Vanishing West Virginia

This photo essay is part of a series exploring the dimensions of daily life in West Virginia, “coal country” as it’s known, where chronic job loss has affected every aspect of life since the industry’s decline began in the 1960s. For generations, communities have grappled with teacher shortages, homelessness, business closures and food insecurity, problems that worsened when the coronavirus struck in March and West Virginians began to see their children go hungry.

Editor’s Note:

F. Brian Ferguson has been photographing in West Virginia for 25 years, mostly for major newspapers like the Charleston Gazette. But like many newspaper photographers, he has a personal project going on the side.

Comprising hundreds of photographs spread across his Zip drives, negative sleeves, CDs and hard drives, “Vanishing West Virginia” is a love letter to Ferguson’s home state and an elegy to a way of life he sees disappearing.         

“Most of the men in my family were coal miners, but my grandpa ran two newspapers – one was a serious paper, and the other was a more literary and humorous paper called The West Virginia Hillbilly,” Ferguson said. “I think I absorbed a lot of his complicated humor and put it in my pictures.”

Ferguson’s pictures recall Robert Frank’s landmark work The Americans, and he says he was influenced by other photographers you’d expect – Danny Lyon, Eugene Smith, Eugene Richards. His pictures, however, dig far deeper than simply mimicking visual styles – they stand on their own as both earnest and deftly observed moments in an often-misunderstood place.  

To see more of Ferguson’s work, please visit fbrianferguson.com

“Roadside ramp sale, Kanawha County.” (Photo by F. Brian Ferguson/GroundTruth)
“Bolt Mountain, Raleigh County.” (Photo by F. Brian Ferguson/GroundTruth)
“Night Shift, McDowell County.” (Photo by F. Brian Ferguson/GroundTruth)
“Bar Owner, Kanawha County.” (Photo by F. Brian Ferguson/GroundTruth)
“Beauty Shop, Kanawha County.” (Photo by F. Brian Ferguson/GroundTruth)
“Prom Date, Mason County.” (Photo by F. Brian Ferguson/GroundTruth)
“Steel Town, West Virginia-Pennsylvania State Line.” (Photo by F. Brian Ferguson/GroundTruth)
“Home Place, Lewis County.” (Photo by F. Brian Ferguson/GroundTruth)
“Black Lung, Raleigh County.” (Photo by F. Brian Ferguson/GroundTruth)
“Church, Kanawha County.” (Photo by F. Brian Ferguson/GroundTruth)
“Single ‘A’ Football, Nicholas County.” (Photo by F. Brian Ferguson/GroundTruth)

Related: Kids in WV are going hungry as state touts summer feeding plan


“Dirt Track Races, Wood County.” (Photo by F. Brian Ferguson/GroundTruth)
“Jesco White, Kanawha County.” (Photo by F. Brian Ferguson/GroundTruth)
“Skate rink, Fayette County.” (Photo by F. Brian Ferguson/GroundTruth)
“The Blue Goose, Raleigh County.” (Photo by F. Brian Ferguson/GroundTruth)
“Mother and Son, Roane County.” (Photo by F. Brian Ferguson/GroundTruth)
“Steel Town, Hancock County.” (Photo by F. Brian Ferguson/GroundTruth)
“Boy, Kanawha County.” (Photo by F. Brian Ferguson/GroundTruth)
“Calf Birthing, Pendleton County.” (Photo by F. Brian Ferguson/GroundTruth)
“Graduating Class, Randolph County.” (Photo by F. Brian Ferguson/GroundTruth)
“War Coffee Shop, McDowell County.” (Photo by F. Brian Ferguson/GroundTruth)