Category Archives: Current Events

Arkansas connection to the Hatfield McCoy feud!!!!

Believe it or not there is an Arkansas connection to the Hatfield McCoy feud. Take a look at this article from 501 Life Magazine of Conway:

Greenbrier family details fact/fiction in Hatfield-McCoy Feud | Print |
by Renee HunterThe Hatfield-McCoy Feud captured the public imagination, resulting in newspaper stories, books and movies.All of these treatments have been inaccurate, sometimes intentionally, much to the dismay of the Hatfield descendents.

The family owns several items that reflect the Hatfield heritage. (Mike Kemp photo)

 
The family owns several items that reflect the Hatfield heritage. (Mike Kemp photo)

A 1975 television movie had the feuders “chasing each other around in the bushes of Southern California; it was so fake,” said William Hatfield Sr. of Greenbrier, grandson of William Anderson “Devil Anse” Hatfield. An interview with Sadie, who was married to Anse’s youngest son, Tennyson, was supposed to be aired in conjunction with the film, but wasn’t because of the Super Bowl. 

William Hatfield Jr. has seen the trailer for an upcoming History Channel show about the feud, and he is afraid this, too, will be filled with inaccuracies. The program will be aired over three nights on Memorial Day weekend. Kevin Costner will play Anse. 

“It looked to me like he’s going to be a ruthless, heartless fellow, but we’ll see how he gets that way,” William Jr. said. “I don’t know who they used as a consultant.”

Anse’s great-granddaughter, Heather Vaillancourt of Greenbrier, says Anse was not ruthless, but was a gentle man who once wrote the president a letter asking for help to end the feud. The letter is now in the National Archives. Anse’s nickname was not for meanness, but rather was because he had the ability to suddenly disappear after an engagement with Union soldiers who said “only the devil could get away that fast.”

“We make him out to be a gentle soul; very hospitable,” William, Sr. said.

“So often, they play up the backward, hillbilly aspect,” said William Jr. One New York Times reporter deliberately posed Anse and his brothers in front of their log hunting cabin, dressed down and with guns in their hands to emphasize this aspect.

In truth, William,Jr. says, the Hatfields were wealthy, owning “over 5,000 acres of good hardwood timber.” 

“They had a house that for that day was a mansion,” he added, and their hunting cabin “was finer than most people’s houses. They were like the Kennedys of West Virginia.” 

The feud began at the end of the Civil War, in which the Hatfields fought for the Confederacy, when a returning Union soldier, Harmon McCoy, was killed by an ex-Confederate home guard called the “Logan County (WV) Wildcats.” Because Anse was the group’s leader, he was blamed for the murder, although he was not there at the time. 

The feud escalated, including incidents over a pig, star-crossed lovers and an election-day killing, in which Anse’s brother, Ellison, was stabbed 26 times and then shot, resulting in a retaliatory multiple shooting. The climax was the burning of a cabin by the Hatfields to smoke out a McCoy who had killed one of theirs, which resulted in several deaths. This last incident caused Kentucky to ask for U.S. Supreme Court intervention to allow the state to extradite and try the offenders. One Hatfield relative was hung, seven received life in prison and the feud abated. The last trial was held in 1901. 

In 2000, the “feud” took a different, more friendly turn when the descendents of the original feuders held a reunion and took the rivalry to a softball field. William Jr.’s photo holding the ball from that game is in the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, N.Y.

“They just killed us because they brought ringers in from Pikesville,” Heather said.

There was also a tug-of-war that the Hatfields lost because they were on the uphill side of Tug Fork, across which the rope was stretched. Heather was pulled into the fork and got drenched.

This time it was all in good fun. The reunions lasted through 2006, and the family has several souvenirs and many fond memories.

William Sr. was born in West Virginia early in the Depression. He and his wife, Marquita, moved to Detroit after their marriage seeking work. For many years, William Sr. worked for the Ford Motor Company as a test driver, and the couple’s two children grew up there. Heather married Bill Vaillancourt, and the couple eventually moved to Greenbrier when Bill took a job with Acxiom. After retirement, Heather’s parents came for a visit on the way back to West Virginia, where they planned to retire. They never made it, but instead settled in Greenbrier to be near their daughter and their son, who lives in Tulsa. 

Today, the feud story draws tourists to the Kentucky-West Virginia area with a museum, a marathon and other related attractions. There is even a 500-plus-mile Hatfield-McCoy Trail System, one of the largest off-highway vehicle trail systems in the world.

“We’re not proud of what happened in the feud,” Heather said, but added that “because they were infamous, we have gotten to know them the way we couldn’t have gotten to know them otherwise.”

And the world has a fascinating – if not always accurate – story. 

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What the Sam Hill is going on? (Phrase came out of Hatfield-McCoy feud)

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Arkansas connection to the Hatfield McCoy feud!!!!

Believe it or not there is an Arkansas connection to the Hatfield McCoy feud. Take a look at this article from 501 Life Magazine of Conway: Greenbrier family details fact/fiction in Hatfield-McCoy Feud | Print | by Renee HunterThe Hatfield-McCoy Feud captured the public imagination, resulting in newspaper stories, books and movies.All of these treatments have been […]

Origin of Hatfield-McCoy feud may have been a fight over a pig

Kevin Costner interview on the set of ” Hatfields and McCoys” ,Romania I have always wondered how the feud got started and it seemed that it started over the ownership of a pig. Below is an interesting article on the Hatfield McCoy fued: Close Me! The Hatfield McCoy Feud Mine Wars The largest armed conflict […]

Hatfield-McCoy Feud on History Channel makes good effort to get it right

Hatfield and McCoys Here is an article from Yahoo on the Hatfield and McCoy film series: Y! Big Story: The real story behind the Hatfields and the McCoys Trending Now – Fri, 1st Jun 2012 09:20 PM Everything you need to know to get up to speed on the story of the day The History […]

Does the History Channel’s “Hatfields and McCoys,” fit the actual history

Kevin Costner interview on the set of ” Hatfields and McCoys” ,Romania ____________ I have really enjoyed watching the film series on the History Channel about this feud. It appears to me that the movie did follow the historical details pretty close. How much of History Channel’s ‘Hatfields and McCoys’ is fiction?   Gloria Goodale […]

Great, great, granddaughter of Devil Anse Hatfield said he came to Christ

The Hatfields and McCoys_ Extended Version – CBN.com Hatfield and McCoys I used to travel to Pikeville, Kentucky on a regular basis and I was amazed at the rugged people that lived in that coalmining area. It is the back drop of the Hatfield and Mccoy feud. However, it was filmed in Europe. I have […]

(Here are some links to posts related to the Civil War film “The Conspirator):

Senator Pryor asks for Spending Cut Suggestions! Here are a few!(Part 34)(The Conspirator Part 26, Boston Corbett, man who shot Booth),

Senator Mark Pryor wants our ideas on how to cut federal spending. Take a look at this video clip below: Senator Pryor has asked us to send our ideas to him at cutspending@pryor.senate.gov and I have done so in the past and will continue to do so in the future. Here are a few more […]

Balanced Budget Amendment the answer? Boozman says yes, Pryor no (Part 20, Milton Friedman’s view is yes)(The Conspirator Part 25, Louis Weichmann)

Ronald Wilson Reagan (Part 78)(1981 Orsini McArthur murder case part 3)(The Conspirator Part 13, Mary Surratt Part D)

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(Here are some posted related to the 1911 Civil War Reunion in Little Rock):

May 16-18, 1911 Confederate Veterans Reunion in Little Rock Pictures and story (Part 7)

Confederate soldier Julius Howell Interview What The south Fought For Confederate soldier Julius Howell talking about his capture and imprisonment at the Union prison camp at Point Lookout, Md. Howell was born in 1846 near the Holy Neck section of Suffolk, in the Holland area. He was the youngest of 16 children, the son of […]

May 16-18, 1911 Confederate Veterans Reunion in Little Rock Pictures and story (Part 6)

The American Civil War Part 1 The Union I really enjoyed the article “REBEL GRAY’S GOLDEN DAYS: In 1911, LR filled to the brim with Confederate veterans,” by Jake Sandlin that ran in the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette on May 15, 2011. It took 81 years before more people to gather in Little Rock for another event (Bill […]

May 16-18, 1911 Confederate Veterans Reunion in Little Rock Pictures and story (Part 5)

Ken Burns discusses his Emmy winning series The Civil War – EMMYTVLEGENDS.ORG I really enjoyed the article “REBEL GRAY’S GOLDEN DAYS: In 1911, LR filled to the brim with Confederate veterans,” by Jake Sandlin that ran in the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette on May 15, 2011. It took 81 years before more people to gather in Little Rock […]

May 16-18, 1911 Confederate Veterans Reunion in Little Rock Pictures and story (Part 3)

Civil war veteran soldier footage, captured between 1913 and 1938 Civil war veteran soldier footage, captured between 1913 and 1938. Our other greatest generation. God bless both sides of this war who both tested and saved our union. _____________________________________________ I really enjoyed the article “REBEL GRAY’S GOLDEN DAYS: In 1911, LR filled to the brim […]

 

Origin of Hatfield-McCoy feud may have been a fight over a pig

Hatfields and McCoys Theatrical Trailer

I have always wondered how the feud got started and it seemed that it started over the ownership of a pig. Below is an interesting article on the Hatfield McCoy fued:

The Hatfield McCoy Feud

Close Me!

The Hatfield McCoy Feud

Mine Wars

  • The largest armed conflict in America since the Civil War.

The Hatfield McCoy Feud

The Hatfield-McCoy feud began in the mountainous Tug River valley. The Tug River separates West Virginia from Kentucky and separated most of the Hatfield and McCoy clans. William Anderson Hatfield was the recognized leader of the Hatfields and went by the nickname of “Devil Anse”. The leader of the McCoys was Randle McCoy.

The first known event linking the Hatfields and McCoys was at the end of the Civil War. Devil Anse fought for the Confederate Army for two years. Then he and some of his family members left the army and returned home. They joined a local Confederate militia known as the Logan Wildcats. Randle McCoy’s brother, Asa Harmon McCoy, was a Union soldier. In 1865 Asa was wounded in battle and came home. While Asa was recuperating, he was murdered. No one was ever charged with the murder but it was rumored that Devil Anse and the Logan Wildcats were involved. Some believe the feud started with this incident but there were no attempts at retaliation by the McCoys and no further conflict between the families for over a decade./p>

Then in the late 1870s, Devil Anse Hatfield got into a land dispute with Randle McCoy’s cousin Perry Cline. Anse won the land dispute and was granted Perry’s entire 5,000 acre plot of land. The McCoys felt that Anse had used his political connections to influence the court’s decision. A few months after the verdict, Randle McCoy accused Anse’s cousin, and best friend, Floyd Hatfield of stealing his hog. A lawsuit was brought against Floyd and the magistrate put together a jury of six McCoys and six Hatfields to hear the case. At the end of the trial one of the McCoys voted with the Hatfields for acquittal. That McCoy worked on Devil Anse’s timber crew and the McCoys claimed he voted with the Hatfields to save his job. As a result, the McCoys felt like they had been cheated again. This heightened ill feelings between the two families and several armed confrontations followed. This is when the violence between the families began in earnest.

Then in 1880, two years after the Hog Trial, events took an unexpected turn. At a community celebration Devil Anse’s son Johnse Hatfield met Randle McCoy’s daughter Roseanna. After spending one day together the couple decided they wanted to get married. Johnse brought Roseanna home with him and Devil Anse allowed them to live together in his house. It has been said that Anse refused to let Johnse marry Roseanna because she was a McCoy but there is also evidence to the contrary. In any event, Roseanna soon became pregnant with Johnse’s baby. Eventually she realized Johnse wasn’t going to marry her and she left the Hatfield home. However, her father refused to take her back in and she went to live with her Aunt Betty. Shortly after moving in with Aunt Betty, Roseanna gave birth to her baby but it died of the measles at eight months of age. Then six months after the baby’s death Johnse married Roseanna’s cousin, Nancy McCoy.

Not long after Johnse’s romantic entanglements another pivotal event in the feud occurred. Devil Anse’s brother Ellison Hatfield got into a fight with three of Randle McCoy’s sons at an election day celebration. One of the McCoys pulled a knife and Ellison was stabbed 27 times and then shot in the back. Anse and a posse intercepted the McCoy brothers as they were being taken to a Kentucky jail and escorted them back to West Virginia. Ellison was still alive and, according to Anse, the three McCoys would live only if Ellison survived. The following day Ellison died. Anse and his followers then transported the McCoy brothers across the river to Kentucky, tied them to several pawpaw trees and shot them. Indictments were issued for Anse and several of his supporters, but for five years no action was taken to extradite them.

Then in 1887 the McCoy family was able to gain influence with the newly elected governor of Kentucky. This resulted in vigorous efforts to extradite Devil Anse and his associates for the murder of Randle McCoy’s three sons. These efforts included a $500 reward for Devil Anse Hatfield’s capture. On January 1, 1888 the Hatfield family decided to retaliate by attacking and burning Randle McCoy’s home in Kentucky. During the raid two of Randle’s children were killed and his wife was seriously injured. This led to the Battle of Grapevine Creek in which several Hatfield supporters were captured or killed. The captured Hatfields were then transported to Pike County Kentucky to await trial.

In September 1888, the Hatfields involved in the raid on Randle McCoy’s home were tried for their crimes. All were sentenced to life in prison except for Ellison Mounts who was hanged the following year. Devil Anse made no attempt to get revenge for the conviction of his family members and this marked the end of the feud.

For more information on these events check out the links below.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hatfield-McCoy_feud
http://www.wvculture.org/history/crime/hatfieldmccoy01.html
http://www.ghat.com/lugar1.htm

Related posts:

What the Sam Hill is going on? (Phrase came out of Hatfield-McCoy feud)

d Added by: Hank Cox   Birth:  Jan. 30, 1844 Morgantown Butler County Kentucky, USA Death:  May 30, 1904 Lexington Fayette County Kentucky, USA Adjutant General of Kentucky: 1887 – 1891. He was assigned to this position on October 1, 1887 and served under Governor Simon Bolivar Buckner.     What in Sam Hill … […]

Arkansas connection to the Hatfield McCoy feud!!!!

Believe it or not there is an Arkansas connection to the Hatfield McCoy feud. Take a look at this article from 501 Life Magazine of Conway: Greenbrier family details fact/fiction in Hatfield-McCoy Feud | Print | by Renee HunterThe Hatfield-McCoy Feud captured the public imagination, resulting in newspaper stories, books and movies.All of these treatments have been […]

Origin of Hatfield-McCoy feud may have been a fight over a pig

Kevin Costner interview on the set of ” Hatfields and McCoys” ,Romania I have always wondered how the feud got started and it seemed that it started over the ownership of a pig. Below is an interesting article on the Hatfield McCoy fued: Close Me! The Hatfield McCoy Feud Mine Wars The largest armed conflict […]

Hatfield-McCoy Feud on History Channel makes good effort to get it right

Hatfield and McCoys Here is an article from Yahoo on the Hatfield and McCoy film series: Y! Big Story: The real story behind the Hatfields and the McCoys Trending Now – Fri, 1st Jun 2012 09:20 PM Everything you need to know to get up to speed on the story of the day The History […]

Does the History Channel’s “Hatfields and McCoys,” fit the actual history

Kevin Costner interview on the set of ” Hatfields and McCoys” ,Romania ____________ I have really enjoyed watching the film series on the History Channel about this feud. It appears to me that the movie did follow the historical details pretty close. How much of History Channel’s ‘Hatfields and McCoys’ is fiction?   Gloria Goodale […]

Great, great, granddaughter of Devil Anse Hatfield said he came to Christ

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(Here are some posted related to the 1911 Civil War Reunion in Little Rock):

May 16-18, 1911 Confederate Veterans Reunion in Little Rock Pictures and story (Part 7)

Confederate soldier Julius Howell Interview What The south Fought For Confederate soldier Julius Howell talking about his capture and imprisonment at the Union prison camp at Point Lookout, Md. Howell was born in 1846 near the Holy Neck section of Suffolk, in the Holland area. He was the youngest of 16 children, the son of […]

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The American Civil War Part 1 The Union I really enjoyed the article “REBEL GRAY’S GOLDEN DAYS: In 1911, LR filled to the brim with Confederate veterans,” by Jake Sandlin that ran in the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette on May 15, 2011. It took 81 years before more people to gather in Little Rock for another event (Bill […]

May 16-18, 1911 Confederate Veterans Reunion in Little Rock Pictures and story (Part 5)

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Civil war veteran soldier footage, captured between 1913 and 1938 Civil war veteran soldier footage, captured between 1913 and 1938. Our other greatest generation. God bless both sides of this war who both tested and saved our union. _____________________________________________ I really enjoyed the article “REBEL GRAY’S GOLDEN DAYS: In 1911, LR filled to the brim […]

Tennessee Football’s 10 Most Heartbreaking Losses, 1989-2007 (The Hogs made the list twice!!) Part 2

Former UT quarterback Peyton Manning, center, is congratulated by head coach Phil Fulmer as his jersey is retired Saturday before the South Carolina game in 2005.

Photo by Saul Young

Former UT quarterback Peyton Manning, center, is congratulated by head coach Phil Fulmer as his jersey is retired Saturday before the South Carolina game in 2005.

The hogs made the list twice:

Tennessee Football’s 10 Most Heartbreaking Losses, 1989-2007

By

(Senior Analyst) on August 12, 2008

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Part one of a two-day piece, where tomorrow we’ll look at something more uplifting…but as the 2008 season closes in, here’s one more look at the past.

You can’t fully appreciate the joy without the heartbreak, and so here’s a painful reminder of what might’ve been: the 10 most heartbreaking losses in the modern era of Tennessee football (we use 1989 as a starting point both because I’m only 26 years old, and because the Vols’ 11-1 SEC Championship season that year served as the modern genesis of the success the Vols have enjoyed in the last two decades).

5. 1999: Arkansas 28 – No. 3 Tennessee 24 (Fayetteville)

Clint Stoerner used all his karma in two seasons, going from the goat of the dramatic ’98 game to the hero in 1999.  The Vols were third in the polls and second in the BCS, on pace to play the winner of Florida/Florida State for the title, and hadn’t lost an SEC game in November since the 1980s.

After the previous season, you knew this game would be tight, but a Travis Henry TD put the Vols up 24-14 in the second half.  The lead wasn’t safe though: Stoerner found Vol nemesis Anthony Lucas on a beautiful throw and catch to put Arkansas ahead 28-24 with under 4:00 to play.

Tee Martin drove the Vols down close, but a fourth down pass into the end zone was incomplete—and Tennessee’s hopes of defending their National Championship were dashed.

4. 1990: No. 1 Notre Dame 34 – No. 9 Tennessee 29 (Knoxville)

Back before National Championships, losing to Florida, or Phillip Fulmer, this game was just about as big as they came in Knoxville.  Notre Dame was still Notre Dame and loaded with talent, but the Vols were very good too.  Tennessee stood toe-to-toe with the number one team in the country, holding a lead in the fourth quarter of an incredibly well-played football game.

Rocket Ishmail simply wouldn’t be contained all day, finally breaking loose to put the Irish ahead.  Notre Dame built their lead to 34-23 before Andy Kelly led a frantic drive downfield for a score.  The two-point conversion failed, but then the Vols recovered the only onside kick I can ever remember them being successful on.

Kelly again drove the Vols in range, and everyone in Neyland Stadium knew we were on the verge of something monumental.  But his final pass was intercepted in the end zone, and Notre Dame held on.

3. 2001: Georgia 26 – No. 6 Tennessee 24 (Knoxville)

After gaining revenge on LSU the previous week, the Vols looked to do the same to Georgia as they jumped on a wounded Dawg team early.  But Georgia held fast and played their way back into the game thanks to a punt return, and as the second half unfolded, this turned into a classic.

Georgia took a 20-17 lead in the fourth quarter, but Casey Clausen and the Vols picked up a critical fourth down conversion to keep a drive alive.  However, Clausen was intercepted, and Georgia needed first downs to ice it.  The Vol defense held behind a roaring Neyland Stadium crowd, giving Tennessee the ball back with a minute to play.

On the best call of Randy Sanders’ career, Travis Stephens took a screen pass 62 yards down the left sideline with 44 seconds to play in one of the loudest moments in Neyland Stadium history.  But after an ill-fated squib kick, freshman David Greene and new head coach Mark Richt wrote their names into the lore of this rivalry, as Tennessee played prevent and Greene picked the Vol D apart.

At the six-yard line with 10 seconds to play, the Dawgs snuck the fullback into the secondary and Greene fired a touchdown pass.  Allow me to just say that you’d never hear John Ward talking about stepping on someone’s face and breaking their noses.

2. 1990: Alabama 9 – No. 3 Tennessee 6 (Knoxville)

I didn’t think this one would ever be topped.  Ranked third and the owners of an unusual 4-0-2 record after tying eventual National Champion Colorado and No. 5 Auburn, the Vols were thinking SEC and National Championship.  Alabama, who’d won four straight against Tennessee at this point, was struggling at 2-3 under new head coach Gene Stallings.

If there was ever a year to not just beat Alabama, but crush them, this was it—and you could tell right away it just wasn’t going to materialize.  Tennessee couldn’t move the ball at all, and when they did, they turned it over soon after.  Alabama wasn’t moving either, but they hung around and hung around.  Greg Burke was asked twice early to kick field goals of more than 50 yards, and he hit one of them.

Late in the contest, with the score tied at 6-6 and Vol fans thinking about a possible third tie in seven games, Tennessee finally got good field position when Alabama was forced to punt from their own end zone and Dale Carter returned it to the 35-yard line.

Burke was called on again from 50 yards, and for Vol fans, the worst that could happen at this point was a tie if he missed—except Alabama blocked the kick, and the ball went flying 20 yards downfield, giving the Crimson Tide a shot at their own field goal.  Phillip Doyle from 47 yards as time expired completed the stunning heartbreak.

1. 2001: No. 21 LSU 31 – No. 2 Tennessee 20 (SEC Championship)

The Vols had survived the heartbreak of No. 3 on this list and put themselves in position to play for the National Championship by beating Florida in Gainesville the week before.  The SEC Championship Game seemed like a detour on the way to the Rose Bowl, as the Vols were 2-0 in their two previous appearances and had already beaten LSU 26-18 early in the year without Donte’ Stallworth.

When the Vols took a 17-7 lead in the second quarter, my friends and I in the Georgia Dome started talking about taking an RV from Knoxville to Pasadena.  Rohan Davey and LaBrandon Toefield had been knocked out of the game.  It was over…but the Vols couldn’t put it away.

LSU came back to tie it behind Matt Mauck.  Then they took the lead after a rare Travis Stephens fumble.  Then the Vols drove to 1st-and-goal at the four, but came away with only a field goal to cut it to 24-20.  But when the Vol D held LSU on the ensuing drive and got the ball back midway through the fourth quarter and started marching downfield, I was sure we were going to win.

Then Donte’ Stallworth caught a pass, turned upfield, and got stripped.  Suddenly the ball was on the turf.  LSU pounced on it—and our championship dreams.  The Tigers would punch it in on 4th-and-goal from the one just for effect to seal our fate.

Tennessee was two quarters away from playing for the National Championship.  We haven’t been that close since.

University of tennessee football Coach Phillip Fulmer signals for a time out during an October 9, 1993 game against Arkansas.

Photo by HEATHER STONE/KNOXVILLE NEWS SENTINEL

University of tennessee football Coach Phillip Fulmer signals for a time out during an October 9, 1993 game against Arkansas.

Hatfield-McCoy Feud on History Channel makes good effort to get it right

Hatfield and McCoys

Here is an article from Yahoo on the Hatfield and McCoy film series:

Y! Big Story: The real story behind the Hatfields and the McCoys
Trending Now – Fri, 1st Jun 2012 09:20 PM
Everything you need to know to get up to speed on the story of the dayThe History Channel made its own history with “Hatfields & McCoys.” The miniseries drew the biggest audience ever for a nonsports event—twice.More than a century later, the storied feud is as much about American mythology as it is a tale of Appalachian blood vengeance. The saga came on the heels of the divisive Civil War, which killed more Americans than any other military engagement and led West Virginia to secede from Confederate Virginia. The hostilities were never just one incident, but escalating grievances that included pig theft, turf arguments, broken romances and murder.

And sometimes, Americans just like to take sides in a feud.

(Related: Inside History Channel’s epic miniseries, “Hatfield & McCoys”)

The real McCoy—spoiler alert: How real was the miniseries? Liberties, as they say, were taken:

Historians and educators were also brought in to vet the story, according to the show’s producers, though writers “took such traditional liberties as compressing characters and the timing of events.” (May 29, Christian Science Monitor)

Then again, the real story will probably never be known: Among other things, talking about oneself wasn’t as popular back then as it is now. The Hatfields, headed by timber merchant William Anderson (aka Devil Anse), and the McCoys, whose patriarch Randolph “Old Randall” McCoy owned land and livestock, lived in Tug Valley within Kentucky and West Virginia. The two families shared kin, which made tracking who was on whose side difficult.

A rough timeline of the blood feud, according to the History Channel, Biography and other sources:
1865: The militia group Logan Wildcats, which include Devil Anse, his uncle Jim Vance and other Hatfields, kills Asa Harmon McCoy, Randolph McCoy’s brother. Since Asa served on the “wrong side” of the Civil War, his death doesn’t start the feud, but animosities may be kindled. 1878: If there’s a beginning, this would be it: Randolph McCoy accuses Devil Anse’s cousin, Floyd Hatfield, of porcine theft. Stealing valuable pigs was a pretty rare and therefore grievous offense in the farming valley. Favorable testimony by Bill Staton—a McCoy married to a Hatfield—clears Floyd. 1880: Two McCoys kill Staton a couple years later. One successfully claims self-defense in a murder trial. The same year, Johnse Hatfield, son of Devil Anse, gets it on with Roseanna McCoy, daughter of Randolph. She stays with the Hatfields, but Johnse dumps the pregnant girlfriend and marries her cousin, Nancy McCoy. (The baby died and a descendant claims Roseanna died of a broken heart before she was 30.) 1882: In August, Randolph McCoy’s three sons fight with Devil Anse’s two brothers and inflict heavy injury on Ellison. The Hatfields take the sons from the authorities. When Ellison Hatfield, stabbed and shot in the back, dies from his wounds, all three brothers, tied to pawpaw bushes, are shot in a hail of bullets. The Hatfields are indicted, but not arrested. 1887: Lawyer Perry Cline convinces the Kentucky governor to get a bounty on the Hatfields’ heads. He also hires bounty hunter “Bad” Frank Phillips. Newspapers cover the feud, publicizing the bounty on their heads. (The University of Kentucky has digitized coverage here.) New Year’s massacre, 1888: Devil Anse’s son Cap and friend Jim Vance ambush the McCoy’s home. Randolph McCoy hides in a pigpen, but son Calvin and daughter Alifair are killed, and wife Sarah is beaten. Within days, bounty hunter Phillips kills Jim Vance and captures nine Hatfields. 1889: The Supreme Court rules that the Hatfields can be tried, and the trial ends with eight Hatfields and friends sentenced to life in prison. One man is hanged. 1892: A railroad comes through Tug Valley, changing the mountainous culture forever into a coal-mining community. 1914: Randolph McCoy, a ferry operator, dies at age 88 from cooking fire injuries. He had lost five out of 16 children to the feud. 1922: Devin Anse Hatfield, 11 years after being baptized, dies of pneumonia at age 73. June 13, 2003: The Hatfields and the McCoys sign a peace agreement.
American law and the Supreme Court: The acrimony wasn’t as lawless as contemporary accounts made it out to be: The clans also battled in court, be it over theft or murder—although they were inclined to disagree with the verdicts with gunfire. Lawyer Cline, a distant cousin to Randolph McCoy, had lost 5,000 acres to his neighbor Devil Anse in court battles over the years. Plans to build a railroad now made that lost Tug Valley property even more valuable, so Cline’s motives for rounding up the Hatfields have been suspected as more a financial grudge than a real penchant for justice. Litigiousness went to the highest court in the land in Mahon v. Justice (1888), when the Hatfields protested their arrest-by-posse, which dragged them across state lines into Kentucky. The case was really about state sovereignty and symbolized a battle between Kentucky and West Virginia.

(Related: The Supreme Court in the Hatfield-McCoy feud)

The Hatfields vs. the McCoys, in social media: Before Team Edward and Team Jacob, there were #teamhatfield and #teammccoy. While some tweets side with the “underdog,” some couldn’t help admire the Hatfield’s “Murder Inc. Style.” Then again, some dismiss a pig as a legitimate instigator—even though in 19th century America, a pig is your livelihood.

Searches about the feud escalated on Yahoo, becoming the most-searched (non-navigational) term in May. People searched online for “battle of grapevine,” “hatfield and mccoys history,” “hatfields and mccoys trails,” “hatfield and mccoys pictures,” “hatfield and mccoys family tree,” “what started the hatfield and mccoy feud.” Sorry, Team McCoy: Hatfields had double the look-ups.

Most popular Hatfields and McCoys (Yahoo! Search)
William Anderson “Devil Anse” Hatfield (played by Kevin Costner) Johnse Hatfield (Matt Barr)—the cad died in April 1922. Randall McCoy (Bill Paxton) Roseanna McCoy (actress Lindsay Pulsipher) has also been trending big) “Bad” Frank Phillips (Andrew Howard) Cotton Top Ellison Mounts (Noel Fisher) Nancy McCoy (Jena Malone) Cap Hatfield (Boyd Holbrook) Perry Cline (Ronan Vibert) Jim Vance (Tom Berenger)
Repeating history: HBO had been the cable kingmaker, but now the History Channel may be able to lay claim to that.

With all the success we have had at HISTORY, we felt strongly for some time that we should own historical drama, and in true HISTORY fashion, we have done it, with — pardon the pun — guns ablazin! (Nancy Dubuc, President & General Manager, HISTORY)

Episodes will air again Saturday June 2 6 p.m.-midnight. You can also catch it online (June 5 for Part 1, June 6 for Part 2 and June 7 for Part 3). The series is already out on DVD.

Hatfield-McCoy Feud on History Channel (ABC News)

Kevin Costner Talks About His ‘Hatfields & McCoys’ Character, ‘Devil’ Anse Hatfield

Bill Paxton Talks About His ‘Hatfields & McCoys’ Character, Randall McCoy

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Does the History Channel’s “Hatfields and McCoys,” fit the actual history

Kevin Costner interview on the set of ” Hatfields and McCoys” ,Romania

____________

I have really enjoyed watching the film series on the History Channel about this feud. It appears to me that the movie did follow the historical details pretty close.

How much of History Channel’s ‘Hatfields and McCoys’ is fiction?

 
Gloria Goodale | The Christian Science Monitor | May 31, 2012

There is something about portraying grimy men shooting one another in the woods that speaks to many actors of a certain, let’s say, experience.

The History Channel’s “Hatfields and McCoys,” a six-hour miniseries about the 19th-century folk legend, airing on the basic cable channel through Wednesday night, is chock full of some of Hollywood’s top frontier-lovin’ hombres. Star Kevin Costner won an Oscar for his Civil-War-era “Dances with Wolves,” and Powers Booth may have set a high-water mark for portraying gritty outlaw life in HBO’s “Deadwood.”

But this is not a feature film or even HBO. This is the History Channel debuting its first scripted series, coming out of the gate with the somewhat lofty goal of illuminating some of history’s lesser-known corners. While most Americans may know the reference to the 19th-century Appalachian blood feud, few know more than the gun-toting, cartoon cowboy characters who shoot at each other and miss.

And so, this largely unfamiliar but profoundly foul-mouthed, violent depiction of frontier justice and family revenge may be just the ticket for a channel trying to shed its somewhat stuffy legacy, says Josh McMullen, chairman of the Government, History, and Criminal Justice Department at Regent University’s School of Undergraduate Studies.

“The History Channel’s ‘Hatfields and McCoys’ is in keeping with the station’s recent trajectory towards popular culture rather than rich, historical analysis,” he says via e-mail, adding that much of the programming on the channel – such as “American Pickersand “Pawn Stars” – is “more akin to reality television than it is to a historical documentary.”

These shows focus on Americana as much as they do on American history, notes Professor McMullen. The History Channel’s “Hatfields and McCoys” continues the theme, as it has been a long-standing American folk legend, he adds.

 

As with any program trying to separate the threads of a little-documented historical period, he says, the difficulty is separating fact from fiction when discussing the famous feud. One major problem anyone faces in attempting to explore history’s overlooked, disenfranchised, or maligned is that often these are individuals with little desire – or little capacity – to tell their own stories. “These were not regions of the country where people were keeping careful track of their own stories,” says Thomas Flagel of the History Department at Columbia State Community College in Franklin, Tenn.

Many participants in this story lived in isolated areas where it would be difficult to trace events accurately, he says. This was not helped by the yellow journalism of the time. If the sketchy events emerging from news accounts as the bodies piled up were not sensational enough, he adds, “newspapers of the day often had no problem with simply making things up.”

Nonetheless, the show’s producers were at pains to point out in press materials that while not actually filmed in Appalachia – the incentives are better in Romania, where it was shot – the miniseries “tries to capture accurately details of the family fight that eventually involved the US Supreme Court, made international headlines, and nearly pushed Kentucky and West Virginia to the brink of war.”

Historians and educators were also brought in to vet the story, according to the show’s producers, though writers “took such traditional liberties as compressing characters and the timing of events.”

How far is too far often depends on whose views are offended, says Bob Thompson, founder of the Bleier Center for Television and Popular Culture at Syracuse University in New York. He points to the ruckus raised over recent programs such as “Game Change,” about the 2008 election, noting that criticism often had as much to do with politics as history. Beyond that, “drama has no obligation to be historically accurate,” he says with a laugh, pointing to such august precedents as Shakespeare’s history plays.

But, notes McMullen, the miniseries also raises larger questions for the History Channel itself. Does the show do justice to its historical claims, he says, “or is it simply content to entertain its viewers?” he asks. With other cable television shows such asGame of Thrones” and “True Blood” pushing the envelope in terms of sex and blood, he says, “it appears that the History Channel is simply following suit.”

The question is, he says, “whether or not the History Channel has a different mission than an HBO or Showtime.” As the Hatfields and McCoys slug it out on the station, “perhaps the History Channel needs to have some of its own internal feuding over its identity.”

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Great, great, granddaughter of Devil Anse Hatfield said he came to Christ

The Hatfields and McCoys_ Extended Version – CBN.com

Hatfield and McCoys

I used to travel to Pikeville, Kentucky on a regular basis and I was amazed at the rugged people that lived in that coalmining area. It is the back drop of the Hatfield and Mccoy feud. However, it was filmed in Europe. I have enjoyed watching the film series on the fued on the History Channel and I wanted to look further at the historical facts and I was surprised at what I found about a spiritual aspect in the story.  Take a look at this below:

Amazing End to the Hatfield-McCoy Feud

Wendy Griffith

CBN News Senior Reporter 

CBN News is a national/international, nonprofit news organization that provides programming by cable, satellite, and the Internet, 24-hours a day. 

Many have heard of the famous Hatfield-McCoy feud, but there’s a part of the story that’s not often told.

Shortly after the Civil War and up until about the turn of the century, the mountains along the West Virginia-Kentucky border were home to the most famous feuding family of all times– the Hatfields and McCoys.

Devil Anse Hatfield, the leader of the Hatfield clan, was the great-great-great uncle of CBN News Senior Reporter Wendy Griffith. Click play to watch her report, as she visited her home state of West Virginia to learn more about this unique heritage.

Although many books have been written on the feud, Jimmy Wolford, a local singing legend and the great nephew of Randolph McCoy–the patriarch of the McCoy clan, was the first to write an entire album of songs on the feud. His colorful lyrics include lines such as, “They were men, who matched the mountains, they were Hatfields and McCoys. They were men, who matched the mountains.they were men, when they were boys.”

He told CBN News how William Anderson Hatfield, the leader of the Hatfield clan, got his nickname “Devil Anse.”

“They said when he was a kid, he was devilish, you know, liked to carry on and play pretty rough at times,” Wolford recalled. “Then others say that during the Civil War he had a nickname. because he was a pretty tough character.”

Hatfield Beginnings

Devil Anse Hatfield was born in a log cabin in 1839, one of 11 children. His playground was the rugged Appalachian Mountains of southern West Virginia. He loved to hunt and was known as one of the best horseman and marksman in the valley. Although he often hunted black bear, in later years, he also kept some as pets.

Despite being illiterate, Devil Anse owned considerable land and ran a successful timber business. He and his wife, Levicy, were busy raising 13 children. Life was good.

Until one day in the fall of 1878, Randolph McCoy, who lived on the Kentucky side of the Tug Fork River, accused Floyd Hatfield, a cousin of Devil Anse, of stealing some of his hogs. The case went to trial and a jury of six Hatfields and six McCoys found Floyd Hatfield innocent.

“They gave the pig back to the Hatfields and all hell broke lose,” Wolford explained.

A Love Story Unfolds

Not long after the pig trial, a McCoy shot to death the juror who had sided with the Hatfields. After that, tensions remained high among the two families, but not for Johnse Hatfield and Roseanne McCoy.

Despite their family feud, the oldest son of Devil Anse and the daughter of Randolf Mccoy fell in love. Roseanne, too afraid to go home, moved in with the Hatfields and became pregnant. But their father’s would not allow them to wed.

So, Roseanne moved in with her aunt and gave birth to a baby girl who later died of measles. To make matter’s worse, only months later, Johnse married Roseanne’s 16-year-old cousin, Nancy McCoy. And although it wasn’t a bullet that killed her, Roseanne died of a broken heart just the same, while still in her 20s.

Two years later, the fighting escalated into one of the bloodiest battles the families had ever seen.

Revenge Turns Deadly

It was a hot summer day in August of 1882 and it was Election Day on Blackberry Creek. Unfortunately, the festivities turned tragic when Ellison Hatfield, Devil Anse’s brother, and three McCoy brothers got into a heated argument.

Armed with knives, the McCoys stabbed Ellison more than 20 times and shot him. They brought him back to an old log cabin bleeding profusely, but still alive.

Sarah McCoy begged for the life of her three sons, but Devil Anse had already made a promise: “If Ellison dies I’m going to kill the McCoy boys.”

Two days after Ellison died, Devil Anse and his posse tied the three McCoy brothers to some paw-paw bushes, blindfolded them, asked if they had any final words and then shot them in retaliation for his brother’s death.

There were several more battles, and as many as 15 lives lost in the feud, including five McCoy children. Some say Randolph McCoy, who spent his later years as a ferry boat captain, never quite recovered from the loss of so many children and died in 1914 at age 88.

But for Devil Anse something dramatic was about to happen that would change his life and perhaps the lives of many generations to come.

A Change for Generations

At the advice of his friend and preacher Dyke Garrett, then 72-year-old Devil Anse went forward at a revival meeting and received Jesus Christ as his Lord and savior. Afterwards, he was baptized in the waters of Island Creek near his homes in Logan.

Wolford recounted the day in song:

“Island Creek was cold when Devil Anse went under, but when that bearded man came to the top, he was shouting and a singing, the rifle fire stopped ringing and the water in Island Creek turned boiling hot.”

A photo from September 1911 shows him on the banks of the river that day surrounded by witnesses. For Garrett, it was a baptism he’d been waiting his whole life to perform.

“Around these parts, they called him Uncle Dyke.they say for the rest of his life after that baptism, he had a little bit of bragging rights, and he would tell people that he was the man who baptized the devil,” feud expert and author Keith Davis said.

He believes the baptism of Devil Anse not only helped officially end the feud, but has impacted generations of Hatfields and other families throughout the region.

“I know many Hatfields that are in church that are committed to Christ and I think that something happened in 1910-1911, that is still going on today,” Davis said.

According to friends and neighbors, Devil Anse spent the last ten years of his life in peace, knowing that he was forgiven, his sins washed away in the cool mountain stream.

His death from pneumonia in Jan. 1921 at the age of 81 got strong media attention, including an article in the New York Times, and his funeral was the largest ever held in Logan county, drawing several thousand people.

They say some of the mourners even bore the name McCoy.

*Originally aired March 20, 2009

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Hatfield and McCoys Here is an article from Yahoo on the Hatfield and McCoy film series: Y! Big Story: The real story behind the Hatfields and the McCoys Trending Now – Fri, 1st Jun 2012 09:20 PM Everything you need to know to get up to speed on the story of the day The History […]

Does the History Channel’s “Hatfields and McCoys,” fit the actual history

Kevin Costner interview on the set of ” Hatfields and McCoys” ,Romania ____________ I have really enjoyed watching the film series on the History Channel about this feud. It appears to me that the movie did follow the historical details pretty close. How much of History Channel’s ‘Hatfields and McCoys’ is fiction?   Gloria Goodale […]

Great, great, granddaughter of Devil Anse Hatfield said he came to Christ

The Hatfields and McCoys_ Extended Version – CBN.com Hatfield and McCoys I used to travel to Pikeville, Kentucky on a regular basis and I was amazed at the rugged people that lived in that coalmining area. It is the back drop of the Hatfield and Mccoy feud. However, it was filmed in Europe. I have […]

(Here are some links to posts related to the Civil War film “The Conspirator):

Senator Pryor asks for Spending Cut Suggestions! Here are a few!(Part 34)(The Conspirator Part 26, Boston Corbett, man who shot Booth),

Senator Mark Pryor wants our ideas on how to cut federal spending. Take a look at this video clip below: Senator Pryor has asked us to send our ideas to him at cutspending@pryor.senate.gov and I have done so in the past and will continue to do so in the future. Here are a few more […]

Balanced Budget Amendment the answer? Boozman says yes, Pryor no (Part 20, Milton Friedman’s view is yes)(The Conspirator Part 25, Louis Weichmann)

Ronald Wilson Reagan (Part 78)(1981 Orsini McArthur murder case part 3)(The Conspirator Part 13, Mary Surratt Part D)

  (Picture from the Ronald Reagan Library) Ronald Reagan with his older brother Neil (Moon) Reagan. (Circa 1912) Second Reagan-Mondale presidential debate 1984 October 21, 1984 The Second Reagan-Mondale Presidential Debate MS. RIDINGS: Good evening from the Municipal Auditorium in Kansas City. I am Dorothy Ridings, the president of the League of Women Voters, the […]

Balanced Budget Amendment the Answer? Pryor says no, Boozman says yes (part 9)(Famous Arkansan, Art Porter Sr.)(Conspirator Part 4)

I survived last night even though there were several tornadoes all through Arkansas last night. America has too many bureaucrats and they are dramatically overpaid. This mini-documentary uses government data to show how federal, state, and local governments are in fiscal trouble in part because of excessive pay for a bloated civil service. Steve Brawner […]

Balanced Budget Amendment the Answer? Pryor says no, Boozman says yes (part 8)(Famous Arkansan, Patsy Montana)(The Conspirator, part 2)

 It is 9:35 pm and we have been hiding from Tornadoes all night and I hope they are finished bothering us for the evening.  Ronald Reagan on Balanced Budget Amendment Steve Brawner in his article “Safer roads and balanced budgets,” Arkansas News Bureau, April 13, 2011, noted: The disagreement is over the solutions — on […]

Senator Pryor asks for Spending Cut Suggestions! Here are a few!(Part 14)(“The Conspirator” movie, part 1)

  Senator Mark Pryor wants our ideas on how to cut federal spending. Take a look at this video clip below: Senator Pryor has asked us to send our ideas to him at cutspending@pryor.senate.gov and I have done so in the past and will continue to do so in the future. Here are a few […]

(Here are some posted related to the 1911 Civil War Reunion in Little Rock):

May 16-18, 1911 Confederate Veterans Reunion in Little Rock Pictures and story (Part 7)

Confederate soldier Julius Howell Interview What The south Fought For Confederate soldier Julius Howell talking about his capture and imprisonment at the Union prison camp at Point Lookout, Md. Howell was born in 1846 near the Holy Neck section of Suffolk, in the Holland area. He was the youngest of 16 children, the son of […]

May 16-18, 1911 Confederate Veterans Reunion in Little Rock Pictures and story (Part 6)

The American Civil War Part 1 The Union I really enjoyed the article “REBEL GRAY’S GOLDEN DAYS: In 1911, LR filled to the brim with Confederate veterans,” by Jake Sandlin that ran in the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette on May 15, 2011. It took 81 years before more people to gather in Little Rock for another event (Bill […]

May 16-18, 1911 Confederate Veterans Reunion in Little Rock Pictures and story (Part 5)

Ken Burns discusses his Emmy winning series The Civil War – EMMYTVLEGENDS.ORG I really enjoyed the article “REBEL GRAY’S GOLDEN DAYS: In 1911, LR filled to the brim with Confederate veterans,” by Jake Sandlin that ran in the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette on May 15, 2011. It took 81 years before more people to gather in Little Rock […]

May 16-18, 1911 Confederate Veterans Reunion in Little Rock Pictures and story (Part 3)

Civil war veteran soldier footage, captured between 1913 and 1938 Civil war veteran soldier footage, captured between 1913 and 1938. Our other greatest generation. God bless both sides of this war who both tested and saved our union. _____________________________________________ I really enjoyed the article “REBEL GRAY’S GOLDEN DAYS: In 1911, LR filled to the brim […]

 

LSU going to drop Arkansas the last week of the season to play Texas A&M instead?

Good to have a big time opponent the last week of the year. There are only two opponents on our schedule that are big time every year and the other one plays in the Iron Bowl at the end of every year. I don’t want to have LSU at the first half of our schedule because you will be making the same mistake that Tennessee makes every year when they front load their schedule with all the tough opponents then end the year in November with Memphis, Vandy, and Kentucky. Sure they get three wins to finish every season but they don’t allow their team time to jell and get better through the year like Arkansas has been doing under Petrino the last few years.

Will the Battle For the Golden Boot be moving? Jeff Long says he's not aware of a change with the annual Arkansas-LSU matchup.
Image by Mark Wagner
Will the Battle For the Golden Boot be moving? Jeff Long says he’s not aware of a change with the annual Arkansas-LSU matchup.

If LSU is replacing Arkansas as its opponent to end the regular season, Jeff Long says he isn’t aware of it.

Long used Twitter to respond to reports that “The Battle For The Boot” might eventually move form its traditional post-Thanksgiving timeslot.

“Hog Fans, I do not know where LSU is getting this information. Have had repeated conversation with SEC Officials and there are no plans as of 6/1/12 to change LSU from our season ending Football game.”

No plans for this year or beyond? It should be noted Long doesn’t specify.

LSU athletic director Joe Alleva has expressed an interest in changing opponents and said the change could come as soon as 2014.

Arkansas and LSU have ended the regular season against each other since 1992 when the Razorbacks joined the SEC. LSU leads the all-time series 12-8, including a 24-point victory last season. From 2005-2010 the average margin of victory was 3.5 points.

Presumably, the Razorbacks would replace the Tigers with another set of Tigers. Missouri will become Arkansas’ permanent cross-division rival in 2014. 

LSU-Arkansas will meet on the Friday after Thanksgiving this year. The game will be shown on CBS and is scheduled for Fayetteville.

Future SEC football schedules in discussion

Arkansas and LSU have met as each other's regular season finale since the Hogs joined the SEC for football in 1992.
Image by Mark Wagner
Arkansas and LSU have met as each other’s regular season finale since the Hogs joined the SEC for football in 1992.
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I am for the 6-1-1 format because I really do think that Tennessee and Alabama have a lot of history in that series and so do Auburn and Georgia in their series.

I admit that none of the other schools have a history in the other series. Miss St v. Kentucy and Ole Miss v Vandy and SC v. Texas A&M and Arkansas v. Missouri are not barnburners with a great history.

I do think that new series like that could turn into great series. For instance, Arkansas is next door to Missouri and could turn into an intense rivalry. In fact, maybe that should be played the last week of the year since the LSU v Arkansas game is no longer going to be the last week of the year after this year according to Arkansas Sports 360.

Scheduling is hot topic at SEC meet

by David Paschall

With two days down and two days remaining at the Southeastern Conference spring meetings, the future football scheduling format continues to be passionately debated.

The only certainty is that Steve Spurrier’s proposal that only division games determine division winners is out.

SEC commissioner Mike Slive described the 6-1-1 model, in which each team plays its six divisional opponents, a permanent foe from the opposite division and a rotating foe from the opposite division, as “the leader in the clubhouse.” LSU officials, however, would like to end their annual matchup against Florida and believe a 6-2 model would be more balanced and would enhance the frequency in which teams from the opposite sides would play.

“Mississippi State is going to play Kentucky every year, and I think that is disproportionate,” Tigers coach Les Miles told reporters Wednesday at the gathering in Destin, Fla. “I’m not for Auburn playing Georgia every year. Again, it’s disproportionate. I think there should be an opportunity to see a greater segment of the conference.”

Said LSU athletic director Joe Alleva: “It’s not because I’m opposed to playing Florida. I just think it creates a competitive inequity. In my opinion, people are voting for their own self-interests, not what is best for the whole league.”

Adopting a 6-2 model would eliminate Alabama playing Tennessee and Auburn playing Georgia on an annual basis. There has been discussion of those four schools using a 6-1-1 format and the other 10 teams going with a 6-2.

“We have looked at that, and there is some real complexities with that,” Slive said. “That is a nice solution if it was available, but like everything else, every time we do something it raises another set of issues, and you have got to balance those against the issues raised by another format.”

Coaches voiced their concerns to their athletic directors Wednesday, and the athletic directors are scheduled to make their recommendation to school presidents Friday.

The league’s basketball counterparts have had a much easier time, proposing an 18-game schedule in which each team would play the other 13 teams at least once. There would be one permanent home-and-home series annually, while the remaining four games would rotate among the other 12 teams.

Among the permanent basketball rivalries would be Tennessee-Vanderbilt, Florida-Kentucky, Alabama-Auburn and Georgia-South Carolina, so Kentucky and Tennessee no longer would play twice in most years.

Contact David Paschall at dpaschall@timesfreepress.com or 423-757-6524.

Top football stadiums in the country (Part 9)

South Carolina D vs Arkansas O 2011

Tennessee ’86 Sugar Bowl Memories by Russ Finley

Uploaded by on Dec 12, 2009

All video footage is copyright of WATE-TV6 and the University of Tennessee, but legally reproduced here in conjunction with Fair Use laws.

Vols feature (1986 win over Miami 35-7 in the USF&G Sugar Bowl) Russ Finley and Russ Hollingsworth

Here is a list of the top football stadiums in the country.

Power Ranking All 124 College Football Stadiums  

By Alex Callos

(Featured Columnist) on April 19, 2012 

When it comes to college football stadiums, for some teams, it is simply not fair. Home-field advantage is a big thing in college football, and some teams have it way more than others.

There are 124 FBS college football teams, and when it comes to the stadiums they play in, they are obviously not all created equal.

There is a monumental difference from the top teams on the list to the bottom teams on the list. Either way, here it is: a complete ranking of the college football stadiums 1-124.

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When I think of South Carolina it makes me think of how good they were last year and still everyone overlooked them. Did you know that #9 South Carolina came into Fayetteville last year to play the #7 Razorbacks but since #1 v #2 were playing at the same time in Alabama that night nobody talked about the Razorback victory.

Tennessee’s coach Johnny Major got his coaching start at Arkansas and he led Tennessee back into the top 10 in 1985 with a 35-7 Sugar Bowl victory over top ranked Miami.

64. Sun Life Stadium: Miami (FL) Hurricanes
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Sun Life Stadium is probably more widely known as being home to the Miami Dolphins, and also the Orange Bowl.

The Miami Hurricanes also call this place home. It has been around since 1987 and seats 76,500.

The atmosphere here is average as best, and the stadium is kind of located in a not-so-great residential area.

Still, this is Miami, so the weather is nice, and the place can get loud at times.

 

63. Memorial Stadium: Illinois Fighting Illini

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Memorial Stadium is another of those old facilities with bleacher seating.

It was built in 1923 and seats 62,872. The Fighting Illini have not been too good in recent years, but the stadium is usually packed with a sea of orange.

The surrounding area is great, but everything inside is average and on the lower end of the scale as far as Big Ten goes.

 

62. Raymond James Stadium: South Florida Bulls

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Raymond James Stadium is an excellent place to watch and NFL game. As far as college goes, though, it is average.

Built in 1998 for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, this stadium is very new compared to other college fields.

It seats 66,321, and there is not a bad seat in the house. It has an open feel to it so visitors can enjoy the nice Tampa weather.

Overall, not a bad place; just not with as much of a college atmosphere as other stadiums.

 

61. Floyd Casey Stadium: Baylor Bears

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Floyd Casey Stadium was built in 1950 with a seating capacity of 50,000.

Perhaps the best aspect about the older stadium is the fans. They fill up the place and bring quite an atmosphere to the stadium.

It has been renovated multiple times, as recently as 2004, and that is keeping it up to date and in the middle of this list.

 

60. Romney Stadium: Utah State Aggies

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Built in 1968, this stadium only has a seating capacity of 25,513, but what sets this stadium apart from many others is the beautiful surrounding area.

There are mountains in the background, making this a perfect place to come for a late-afternoon game as the sun sets.

The atmosphere inside is not bad as well, and the isolated town of Logan makes for a nice place to watch a game.

 

59. Gerald J. Ford Stadium: SMU Mustangs

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This horseshoe shaped stadium was built in 2000 with a seating capacity of 32,000.

The stadium is actually located right in downtown Dallas and has the atmosphere of a more eastern campus than those in the south.

One of the standout aspects of this stadium is the SMU band known as the “Hub of SMU Spirit.”

 

58. BB&T Field: Wake Forest Demon Deacons

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There are not a lot of tiny stadiums in the country with an atmosphere quite like the 31,500-seat BB&T Stadium.

Even though it is small in size, with such an excellent atmosphere, this stadium built in 1968 cracks the top 60 on the list.

All of the features of the stadium are updated, and it has a newer feel even though it is nearly 50 years old.

Certainly one of the most unique in the ACC.

 

57. Falcon Stadium: Air Force Falcons

Falcon-stadium-400_original_display_image

Even though it may not look like it, this stadium seats 46,692. It was built in 1962 and has the most amazing backdrop of any college football stadium.

While Utah State has quite a background outside of their stadium, the Rocky Mountains surrounding Falcon Stadium are simply superb.

The stadium is 6,620 feet above sea-level, making it the second-highest of all the stadiums. There is a lot to see in and around the stadium here that makes the experience something to remember.

 

56. Folsom Field: Colorado Buffaloes

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Located in the middle of the beautiful campus of Colorado, Folsom Stadium is one of the older facilities in the country, having been around since 1924. 

It seats 53,750 and has gone through a few improvements and expansions over the years, allowing it to stay updated.

There are big-screen televisions on each end of the field, something a lot of stadiums do not have. A six-story press box has also recently been added.

 

55. Williams-Brice Stadium: South Carolina Gamecocks

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Williams-Brice Stadium is one of the larger stadiums in the country, with a seating capacity of 80,250. Built in 1934, it is also relatively old as far as stadiums are concerned.

There is a lot to experience here outside of the stadium before, during and after the game.

As one of the 20 largest stadiums in the country, this place can get a little loud, and while it is not one of the top stadiums in the SEC, there is a lot here to enjoy on a Saturday afternoon.

President Obama praises Pat Summitt

I have tried my best to point out President Obama’s political and economic shortcomings but I have to give him credit for doing this today.

President Barack Obama awards Pat Summitt, former women's college basketball head coach, the Presidential Medal of Freedom in the East Room of the White House, Tuesday, May 29, 2012, in Washington. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

Photo by AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster

President Barack Obama awards Pat Summitt, former women’s college basketball head coach, the Presidential Medal of Freedom in the East Room of the White House, Tuesday, May 29, 2012, in Washington. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

Obama hails Pat Summitt as role model in medal ceremony

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama paid tribute today to former Tennessee Lady Vols Coach Pat Summitt, presenting her with the nation’s highest civilian honor, the Presidential Medal of Freedom.

At a White House ceremony this afternoon, Obama reflected on Summitt’s legendary career at Tennessee, her status as a role model to the young women she coached, and her tenacity in confronting the health problem that led to her retirement last spring.

“Anyone feeling sorry for Pat will find themselves on the receiving end of that famous glare,” Obama said.

Summitt was among more than a dozen political and cultural legends to receive the medal. The award is given to individuals “who have made especially meritorious contributions to the security or national interests of the United States, to world peace, or to cultural or other significant public or private endeavors.”

Tennessee head coach Pat Summitt raises her arm in celebration, after Tennessee defeated Stanford 64-48 for the NCAA National Championship at the St. Pete Time's Forum in Tampa, FL on April 8, 2008.<br /><br />
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<p>Photo by <a title=Saul Young

Tennessee head coach Pat Summitt raises her arm in celebration, after Tennessee defeated Stanford 64-48 for the NCAA National Championship at the St. Pete Time’s Forum in Tampa, FL on April 8, 2008.

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Summitt, 59, stepped down as the University of Tennessee women’s head basketball coach in April, just eight months after disclosing that she has been diagnosed with early-onset dementia, Alzheimer’s type.

Her remarkable, 38-year career included 1,098 victories and eight national championships. She was named NCAA Coach of the Year eight times and has been a member of the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame since 1999. She now holds the position of head coach emeritus at UT.

Besides Summitt, others receiving the Presidential Medal of Freedom include former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright; singer and songwriter Bob Dylan; astronaut John Glenn; novelist Toni Morrison; Israeli President Shimon Peres; and retired U.S. Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens.

Tennessee coach Pat Summitt, left, shakes hand with Connecticut coach Geno Auriemma before an NCAA college basketball game in Knoxville, Tenn., on Jan. 7, 2006. Tennessee won, 89-80.

Photo by Wade Payne

Tennessee coach Pat Summitt, left, shakes hand with Connecticut coach Geno Auriemma before an NCAA college basketball game in Knoxville, Tenn., on Jan. 7, 2006. Tennessee won, 89-80.

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More details as they develop online and in Wednesday’s News Sentinel.

Tennessee's coach Pat Summitt, left, reacts with her team as they pull ahead in the final minutes against Connecticut to win 68-67, in Hartford, Conn., Saturday, January, 8, 2005.

Photo by Steve Miller, Associated Press

Tennessee’s coach Pat Summitt, left, reacts with her team as they pull ahead in the final minutes against Connecticut to win 68-67, in Hartford, Conn., Saturday, January, 8, 2005.

President Barack Obama looks to Pat Summitt, former women's college basketball head coach, as he awards her the Presidential Medal of Freedom in the East Room of the White House, Tuesday, May 29, 2012, in Washington. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

AP

President Barack Obama looks to Pat Summitt, former women’s college basketball head coach, as he awards her the Presidential Medal of Freedom in the East Room of the White House, Tuesday, May 29, 2012, in Washington. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

President Barack Obama awards the Medal of Freedom to former basketball coach Pat Summitt during a ceremony in the East Room of the White House in Washington, Tuesday, May 29, 2012. The Medal of Freedom is the nation's highest civilian honor. It's presented to individuals who have made especially meritorious contributions to the national interests of the United States, to world peace or to other significant endeavors. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

AP

President Barack Obama awards the Medal of Freedom to former basketball coach Pat Summitt during a ceremony in the East Room of the White House in Washington, Tuesday, May 29, 2012. The Medal of Freedom is the nation’s highest civilian honor. It’s presented to individuals who have made especially meritorious contributions to the national interests of the United States, to world peace or to other significant endeavors. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

Pat Summitt, former women's college basketball head coach, talks with Bob Dylan after they received the Presidential Medal of Freedom in the East Room of the White House, Tuesday, May 29, 2012, in Washington. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

AP

Pat Summitt, former women’s college basketball head coach, talks with Bob Dylan after they received the Presidential Medal of Freedom in the East Room of the White House, Tuesday, May 29, 2012, in Washington. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

Pat Summitt, former women's college basketball head coach, looks on as musician Bob Dylan, right, and former Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens shake hands after they received the Presidential Medal of Freedom in the East Room of the White House, Tuesday, May 29, 2012, in Washington. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

AP

Pat Summitt, former women’s college basketball head coach, looks on as musician Bob Dylan, right, and former Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens shake hands after they received the Presidential Medal of Freedom in the East Room of the White House, Tuesday, May 29, 2012, in Washington. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)