• Source: Jim Comstock
    • James Franklin Comstock (25 February 1911, Richwood, West Virginia - 22 May 1996, Huntington, West Virginia) was a West Virginia writer, newspaper publisher and humorist. He founded the weekly West Virginia Hillbilly (1957-1980) and compiled a definitive 51-volume encyclopedia of West Virginia history and culture.


      Biography


      After completing high school locally, Comstock graduated from Marshall College (now University) (B.A., English) in 1934. An aspiring journalist, he found himself teaching high school English in his home town from 1938 to 1942. With the outbreak of war, he sought employment in the military industry. Finding the manufacture of gun barrels boring, however, he joined the U.S. Navy as a lieutenant and was assigned to decoding messages on Guam (1944-1946). Returning to civilian life, he worked for a time as a correspondent for the Clarksburg [West Virginia] Exponent Telegram before starting his own weekly newspaper. In 1946 he co-founded The [Richwood] News Leader with Bronson McClung (a former pupil).
      Comstock devoted 20 years (1957-1977) to compiling the West Virginia Heritage Encyclopedia which included original content as well as reprinting long out-of-print material by and about West Virginians. He led a campaign to preserve the house in Hillsboro, West Virginia, where Pearl S. Buck, the Nobel Prize-winning novelist, was born. Comstock assisted with the financing of the rescue of the historic Cass Scenic Railroad. He also started the Mountain State Press to publish books of West Virginia interest.


      = The West Virginia Hillbilly

      =
      In 1957 Comstock and McClung established The West Virginia Hillbilly, which became a celebrated repository of Appalachian folklore, heritage and humor. Comstock characterized his publication as “A newspaper for people who can't read, edited by an editor who can't write”. Comstock’s regular column was christened “The Comstock Lode”. Circulation for the weekly peaked around 30,000 in the 1960s and ‘70s, with many readers subscribing from outside West Virginia. Comstock's West Virginia Heritage Foundation supported the publication and distribution of seven volumes (over six years) of West Virginia Heritage (1967-72) drawn from the periodical, including both reprinted and original material.
      A 2016 tribute published in The Paris Review, asserted that “The Hillbilly wasn’t just a paper—it was an art project, a platform for historic preservation, a conservative wailing wall, and, above all, an exploration of the West Virginian id.” The paper's run ended in 1980.
      Comstock died at St. Mary's Hospital in Huntington, West Virginia at age 85.


      Works


      Pa and Ma and Mister Kennedy (1965)
      Pa and Ma and Fiddlin' Clyde (1965)
      West Virginia Heritage, Compiled from West Virginia Hillbilly material by Jim Comstock and Bronson McClung; Richwood, West Virginia: West Virginia Heritage Foundation.
      Volume 1 (1967)
      Volume 2 (1968)
      Volume 3 (1969)
      Volume 4 (1970)
      Volume 5 (1971)
      Volume 6 (1972)
      Volume 7 (1972)
      Best of "Hillbilly": A Prize Collection of 100-Proof writing from Jim Comstock's "West Virginia Hillbilly" (1969), edited by Otto Whittaker.
      'Ritin' and Railin' by Brooks Pepper (1973; edited by Comstock)
      Good News the Life of Jesus Reported in Newspaper Style (1974)
      West Virginia Heritage Encyclopedia; 51 vol. [Exclusive run of 3,000 sets; never reprinted] (1974-1976).
      Volume 1 – A to Atkinson
      Volume 2 – Atkinson to Black
      Volume 3 – Black, Louis to Bruce, Barton
      Volume 4 – Bruce, C.H.R. to Centennial Catalogue
      Volume 5 – Centennial Catalogue to Coppiniger
      Volume 6 – Copsy, John to Diss Debar
      Volume 7 – Diss Debar to First Sawmill
      Volume 8 – First Sawmill to Garnett, Gen.
      Volume 9 – Garnett, William to Greenbrier County
      Volume 10 – Greenbrier County to Hays Creek
      Volume 11 – Haythe, Ray to Iron Furnace
      Volume 12 – Iron Furnace to Laidly, John
      Volume 13 – Laidley, William Sidney to Mann, Isaac
      Volume 14 – Manning, Andrew Johnson to Military Line
      Volume 15 – Military Telegraph to Morris, Benjamin
      Volume 16 – Morris, Benjamin to Ohio Valley
      Volume 17 – Ohio Valley College to Pocahontas Times
      Volume 18 – Pocahontas Trail to Reuther, Walter
      Volume 19 – Reuther, Walter to Schaffer, Owens
      Volume 20 – Schaie, Klaus Warner to Staats Mill
      Volume 21 – Stacey, Arthur E. to Traubert, Charles Herbert
      Volume 22 – Travel Councils to Werner, Harry Rupert
      Volume 23 – Werner, William Lewis to Women's Reformatory
      Volume 24 – Woo, George to Young, Ivan E
      Volume 25 – Bibliography
      Supplemental series:
      Volume 1 - Hardesty's Monroe, Putnam and Tyler Counties
      Volume 2 – Hardesty's Doddridge, Marion, Upshur, and Wetzel Counties
      Volume 3 - Hardesty's Calhoun, Pocahontas, Braxton and Berkeley Counties
      Volume 4 – Hardesty's Jackson, Kanawha, and Barbour Counties
      Volume 5 - Hardesty's Mason, Pleasants, Lewis, and Roane Counties
      Volume 6 – Hardesty's Harrison, Cabell, Wirt, and Greenbrier Counties
      Volume 7 - Hardesty's Gilmer, Ritchie, Lincoln and Wayne Counties
      Volume 8 - Hardesty's Wood and Jefferson Counties
      Volume 9 – The Soldiery of West Virginia
      Volume 10 – Historical Records Survey, West Virginia
      Volume 11 – West Virginia, A Guide to the Mountain State (1st ed. 1941, Oxford University Press; Writers' Program of the WPA in the State of West Virginia.)
      Volume 12 – The Border Settlers of Northwestern Virginia from 1768-1795 Embracing the Life of Jesse Hughes and Other Noted Scouts of the Great Woods of the Trans-Allegheny, by Lucullus Virgil McWhorter (Part 1)
      Volume 13 – The Border Settlers... (Part 2)
      Volume 14 – Commonplace Book (A collection of articles on diverse topics, from Civil War Gen. Rosecranz to West Virginia theater)
      Volume 15 – A Forrest Hull Sampler
      Volume 16 - Shirley Donnelly Sampler
      Volume 17 - A History of the Valley of Virginia, by Samuel Kercheval
      Volume 18 – History and Government of West Virginia, by Virgil A. Lewis
      Volume 19 – Stories and Verse of West Virginia (Part 1; 1st ed. 1925) by Ella May Turner
      Volume 20 – Porte Crayon Sampler
      Volume 21 – Pages from the Past..., by George W. Summers
      Volume 22 - West Virginia People and Places by Charles Carpenter
      Volume 23 – West Virginia Songbag
      Volume 24 – Stories and Verse of West Virginia (Part 2; companion and homage to Turner's book)
      Volume 25 – West Virginia Women
      Volume 51 – West Virginia Picture Book
      Sixty Years on the Great Kanawha and other Rivers (The Life of Captain Harry White) (1976) by Jim Comstock
      7 Decades: An Autobiography of a Kind (1982)


      Humor


      In 1947, Comstock founded the “University of Hard Knocks”, an honorary society with a mission to recognize people who have made a success of their life without the benefit of higher education. Alderson Broaddus College in Philippi, West Virginia sponsored the organization, which moved its offices to the A-B campus in 1976. The society was dissolved in 2014.
      In 1957, Comstock perpetrated an elaborate hoax involving the use of a captive mountain lion, to convince rival editor Calvin Price of neighboring Pocahontas County that these animals still existed in West Virginia. (After the exposé, he arranged for it to live out its retirement at the French Creek Game Farm, a state-run zoo.)
      In a notorious episode of pranksterism, Comstock once printed an issue of The News Leader using ink admixed with the juice of the ramp, the storied wild onion that abounds in the state in the spring. The intolerable stench at the local post office prompted the postmaster to extract a promise that he would never do it again.
      Comstock embarked upon a facetious political campaign in 1964, running for U.S. Congress as the Republican candidate from the Third District in West Virginia, then an impossibly Democratic stronghold. He opposed “motherhood” among other things, and lost to incumbent John M. Slack Jr., failing even to carry his home precinct.
      The masthead of The West Virginia Hillbilly announced its publication as ‘‘weakly’’.
      Comstock bragged that of Richwood’s 3,000 residents, only 19 maintained Hillbilly subscriptions.
      When a “slick” New York magazine referred to the Hillbilly as a “sophisticated” newspaper, Comstock demanded a retraction.


      External links


      West Virginia & Regional History Center at West Virginia University, Jim Comstock, Newspaper Editor and Collector, Papers


      References

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