pocket of
somebody yeah uh... was an anti-union republican and said
didn't even acknowledge it didn't even make a comment on the assassination
and took no action on this list of demands at all and said, didn't even acknowledge it, didn't even make a comment on the assassination and
took no action on this list of demands at all.
So two things about Governor Morgan.
One, while he was governor, a US Senate committee on labor issued an opinion that West Virginia
was nothing more than an industrial autocracy, and that the governor was basically there strictly
for the benefit of the
coal operators. And the number two when he was elected, the reason he won is because he ran
against three other progressives who were pro labor and they split that vote. He was the only
anti labor guy and if you put their votes together, he would have been beaten badly, but they split the vote and that
led this anti-labor guy to become governor. And it reveals something really important that
the people, the general voter out there in West Virginia, was pro-labor, was in favor of minors,
was in favor of unions, was not in favor of anti-union conservatives.
And just put put that in your pocket for later because it's a really important point.
That's right front front pocket even I think the front pocket of your tetrisol vest.
That's right right beside your pocket watch.
Sure.
All right.
So because of the non-action by the by, on August of 1921, 10,000, that's
right, 10,000 miners came to town to Marmot, which is eight miles south of Charleston, armed,
most of them armed, I imagine everyone who had a gun had their gun.
You definitely.
And they were trying to avenge obviously the deaths of hatfield and chambers
and they wanted to confront this sheriff there in Logan county
the name was don shafen
and uh... they also wanted and he was a minor guy so it was sort of all in the
same bucket
and they wanted to free some minors that were jailed in mingo county
so governor morgan finally steps in and Chafan, that sheriff I was just talking about from
Logan County, he got a bunch of deputies together, got a bunch of anti-union civilians together,
got their guns and got up on the ridge line at Blair Mountain because the marchers, you
know, heading into town had to go through there. And this was a, this was a war.
I mean, it was several days of gunfire,
gatlin guns, machine guns, rifles.
They had airplanes dropping shrapnel bombs
and dropping gas bombs like gases
that would make you nauseous and stuff like that.
There's a guy on a horse with a trident.
I'm not gonna ask if that's for you.
Okay.
But it was it was several days of like a legit real war such that the
president of the United States, Warren Harding had to come in and send in while
didn't come in like literally, but sent in federal troops in his stead.
Right.
And the Union surrendered.
They were obviously outgunned by that point, but a lot of them were veterans, like army
veterans.
So when they called in the army, they were like, I'm not going to go to war against my army
that I served in.
Right.
And so even though the miners didn't make it to hang Don Chafin and they didn't make
it to free the miners in Mingo County.
They still considered this a win.
Apparently on the way back from town or from the fight, one of the miners leaned out of
a passing street car and said, it was Uncle Sam did it.
They were saying like, we surrendered only to federal troops who were sympathetic with.
We didn't surrender to Baldwin Felt's detectives. We didn't surrender to Chafin. We didn't surrender to Baldwin, felt detectives, we didn't surrender to Chafen,
we didn't surrender to the mine operators.
It was strictly because federal troops came that we said,
okay, because we have no beef with the federal government,
so we're not gonna fight them.
So it was actually generally,
it was pretty much a win for the miners for sure,
and it definitely helped catalyze the organizing that went on. I saw that right after
Sid Halffield was gunned down, I think they reached like 90% of miners had signed on further union
in the area. And this just helped catalyze it even further. The thing is, the coal mine operators didn't give up at all.
They continued their tactics trying to break strikes and break up the unions.
They actually proved to be very successful.
There was a drop in union membership from the United Mine Workers Association from 500,000
in 1920, shortly after the events we've just described,
do 100,000 in 1929,
not because people lost interest in unionizing
or having better working conditions,
but because the mine operators ratcheted up the heat,
both politically and violently,
to make that happen.
Yeah, absolutely. violently to make that happen.
Yeah, absolutely. But while the Union sort of lost the battle
in that nine year period,
they won the overall war eventually
because what it also did was just sort of
draw more attention to this kind of stuff
and it was national news
and all of these sort of militant anti-union ideas were, I think, as far as the American
public goes, where like, you know, this is no good. And if the R comes in and says, like,
hey guys, we need a new deal. And they're like, okay, what should we call it? And he went,
how about the new deal? And all of a sudden, you know, unions had a, I mean, I guess you could say that had an easier time.
They definitely weren't being intimidated.
I mean, there's unions are still intimidated,
but not in the ways they were in the, you know,
turn of the century through the 1920s.
Yeah, remember when I said Governor Morgan was elected,
but not by any sort of popular vote
in that the will of the people actually was pro-union?
Thanks to the United Mine Workers Association and some of the other unions, that voice was
elevated into national politics and it actually ended up taking over the show, getting FDR
elected and then working directly with FDR to get the New Deal passed, to get the labor
union strength and to get better benefits in working conditions for union members
and not just union members. The unions had a knock-on effect for other workers who weren't even unionized
because it caused, it forced the mine operators to improve conditions across the board.
So it benefited workers who hadn't even joined the union and the wages had to
get competitive all of a sudden too. So that benefited everyone as well. It's really difficult
to overstate the effect that the United Mine Workers Union had. Like it was an enormously
important on the future of America. Yeah, not just in Southern West Virginia, but yes, in America. They went on to form the CIO as an AFL CIO, which organized industrial workers, like the people who put
together stuff using the raw material that people like the miners dug out of the ground.
And that had a huge effect as well. So it was a really, really big deal. These mine wars
that took place in Southern West Virginia and the effect that they had
across the rest of the country.
Yeah, absolutely.
They also went on to found the NFL and the NBA and the CW Bryant.
That's right, and the JM Clark.
As far as Baldwin felt that company, that agency, they operated for about 15 years after that, not nearly as sort of
young and busting public eye sort of spectacle, a little quieter, but when Baldwin and Feltz
both died within a year and a half of each other in 1936, they folded for good, rich dudes,
made a ton of money obviously. And I'd suggest seeing Mate one,
the John Sales movie from 1987 is really good.
It's a fictionalized version.
There are a few characters.
I believe the mayor is in it and CE lively is in it.
And a couple of others,
but the main players like Chris Cooper is the lead. It's a fictionalized character,
but this is a really good movie. John Sales is a great filmmaker. Yeah. And it wrote and directed.
Right. And a nice little post script to all of this is found with CE lively. Apparently his
usefulness ran its course after he was revealed to not be an actual friend to the miners. And he was no longer employed by Baldwin Feltz.
And by 1927, he had gone back to mining and was destitute.
That kind of thing makes you feel good.
Yeah.
What about his restaurant?
It was shut down for health code violations.
Oh.
Somebody found pee in the soup.
Oh my god.
It was terrible. That old bag. No,
someone put their foot in the Brunswick's stew. Oh my gosh, you remember that? Well, I just
listen to that. It's coming out as a select, I think, sometimes. Yeah, our foot in Brunswick's
stew episode. Well, since Chuck referenced our foot in Brunswick's stew episode, I think
everybody, we can all agree that it's time for a listener mail.
I'm gonna call this Josh Correction, sorry.
That seems to be like a good 50% of our listener mail
these days.
Well, I don't talk as much, I'm smart.
I keep my trap shut.
Okay.
Hey guys, wanted to write in a clear of Josh's conception of Catalina Island.
It was my home away from home for almost 20 years.
My husband and I lived on our 44-foot slupe.
And of Mord and that harbor many times, probably even the same mooring where the splinter had Mord in 1981.
And of course, this is referencing our Natalie Wood episode.
Which time?
Yeah. Ha ha ha ha.
The show's so nice, they released it, Thrice.
That's right.
Josh depicted the location as a place
where rich people go on their yachts to party yacht to yacht.
And reality, it's more like camping at an RV park.
Boats a small, it's 20 feet,
sail over to Twin Harbors on Catalina,
and the occupants all dine at Doug Harbors' reef, which is the only restaurant there. The city of Abelon is the
South of France type place, but the isthmus of Catalina is of Boater's campground. A couple
of things I'll chime in about one, in our experience there's never been a powerboater
that thought twice about disturbing their anchorage neighbors with flood bites and generators
and loud music. And two, as for the people who heard cries of help,
I wonder if they were actually downwind or upwind of the splendor because sound travels very well across water.
Perhaps the dinghy was actually very far away when they heard these cries.
Just curious.
Uh, signed, part of the sufficient of family.
Kathy with a cave.
Oh, I wonder if that's Kathy with a K who gave us Lassos in Arizona.
Oh, is that Kathy with a K?
You know, I got my Lassos hanging up at the camp still.
And that, that tracks people who have Lassos also might have spent a portion of their life
living on the sailboat.
Uh-huh.
So, okay, if that's you, Kathy with a K, how are you?
Good to hear from you.
And if you're not the same Kathy with a K, good to hear? Good to hear from you. And if you're not the same, Kathy, with a K,
good to hear from you as well.
Thanks for that.
I love being corrected.
Even though you could make a case that,
partying from RV to RV to RV park
is a very celebrity thing to do these days.
That's fine.
We'll go with your interpretation of it.
All right.
Well, if you want to get in touch with us,
like Kathy, with a K did, you can send us an email to softpodcast at iHeartRadio.com.
Stuff you should know is a production of iHeartRadio. For more podcasts my
heart radio visit the iHeartRadio app. Apple podcasts are wherever you listen to
your favorite shows.
to your favorite shows.
Walter Isaacson set out to write about a world-changing genius in Elon Musk and found a man addicted to chaos and conspiracy. I'm thinking it's idiotic to buy Twitter because he doesn't have a fingertip feel for social, emotional, networks.
The book launched a thousand hot takes, so I sat down with Isaacson to try to get past the noise.
I like the fact that people who say I'm not as tough on musk as I should be are always using anecdotes
from my book to show why we should be tough on musk. Join me, Evan Ratliffe, for On Musk with Walter Isaacson.
Listen on the iHeart Radio app Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
Tune in to the new podcast stories from the village of Nothing Much, like easy listening, but for fiction. If you've overdosed on bad news, we invite you into a world where the glimmers
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Listen, relax, enjoy.
Listen to stories from the village of nothing much.
On the I Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
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Hey, this is Carlos Miller.
Here at 85 Self-Shilk, comedy is king.
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