October 13, 2012
Mann: Railroad days: C&O winds through mountains, life
West Virginia State Archives
A passenger train pulls through the Hinton train station in this undated photo.
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I was the first male grandchild and I was treated as a prince by my grandparents and spinster aunt. Even at that early age I began to love the place. I had a dog and cat. I fed chickens with my grandmother. My grandfather would come in from the fields with something in his pocket and ask me to reach in to see what it was. Once I remember well it was a rabbit so tiny it would fit in a teacup. I watched my aunt milk cows. I watched my grandfather slop the hogs. I saw meadows and woodlands and creeks and sky and clouds. And at night, I saw the heavens in all their glory, unadulterated with the light of any other thing but maybe lightening bugs.

Once my grandmother took me to the chicken house to a setting hen's nest. She lifted the hen in spite of her protests and revealed a nest full of fuzzy chicks. The consequence of this love was that I was on that farm with them every chance I had throughout my early life. And the way I got there was, you guessed it, the C&O Railway.

During the Depression, I spent many months and years with my grandparents. I used to beg my parents for the $1.93 which was the fare from Charleston to Hinton on what else but the C&O Railway. I never had more than the fare. When the porter came through hawking coffee and ham sandwiches, I had belly rumbles over the thought of a ham sandwich. But the sandwich, which was two thick slices of bread between which was a sumptuous slice of ham, was 25 cents. I had not a nickel on me. I was happy when he went to the next car, and the yearn for that sandwich subsided somewhat.

I spent at the farm every Thanksgiving, every Christmas and every Easter Holiday that I could get the $1.93. Also, matters got so bad at home that I went to live with my grandparents year around.

It was an education one could not receive any other way or place. I learned the basics and realities of life. I helped to prepare soil for seeds, to cultivate them, to harvest them and to watch the process of tabling them. I watched my grandmother choose a chicken for the pot and see that it got there. I have been there and helped in November to kill the hogs, butcher them, carve out the hams and shoulder, grind the pieces to sausage and watch my grandmother in inclement weather squatting to clean intestines for soap making. I have helped to shear sheep for their wool and to clip the tales of lambs and castrate calves and pigs. That is, I have worked at the bottom of the economic mountain. At the top are those players who gamble with the wealth that the bottom has produced, just as the Saturday-night kind of player who rolls dice for pennies.

In December of 1941, I boarded a New York Central car to be transported to Columbus, Ohio, where I was inducted into the Army Air Corp. From there by train I was transported to Jefferson Barracks, Missouri. Months later I hitchhiked from St. Louis to Charleston. Then back to the C&O for a ride to Detroit and some basic training, after which I boarded a C&O train to be carried to Newport News, Va., to become one of hundreds on a troopship. The train passed through Charleston on the way and stopped there in the middle of the night. I had my last sight of my hometown for a while.

In December 1945, I boarded at C&O train at Union Station in Washington, D.C. for a transport to Charleston and home.

Incidentally, while going through my grandfather's papers years after the war, I discovered a document showing that he had sold to the C&O Railway 18 chestnut oak railroad ties he had hewn with a broadax. The farm he got from the Rollyson folk was rocky, but also tree wealthy.

Today, the C&O tracks are a football field's distance from my front door. I hear the trains often and see the coal trains going east full and going west empty. And I hear Amtrack blow its horn from time to time. The Fast Flying Virginia and the George Washington, C&O's super passenger trains, are memories come alive on Railroad Days.

Mann, a former prosecutor and teacher, a World War II veteran, is a lawyer, gardener and writer in Hinton.

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Copyright 2012 . All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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