N.C. town with deep kinship to hold fundraiser

Mountain Faith has played the Darrington Bluegrass Festival. On Friday, the band will take the stage at an outdoor concert to raise money for people in the Oso area. It’s happening far from Darrington, but in a place that shares a deep kinship with the Snohomish County town.

That place is Sylva, N.C. It’s a mountain town that over many decades sent hundreds of its sons and daughters out west to the Darrington area to find work and a better life.

Two Western Carolina University history professors have studied that migration. They have visited Darrington, and know families with loved ones in both places.

“The connections are really, really interesting,” said Rob Ferguson, an assistant professor of history at the university in Cullowhee, N.C.

Ferguson has been to the Darrington Bluegrass Festival three times since 2003. There, he interviewed “tar heels” who moved out in the ’50s. “When they talk about home, they’re talking about North Carolina,” he said.

In news coverage of the monster mudslide, Ferguson noticed how often Darrington’s rugged independence was voiced — an attitude that “we take care of our own.”

“We were inspired to do something,” Ferguson said. With his colleague Scott Philyaw, an associate history professor and director of Western Carolina University’s Mountain Heritage Center, Ferguson and one of the musicians organized Friday’s concert. The show and Sylva’s ties to the mudslide area were featured in a recent article in The Sylva Herald.

The name of the concert — “The Circle is Unbroken: A Benefit for Oso, Washington, from Western North Carolina” — suggests strong ties between the distant communities, and also their shared musical traditions. “Will the circle be unbroken, by and by Lord by and by” are lyrics to a hymn that was rewritten by the Carter Family, a traditional folk group.

At the concert in Sylva’s Bridge Park, Mountain Faith will be joined by another bluegrass band, the Boys of Tuckasegee. Scott Norris, a Mountain Faith musician, is a history graduate student at Western Carolina University. Donations will be sent to an Oso mudslide relief fund at Coastal Community Bank.

Music led Ferguson to discover family bonds between Jackson County, N.C., and the Darrington area. His master’s thesis focused partly on the Queen family, an Appalachian mountain music dynasty. “Through researching this family, I found out they had a lot of family in Washington,” he said.

Philyaw, once Ferguson’s professor, has done extensive research on migration from the Sylva area to Skagit County and Darrington. North Carolinians came in waves, and not all were loggers.

“In our Sylva Herald, we routinely have obituaries for people who had gone out there in the 1940s and ’50s,” Philyaw said. Loggers who came in the mid-20th century weren’t the first to leave home.

“The first came from western North Carolina in the 1880s, mainly to the Skagit River valley,” Philyaw said. “One was a merchant from Bryson City.” The name of that North Carolina town is echoed in Darrington, which has a Bryson Road and families with that surname.

Migration before 1900 included dairy farmers and business people. An article in a Sylva newspaper in the early part of the century “was lamenting that our best people were leaving and going to Washington,” Philyaw said.

“Washington had just become a state. There was lots of land available, and this area was in an economic downturn,” he said. And the Northwest’s rain and wooded mountains were much like home. By 1909, Philyaw said, a tar heel picnic was being held in Sedro-Woolley.

By the 1930s, North Carolina logging was in serious decline. “Washington was needing more and more people, and we had more out-of-work loggers,” Philyaw said.

Another wave of migration in the 1940s and ’50s solidified the Darrington-Sylva ties. “Forests around here needed time to regrow, so a lot of loggers ended up going out to Washington,” Ferguson said. During that time, he said, Darrington resident G.W. Clayton wrote a monthly column of Darrington news that was published in The Sylva Herald.

“Darrington was a thriving logging community,” Ferguson said. Clayton would write that Darrington “needs more tar heels. He acted like a booster.”

In Darrington, “hard-working folks were asked to recruit more hard-working folks,” Ferguson said. “They wrote home to their brothers, cousins and friends. You go where you know people.”

Stunned by the mudslide and the loss of so many lives, Ferguson said “it’s really unbelievable.” His fondest memory of the area is from the summer of 2006. “My wife and I sort of fell in love on a road trip out to Darrington. We went to the music festival. And we swam in the river.”

Philyaw said when they began planning the concert, they considered an indoor venue. “We’re in our rainy season,” he said. “But it suddenly hit us — rain isn’t stopping what the people are doing out there. We won’t let it stop us. Now the forecast says the sun is supposed to shine.”

Julie Muhlstein: 425-339-3460; jmuhlstein@heraldnet.com.

Music in N.C.

“The Circle is Unbroken: A Benefit for Oso, Washington, from Western North Carolina,” a concert in Sylva, N.C., to help people affected by the Oso mudslide, will feature two bands, Mountain Faith and the Boys of Tuckasegee. It’s set for 7-9 p.m. Friday at the Bridge Park Pavilion, 76 Railroad Ave., Sylva, N.C. Donations will be sent to Coastal Community Bank in Darrington. Donate online at: www.coastalbank.com/notice-details.html

Or mail donations to: North Counties Relief Fund, c/o Coastal Community Bank, P.O. Box 90, Darrington, WA 98241

Talk to us

> Give us your news tips.

> Send us a letter to the editor.

> More Herald contact information.

More in Local News

Boeing firefighters union members and supporters hold an informational picket at Airport Road and Kasch Park Road on Monday, April 29, 2024 in Everett, Washington. (Annie Barker / The Herald)
Biden weighs in on Boeing lockout of firefighters in Everett, elsewhere

On Thursday, the president expressed support for the firefighters, saying he was “concerned” Boeing had locked them out over the weekend.

Everett officer Curtis Bafus answers an elderly woman’s phone. (Screen shot from @dawid.outdoor's TikTok video)
Everett officer catches phone scammer in the act, goes viral on TikTok

Everett Police Chief John DeRousse said it was unclear when the video with 1.5 million views was taken, saying it could be “years old.”

Construction occurs at 16104 Cascadian Way in Bothell, Washington on Tuesday, May 7, 2024. (Annie Barker / The Herald)
What Snohomish County ZIP codes have seen biggest jumps in home value?

Mill Creek, for one. As interest rates remain high and supplies are low, buyers could have trouble in today’s housing market.

Everett mayor Cassie Franklin, left, former Everett City Council member Scott Murphy
Former Everett council member announces run for Everett mayor

Scott Murphy says the city is “worse off than we were six years ago” when Mayor Cassie Franklin took office. She’s up for re-election next year.

The Marysville School District office on Thursday, Aug. 31, 2023 in Marysville, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
State: Marysville school plan ‘does not comply,’ must be fixed by Wednesday

In a letter, the state superintendent’s office outlined concerns with the work the district has done so far — and warned of more oversight.

Bothell
Bellingham driver sentenced for street-racing crash that killed Bothell man

Addison J. Parker, 28, died in the crash in September 2021. The driver got nearly six years in prison last month.

Everett
Charges dismissed for Everett man accused of ramming Yakima police gates

A judge last week deemed Jose Guadalupe Mendez incompetent to stand trial in the June 2023 incident.

Amazon workers wrap up pallets of orders for shipment at the new PAE2 Amazon Fulfillment Center on Thursday, Sept. 14, 2023, in Arlington, Washington. (Ryan Berry / The Herald)
Amazon to open new satellite internet manufacturing center in Everett

The 184,000-square-foot Amazon facility with 200 employees will support Project Kuiper, the company’s broadband internet network.

Washington Attorney General Bob Ferguson speaks at the Snohomish & Island County Labor Council champions dinner on Tuesday, Oct. 10, 2023 in Everett, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Bob Ferguson gets two Bob Fergusons to exit governor’s race

Attorney General Ferguson vowed to see those who share his name prosecuted if they didn’t drop out.

The nose of the 500th 787 Dreamliner at the assembly plant in Everett on Wednesday morning on September 21, 2016. (Kevin Clark / The Herald)
Ex-Boeing engineer, sidelined after a 787 critique, defends troubled plane

Dueling narratives emerged as Boeing’s credibility is near an all-time low, leaving industry observers and the public at a loss as to the risk.

A gas station at the intersection of 41st Street and Rucker Avenue advertises diesel for more than $5 a gallon and unleaded for more than $4.70 a gallon on Friday, May 10, 2024 in Everett, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
As gas prices near $5 in Everett, who has the best deal around?

For some, it’s good to drive an electric vehicle these days. For the rest of us, we’re scouting for the cheapest pumps — and looking at north Snohomish County.

Police respond to a wrong way crash Thursday night on Highway 525 in Lynnwood after a police chase. (Photo provided by Washington State Department of Transportation)
Charges: Man ‘snapped,’ kidnapped woman before fatal crash on Highway 525

Robert Rowland, 37, became violent when he learned his partner was going into treatment for substance abuse, according to new charges.

Support local journalism

If you value local news, make a gift now to support the trusted journalism you get in The Daily Herald. Donations processed in this system are not tax deductible.