Search Results

1. Technician using Recording Equipment at the Home of West Virginia University Professor Louis W. Chappell

2. Recording Equipment Used by West Virginia University Professor Louis W. Chappell

Display is set up in his home in Virginia.

3. Sound Equipment Used by West Virginia University Professor Louis W. Chappell to Record Folk Music

4. West Virginia University Professor Dr. Louis W. Chappell's Home in Madison Heights, Virginia

5. Album of Folk Music Recorded by Dr. Louis W. Chappell, West Virginia University

6. One of the Disks Used by Dr. Louis W. Chappell to Record Folk Music, West Virginia University

7. Turntable Used by West Virginia University Professor Louis W. Chappell to Record Folk Music

8. Sound Equipment Used by West Virginia University Professon Louis W. Chappell to Record Folk Music

Parsons and Cottrill (possibly spelled Cottrell) are from Orma, Calhoun County, W. Va.

9. Phoebe Parsons and Her Brother Noah Cottrill at Old Time Music Festival, Chloe, W. Va.

10. Fiddle Players at the Pocahontas County Fair

Paris Hammons, the father of fiddler Edden Hammons, and his family are the subjects of a Library of Congress publication, "The Hammons Family: Traditions of a West Virginia Family and Friends". The phase, "Howdy Fellers", a favorite greeting of Paris Hammons, is written on the front of the photograph.

11. Paris Hammons of Pocahontas County, W. Va.

Paris Hammons, left and Ed Richardson, right, were hunting buddies. Paris Hammons, the father of fiddler, Edden Hammons, and his family were the subjects of a Library of Congress publication titled, "The Hammons Family: Traditions of a West Virginia Family and Friends".

12. Paris Hammons and Ed Richardson, Marlinton, Pocahontas County, W. Va