Love stories from listeners of Barangay LSFM are featured in this weekly radio program. Listen in as Papa Dudut reads the letter of a "kabarangay" who shares his/her heartfelt experience. A dramatization brings the audience closer to feeling the joy, the pain, the ups and downs of being in love--something that each one of us can relate to.
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A tartalmat a Michael and Carrie Kline, Talking Across the Lines, Carrie Kline, and Talking Across the Lines biztosítja. Az összes podcast-tartalmat, beleértve az epizódokat, grafikákat és podcast-leírásokat, közvetlenül a Michael and Carrie Kline, Talking Across the Lines, Carrie Kline, and Talking Across the Lines vagy a podcast platform partnere tölti fel és biztosítja. Ha úgy gondolja, hogy valaki az Ön engedélye nélkül használja fel a szerzői joggal védett művét, kövesse az itt leírt folyamatot https://hu.player.fm/legal.
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We made it— 300 episodes of This Is Woman’s Work ! And we’re marking this milestone by giving you something that could seriously change the game in your business or career: the skill of pitching yourself effectively. Whether you’re dreaming of being a podcast guest, landing a speaking gig, signing a client, or just asking for what you want with confidence—you’re already pitching yourself, every day. But are you doing it well? In this milestone episode, Nicole breaks down exactly how to pitch yourself to be a podcast guest … and actually hear “yes.” With hundreds of pitches landing in her inbox each month, she shares what makes a guest stand out (or get deleted), the biggest mistakes people make, and why podcast guesting is still one of the most powerful ways to grow your reach, authority, and influence. In This Episode, We Cover: ✅ Why we all need to pitch ourselves—and how to do it without feeling gross ✅ The step-by-step process for landing guest spots on podcasts (and more) ✅ A breakdown of the 3 podcast levels: Practice, Peer, and A-List—and how to approach each ✅ The must-haves of a successful podcast pitch (including real examples) ✅ How to craft a pitch that gets read, gets remembered, and gets results Whether you’re new to pitching or want to level up your game, this episode gives you the exact strategy Nicole and her team use to land guest spots on dozens of podcasts every year. Because your voice deserves to be heard. And the world needs what only you can bring. 🎁 Get the FREE Podcast Pitch Checklist + Additional Information on your Practice Group, Peer Group, and A-List Group Strategies: https://nicolekalil.com/podcast 📥 Download The Podcast Pitch Checklist Here Related Podcast Episodes: Shameless and Strategic: How to Brag About Yourself with Tiffany Houser | 298 How To Write & Publish A Book with Michelle Savage | 279 How To Land Your TED Talk and Skyrocket Your Personal Brand with Ashley Stahl | 250 Share the Love: If you found this episode insightful, please share it with a friend, tag us on social media, and leave a review on your favorite podcast platform! 🔗 Subscribe & Review: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Amazon Music…
Took Off Running: Race and Culture Along the Turnpike
Manage episode 267178822 series 2433209
A tartalmat a Michael and Carrie Kline, Talking Across the Lines, Carrie Kline, and Talking Across the Lines biztosítja. Az összes podcast-tartalmat, beleértve az epizódokat, grafikákat és podcast-leírásokat, közvetlenül a Michael and Carrie Kline, Talking Across the Lines, Carrie Kline, and Talking Across the Lines vagy a podcast platform partnere tölti fel és biztosítja. Ha úgy gondolja, hogy valaki az Ön engedélye nélkül használja fel a szerzői joggal védett művét, kövesse az itt leírt folyamatot https://hu.player.fm/legal.
Took Off Running is part of a series of audio history and musical productions that explore life along the Staunton-Parkersburg Turnpike, an early toll road through the Appalachian Mountains of West Virginia. Featuring first-hand accounts of local residents, this production brings to life voices of the region's inhabitants in a vibrant, fast-moving quilt of stories on race and ethnicity in the 19th and 20th century. Michael and Carrie Kline of Talking Across the Lines scripted and produced this documentary from 90 oral history interviews, seasoned with West Virginia music recorded especially for the series. Executive Producers: Phyllis Baxter and Mary Rayme Recording, Scripting & Audio Production: Michael and Carrie N. Kline Special Assistance: Bob Enoch, David McCain, David Scott, Jim Bailey and Joy Stalnaker
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33 epizódok
Manage episode 267178822 series 2433209
A tartalmat a Michael and Carrie Kline, Talking Across the Lines, Carrie Kline, and Talking Across the Lines biztosítja. Az összes podcast-tartalmat, beleértve az epizódokat, grafikákat és podcast-leírásokat, közvetlenül a Michael and Carrie Kline, Talking Across the Lines, Carrie Kline, and Talking Across the Lines vagy a podcast platform partnere tölti fel és biztosítja. Ha úgy gondolja, hogy valaki az Ön engedélye nélkül használja fel a szerzői joggal védett művét, kövesse az itt leírt folyamatot https://hu.player.fm/legal.
Took Off Running is part of a series of audio history and musical productions that explore life along the Staunton-Parkersburg Turnpike, an early toll road through the Appalachian Mountains of West Virginia. Featuring first-hand accounts of local residents, this production brings to life voices of the region's inhabitants in a vibrant, fast-moving quilt of stories on race and ethnicity in the 19th and 20th century. Michael and Carrie Kline of Talking Across the Lines scripted and produced this documentary from 90 oral history interviews, seasoned with West Virginia music recorded especially for the series. Executive Producers: Phyllis Baxter and Mary Rayme Recording, Scripting & Audio Production: Michael and Carrie N. Kline Special Assistance: Bob Enoch, David McCain, David Scott, Jim Bailey and Joy Stalnaker
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33 epizódok
Minden epizód
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Michael and Carrie Kline, Talking Across the Lines

1 MireyaGeniusEdited4-21-2025 1:00:34
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MireyaGeniusEdited4-21-2025 by Michael and Carrie Kline, Talking Across the Lines
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Michael and Carrie Kline, Talking Across the Lines

1 Bridging the Gaps, an Interview with Farm Manager Mireya Katerina Tsironis Genius 1:00:34
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We present this field interview with Mireya Katrina Tsironis Genius made with Carrie Kline in April of 2025. Now in her early thirties, Mireya Genius is an organic vegetable farm manager in the Connecticut River Valley of western Massachusetts. She traces her involvement in agriculture to her childhood on the Isle of Crete where her parents had settled in a small traditional village with plenty of room for vegetable farming, which soon captivated her with its possibilities. She learned to raise chickens from an elderly half-blind woman, and became watchful of older people. Her pursuit of farming eventually brought her in conflict with old Greek male farmers who found her youthful enthusiasm annoying and her interest in driving a tractor out of the question. So she finished up her studies and looked to settle in other parts of the world before landing in western Massachusetts eight years ago to make a start in commercial farming. Mireya Genius came because here she can more fully express herself. She enjoys working in a group—it makes the time pass—and she was learning new farming practices from fellow workers. “People here in the fields were speaking Spanish,” she recalled.” They called themselves ‘Hispanics’ and knew the ropes. I learned fast. I was white and bi-lingual (Spanish) and assumed to have good leadership skills. So I progressed in my employment goals, even learned to drive a tractor! ‘Here,’ they said. Go ahead.’ No discrimination.” Yet she found people in Massachusetts slow to accept her socially and suffered acute loneliness for a time, often crying in asparagus fields, wondering what she was doing here. She fell in love with the workers she was soon supervising and came to find out the divide she was feeling was widespread. She decided to try to bridge the gaps dogging her work, for instance, that United Statesians in general don’t bother to learn about other people. “They just like to get things like coffee cheap, without knowing how it is produced, or the people who produce it. The same with nameless migrants working in the hot summer sun to grow the vegetables we eat. We don’t even know their names, living situations, social needs, or the threats of deportation that presently haunt them, whether or not they are legally in our valley. Many of them come for medical reasons. They like the quality of farming life.”…
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Michael and Carrie Kline, Talking Across the Lines

1 EyesOnFreedom: Evolving Gifts of Simple Nonviolent Living 1:00:23
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Wally and Juanita Nelson were civil rights activists, peace activists, war tax refusers, subsistence farmers, and advocates for simple living. They were members of groups such as CORE (Congress on Racial Equality), FOR (Fellowship of Reconciliation), and Peacemakers. In western Massachusetts they were founding members of the Greenfield Farmers' Market, the Free Harvest Supper, the Valley Community Land Trust, and Winter Fare. They were recipients of numerous awards during their lifetime, including the Courage of Conscience Award from the Peace Abbey in Sherborn, Mass., the Sacco and Vanzetti Award from Community Church in Boston, and the Local Hero Award from CISA (Community Involved in Sustaining Agriculture) for championing local food and agriculture. (Excerpted from https://www.nelsonhomestead.org) As folklorists, gatherers of oral testimonials and audio producers, we Klines, along with production assistant Nicholas Boyer, produced an hour-long audio tapestry. This is an interweaving of many of the 25 voices we've recorded near and far under the guidance of the Nelson Legacy Project Archival Committee. Each interview averages 90 minutes. We excerpt short portions in order to weave a conversation on the themes of the Nelsons' lives—race, or the one human race, nonviolence, war tax refusal, joy, dance, land trusts and the action around the Kehler-Corner home seizure in Colrain by the IRS, the local food movement and simple living. Most all of our documentaries have music woven throughout. We created a short piece on the Nelsons called You Don't Gotta. You can hear it on the Project website where you can also enjoy a great many other audiovisual pieces and writings featuring the Nelsons.…
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Michael and Carrie Kline, Talking Across the Lines

1 New Lights in the Dawnland 2:01:05
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“New Lights in the Dawnland” Recorded and Produced by Michael Kline, Talking Across the Lines, Sunderland, MA Time 2:00:08 “New Lights in the Dawnland” is a two hour audio documentary based on five individually recorded voices recounting 13,000 years of Indigenous history of Northfield and surrounding areas in Massachusetts and Vermont leading up to the arrival of English colonists in the 17th Century and the impacts of colonialism that followed. Replete with tribal songs, flute and drum interludes and ambient sounds, this conversational telling of the story creates its own imagery, to the considerable satisfaction of those whose voices are interwoven throughout. The five narrators recorded for “New Lights in the Dawnland” spoke from memory and the heart where memory dwells without notes or prior discussions as to the intended content of their testimonials. The five voices belong to old friends who have paid increasing collective attention to their own Indigenous cultures and histories, buttressed by a decade of archaeological research of their homelands and battlefields. It is a study of the confluence of the focused efforts of the five in the service of wider understanding and inclusion – among themselves and non-Indigenous neighbors. This production, then, has it's roots in intertribal memory and legend passed through a multi-generational conduit of oral tradition. Its sources are enriched through spiritual interaction with natural surroundings, as well as, more recently, the surfacing of old letters, diaries and other written colonial records. This production does not purport to be a polished or footnoted, scholarly, historical, rendering of Squakheag's past. Library bookshelves groan with euro-centric studies which have long peddled destructive stereotypes and historical inaccuracies. The response of these narrators is a passionate reaching out in search of balance and reciprocity in the telling of a shared past as a cornerstone to peace and reconciliation. It is dedicated to the life, accomplishments and speedy recovery of Doug Harris and his devoted new wife, Genevieve Frasier.…
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Michael and Carrie Kline, Talking Across the Lines

In honor of the 100th birthday of the late Juanita Nelson, we are posting this 11-minute audio teaser, a sampling of what is to become a longer piece imparting the clear and persuasive ways in which Wally and Juanita Nelson lived their lives. The Nelsons were beloved to hundreds of people. Wally and Juanita, who lived their final three decades in Western Massachusetts, worked a small plot of land, lived without electricity or running water, and actively resisted militarism and oppression, working in community with others. Learn more about them here: https://www.nelsonhomestead.org…
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Michael and Carrie Kline, Talking Across the Lines

1 Indigenous History in Northfield, Massachusetts 1:17:38
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Northfield, Massachusetts' Indigenous Origins This recorded testimonial is the account of an Indigenous resident of Northfield, Massachusetts, Joe Graveline, creating a sense of the town's pre-European history. Graveline's discourse is strongly rooted in archaeological and geological findings right around his own home and fields. He is open to the way the land itself speaks to him in the Connecticut River Valley. Here is the setting for 11,000 years of Indigenous intertribal exploration, settlement, and conquest along the vast waterway, told with animation and intimacy. Indigenous stories and memories have been long suppressed by those who spread out over these stolen lands we call New England. Isn't it the victors who always write the history? The clarity and passion of this account awakened us to new ways of thinking about New England culture and history—from an Indigenous point of view. Local Indigenous people have been reminding us that, “We are still here.” Those who left have in many cases returned. Those who never left are speaking their past, dancing the dances, singing the songs, chanting the chants and reseeding the land and culture with ancient knowledge. A grant from the Northfield Cultural Council, a branch of the Mass Cultural Council kicked off an oral history project to gather local memory about life and times of residents of this special town on the New Hampshire border in western Massachusetts. The 350th Committee stressed the need for an in depth understanding of pre-European settlement of the Town. Massachusetts State Senator Jo Comerford has supported the project and has been particularly concerned with our recording Indigenous narratives. This pleased us and we have been thoroughly enjoying interviewing Joe Graveline and other Indigenous scholars and cultural practitioners. The Northfield 350th Anniversary Oral History project has drawn intense interest from a wide variety of residents and turned up all kinds of profound renderings of the past. Much of the work has been carried out with grit and determination from local volunteers.…
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Michael and Carrie Kline, Talking Across the Lines

1 Brotherhood of the Spirit: A Tale of a 1970s New Age Community 1:05:19
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“Brotherhood of the Spirit:” An Unvarnished Window into New Age Communal Life of the Post-Vietnam Era in Western Massachusetts Recorded by Carrie Nobel Kline and Joan Stoia for the 350th Anniversary of Northfield, Massachusetts Oral History Project in the Fall of 2022. This 65-minute audio recorded narrative offers a moving, compellingly honest account of back-to-the-land, intentional, spiritual, drug-free, homegrown living by members of the “Brotherhood of the Spirit (BOS).” Founded by Michael Metelica in 1969, the nascent tree house gathering was driven by aspirations of simple living and honest dealings. From a rural hangout it soon became the promised land for many alienated, aimless youngsters, eager to embrace drug-free opportunities for collective living and collaborative accomplishments. Our protagonist, Mark Alvin, a current resident of Northfield, ruminates in compelling detail about the “fantastic adventures” of his seven years as a committed community member at a time when, “We thought we were going to save the world.” Mark Alvin found himself in the company of others consumed by desires to make art and music, “cooky, creative, wacky” people attracted to the place, along with a wide variety of misfits, artists, people just out of treatment centers and mental institutions. With all of this formative activity going on around him, tone-deaf Metelica, having the charismatic power of making others do what he wanted, was fixated on becoming a rock star. BOS, which by the early 1980s had acquired houses in other villages, went on to purchase the Shea Theater and surrounding block in Turners Falls, MA as the population of the Brotherhood blossomed to several hundred passionately involved members. Perhaps the most vivid of Alvin's descriptions depict farming operations in the Northfield bottom lands along the Connecticut River involving field crews with scores of young workers whose collective ambitions met all challenges with success and celebration. Reflecting on such a rich experience, Alvin exudes enthusiasm at the opportunity of finally fully sharing his story with people eager to hear it—and getting to tell it in his own way.…
Fiddlin' John Johnson (An 8-minute radio piece from The Home Place Series) Produced by Michael Kline, supported by the Humanities Foundation of WV (1979) John Johnson, born and raised in Clay County, was a towering figure in the circle of legendary West Virginia fiddle players. His father, recognizing the boy's talent as a five year old, invited neighboring and distant fiddlers to come stay for days, even weeks, at a time to share their old tunes with such a willing young student. School was a row boat's pull across the Elk River and a mile's walk along the railroad tracks, a sometimes thing for him. John grew up doing all the hardest kind of work along side all the hardest kind of men. With people dropping by at all hours of the night to steal him away for dances and warm him with locally made refreshment, John developed an early taste for liquor, and, as a raging alcoholic, would ramble all over the southwestern states. When strangers heard him play they would invite him home, put him up and keep him around just for the eerie tunes. But he'd get restless in a few days and ramble on, wherever the winds blew him. He picked up Texas swing licks and every kind of a style he encountered in those twisted years. He pulled a long bow with so much torque it smoked. But I never saw him break a hair. John could play any tune in any key. His music was compelling, seductive, and over powering. To see and hear him play the fiddle, you'd have thought we was a devil incarnate. And in his poetry and art he equated his instrument with ungodly sources. His music and continence offered challenges I'd never met anywhere else. When asked by a BBC film crew about the kinds of occasions that prompted him to play, John answered that he liked best to take his fiddle up on the mountain and “play it for the trees.” What follows is an 8 minute audio portrait of the man and his music. Michael Kline…
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Michael and Carrie Kline, Talking Across the Lines

1 Sing Me Back Home: World Music in Western Massachusetts 1:00:16
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Rick Rees, Michael Hoberman, Carrie and Michael Kline created this radio piece in 1993 for WFCR, Public Radio of Western New England. Michael Kline recorded the interviews and musical sessions that make up this production while serving as folklorist for the Pioneer Valley Folklore Society. With funding the Mass Foundation for the Humanities, we were required to write and read a somewhat analytical-sounding narration that follows an otherwise seamless flow of voices and music, as newer and older groups of immigrants discuss and play examples of a living, changing music, carried from other lands, preserved and evolved in the Connecticut River Valley.…
Remembering Blair Mountain was written and produced by Miranda Brown while interning with Talking Across the Lines. Brown weaves oral history interviews recorded by Michael and Carrie Kline and music from the The Blair Pathways Project, produced by Sara Lynch Thomason. The Klines' interviewees were marching to Blair to commemorate the original march of 1921 and save the location of the original Battle of Blair Mountain was in danger from mountaintop removal mining. As of today it has been preserved. Known as the Redneck Army for their red neckerchiefs, ten thousand miners marched 50 miles in late August to early September of 1921, striving to end to the violence of the mine guard system of Baldwin Felts detectives and political complicity. Please let us know what you think of this production. Thanks!…
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Michael and Carrie Kline, Talking Across the Lines

In this powerful 8-minute program, union organizer and widow from the Mannington/Farmington Mine Disaster tells Michael Kline of the last day she spent with her husband. In 1968, 78 miners needlessly died in a West Virginia coal mining tragedy. For a deeper understanding of what really happened and how it could've been avoided, read The Memo, a chapter in Written in Blood: Courage and Corruption in the Appalachian War of Extraction https://www.folktalk.org/merchandise/books/written-in-blood-courage-and-corruption-in-the-appalachian-war-of-extraction/ Set to the music of coalfield songwriters and performers Jean Ritchie and Hazel Dickens, with a taste of ballroom dance music, this incisive narrative performance brings home searingly the true cost of coal, borne for almost 150 years and still today, by the people of Appalachia.…
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Michael and Carrie Kline, Talking Across the Lines

1 Holding Rugged Ground: The Civil War Along the Staunton-Parkersburg Tpke 1:13:19
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Civil War enthusiasts will be captivated by the unfolding story of the Allegheny Mountain campaigns of early 1861 punctuated by lively West Virginia fiddle tunes and songs, cradled in the ambient sounds of the surrounding country side. Digitally recorded interviews with Pocahontas and Randolph County West Virginia elders detail memories of their families’ first-hand encounters in historic battles and their efforts to carry on daily life amidst the bloody War. The social divisions, passions and violence of the era left deep traces among the citizens of the new war-born state of West Virginia still resonating in recollections of their aging descendants. This production will engage listeners through its action-packed account of the Civil War in western Virginia, told by those who carry the tales forth from earlier times. "Holding Rugged Ground" is the second in a series of seven audio history productions exploring life along the Staunton-Parkersburg Turnpike, an early toll road through the Appalachian Mountains of central West Virginia. Featuring first-hand accounts and remembered family lore of local elders, this production brings to life voices of local inhabitants and historians, to tell a story of the War that no one of them could have mustered alone. Over fifty oral history interviews were recorded and transcribed for the project, providing the grist for the script, and augmented by authentic folk music and sound effects recorded especially for the series. With major funding by a Scenic Byways grant from the Federal Department of Highways and the West Virginia Byways Program of the WV Department of Transportation, the project was made possible by administrative and financial support from the Rich Mountain Battlefield Foundation, the Staunton-Parkersburg Turnpike Alliance and Talking Across the Lines, LLC in Elkins, West Virginia. Eventually the entire series of seven productions will be here on the Talking Across the Lines podcast. Some are already here! To purchase your own CD or the entire series visit https://www.folktalk.org/shop/cds/.…
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Michael and Carrie Kline, Talking Across the Lines

1 Old Virginians And Wildcatters: War, Wealth and Work Along the Pike 1:18:54
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Although these stories, tunes and songs take place along the Staunton-Parkersburg Turnpike in northcentral West Virginia, they could be about many places in rural and small-town America. Part of Michael and Carrie Kline's 100-voice oral history project with 30 more musical performances by people along the historic road, themes in this podcast include the Civil War in western Virginia, the birth of West Virginia in the midst of the bloody Civil War, the origins and progression of the oil and gas industry, told by the people who lived it, along with an insider's view of small town life. This project was initiated by the Staunton-Parkersburg Turnpike Association, located in Beverly, West Virginia.…
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Michael and Carrie Kline, Talking Across the Lines

1 Took Off Running: Race and Culture Along the Turnpike 1:17:20
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Took Off Running is part of a series of audio history and musical productions that explore life along the Staunton-Parkersburg Turnpike, an early toll road through the Appalachian Mountains of West Virginia. Featuring first-hand accounts of local residents, this production brings to life voices of the region's inhabitants in a vibrant, fast-moving quilt of stories on race and ethnicity in the 19th and 20th century. Michael and Carrie Kline of Talking Across the Lines scripted and produced this documentary from 90 oral history interviews, seasoned with West Virginia music recorded especially for the series. Executive Producers: Phyllis Baxter and Mary Rayme Recording, Scripting & Audio Production: Michael and Carrie N. Kline Special Assistance: Bob Enoch, David McCain, David Scott, Jim Bailey and Joy Stalnaker…
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Michael and Carrie Kline, Talking Across the Lines

1 Switchbacks And Wagon Tracks 1:12:02
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Voices of the Staunton-Parkersburg Turnpike is a series of audio history productions that explore life along the Staunton-Parkersburg Turnpike, an early toll road through the Appalachian Mountains of Central West Virginia. Featuring first-hand accounts of local elders, this production brings to life voices of the region’s inhabitants in vibrant stories and music. Over ninety oral histories augmented by musical selections and ambient sound recorded especially for the series. Switchbacks And Wagon Tracks: Building the Staunton-Parkersburg Turnpike takes listeners from Native American experience up to the American Civil War through vivid portrayals by historians and old-timers who remember what their elders told them.…
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