Almost every American city enjoys a magical time in history when all the tumblers of fate, luck, hard work, and good fortune seem to fall into place, and the city enjoys a golden era. The 1940s were just such a time in the city of Bluefield. At the dawn of the decade, the United States was on the verge of entering the greatest war the world has ever known, and the coal that flowed through Norfolk and Western Railway's Bluefield yard was destined to fuel an Allied victory. But there is so much more than war and coal at the heart of Bluefield's story. The 1940s were a time of inspiration for men like Nobel laureate John F. Nash Jr., a time of artistic discovery for men like Joseph Dodd of Bluefield State College, a time of valor and heroism for Congressional Medal of Honor recipient S.Sgt. Junior Spurrier, and a period of success in business, arts, and professional fields for hundreds of Bluefield's sons and daughters.
Almost every American city enjoys a magical time in history when all the tumblers of fate, luck, hard work, and good fortune seem to fall into place, and the city enjoys a golden era. The 1940s were just such a time in the city of Bluefield. At the dawn of the decade, the United States was on the verge of entering the greatest war the world has ever known, and the coal that flowed through Norfolk and Western Railway's Bluefield yard was destined to fuel an Allied victory. But there is so much more than war and coal at the heart of Bluefield's story. The 1940s were a time of inspiration for men like Nobel laureate John F. Nash Jr., a time of artistic discovery for men like Joseph Dodd of Bluefield State College, a time of valor and heroism for Congressional Medal of Honor recipient S.Sgt. Junior Spurrier, and a period of success in business, arts, and professional fields for hundreds of Bluefield's sons and daughters.
Images of America: Bluefield in the 1940s is the seventh regional pictorial history by local newspaperman William R. "Bill" Archer, senior writer at the Bluefield Daily Telegraph.
Title: Archeras new book takes readers back to Bluefield in the
1940s
Author: Charles Ownes
Publisher: Bluefield Daily Telegraph
Date: 2/8/2009
A new publication by the Daily Telegraphas Bill Archer revisits a
magical time in the history of Bluefield.
aBluefield in the 1940s, a which is being released Monday by
Arcadia Publishing, remembers a golden era for Bluefield. From a
time of war and coal, the new book features more than 200 vintage
photographs, including a rare collection of photographs taken by
Ellis Leon Martin during the Heroes Day Parade on July 4, 1945. The
parade honored the late Staff Sgt. Junior Spurrier, who received
the Congressional Medal of Honor during World War II.
aEverybody had made a contribution to the war effort at the time, a
Archer, the Daily Telegraphas Senior Editor, said. aAnd many
families had sacrificed their sons to the success of the war. I
think the people at the time a after three years of total war a
really wanted something to celebrate. Of course the War in Europe
was over by July 4, 1945. Junior Spurrier had received the
Congressional Medal of Honor for his valor earlier that year in
France. It was a relief to a lot of people. It was just a really
special parade. The crowd was estimated at 30,000 people.a
Archer said he came up with the idea of aBluefield in the 1940sa
when working on his last book, aThe Virginian Railroad.a At the
time, Vera Hambrick handed Archer an envelope filled with negatives
that she thought her father, Ellis Leon Martin, had taken at a
political event in Bluefield. When he examined the negatives,
Archer quickly realized they were long-lost photographs of the
Heroes Day Parade. Itwas the first time the veteran newspaperman
had seen so many photographs of the special event.
aIn an instance, I knew what the photographs were, a Archer said.
aSo I started at that point trying to work out some kind of vehicle
that could carry all of this. I think more than just the war years,
it was the combination of the photographs of different people here
at work that Mel Grubb took that really talks a lot about where we
were in that critical time in history. To put the two collections
together, Mel Grubbas 1947 series that was for the Sunset News
Observer, and the Ellis Leon Martin photographs, was incredible.
Many of these have never been seen. A lot of them really havenat
been seen since 1947. Those two collections formed the basis for
the book, but the (Eastern Regional Coal Archives of Bluefieldas
Craft Memorial Library and Dr. Stuart McGehee) came through with
some beautiful pictures of Greer Garson here in 1942.a
Archer said the combination of photographs, including the set David
McNeil came across that Grubb had taken in the 1940s, serve as the
backbone of the new book. Many of the photographs have never been
published before, and some of the photographs from the Meld Grubb
collection show features of life in the 1940s that arenat a part of
modern life.
A few examples of the many unique and rare photographs found in the
new book include a picture of Frank Sinatra in Bluefield prior to a
concert by the Tommy Dorsey Orchestra on May 8, 1941; a photograph
of Charles B. aDutcha Cromer inspecting bottles at the old
Coca-Cola bottling plant on Bluefield Avenue; and a photograph of
Garnett S. aDoca Helton, a serviceman for Appalachian Power
Company, who hadthe unique occupation of going from store to store
throughout the downtown business district turning the outdoor
lighting on each morning.
The new book is Archeras seventh aImages of Americaa publication.
It can be purchased at select locations, including the Bluefield
Daily Telegraph and Hearthside Books in Bluefield. To reserve a
signed copy of Bill Archeras aBluefield in the 1940s, a please
contact the Daily Telegraph at 327-2800.
Archer will hold a book signing for aBluefield in the 1940sa on
Thursday, Feb. 12, from 3 to 6 p.m. at Hearthside Books on Bland
Street in Bluefield. He will hold a second book signing on
Saturday, Mach 7, from 10: a .m. to 12: 30 p.m. at Barnes & Noble
in Christiansburg, Va.
Archer said a number of people are to be thanked for helping with
the new publication, including the late Daily Telegraph Executive
Editor Tom Colley.
aTom is the one who got me initially involved in this, so as far as
Iam concerned he has really had a hand in all of the projects I
did, a Archer said.
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