William Hughie Ellis Gravesite
Introduction
Text-to-speech Audio
William Hughie Ellis is buried in the Maston Conley Cemetery in Chapmanville, WV. The cemetery sits on a knoll above present day Corridor G and is accessible only via a private gated road. Hughie came from a musical family and is the brother of Logan County's Aunt Jenny Wilson, who is well-known for her banjo playing and singing.
Images
Hughie Ellis and son Joe Ellis play in Cleveland
Headstone of William Hughie Ellis
Story about Hughie Ellis
Backstory and Context
Text-to-speech Audio
When West Virginia University professor Patrick Gainer recorded William Hughie Ellis of Logan County in 1959, he sang and played the banjo, cracked jokes, regaled the small audience in the room with his ghost stories and humorous tall tales and said that he could play two hundred and sixty-eight different banjo tunes. And when asked if he ever played the fiddle he said “I used to play a right smart fiddle.”
William Hughie Ellis was born sometime between 1883 and 1887 (accounts and documents vary) at Henlawson, Logan County, on the farm his parents owned in what is now Chief Logan State Park. And he was raised there “right down at the head of Snap Creek” that flows into the Guyandotte River. We know of him and his music chiefly because he was an elder brother to Aunt Jennie Wilson, the well-known Logan County banjo player; his style is quite similar to hers. The Gainer tape is the only known recording of Mr. Ellis. In that recording he played in both clawhammer and finger-picking styles; the tunes he played included If I Were a Gambler, and the fiddle tune/breakdown Fly Around My Pretty Little Miss, which he calls My Blue-Eyed Daisy. After playing Cripple Creek, he said that he had “danced that a thousand times.”
Mr. Ellis also spoke briefly about the kinds of work people did in his younger years. Coal mining took hold in Logan County in 1904 but in 1910 he was a laborer in a lumber camp and when interviewed by Gainer he remembered those years in which timbering was still a dominant industry in West Virginia. And so he spoke of digging for ginseng, cutting timber, running log rafts, and working on the boats that pushed the rafts down river.
He seemed to relish telling of his experiences making molasses from the cane he grew, beginning at the age of seventeen. He said that “people bragged on” the molasses he made and he’d “let neighbors and friends all gang up in there and eat molasses and have a big time,” when no doubt he’d play music and they’d all dance.
In 1910 his family still had the farm and he apparently lived there at the time he was working at a nearby lumber camp, but by 1917 he had moved to Kitchen and was working as a miner for the Guyandotte Coal Company. In 1920 he listed his occupation as laborer in the Chapmanville mines but by 1930 he had left mining and noted that he was a farmer working on his own land. In 1940 he was serving as a Justice of the Peace in Chapmanville.
Mr. Ellis died on 2 February 1972 and was buried at the Maston Conley Family Cemetery at Chapmanville. Above his name on the headstone is a banjo. [See photo below.]
—Gloria Goodwin Raheja, February 2021, with musical commentary and additional information from Chris Haddox via conversations with Hughie's son, Danny Ellis, in February, 2022.
Finding Hughie's Grave
While many of the cemeteries in this project require some effort to find and visit, the Maston Conley cemetery--where Hughie is at rest--is nearly an in-town cemetery. It is situated up on a hill in Chapmanville, WV, above the four lane highway known as Corridor G, and just a stone's throw from the big Chapmanville school complex, numerous houses, and the Evans Funeral Home. As we learned, the road leading up to the cemetery is gated and locked as it leads to a private residence at the top of the wooded hill. Fortunately, access was easily attained after speaking with a nice gentleman at Evans Funeral home. He opened the gate and allowed us to drive up to visit the cemetery and in short order we found Hughie's grave. As referenced in the biography above, we do have a recording of Hughie talking with an audience where he references playing Cripple Creek quite often, so a little banjo rendition of that tune seemed an appropriate offering!
Go with us to Hughie's grave for a little banjo tune!
In the video below, I butcher the name of the cemetery a bit in the introduction, saying Conley Maston/Matson. Turns out that Maston Conley is one of the folks buried in the cemetery. Civil War buffs will find this interesting because of Maston's Confederate solider status. Interestingly, the gentleman who opened the gate for us referred to the cemetery as the Matheny Cemetery, and there is a Howard D. Mathena buried here.
Listen to Hughie regale an audience with stories and banjo tunes.
The setting for this 1959 conversation between Hughie Ellis and West Virginia University Professor, Dr. Patrick Gainer, is unknown. I initially thought it might have been at the WV State Folk Festival in Glenville, WV, but the archives there have no records of Hughie Ellis having ever attended. Given that Hughie says in the recording that "this is about as far from home as I've ever been," and "you people up here probably don't believe everything I'm saying," I'm guessing that Gainer may have arranged for Hughie to come to Morgantown, where Gainer was a professor at WVU at the time.
Sources
-Gloria Goodwin Raheja’s research for her book Logan County Blues: Frank Hutchison in the Sonic Landscape of the Appalachian Coalfields.
-Patrick Gainer Collection, A&M 3003, Tape 119 Side 2. West Virginia University Library, West Virginia and Regional History Center.
-Chris Haddox conversations with Danny Ellis, February, 2022
Danny Ellis, collected from the Cleveland Press, August 15, 1969
Chris Haddox 2021
Danny Ellis, collected from the Cleveland Press, August 15, 1969