Episodios

  • Buried In Appalachia | Swift's Silver Mine and The Abraham Smith Treasure
    Apr 11 2026

    In this episode of Roots & Shadows: The Real Appalachia, we explore two lost treasure stories rooted deep in the mountains of Appalachia, both tied to real places, real history, and mysteries that have never been fully solved.

    The first story takes us into one of the most well-known legends in Appalachian history: the lost silver mine of Jonathan Swift. Said to have been discovered in the mid-1700s, Swift and his men reportedly mined and smelted large amounts of silver somewhere in the mountains, returning multiple times to work the site. He left behind journals filled with directions, references to river forks, mountain gaps, rock houses, and hidden landmarks that people have been trying to follow for over 250 years. While many have searched in Kentucky, some clues suggest the story may belong closer to Southwest Virginia and East Tennessee, where real evidence of silver deposits has been found.

    The second story brings us to Saltville, Virginia, during the Civil War, a place where the most valuable resource wasn’t gold, but salt. By 1864, Saltville had become one of the most important industrial sites in the Confederacy, producing massive amounts of salt used to preserve food and sustain the war effort. Because of that, it became a target. Union forces raided the area, battles were fought, and by the end of the year, the salt works were destroyed.

    It’s in that moment of uncertainty and chaos that the story of Abraham Smith takes shape.

    According to local accounts, Smith buried a large amount of gold, often described as around $60,000, somewhere between Allison’s Gap and Saltville to keep it from being seized. What happened next depends on how the story has been passed down. Some say he never made it back. Others say the location was shared but never recovered. There are even versions that speak of a deathbed confession pointing to the treasure’s location, though no official record has ever confirmed it.

    Despite years of searching, no one has ever been able to prove where it was hidden, or if it’s still there at all.

    From hidden silver mines to buried Civil War gold, this episode of Roots & Shadows looks at the line between history and folklore, and the stories that continue to live in the mountains long after the truth has been lost.

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    29 m
  • America's Lost State | The Original 14th
    Apr 4 2026

    In the late 1700s, long before Tennessee became a state and while much of Appalachia was still considered the western frontier, something began taking shape in the mountains that most people have never heard about. It wasn’t just talk or frustration with distant government. It was a real attempt to build something new.

    This is the story of the State of Franklin, a lost chapter of American history that nearly became the 14th state of the United States.

    At a time when Virginia and North Carolina stretched across vast and rugged land, the people living in what is now Northeast Tennessee and Southwest Virginia found themselves far removed from the decisions being made in places like Richmond. Travel took days. Communication took weeks. And when problems came, whether it was conflict, lawlessness, or survival on the frontier, help didn’t always come at all.

    Leaders like John Sevier and Arthur Campbell began to see that the needs of the people in these mountains were different from those back east. They believed a new state could offer better representation, stronger protection, and a government that actually understood the realities of life on the frontier. What followed was something few people realize ever truly existed.

    Franklin wasn’t just an idea. It had its own government, courts, elections, and leadership. People lived under it. Taxes were collected. Laws were enforced. For a brief moment in time, it functioned as a real state.

    And then it came down to a vote.

    When the proposal reached Congress under the Articles of Confederation, the State of Franklin fell just one vote short of becoming an official part of the United States. One vote separated what was from what might have been.

    But the story doesn’t end there.

    As North Carolina moved to reassert control, tensions grew. Two governments operated in the same place at the same time. Neighbors were forced to choose sides. And what started as a political disagreement slowly became something much more personal. The conflict between John Sevier and John Tipton would bring that divide into the open, showing just how fragile the situation had become.

    Even in Virginia, the movement raised alarms. Arthur Campbell’s support for a new western state drew the attention of Governor Patrick Henry, who saw the effort as a threat to the stability of the state. Laws were passed, lines were drawn, and what had once been an idea rooted in distance and necessity was now treated as something far more serious.

    In the end, the State of Franklin didn’t fall in a single moment. It faded. Support weakened, pressure mounted, and the structure that had once held together began to slip away.

    But for a time, it was real.

    This episode of Roots & Shadows explores the forgotten story of America’s lost state, the people who tried to build it, and the question that still lingers today, who gets to decide what a place becomes?

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    28 m
  • When The Deserters Came To Town |The Hubert J. Treacy Case
    Mar 28 2026

    In 1942, something happened in the mountains of Southwest Virginia that most people today have never heard about… but for a short time, it shook a quiet Appalachian town in a way that couldn’t be ignored.

    It started with two soldiers, Charles Joseph Lovett and James Edward Testerman, men who had already stepped outside the lines of military order. What followed was a chain of decisions that carried them out of the structured world of the Army and into something far more uncertain. After going absent without leave, the two men made their way through Virginia, committing robbery along the way, eventually setting their sights on a small Appalachian town.

    By the time they reached Abingdon, they weren’t just passing through.

    They were looking for something, a connection, a place, maybe even someone they thought might help them. But what they found instead was a situation that escalated quickly and violently, pulling federal law enforcement directly into the mountains.

    When agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation stepped in, the encounter didn’t end in a quiet arrest. It ended in gunfire.

    Hubert J. Treacy was killed.

    Charles L. Tignor was wounded.

    And for a brief moment in time, the kind of violence most people associated with distant cities found its way into the hills of Appalachia.

    What followed was a manhunt, a capture, and a case that moved quickly through the federal system. Lovett and Testerman were taken from the region and placed into custody, their story shifting from something people witnessed firsthand… to something recorded in court documents, prison records, and federal files.

    In the end, both men were sent to serve life sentences at one of the most infamous prisons in American history, Alcatraz Federal Penitentiary, known to many simply as “The Rock,” where some of the most dangerous inmates in the country were held.

    But here in Appalachia, the memory of what happened didn’t completely fade.

    Because stories like this don’t just disappear.

    They settle into the land.

    They become part of the place.

    And over time, they move from something people saw… to something people remember.

    In this episode of Roots & Shadows: The Real Appalachia Podcast, we step back into 1942 and walk through the events that brought federal agents into a quiet mountain town, the violence that followed, and the lasting mark it left behind.

    Because around here, the roots run deep, in the land, in the people, and in the history we carry.

    And the shadows…

    Well, sometimes they come from the moments we’d rather forget.

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    28 m
  • The Thing At The End Of The Holler | Appalachian Folkore
    Mar 21 2026

    In the mountains of Southwest Virginia, there are places people don’t talk about unless you ask, and even then, you might not get much more than a short answer and a look that tells you not to press it any further.

    This week on Roots & Shadows: The Real Appalachia Podcast, we travel to a quiet holler in Rich Valley, where stories have been passed down for decades about something that has been seen there, something that doesn’t quite make sense, and something that, according to the people who’ve experienced it, has never really left.

    What started in the 1970s with two men standing at the top of the holler quickly turned into something more. Both of them saw the same thing in broad daylight, a white object moving across the road, up the bank, and toward a house, and not long after, tragedy followed. Years later, that account would still be told the same way, with no change in the details.

    Over time, other stories began to surface. A group of sisters who grew up in and around that holler described seeing something from time to time, not every visit, but often enough that it stopped feeling like coincidence. They spoke about a tall white figure, something shaped like a person but not quite right, and more than anything, they described the feeling that came before it. A sense that something wasn’t right, something that made the hair stand up on the back of their necks before they ever saw anything at all.

    There were other moments too. Strange sounds with no clear source. A heavy impact against the side of a house that left no mark behind. And a belief passed down in that area that if something falls and you don’t go find out what it was, it can bring bad luck.

    At one point, someone from outside the community came into that holler believing something was tied to the land itself, something that had been there for a long time and never left. What came of that is still unclear, but the stories didn’t stop.

    Not everyone who has spent time there has experienced anything unusual. Some people have lived in that holler for years and never once seen or felt anything they couldn’t explain. And that matters, because in a place like this, both of those things can be true at the same time.

    And even now, those stories continue.

    In 2020, a young girl who had grown up hearing about that holler went looking for it, expecting nothing more than a good story. But what she saw that night matched descriptions that had been passed down for generations, down to the smallest detail, something she had never been told before.

    Because in Appalachia, you’ll always find both.

    The roots, in the land, the families, and the history that’s been carried forward for generations.

    And the shadows, in the stories people remember, the things they’ve seen, and the moments they can’t quite explain.

    And sometimes, the truth sits somewhere in between.

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    26 m
  • The House Beside The Road | The Preston - Crockett House
    Mar 14 2026

    An old brick house beside Interstate 81 in Seven Mile Ford, Virginia holds nearly two centuries of Appalachian history, mystery, and folklore.
    From a Wilderness Road tavern and a cave discovery to the unusual life of writer Lucy Crockett, the Preston House carries stories that refuse to disappear.If you drive north on Interstate 81 through Smyth County, Virginia, just before the Seven Mile Ford exit, there’s an old brick house sitting quietly back from the road. Most people pass it without noticing. But for nearly two centuries, that house has carried stories that refuse to disappear.

    In this episode of Roots & Shadows: The Real Appalachia, host Kevin Austin explores the history and folklore surrounding the Preston House, sometimes called the Herondon House, one of the most intriguing historic homes in Southwest Virginia.

    Long before the interstate existed, this land sat along the Wilderness Road, one of the most important migration routes in early American history. Settlers heading west into Kentucky and Tennessee passed through this valley with wagons, livestock, and everything they owned. Taverns and inns appeared along the road where weary travelers could rest for the night.

    According to local tradition, an early log tavern once stood on the very ground where the brick house now sits. Stories passed down around Seven Mile Ford suggest that some travelers who stopped there were never seen again.

    In 1892, a discovery nearby only deepened the mystery. A small cave was found containing the remains of twenty-one skeletons, including one described as a woman holding a child. While no one ever proved where the bones came from, the discovery became part of the long folklore surrounding the property.

    The brick house that stands there today was built in 1842 by John Montgomery Preston, part of a prominent Virginia family connected through marriage to Revolutionary War hero William Campbell of nearby Aspenvale. For generations the house served as a gathering place for the Preston family and held an extraordinary collection of historic papers, including letters from George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, James Monroe, and Patrick Henry. Some of these documents were later preserved by the Library of Congress and the Draper Manuscript Collection.

    But the most unusual chapter in the story of the house may belong to the last woman who lived there.

    After World War II, the property became home to Lucy Crockett, a writer and illustrator who published nine books between 1939 and 1963. One of her novels, The Magnificent Bastards, was adapted into the 1956 film The Proud and the Profane, starring William Holden and Deborah Kerr.

    Lucy called the house Herondon, and over the years she became one of the most memorable figures in the area. Locals remember seeing her drive into town in an old military jeep, often carrying a revolver on her hip.

    In the early 1960s she reportedly sent letters to officials in Washington, including FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, claiming she had information about a possible threat to the U.S. government. Family members later recalled that federal agents visited the property in 1963 to investigate the letters.

    Today the future of the old house is uncertain. The property was sold in May 2022 with plans for commercial development nearby, and the fate of the historic structure remains unclear.

    For now, the old house still stands beside the road near Seven Mile Ford, holding nearly two hundred years of Appalachian history, mystery, and memory.

    Because in Appalachia, some places don’t just sit beside the road.

    They collect stories.

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    33 m
  • The Knock That Went Unanswered | The Mickey Davidson Case
    Mar 8 2026

    In June of 1990, a quiet Appalachian town in southwest Virginia was shaken by a crime that many people here still remember decades later. In the small community of Saltville, nestled in Smyth County, life moved at the steady rhythm familiar to so many mountain towns. Families had lived there for generations. Neighbors knew one another. Children rode bikes through the neighborhoods during long summer evenings while the mountains settled into the quiet sounds of another Appalachian night.

    But on June 14, 1990, that quiet rhythm was interrupted by a phone call to the Smyth County Sheriff’s Office.

    The caller didn’t report a crime. They didn’t describe violence or ask for help. They simply suggested that deputies might want to check on a house in town.

    When officers arrived at the home in Saltville’s Government Plant neighborhood, they walked up the short sidewalk and knocked on the front door.

    No one answered.

    What began as a routine welfare check quickly turned into one of the most disturbing crime scenes the community had seen in nearly twenty years. Inside the home, investigators discovered the bodies of 36-year-old Linda and her two daughters, fourteen-year-old Melissa and thirteen-year-old Amanda.

    The man responsible was Linda’s husband, Mickey Wayne Davidson.

    In this episode of Roots & Shadows: The Real Appalachia, we take a careful look back at the events surrounding the 1990 Saltville murders — a crime that left an enduring mark on this Appalachian community. Through court records, historical reporting, and conversations with people connected to the case, this episode explores what happened during those two days in June and how the people of Saltville struggled to come to terms with a tragedy that unfolded inside an ordinary home.

    We examine the anonymous phone call that first brought deputies to the house, the investigation that followed, and the confession that revealed what had happened inside.

    The story also explores the legal case that followed in Smyth County Circuit Court. After being charged with three counts of capital murder, Davidson chose to plead guilty rather than face a full trial. During sentencing, he refused to present a defense and attempted to waive his automatic appeals, telling the courts he believed he deserved the punishment he received.

    The case moved through the Virginia court system before ending on October 19, 1995, when Davidson was executed by lethal injection at Greensville Correctional Center.

    But the impact of what happened in that house in Saltville didn’t end with the court proceedings.

    In small Appalachian towns, tragedies like this don’t simply fade into history. They become part of the memory of a place, stories shared on front porches, in school hallways, and around kitchen tables where people still remember the victims and the lives they were living before everything changed.

    The Knock That Went Unanswered is not a story meant to sensationalize violence. It is a reflection on how a quiet Appalachian community responds when tragedy arrives at its doorstep, and how the roots of a place endure long after the shadows have passed.

    In this episode of Roots & Shadows, we return to Saltville, Virginia, to a quiet neighborhood, a house on a small street, and a knock on the door that went unanswered.

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    31 m
  • The Name They Carried | The Melungeons of Appalachia
    Mar 1 2026

    In the mountains of Appalachia, some families carried a name that set them apart. Melungeon.

    For generations in Southwest Virginia, and East Tennessee Melungeon families lived in the space between racial categories. In court records they were labeled “free persons of color.” In census rolls they were marked inconsistently. As racial classification laws hardened in the late 1700s and early 1800s, identity in the mountains became less about ancestry and more about survival.

    This episode of Roots & Shadows: The Real Appalachia explores the documented history of the Melungeon's of Appalachia, focusing on communities in Hawkins County, Tennessee, the Vardy settlement, Newman’s Ridge, and parts of Southwest Virginia near the Virginia -Tennessee border. We examine early land grants, tax lists, and voting disputes that show how families navigated changing racial laws in colonial Virginia and early Tennessee statehood.

    Who were the Melungeons? Were they of mixed European, African, and Native ancestry, as many historians now suggest? Were the long-circulating stories of Portuguese or Turkish descent attempts to claim a safer identity in a society structured by racial hierarchy? Why did so many families settle along isolated Appalachian ridges and hollows where distance offered protection from scrutiny?

    We walk through documented court cases involving property rights, military service, and challenges to voting eligibility. We explore how miscegenation laws and Virginia’s evolving racial statutes reshaped the legal landscape, forcing families into categories that did not reflect lived reality. The story of the Melungeons is not simply folklore. It is woven into the legal, social, and economic history of Appalachia.

    This episode also includes insight from Heather Andolina, President of the Melungeon Heritage Association, offering perspective on how Melungeon identity is understood today, how descendants are reclaiming their history, and why careful research matters when separating myth from documented record.

    The Melungeons were not a mystery tribe hidden in the hills. They were farmers, laborers, Civil War soldiers, church members, and neighbors. They built homes along remote ridges like Newman’s Ridge and in communities like Vardy. Some blended quietly into broader Appalachian society over time. Others carried family stories forward, even when public acknowledgment carried risk.

    In the twentieth century, scholars revisited the history. In the twenty-first century, DNA ancestry testing reopened conversations many families once avoided. For some descendants, genetic results confirmed oral tradition linking European, African, and Native lines. For others, the results complicated long-held narratives. What remains consistent is that identity in Appalachia has never been simple.

    This episode explores Melungeon history, Appalachian racial classification laws, Southwest Virginia settlement patterns, Hawkins County court records, the Vardy community, and the enduring question of belonging in a region shaped by both isolation and resilience.

    Because in these mountains, a name could protect you, define you, or follow you. And sometimes the story of who you are is shaped as much by the laws written about you as by the bloodlines you carry.


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    37 m
  • The Woman No One Looked For | The Legend Of The Creekfield Woman | Appalachian Folklore
    Feb 22 2026

    In far southwestern Virginia, near the Tennessee border, the small mountain community of Taylors Valley carries one of Washington County’s most enduring ghost stories, the Legend of the Creekfield Woman.


    Taylors Valley sits just outside Damascus, Virginia, along what is now the Virginia Creeper Trail. Long before hikers and cyclists passed through the valley, the area was shaped by farming communities, Civil War memory, and later the arrival of the Virginia and North Carolina Railroad. It is in that setting that the Creekfield Woman legend took root.


    Several versions of the story exist. Some speak of hidden treasure buried in the hills. Others mention outlaws passing quietly through the valley. But the version most often repeated in Southwest Virginia ties the legend directly to the American Civil War.


    According to local tradition, a young woman believed her husband had been killed in battle during the 1860s. News traveled slowly through Appalachian communities at the time. Months passed. Grief settled into daily life. Then, unexpectedly, the husband returned home.


    What happened next depends on who is telling the story. Some accounts describe a confrontation born of confusion and mistrust. Others suggest tragedy unfolded in a moment of panic. Nearly every version ends the same way. The woman disappears, and her story never resolves publicly. No official record clearly confirms her fate. What remains is oral history.


    Decades later, when the Virginia and North Carolina Railroad carved its way through Taylors Valley in the late nineteenth century, railroad workers began reporting unusual sightings along the tracks. A woman dressed in white. Long dark hair. A lantern in her hand. Walking the rail line before daylight. Always near the wooded stretches and low water crossings.


    When the railroad ceased operation and the corridor became the Virginia Creeper Trail, the sightings did not vanish. They shifted. Locals and visitors near Damascus, Virginia have described unexplained encounters near waterfalls and remote sections of the trail. The setting evolved from rail line to recreational path, but the story endured.


    The Creekfield Woman has become part of Washington County folklore, woven into Appalachian storytelling traditions where history and memory overlap. Unlike documented crimes or industrial disasters, this legend survives through repetition rather than paperwork. It is passed along on porches, at kitchen tables, and beside campfires. Details change. The core image remains.


    In this episode of Roots and Shadows: The Real Appalachia, we explore the Civil War version of the Creekfield Woman legend and examine how Appalachian folklore grows from real geography. Taylors Valley is a real place. Damascus, Virginia is a real town. The Virginia Creeper Trail follows the path of a documented railroad. The Civil War left lasting scars across Southwest Virginia. Folklore often takes shape where historical uncertainty leaves space.


    We separate documented regional history from oral tradition and consider why certain stories persist for generations. What makes a Civil War era legend endure in a specific Appalachian valley? Why do sightings attach themselves to railroads, river crossings, and wooded bends in the trail?


    The Legend of the Creekfield Woman stands at the intersection of Appalachian ghost stories, Civil War memory, and the cultural landscape of Southwest Virginia. It reflects how communities preserve unresolved moments through narrative rather than record.


    Because in the mountains of Appalachia, not every story ends with documentation. Some remain part of the place itself, carried forward by those who walk the same ground and remember what they were told.

    🎵 Music Credit

    “Creekfield Woman” performed by Martha Spencer.

    Written by Yates Brothers.

    Used with permission.

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    35 m