Hillbilly highway The transappalachian migration and the making of a white working class

Max Fraser

Book - 2023

"Over the first two-thirds of the twentieth century, as many as eight million whites left the economically depressed southern countryside and migrated to the booming factory towns and cities of the industrial Midwest in search of work. The "hillibilly highway" was one of the largest internal relocations of poor and working people in American history, yet it has largely escaped close study by historians. In Hillbilly Highway, Max Fraser recovers the long-overlooked story of this massive demographic event and reveals how it has profoundly influenced American history and culture--from the modern industrial labor movement and the postwar urban crisis to the rise of today's white working-class conservatives. The book draws on... a diverse range of sources--from government reports, industry archives, and union records to novels, memoirs, oral histories, and country music--to narrate the distinctive class experience that unfolded across the Transppalachian migration during these critical decades. As the migration became a terrain of both social advancement and marginalization, it knit together white working-class communities across the Upper South and the Midwest--bringing into being a new cultural region that remains a contested battleground in American politics to the present" --

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  • Introduction
  • Chapter 1. Changes on the Land: Agrarianism, Industrialization, and Displacement in the Appalachian South
  • Chapter 2. On the Road: Migration and the Making of a Transregional Working Class
  • Chapter 3. Green Peas and Hotheads: The Paradox of the Hillbilly Highway
  • Chapter 4. An Other America: Hillbilly Ghettos after World War II
  • Chapter 5. "An Exaggerated Version of the Same Thing": Southern Appalachian Migrants, Cultures of Poverty, and Postwar Liberalism
  • Chapter 6. Lost Highways: Country Music and the Rise and Fall of Hillbilly Culture
  • Conclusion
  • Acknowledgements
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index
Review by Choice Review

Hillbilly Highway tells the story of the routes rural white southerners took to travel to (and from) the industrial Midwest throughout the 20th century. Fraser's smart history tells the story of "the Transappalachian migration's imprint on the social, cultural, and political map of recent American history," and the author is correct to note that the study fills a significant gap in the literature (p. 8). Built on a diversity of sources--from oral histories to country music recordings--Hillbilly Highway documents the industrial development that first forced rural southerners into extractive industries in their own region, and later pushed them to the manufacturing outfits of cities like Akron and Detroit. Fraser (Univ. of Miami) shows that, in spite of the misconceptions of contemporary observers and historians, Appalachian migrants were some of the more militant members of the national labor uprising of the 1930s, and that poor white southern migrants figured prominently, if ambiguously, in the War on Poverty's failed efforts to understand economic insecurity in the 1960s by focusing on the supposed cultural inadequacies of the poor. Given the dearth of scholarly research on the important phenomenon of white southern migration, this excellent book is a critical addition for academic library collections. Summing Up: Essential. Advanced undergraduates through faculty. --Jon Shelton, University of Wisconsin-Green Bay

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.