The Hatfields and the McCoysThe Hatfield-McCoy feud has long been the most famous vendetta of the southern Appalachians. Over the years it has become encrusted with myth and error. Scores of writers have produced accounts of it, but few have made any real effort to separate fact from fiction. Novelists, motion picture producers, television script writers, and others have sensationalized events that needed no embellishment. Using court records, public documents, official correspondence, and other documentary evident, Otis K. Rice presents an account that frees, as much as possible, fact from fiction, event from legend. He weighs the evidence carefully, avoiding the partisanship and the attitude of condescension and condemnation that have characterized many of the writings concerning the feud. He sets the feud in the social, political, economic, and cultural context of eastern Kentucky and southwestern West Virginia in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. By examining the legacy of the Civil War, the weakness of institutions such as the church and education system, the exaggerated importance of family, the impotence of the law, and the isolation of the mountain folk, Rice gives new meaning to the origins and progress of the feud. These conditions help explain why the Hatfield and McCoy families, which have produced so many fine citizens, could engage in such a bitter and prolonged vendetta |
Contents
The Feudists and Their Society | 1 |
The Legacy of the Civil War | 9 |
Election Days on Blackberry Creek | 19 |
The Smoldering Fires | 30 |
An Era of Violence | 37 |
Inflammatory Politics | 49 |
New Years Day 1888 | 58 |
The Hatfields on the Defensive | 68 |
Hawkshaws in the Hills | 92 |
The Hatfields Stand Trial | 101 |
The War Spirit Abates | 110 |
The Habit of Violence | 118 |
Epilogue | 125 |
Notes | 127 |
Bibliographical Note | 139 |
143 | |
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Common terms and phrases
accounts Alifair allegedly Anderson Hatfield armed arrest attorney Big Sandy Bill Staton Blackberry Creek Breathitt County Calvin Cap Hatfield capture Chafin charged Charleston Cincinnati Enquirer Circuit Court death declared detectives Devil Anse Hatfield election Elias Hatfield Ellison Hatfield Ellison Mounts extradition February 18 feudists fire Floyd Hatfield Frank Phillips Frankfort Gibson Gillespie Governor Buckner Governor Wilson guard Hargis Hatfield clan Hatfield-McCoy feud Hatfields and McCoys Ibid indictments Jackson January January 25 Jim McCoy Jim Vance John Johnse Hatfield Jones jury justice Kentucky and West killed lived Logan County Louisville Courier-Journal Mahon Mate Creek McCoy brothers McCoy family McCoy's mountain murder Nancy newspaper Perry Cline Pike County jail Pikeville Plyant prisoners Randolph McCoy reporter residents Rose Anna Rowan Sarah McCoy Selkirk McCoy sheriff shoot shot tion Tolbert Tolliver Tom Chambers trial trouble tucky Tug Fork Tug Valley vendetta W.Va Wall Hatfield Wallace warrants West Virginia Wheeling Intelligencer