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Ginseng Diggers: A History of Root Gathering in Appalachia
Resource ID: 8361
Type: podcast episode, audio
share:
- UPDATED: 6.29.2025
- status: in progress
- Flora+Fauna+Funga, Folklore, Folk Medicine, Regional, Culture
date:
7.16.2024
length:
2 hr 13 min
podcast:
creator:
Philippe Willis
guest:
Luke Manget
notes:
. . .
description:
Luke Manget is an author, historian, and assistant professor of history at Western Carolina University in Cullowhee, North Carolina. After a reading from an 1870’s newspaper about a strange race of beings known as “saugers,” we dive straight into the significance of ginseng on the American frontier [1780’s], specifically in southern Appalachia: Va, WV, NC. We get into such topics as: the commons vs private property; old world mandrake folklore; & deterring poachers with traps. Luke then describes the ginseng digger stereotype as perpetuated & mythologized by newspapers of the late 19th-century, opening a discussion about class in Appalachian society. For the last third of the episode we hear about the other roots and herbs that were dug for profit besides ginseng; the counter-medical-establishment herbalism movement of the 1800's; and lastly, newspaper accounts of The Wild Man of the Woods.
places:
flora + fauna:
