The Hatfield–McCoy Feud involved two American families from the West Virginia–Kentucky area along the Tug Fork of the Big Sandy River from 1863 to 1891. The Hatfields of West Virginia were led by William Anderson "Devil Anse" Hatfield, while the McCoys of Kentucky were under the leadership of Randolph "Ole Ran'l" McCoy. Those involved in the feud were descended from Joseph Hatfield and William McCoy (born c. 1750). The feud has entered the American folklore lexicon as a metonym for any bitterly feuding rival parties.
The McCoy family
lived primarily on the Kentucky side
of the Tug Fork; the Hatfields lived mostly on the West Virginia side. The majority of the Hatfields, although
living in Mingo County (then part of
Logan County), fought for the Confederacy in the American Civil War;
most McCoys also fought for the Confederates, except Asa Harmon McCoy, who fought for the
Union. The first real violence in the feud was the death of Asa as he returned
from the war, murdered by a group of Confederate
Home Guards called the Logan
Wildcats. Devil Anse Hatfield
was a suspect at first but was later confirmed to have been sick at home at
the time of the murder. It was widely believed that his uncle, Jim Vance, a member of the Wildcats, committed the murder.
The Hatfields
were more affluent and had many more political connections than the McCoys. Anse's timbering operation was
a source of wealth for his family, while the McCoys were more of a lower-middle-class family. Ole Ran'l owned a
300-acre (120 ha) farm. Both families had also been involved in the
manufacturing and selling of illegal moonshine, a popular commodity at the
time.
Feud
Civil War
Asa Harmon McCoy
joined the 45th Kentucky Infantry on
October 20, 1863. According to his Compiled
Service Records, he was "captured
by Rebels" on December 5, 1863, and was released four months later to
a Union hospital in Maryland. At the time of his capture,
he was recovering from a gunshot wound to the chest. During the early months of
the Civil War, Asa joined a company
of the Pike County Home Guards, under
the command of Uriah Runyon, and it
is thought he sustained the wound while serving in this unit. William Francis also led a company of Pike County Guards in 1862, a group
of which attacked and shot Mose Christian
Cline, a friend of Devil Anse
Hatfield. Although Cline survived his wounds, Anse vowed to retaliate
against the responsible parties. Sometime in 1863, a group of Confederate Home Guards ambushed and
killed Francis as he was leaving his house, and Anse took credit for the deed.
Runyon later joined the 39th Kentucky
Infantry and was killed on May 7, 1864, in Pike County, Kentucky. His Compiled
Service Records say "Killed by
Rebels".
On muster rolls beginning on May 6, 1864, Asa is reported in
a Lexington hospital, suffering from
a leg fracture. Beginning in December 1864, the 45th Kentucky Infantry began mustering its companies out of
service. Asa's Company E was
mustered out on December 24, 1864, in Ashland.
He was killed near his home on January 7, 1865, just thirteen days after
leaving the Union Army. A group of Confederate guerrillas took credit for
the killing and his wife's pension application states that he was "killed by Rebels". There are
no existing records about his death and no warrants were issued in
connection with the murder. McCoy
family tradition points to James "Jim" Vance, an uncle of
Anse and a member of a West Virginia
militia group, as the culprit.
Escalation
The second recorded instance of violence in the feud
occurred thirteen years later, in 1878, after a dispute about the ownership of
a hog: Floyd Hatfield, a cousin of
Anse's, owned the hog, but Randolph
McCoy claimed it was his, saying that the notches on the pig's ears were McCoy, not Hatfield, marks. The matter was taken to the local Justice of the Peace, Anderson "Preacher Anse" Hatfield,
who ruled in favor of the Hatfields
by the testimony of Bill Staton, a
relative of both families. In June 1880, Staton was killed by two McCoy brothers, Sam and Paris, who were
later acquitted on the grounds of self-defense.
The feud escalated after Roseanna McCoy entered a relationship with Devil Anse's son Johnson,
known as "Johnse" (spelled "Jonce" in some sources),
leaving her family to live with the Hatfields
in West Virginia. Roseanna
eventually returned to the McCoys,
but when the couple tried to resume their relationship, Johnse was arrested by
the McCoys on outstanding Kentucky bootlegging warrants. He was
freed from McCoy's custody only when
Roseanna made a desperate midnight ride to alert Anse, who organized a rescue
party. The Hatfield party surrounded
the McCoys and took Johnse back to West Virginia before he could be
transported the next day to the county seat in Pikeville, Kentucky. Despite what was seen as her betrayal of her
own family on his behalf, Johnse thereafter abandoned the pregnant Roseanna for
her cousin, Nancy McCoy, whom he wed
in 1881.
The feud continued in 1882 when Ellison Hatfield, brother of Anse, was killed by three of
Roseanna's younger brothers: Tolbert,
Phamer (Pharmer), and Bud. On an
election day in Kentucky, the three McCoy brothers fought a drunken Ellison
and another Hatfield brother;
Ellison was stabbed 26 times and finished off with a gunshot. The McCoy brothers were initially arrested
by Hatfield constables and were
taken to Pikeville for trial.
Secretly, Anse organized a large group of vigilantes and intercepted the
constables and their McCoy prisoners
before they reached Pikeville. The
brothers were taken by force to West
Virginia. When Ellison died from his injuries, all three McCoy brothers were killed by the Hatfields in turn: they were tied to
pawpaw bushes and each was shot numerous times, with a total of fifty shots
fired. Their bodies were described as "bullet-riddled".
Soon, another McCoy, the second son
of the murdered Asa named Larkin "Lark" McCoy, was ambushed
by an alleged West Virginia posse
led by the Hatfields.
Even though the Hatfields
and most inhabitants of the area believed their revenge was warranted, up to
about twenty men, including Anse, were indicted. All of the Hatfields eluded arrest; this angered
the McCoy family, who took their
cause up with Perry Cline. Upon
hearing of the meeting, Anse resolved to stop Randall and sent gunmen to ambush
Randall and his son Calvin, but the gunmen killed Randall's nephews John and Henderson Scott instead after mistaking them for their targets.
Cline, who was married to Martha McCoy,
is believed to have used his political connections to reinstate the charges and
announced rewards for the Hatfields' arrests
as an act of revenge. A few years prior, Cline had lost a lawsuit against Anse
over the deed to thousands of acres of land, subsequently increasing the hatred
between the two families.
Days after the killing of the Scotts, acting constable Cap
Hatfield and family friend Tom
Wallace broke into the house of Bill
Daniels and flogged his wife Mary, sister of Jeff McCoy, who they suspected of warning her brother's family of
danger. Jeff McCoy heard of the
whipping in 1886 while on the run for the murder of mail carrier Fred Wolford. Infuriated, he and his
friend Josiah Hurley set out to
capture Tom Wallace and take him to
jail in Pikeville, but he escaped
them. As Jeff tried to flee, he was shot dead by Cap and Wallace on the banks
of the Tug Fork. Two other McCoys, Jake, and Larkin, once again
attempted to arrest Tom Wallace for
the assault on Mary Daniels in
August 1887, but he managed to escape from jail; he was found murdered the
following year, likely by the McCoys.
New Year Massacre
The feud reached its peak during the 1888 New Year's Night Massacre. Cap and
Vance led several members of the Hatfield
clan to surround the McCoy cabin
and opened fire on the sleeping family. Awakened by the shooting, the McCoys managed to grab their weapons
and fired back. The cabin was then set on fire to drive the McCoys into the open.
Panicking, the McCoys
rushed to every exit they could find. Randolph managed to escape and hide
inside the pig pen. Most of his children managed to escape into the woods. Two
of Randolph's children, Calvin and Alifair, were shot and killed near the
family as they exited their home. Randolph's wife, Sarah, was caught,
beaten, and almost killed by Vance and Johnse. With his house burning, Randolph
and his remaining family members were able to escape farther into the
wilderness; his children, unprepared for the elements, suffered frostbite. The
remaining McCoys moved to Pikeville to escape the West Virginia raiding parties.
Battle of the
Grapevine Creek
Between 1880 and 1891, the feud claimed more than a dozen
members of the two families. On one occasion, the governors of West Virginia and Kentucky even threatened to have their militias invade each
other's states. In response, Kentucky
Governor S. B. Buckner sent his Adjutant
General Sam Hill to Pike County
to investigate the situation.
A few days after the New
Year's Massacre, a posse led by Pike
County Deputy Sheriff Frank Philipps rode out to track down Anse's group
across the state line into West
Virginia. Two McCoys were
members of Philipps' posse, Bud, and one of Randolph's sons, James "Jim"
McCoy. The posse's first victim was Vance, who was killed in the woods
after he refused to be arrested. Philipps then made other successive raids on Hatfield homes and supporters,
capturing many and killing another three Hatfield
supporters, before cornering the rest in Grapevine Creek on January 19. Unfortunately for Philipps, Anse, and
other Hatfields were waiting for
them with an armed group of their own. A battle ensued between the two parties,
and the Hatfields were eventually
apprehended. A deputy, Bill Dempsey,
was wounded and executed by Frank
Philipps after they surrendered. On August 24, 1888, eight of the Hatfields and their friends were
indicted for the murder of Randolph's young daughter, Alfair McCoy (sometimes spelled Allaphare), who was killed during the New Year's Massacre. They included Cap, Johnse, Robert and Elliot Hatfield, Ellison Mounts, French
Ellis, Charles Gillespie, and Thomas
Chambers.
Trial
Because of issues of due process and illegal extradition,
the United States Supreme Court
became involved (Mahon v. Justice, 127
U.S. 700 (1888)). The Supreme Court
ruled 7–2 in favor of Kentucky, holding
that, even if a fugitive is returned from the asylum state illegally instead of
through a lawful extradition procedure, no federal law prevents him from being
tried. Eventually, the men were tried in Kentucky and all were found guilty.
Seven received life imprisonment, while the eighth, Ellison "Cottontop"
Mounts, was executed by hanging and buried in an unmarked grave within
sight of the gallows.
Ellison had tried to retract his confession, stating that he
was innocent and that he had only confessed because he expected leniency, but
his retraction was denied. Thousands attended his hanging in Pikeville, but though the scaffold was
in the open, its base was fenced in to comply with laws that had been passed
that prohibited public executions. The hanging site is the current location of
a classroom building at the present-day University
of Pikeville. With his last words, Ellison claimed that: "The Hatfields made me do it." No
one had been sent to the gallows in Pike
County for forty years, and after Ellison, no one ever was again.
Of those sent to prison:
Valentine "Uncle Wall" Hatfield, elder brother of Anse, was overshadowed by Anse's ambitions but was
one of the eight convicted, dying in prison of unknown causes. He had
petitioned his brothers to assist in his emancipation from jail, but none came
for fear of being captured and brought to trial. He was buried in the prison
cemetery, which has since been paved over.
Doc D. Mahon, son-in-law
of Valentine and brother of Pliant, one of the eight Hatfields convicted,
served 14 years in prison before returning home to live with his son, Melvin.
Pliant Mahon, the son-in-law
of Valentine, served fourteen years in prison before returning home to rejoin
his ex-wife, who had remarried but left her second husband to live with Pliant
again.
Fighting between the families eased following the hanging of
Mounts. Trials continued for years
until the 1901 trial of Johnse, who was sentenced to life imprisonment for his
involvement in the New Year's Massacre
in the last of the feud trials.
In the modern era
In 1979, the families united for a special week's taping of
the popular game show Family Feud,
in which they played for a cash prize and a pig which was kept on stage during
the games. The McCoy family won the
week-long series three games to two. While the Hatfield family won more money – $11,272.32 to the McCoys' $8,459.53—the decision was made
to augment the McCoy family's
winnings to $11,273.37
Tourists travel to those parts of West Virginia and Kentucky each
year to examine the relics that remain from the days of the feud. In 1999, a
large project known as the "Hatfield
and McCoy Historic Site Restoration" was completed, funded by a
federal grant from the Small Business
Administration. Many improvements to various feud sites were completed. A
committee of local historians spent months researching reams of information to
find out about the factual history of the events surrounding the feud. This
research was compiled in an audio compact disc, the Hatfield–McCoy Feud Driving
Tour, which is only available at the Pike
County Tourism CVB Visitors Center in Pikeville.
The CD is a self-guided driving tour of the restored feud sites and includes
maps and pictures as well as the audio CD. The driving tour leads visitors to
feud-related points of interest including the gravesites of the feudists, the "Hog Trial Cabin", also known
as Valentine Hatfield's cabin, Randolph McCoy's homeplace and well in Hardy, Kentucky, Aunt Betty's House, and
many more sites, some complete with historical markers.
Great-great-great-grandsons Bo McCoy and Ron McCoy
of feud patriarch Randolph McCoy
organized a joint family reunion of the Hatfield
and McCoy families in 2000 that
garnered national attention. More than 5,000 people attended.
The Hatfield–McCoy
feud is featured in a musical comedy dinner show in Pigeon Forge, Tennessee.
Hatfield–McCoy
production (July 2012)
In 2002, Bo and Ron
McCoy brought a lawsuit to acquire access to the McCoy Cemetery which holds the graves of six family members,
including five slain during the feud. The
McCoys took on a private property owner, John Vance, who had restricted access to the cemetery.
In the 2000s, a 500-mile (800 km) all-terrain vehicle trail
system, the Hatfield–McCoy Trails,
was created around the theme of the feud.
On June 14, 2003, in Pikeville,
Kentucky, the McCoy cousins
partnered with Reo Hatfield of Waynesboro, Virginia, to declare an
official truce between the families. Reo
Hatfield said that he wanted to show that if the two families could reach
an accord, others could also. He had said that he wanted to send a broader
message to the world that when national security is at risk, Americans put
their differences aside and stand united:
"We're not saying you don't have to fight because sometimes you do have to
fight," he said. "But you
don't have to fight forever." Signed by more than sixty descendants
during the fourth Hatfield–McCoy
Festival, the truce was touted as a proclamation of peace, saying "We ask by God's grace and love that we
be forever remembered as those that bound together the hearts of two families
to form a family of freedom in America." Governor Paul E. Patton of Kentucky
and Governor Bob Wise of West Virginia signed proclamations
declaring June 14 Hatfield and McCoy
Reconciliation Day. Ron McCoy,
one of the festival's founders, said it is unknown where the three signed
proclamations will be exhibited and that "the
Hatfields and McCoys symbolize violence and feuding and fighting, but by
signing this, hopefully, people will realize that's not the final chapter."
The Hatfield and
McCoy Reunion Festival and Marathon are held annually in June on a
three-day weekend. The events take place in Pikeville, Kentucky, Matewan, West Virginia, and Williamson, West Virginia. The festival
commemorates the famed feud and includes a marathon and half-marathon (the
motto is "no feudin', just
runnin'"), in addition to an ATV ride in all three towns. There is
also a tug-of-war across the Tug Fork tributary
near which the feuding families lived, a live re-enactment of scenes from their
most famous fight, a motorcycle ride, live entertainment, Hatfield–McCoy landmark tours, a cornbread contest, pancake
breakfast, arts, crafts, and dancing. Launched in 2000, the festival typically
attracts thousands with more than 300 runners taking part in the races.
In August 2015 members of both families helped archeologists
dig for ruins at a site where they believe Randolph
McCoy's house was burned.
In September 2018, a wooden statue, standing over 8 feet
tall, was erected in honor of Randolph
McCoy at the McCoy homeplace in Hardy, Kentucky. Carved by chainsaw
carver Travis Williams and donated
to the property, this statue had been commissioned by McCoy property owner and Hatfield
descendant Bob Scott. The statue was
unveiled during Hatfield-McCoy Heritage
Days in Pike County, Kentucky, an
event that occurs every September and brings Hatfield and McCoy
descendants back to Pike County to
celebrate the long-standing peace between the families. The McCoy homeplace, like many others
associated with the feud, is open to tourists year-round.
Media
Film
The 1923 Buster Keaton comedy Our Hospitality
centers on the "Canfield–McKay
feud," a fictionalized version of the Hatfield–McCoy feud.
The 1938 Merrie
Melodies cartoon A Feud There Was
depicts a feud between two backwoods families, called the Weavers and the McCoys.
It features Egghead as a peace
activist - going by the name Elmer Fudd (before
he was a hunter) - trying to put an end to the feuding between the two
hillbilly clans.
The 1939 Max
Fleischer cartoon Musical Mountaineers has Betty Boop wander into the territory of the Peters family who are at war with the Hatfields.
The 1943 Walter Lantz
Swing Symphony cartoon Pass the Biscuits Mirandy! depicts the feud between
the Foys and Bartons basing off
from the lyrics of a song of the same title.
The 1946 Disney cartoon
short The Martins and the Coys in Make Mine Music animated feature was
another very thinly disguised caricature of the Hatfield–McCoy feud.
In 1949, the Samuel
Goldwyn feature film Roseanna McCoy told a fictionalized version of the
romance between the title character, played by Joan Evans, and Johnse
Hatfield, played by Farley Granger.
The 1949 Screen Songs
short "Comin' Round the
Mountain" features
another thinly disguised caricature of the Hatfield–McCoy
feud, with cats (called "Catfields")
and dogs ("McHounds")
fighting each other, until a new school teacher arrives.
In 1950, Warner Bros.
released a spoof of the Hatfield–McCoy
feud titled Hillbilly Hare,
featuring Bugs Bunny interacting
with members of the "Martin
family", obviously a reference to a family in the other famous Kentucky feud, the Rowan County War who had been feuding with the "Coy family". When Bugs
Bunny is asked, "Be y'all a
Martin or be y'all a Coy rabbit?", Bugs answers, "Well, my friends say I'm very coy!" and laughs. The Martin brothers chase Bugs for the rest
of the short and are outwitted by him at every turn.
The 1951 Abbott and
Costello feature Comin' Round the Mountain features a feud between the Winfields and McCoys.
The 2007 movie
Pumpkinhead: Blood Feud portrays the feud between the Hatfields and McCoys,
but the circumstances of the feud are different.
In 2012, Lionsgate
Films released a direct-to-DVD film
titled Hatfields & McCoys: Bad
Blood, starring Jeff Fahey, Perry
King, and Christian Slater. This
was another thinly disguised fictional version of the conflict.
Literature
Members of the Hatfield
clan appear in Manly Wade Wellman's 1957
short story Old Devlins Was A-Waiting alongside fictional
great-grandchildren of both the Hatfields
and McCoys.
The Lucky Luke
adventure Les Rivaux de Painful Gulch
(The Rivals of Painful Gulch) from 1962 was inspired by the Hatfield–McCoy feud.
Ann Rinaldi
authored a 2002 historical novel titled The
Coffin Quilt, based on a fictionalized account of the feud.
In Kurt Vonnegut's
1976 novel Slapstick, a frontiersman dressed like "Davy Crockett" kills a man charged with conveying a
message to the former of the United
States because he mistakes him for Newton
McCoy. When the frontiersman is asked his name, he replies "Byron Hatfield".
In Mark Twain's 1884
novel Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, the Grangerfords, an aristocratic Kentuckian
family headed by the sexagenarian Colonel
Saul Grangerford, take Huck in after he is separated from Jim on the Mississippi. Huck becomes close friends
with the youngest male of the family, Buck
Grangerford, who is Huck's age. By the time Huck meets them, the Grangerfords have been engaged in an
age-old blood feud with another local family, the Shepherdsons. He also becomes the unwitting correspondent between
two young lovers among the families, an elopement that leads to a battle
between the two families and the loss of several lives on both sides.
Television
The 1960 episode of "The
Andy Griffith Show" titled "A
Feud is a Feud" has a Wakefield
and a Carter trying to prevent
Andy, in his role as Justice of the
Peace, from marrying two young lovers on opposite sides of the feud. Andy
calls the two feuding fathers to a duel when he finds out that "not nary a shot had ever been fired
during this feud". Both prove to be cowards in comparison with their
courageous children, and the feuding fathers order Andy at gunpoint: "Sheriff, get to marryin'!"
In the Bonanza
episode "The Gunmen"
(season 1, episode 19; aired January 23, 1960) Joe and Hoss were mistaken for
two gunmen called Sladeboys who
were hired by Mcfadden (McCoy) to
take out the Hatfields in the small Texas town of Kiowa Flats.
In the story arc "Missouri
Mish Mash" in season 3 of The
Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle and Friends (1961–62), the heroes are
drawn into the feud between the "Hatfuls"
and the "Floys",
unaware that both sides are secretly controlled by their nemesis Boris Badenov. They finally get elected
to Congress from the area, and end
the feud by responding to their "constituents"'
request to move the other side out of the district... not telling what they are
doing to both sides.
The Flintstones
featured a feud between the Hatrocks and
the Flintstones in the episode "The Flintstone Hillbillies" (aired
January 16, 1964), which was loosely based upon the Hatfield–McCoy feud. They later returned to "The Hatrocks and the Gruesomes" (aired January 22, 1965)
where they visit Fred and are shown to dislike bug music. The Hatrock family consists of Jethro Hatrock (voiced by Howard Morris), Gravella Hatrock (voiced
by Bea Benaderet), Zack Hatrock
(voiced by Mel Blanc), Slab Hatrock
(voiced by Howard Morris), Granny
Hatrock (voiced by June Foray in
"The Flintstone Hillbillies",
Gerry Johnson in "The Hatrocks and the Gruesomes"),
Benji Hatrock (voiced by Doug Young), and their dogasaurus
Percy.
The 1968 Merrie
Melodies cartoon "Feud with a
Dude" has the character Merlin
the Magic Mouse trying to make peace with the two families, only to end up
as the new target. This short has Hatfield
claiming McCoy stole his hen, while McCoy claims Hatfield stole his pig.
The Ghost of Witch
McCoy appears as the main villain in The
Scooby-Doo Show episode "The
Ozark Witch Switch". When a fictional member of the McCoy family is hanged for witchcraft, she
exacts her vengeance by turning Hatfields
into frogs.
A 1975 television movie titled The Hatfields and the McCoys told a fictionalized version of the
story. It starred Jack Palance as "Devil
Anse" Hatfield and Steve
Forrest as "Randall" McCoy.
An episode of the Cartoon
Network time travel animated series Time
Squad, titled 'Feud For Thought'
(aired October 26, 2001) with David Anse
Hatfield voiced by Fred Tatasciore,
and Randall McCoy voiced by John Kassir. The Time Squad goes back to the time of the Hatfields and the McCoys,
where they find that the McCoys are
being peaceful rather than fighting. This poses a threat to established
history, leading the titular team to try and restore the feud.
A fifth-season episode of The West Wing has the Communications
Director describe the feud between Israelis
and Palestinians as "Hatfield and McCoy".
The two feuding
Virginia families in the 2007 made-for-TV film Pumpkinhead: Blood Feud is called Hatfield and McCoy.
The second-season episode Vanished of NCIS takes
place in a rural valley in Virginia,
the two sides of which are feuding in a manner that Leroy Jethro Gibbs compares to the Hatfields and McCoys.
The eleventh episode of Bones
season 7, entitled The Family in the
Feud, is about a long-running family feud that main character Seeley Booth likens to the Hatfield–McCoy feud.
From May 28–30, 2012, U.S. television network The History Channel aired a three-part
miniseries titled Hatfields &
McCoys, starring Kevin Costner
as William Anderson "Devil Anse" Hatfield and co-starring Bill Paxton as Randolph "Ole Ran'l"
McCoy, Tom Berenger as Jim Vance, and Powers Boothe as Judge
Valentine "Wall" Hatfield. The miniseries set the record as the
most-watched entertainment telecast in the history of advertising-supported
basic cable.
A pair of rifles owned by the Hatfields and the McCoys
appeared as a pair of artifacts in the fourth season of the Syfy original show Warehouse 13. Within the show, the rifles can
attract each other like magnets but open fire when they get close enough to
each other.
In 2013, NBC commissioned a pilot for a television show
updating the feud to present-day Pittsburgh
with Rebecca De Mornay, Virginia
Madsen, Sophia Bush, and James Remar
but it was not picked up.
On August 1, 2013, the reality television series Hatfields & McCoys: White Lightning
premiered on the History Channel.
The series begins with an investor offering to set up the feuding families into
business making moonshine and follows the families' attempt to run the
business together.
In an episode of Modern
Family originally aired January 15, 2014, titled "Under Pressure," Cam is working as a gym teacher who
has plans to let parents play dodgeball with each other at the school's open
house, and wants to divide the two teams into Hatfields and McCoys.
The school principal frowns upon this idea, however, Gloria and a competitive
mother played by Jane Krakowski
decide to settle their score with such a game. Hurriedly Cam proclaims Hatfields for one side and McCoys for the other.
In episode 9 of the fourth season of the Chilean series 31
minutos, called "Westland",
in the middle of the episode Tulio sees an "Oestelandia"
between the Hatfields and the McCoys where the origin of the conflict
is that one of the members of the Hatfields
had stolen Grandma McCoy's potty.
Near the end of the episode, they manage to end the conflict where in the
credits both families play their instrumental version of the show together.
The fifth season of My
Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic featured an episode titled "The Hooffields and McColts", in
which two clans have a longstanding feud over whether to use the land for farming
or construction. A similar theme was covered in Season 3, episode 9 of Littlest Pet Shop, "Feud for Thought", in which two koalas are at odds with
each other but don't know why, other than that their owners are in a feud.
In the Ben 10
reboot, a season 3 episode called "Them's
Fighting Words!" features a parody of the feud involving the Hartfields and the McJoys. The Hartfield family's known member is Cornelius Hartjoy (voiced by
Dee Bradley Baker) and the McJoy family's
known member is Cornflower McJoy
(voiced by Laura Bailey). The Hartfields and McJoys have been trying to claim ownership over a missing corn
flute, accusing the other family of stealing it. The villain Hex actually finds it and starts
summoning the ghosts of the family's ancestors (voiced by Dee Bradley Baker and David
Kaye), finding out the flute's power increases the more the two families
fight each other. Ben and Gwen can quell them and stop Hex's
plans to create an army of ghost soldiers by revealing that it was meant to be
shared by them as a marriage gift, ending the feud.
WGBH Boston's Public
Broadcasting Service (PBS) American Experience episode "The Feud" (season 32, episode 1) originally aired on
September 10, 2019, documenting the Hatfield-McCoy
family feud 1863–1891.
Music
The song "The
Hatfield and the McCoy's" was written and sung by Eddie Martin, a Bristol-based musician and regular at the Famous Old Duke. It is track 8 on Pillowcase Blues.
In 2018, Mountain
Fever Records released a single from their album from Dave Adkins, Right Or Wrong. The song, "Blood Feud", written by Dave Adkins and Larry
Cordle, is a retelling of the familiar story of the deadly discord between
the Hatfield and McCoy families during the Civil War era.
Ice Cube's 1991 song
“My Summer Vacation” includes a
reference to “Feudin', like the Hatfields
and McCoys”
In the song “Black
Cowboys” from Jeru the Damaja's 1996
album "Wrath of the Math",
he includes a reference “We shoot sh*t up
like the Hatfields and McCoys”.
Waylon Jennings' 1977
song "Luckenbach Texas (Back to
the Basics of Love)" includes the reference "... this successful life we're livin', got us feudin' like the
Hatfields and McCoys"
Theater
A dinner show based on the rivalry has been performed year-round
in Pigeon Forge, Tennessee since
2010.
Video games
The 2018 action-adventure video game Red Dead Redemption 2 features a violent feud between two families,
the Braithwaites and the Grays, inspired by the Hatfield-McCoy conflict.
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