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The Coalwood Proposition
When once the president of the United States called his nation to greatness, and told the
world we were going to the moon, Coalwood, West Virginia, remained what it had always
been, a town that mined coal. When President Kennedy also said Americans were going to do
many grand and wonderful things, not because they were easy but because they were hard,
Coalwoods men continued to walk out of fog-shrouded hollows and descend beneath
their mountains to grub out the coal by the millions of tons to send to the blast furnaces
of Ohio and Pennsylvania so as to make steel. For if coal failed, the people of Coalwood
believed, steel failed. And if steel failed, so did the country, no matter what else might
happen, even with a young presidents dream of glory on the moon.
I was born in 1943 and raised a Coalwood boy, the second son of Homer Hickam, a mine
foreman who loved the town more than his life, and Elsie Lavender, a woman who could not
love Coalwood no matter how hard she tried. Although my given name was the same as my
fathers, my mother tagged me early on with Sunny the light of her
life. Believing it was more important for me to know who I was rather than what my mother
hoped I might be, my first-grade teacher at the Coalwood School changed the spelling to
Sonny the son of Homer. Although she didnt like it, my mom chose
not to argue. In Coalwood, the teachers were considered the final social arbiters.
During my childhood, I came to understand that Coalwood was more than houses, roads, and
company facilities. It was also a proposition. This proposition held that if a man was
willing to come to Coalwood and offer his complete and utter loyalty to the coal company,
he would receive in return a sensible paycheck, a sturdy house resistant to the weather,
the services of a doctor and a dentist at little or no cost, and a preacher who could be
counted on to give a reasonably uncomplicated sermon. Mr. George Lafayette Carter, the man
who founded Coalwood and built its mine, also opened his wallet to the local schools. He
did so, according to a letter he wrote to his men in 1912, so that any of
Coalwoods children, be they sons and daughters of foremen or common miners, might
aspire to greatness.
In 1926, a newspaper reporter from New York City, having heard of Mr. Carters
proposition, visited Coalwood and filed this copy:
Mr. Carter owns lock, stock and barrel the model coal town of Coalwood
houses, stores, churches, police, clergy, and medical services all that makes up
the life of a miner. It is a town of remarkable contrast to the surrounding villages where
squalor and poverty are their world. With houses painted and surrounded by flower gardens
and lawns, Coalwood looks more like an Alpine Village than the begrimed coal towns of most
of America.
The proposition depended on everybody following Mr. Carters rules. They were few,
unwritten, and unbreakable. One of them had to do with what happened to a miners
family when he was killed. I first observed it in practice when I was six years old and in
the second grade of the Coalwood School.
We were reading from a book titled The Wind in the Willows, a tale of a toad who
could drive an automobile. I liked the book, mostly because the toad was smart and used a
lot of big words. I think all of my fellow classmates wished we might also grow up and be
as smart as that toad, even though he kept wrecking his car. Mr. Toad was just about to
wreck it again, when Mr. Likens, the school principal, came to collect one of my
classmates, a boy named Lonnie Huddle. Lonnie didnt want to go with Mr. Likens. I
think he could see in the principals face that something awful had happened. Lonnie
started to cry, and pretty soon nearly every girl in class joined him. I watched Lonnie
go, certain that because he had cried, he was going to get knocked around by the other
boys at recess for being a sister. But the day ended without Lonnies return.
That evening, as my family gathered around the kitchen table for supper, Dad announced
that Lonnies father had been killed in the mine. After giving my mother a furtive
eye rewarded by a subtle nod of her head, he explained to me and my brother, Jim, that the
company gave a widow of a deceased miner two weeks to make arrangements to get her husband
buried and her family out of town. Her children, however, were not allowed back into the
Coalwood School. These were the rules, he added, and that was all there was to it.
Lonnie wont come back? I asked. I couldnt imagine recess without
him.
Lonnie wont come back, Dad said, and went back to cutting up the ham Mom
had slapped on his plate. Our conversation, such as it was, was over.
Before I went to bed that night, my mother suggested that I make up a prayer for Lonnie
and his mother and his brother and two sisters. Hes gone, Sonny, she
said after I said how much I liked playing tag with Lonnie and what a good reader he was
in class. Its the way of this place. Get used to it. God knows I have.
But hes just down the street! I could go see him, tell him how sorry I am
about his daddy.
It isnt allowed, she said coldly. Hes cut off. You know
about being cut off, dont you?
I did. I had grown up hearing that being cut off was the worst thing that could happen to
anybody. It meant you could no longer use the company store, or go to the company doctor
and dentist, or live in a company house.
Go ahead, she said. Say your prayers.
I did as I was told, finishing with God bless Lonnie and tell him I miss him.
Thats good, she said. Youve done what you can for him.
She climbed up the ladder that leaned against the bunk bed and tucked my blankets so
tightly around my shoulders I could barely breathe. Then she ran a rough hand over my
forehead and then climbed back down. Are you all right, Jim? she asked.
Yes, maam, Jim said.
Did you say your prayers?
Yes, maam.
Good boy.
Mom turned out the light and closed the door behind her. Below me, Jim said, Sister,
if you start crying, Ill get up and smack you myself.
I muttered defiance but felt the tears coming despite myself. I fought them back, except
for a few that escaped and trickled down my cheek. For a long time, I lay awake, wondering
what might happen to us if Dad got killed. Wed be cut off, ordered out of Coalwood.
I couldnt imagine anything worse.
A few days later, when I next walked down Main Street to the company store, which was
known as the Big Store, I ventured past Lonnies house. Another miner and his family
had already moved in. Little kids I didnt know were playing on the front porch. I
never saw or heard from Lonnie again.
When I was growing up in Coalwood, I liked the times after supper the best, because that
was when my mother would pour herself a cup of coffee and my father would fix his dessert
of corn bread and milk in a glass and they would sit at the kitchen table and tell
stories, often about a Coalwood I didnt know, of a town filled with young men who
worked the coal and of their teenaged brides who kept their homes and bore their children.
Jim always left the table, but I stayed behind, quietly leaning on the table with my
elbows and soaking in a world that had once existed right where I was.
Mom and Dad spoke of a younger Coalwood where weekends saw raucous gatherings and miners
boasted of their prowess underground and their wives bragged of the life they were
building in Coalwood, and of the fine houses Mr. Carter had given them and how they kept
them spotless even with the daily assault of coal dust and smoke from the endless chuffing
coal trains that passed within a few yards of their front doors. My mother would laugh
into her coffee cup to recall when she had hit a cow with my dads new car, and how
the cow was unfazed but the car was a shambles, and how shed walked to the mine and
waited to tell Dad when he got off the man-lift before anybody else could do it. I
especially liked it when my father filled in with his side of the story, how hed
heard my mother out and then taken her into his arms, right there in front of God and
everybody, and told her she could wreck all his cars she wanted, he didnt care, as
long as it made her happy. In all my growing-up years, I had never seen my parents hug
each other, and it was fun to imagine what it must have been like, them young and happy.
For her part, my mom always frowned at Dads version and said she never did get that
coal dirt off her dress, that it was ruined even though she still had it and kept it in
her cedar chest and every so often got it out and looked at it. That my mom would keep
such an artifact always seemed to make Dads eyes shine with pride.
A favorite story was about Moms pet alligator. During the first weeks of their
marriage, someone had mailed one to her from Florida as a wedding gift and she had named
it Albert.
They had their dialogue down pat. It was a tee-niny thing, she would say.
No bigger than my little finger, I swan.
It had big teeth, Dad would growl.
And Mom would say, No, it didnt. They were just like little needles.
I believe it, hed say. I still have a scar on my finger, right
here, and then hed show off the index finger on his left hand, which was so
rough and discolored by coal dirt I never could see anything, although I always pretended
I could.
Mom would go on, telling how the alligator had grown larger until it filled up the
bathtub. I changed its water every day, Mom would proudly relate.
When it climbed out of that tub and chased me down the steps, I told you it was him
or me, Dad would say. You took your own sweet time deciding which one of us it
would be.
It was a close-run thing, Homer, shed reply, her lips perched on her
coffee cup and her hazel eyes twinkling.
Then Dad would look at her and shake his head and then tell how he had loaded her and
Albert into his old Ford and drove night and day from West Virginia to the first river he
could find past the Florida border, the only place Mom said she could possibly let her pet
reptile go.
Then they would laugh, the story told. In later years, whenever there was a report of an
alligator eating a poodle or chomping on a golfer, Dad would look up from his newspaper
and say, News of Albert, Elsie, and she would smile.
It was a good story.
The story Dad seemed to like to tell the best over the kitchen table was how he came to
Coalwood. He told it with the same enthusiasm other men might display in recounting their
personal experiences as a soldier in a famous battle, or as a player in a great
championship game. His chance at a job with Mr. Carters coal mine, he said, came in
1934 when the country was deep inside the Great Depression and he was only twenty-two
years old. He had come out of nearby Gary, one of the toughest, meanest coal camps in all
of McDowell County. Gary, he liked to say, was three mountains and a social philosophy
away from Coalwood. After filling in the necessary papers, Dad said he had decided to
begin a vigil outside the Coalwood mine superintendents office. Why hed done
such a thing, he still didnt know, but Mom always interrupted his story at this
point to say she knew why very well. If he hadnt gotten the job, all that remained
for him was to leave West Virginia and ride the rails with thousands of other unemployed
men across the country. I piped up one time and said that riding the rails sounded like
fun. Mom hushed me, saying there was nothing fun about being desperate, even aboard a
train. I stayed hushed, but it didnt change my opinion.
Excerpted from SKY OF STONE © Copyright 2001, by Homer Hickam. Reprinted with permission by Delacorte Press, an imprint of Random House. All rights reserved.
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