Author Archives: CharlieClaywell

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About CharlieClaywell

I have been a writer for years, mainly as a reporter, but I have always enjoyed history, especially non-mainstream stories buried inside old documents. My blog mostly centers around those stories. On occasion, though, I deviate and talk about my dog, vintage toys and what it's like to be middle-aged.

Free research tool lets you browse old newspapers

I am always looking for ways to research old stories and articles — and I stumbled across a site which has a searchable database of U.S. newspapers from 1836-1922. Chronicling America is a Library of Congress project that lets you search actual newspaper images — or even create pdfs of the page.

They also have a Flickr account with select images of old newspapers.

The Library of Congress invites you to explore ‘history’s first draft’ by looking at illustrated pages in old newspapers selected from our online collections. We welcome your tags and comments. There’s so much more to discover in yesteryear’s news!

One of the cool things I did when I was playing around on the newspaper site was conduct a search for my surname since it is fairly unique. Some of the stories I found were both interesting (I learned more about Tinker Dave Beaty) and disturbing. For example, there was a Claywell kid who murder a 13-year-old over a ‘Kick me’ sign that was placed on the Claywell teen’s back. This is the news blurb from a January 1906 edition of the Deseret Evening News:

Boy Stabs a Boy

Chicago, Jan. 6 – A dispatch to the Tribune from Dallas says:

Ollie Claywell, 14 years of age, last night stabbed Carl Ownes[sic], aged 13, and is in jail charged with murder. The boys were employed in the Texas Pacific general office. Someone pinned a placard on young Claywell’s back reading, “kick me”. The Owens boy kicked and a fight started. The boys were separated, but went into the street and the stabbing followed.

As disturbing as that story was it wasn’t the most disturbing one I uncovered. I was reading another story — this one involving a Claywell who shot a teen for allegedly stealing a 15 cent watermelon from a freight train (Blue Simmons Shot Friday Night By Frisco Guard: In Hospital). As I read the story, I glanced at the headline next to it and — let’s just say it is amazing how racist newspapers were in the 1920s. I won’t quote the headline (yes, it uses the N-word), but the story — actually more of an editorial — was blaming black teen females for the demise of the Democrat party in Missouri.

When using the site, remember to use the advance search feature. It will let you narrow down your terms, the state and years in a more refined manner. The only downside of the site, that I found, was the images can be slow to load and the convert to text feature is limited at best — but that should be expected since the newspapers are so old.

Categories: American History, Family History, Genealogy, Tools for historical search | Tags: , , ,

Sid — The Hatfield At The Center Of A Real Feud (Bigger than the Hatfields and McCoys)

The Hatfields and McCoys are the go-to story about feuds — whether or not you know all the details of the story, you’ve most certainly heard of them. Both sides engaging in a tit-for-tat exchange of actions until many needlessly died. But the Hatfield that actually had a much larger role in American history has been crippled by his famous family lineage.

Sid Hatfield, came from humble beginning — one of 12 children of a tenant farmer. Hatfield worked as a farmer, a miner and a blacksmith, but it was his appointment as Police Chief of Matewan, West Virginia by Mayor Cabell Cornelis Testerman that secured his place in American history.

Hatfield was a unique blend of morality and ethics. He supported the rights of miners and their efforts to organize –and just like Mayor Testerman  even rejected bribes from coal company-employed detectives to allow machines guns to be placed inside the village to enforce evictions of miners from coal-company owned houses. Yet, two weeks after Testerman is shot and killed (some say by Hatfield) in a gun battle, Hatfield marries Testerman’s widow.

The story begins in Matewan, West Virginia when miners who had joined the union were fired and then forced out of company-owned housing by the Baldwin-Felts Detective Agency.

The problem, though, is Hatfield intends to arrest some of the detectives enforcing the eviction. Hatfield has warrants from the Mingo County sheriff for the arrests of Albert and Lee Felts, but the Felts brothers claim they have a warrant for Hatfield’s arrest. When the Felts hand the warrant to Mayor Testerman — as the men stand on the porch of the Chambers Hardware Store in Matewan — Testerman calls the warrant a fraud and then all hell breaks loose. Although, who fired the first shot is unconfirmed, the clash which lasted just 20 minutes — took the lives of 10 men, including Mayor Testerman and the two Felts men — and started the ball rolling to the largest armed uprising on American soil since the Civil War.

After the violence, the state placed the town under martial law — which Hatfield complied with — but animosity between miners and coal operators intensified. Adding to the tensions were several court cases including ones against Hatfield. He was indicted for murder in the deaths of the Felts brothers, but was later was acquitted (although key witnesses died or left town).

Hatfield would not survive for long. It would be the murder of an unarmed Hatfield’s on the courthouse steps just a few months later that would be the final straw that would culminate in the Battle of Blair Mountain.

On August 1, 1921, Hatfield, his wife, and a friend Ed Chambers with his wife were walking up to the courthouse in Welch, West Virgina, where Hatfield and Chambers were facing charges of destroying property of the coal operators. Hatfield was accused of dynamiting a coal tipple. On the way into the courthouse they were ambushed and shot by a group of Baldwin–Felts detectives. Hatfield died almost instantly with 3 or 4 bullet wounds to the chest. Chambers was mortally wounded and was killed when a detective shot him in the back of the head. None of the detectives were found guilty of any crime instead claiming self-defense (they claimed Hatfield and Chambers were armed).

The slaying catapulted Hatfield — who died in his mid-20s — to the status of martyr. More than 2,000 miners attended his funeral. They laid down their tools for an hour in his honor and within days drew up arms to avenge his death in what would become known as the Battle of Blair Mountain.

To learn more about the Battle of Blair Mountain read [Amazon links]:

>> Read about civil rights and safety in the American workplace in my article Historical moments that changed America’s work environment.

Categories: Labor History | Tags: , , , ,

Significant Revolutionary War battle did not involve British soldiers

Yohn_Battle_of_Kings_MountainWhile researching my family tree, I learned about Andrew Beaty — a forefather on my maternal side — and his involvement in the Battle of Kings Mountain. Beaty was one of the Overmountain Men who walked miles to engage the Loyalists in this epic battle.

His story takes an odd turn because during the course of the battle he was bitten by a rattlesnake — although it is not recorded when he was injured, it is hard to imagine a person with enough grit and resilence to survive both the battle and a snake bite. But somehow he did.

The battle itself was also unique for several reasons.

It was one of the few major battles of the war fought entirely between Americans: no British troops served here…Kings Mountain is also unique in that large numbers of riflemen fought here. Rifles were not used much by the armies…

The use of rifles was extremely influential in the outcome of the battle as the National Park Service further explains,

The difference between a rifle and a musket is speed versus accuracy.  A rifle is slow to load, but very accurate.  Riflemen can hit a target at 200 or 300 yards.  Yet the rifle can only be fired once a minute.  A musket, with a smooth bore, is easy to load but inaccurate.  Muskets have an accurate range of about 100 yards, but can be fired up to three times a minute.

According to Andrew Beaty’s Revolutionary War pension application, Andrew served three stints with the Continental Line — each tour lasting three months. Although he was born in Pennsylvania, Andrew volunteered in Washington Co., Va., in the Spring of 1777 to serve under Capt. William Asher where the unit went to Little Station on Holston River as guards. Beaty re-entered the service in March 1779  as private under Capt. Abraham Bledsoe and Col. Shelby.

In his last tour of duty (1780) he participated in one of the most important battles of the War. He again volunteered in Washington County — just a short time before the battle of King’s Mountain — serving under Capt. George Maxwell and Col Shelby. Their unit was one of several pursuing a group of Loyalists fighting under British Commander Patrick Ferguson.

When the Patriots overtook the Loyalist, the battle was fought on an isolated ridge top in the Carolina backcountry. The sides were fairly even with about 1,000 soldiers each, but the manner in which they fought differed greatly. Initially the Loyalist had the advantage of higher ground and forced the Patriots to retreat down the mountain side by firing their muskets and charging with their bayonets. The Patriots, however fought back, eventually surrounding and overwhelming the American Loyalists by fighting frontier style — hiding in the trees and firing on the advancing Loyalist with deadly accuracy.

Thomas Jefferson credited the victory as a significant turning point in the War for Independence.

Categories: American Revolutionary War, Appalachia, Cumberland Plateau, Family History, Genealogy | Tags: , ,