Thank you to the Center for Craft for awarding me a 2025 Craft Research Fund for the project, The Multi-Stranded History of Hand Knitting in Appalachia. This research will explore the underdocumented cultural history of hand knitting in Appalachia through archival research, community surveys, and fieldwork with contemporary practitioners in Appalachia and Northern Ireland. The project will result in a publicly accessible archival collection, article, and conference presentation.
Folklorist Archie Green, courtesy American Folklife Center
2021-2022 American Folklife Center Archie Green Fellowships
I'm so honored to be awarded an American Folklife Center at the Library of Congress 2021-2022 Archie Green Fellowship for my occupational folklife oral history project “Rural Free Delivery: Mail Carriers in Central Appalachia.” I've long admired Archie's work in occupational folklore and aspired to this fellowship, so I'm very grateful for this recognition and support.
Over the next year, I'll be documenting the expressive culture and experiences of approximately 25 rural mail carriers and clerks (formerly known as postmasters) in the upper mountain South (VA, WV, KY, OH, NC, and TN). The project will focus, in particular, on the function mail carriers serve as lifelines in their community, as well as how their place of work—rural post offices—are invaluable community hubs in remote rural areas. I'm also interested in recording how, through their regular routes, long-time rural mail carriers may have witnessed changes in the landscape—due to farm loss, deforestation, climate change, mountaintop removal mining, and other factors. The interviews and other project materials will be archived at the Library of Congress.
Thank you to Brett Ratliff at WMMT FM/ Appalshop for their support, past fellows Katy Clune & Kim Stryker for their guidance, and everyone at the AFC, especially Nancy Groce & John Fenn.
Read more about this year’s American Folklife Center fellowship awardees via Folklife Today.
West Virginia Folklife Progam Receives Gerald E. And Corinne L. Parsons Fund Award
The Gerald E. and Corinne L. Parsons fund was founded by American Folklife Center reference librarian Gerry Parsons (1940-1995) in honor of his parents. Parsons Fund Awards provide support to bring people to the Library of Congress to make use of primary ethnographic materials housed at AFC and elsewhere at the Library.
Emily Hilliard, West Virginia’s State Folklorist, was awarded a Parsons Fund Award for a one-week research trip to research AFC’s collection of sound recordings, photographs, field notes, and ephemera related to West Virginia, focusing particularly on archival content related to African Americans and other cultural communities whose “presence and contributions are often marginalized in historical and vernacular culture narratives of the Mountain State.” Her research will inform ongoing and future work of the West Virginia Folklife Program and culminate in a series of multimedia blog posts.
Poster designed by Kin Ship Goods
Emily Hilliard Collection on West Virginia Ballad Singer Phyllis Marks Available via Library of Congress →
Hilliard was awarded a 2016 Henry Reed Fund Award from the American Folklife Center at the Library of Congress for “West Virginia Folklife Presents Ballad Singer Phyllis Marks,” a public programming and documentation project highlighting the career and contributions of the respected octogenarian West Virginia traditional ballad singer Phyllis Marks. The documentation of this September 2016 free public concert is now among the holdings of the Archive of Archive of Folk Culture, American Folklife Center at the Library of Congress. The collection includes audio recording, video recording, digital photographs, concert program, and oversize poster and is available for research and public viewing via the Library of Congress.
Josh and Henry Reed, ca. 1903. Henry Reed, age 19, plays banjo and his older brother Josh plays fiddle. Photograph from the collection of James Reed, reproduced with permission.
West Virginia Folklife Program Receives Henry Reed Fund Award →
The American Folklife Center’s Henry Reed Fund was established in 2004 in honor of old-time fiddler Henry Reed with an initial gift from founding AFC director and fiddler Alan Jabbour. The fund provides small awards to support activities directly involving folk artists, especially when the activities reflect, draw upon, or strengthen the archival collections of the AFC. This year, Henry Reed Funds were awarded to two projects:
Emily Hilliard, State Folklorist at the West Virginia Humanities Council, was awarded funds for “West Virginia Folklife Presents Ballad Singer Phyllis Marks,” a public programming and documentation project highlighting the career and contributions of the respected octogenarian West Virginia traditional ballad singer Phyllis Marks.