All schools in Upshur County will close at 1 p.m. today. All B-UHS sporting events today are canceled.

Community connections: Lesson for WVU students focuses on how stories, those scary and those not, can bring people together

Students in Lisa Di Bartolomeo’s Russian Fairy Tales class recently shared fairy tales and scary stories as a way to make real world connections to class content. (WVU Illustration/Rachel Johnson)

MORGANTOWN — As the local legend goes, more than a dozen people have been murdered in Booger Hole, a small town in Clay County.

While the gory details of each murder are widely disputed, one thing all the locals can agree on is this: Booger Hole is haunted. Angry mobs, wandering travelers and Confederate soldiers are all said to have fallen victim to its evil forces.

Ahead of Halloween, Allie Douglas, a West Virginia University student from Elkview studying immunology and medical microbiology, recently stood at the front of a large lecture hall to share the stories of Booger Hole with her classmates and her professor, Lisa Di Bartolomeo, a professor of Russian and Slavic and Eastern European studies, in a class about Russian fairy tales.

“By going back into Russian history and Russian folklore we can see how many similarities there are from culture to culture, time period to time period. Hopefully, that demonstrates to people that you don’t need to hate people from another culture or another country because we all are basically the same,” Di Bartolomeo said.

With COVID-19 still creating logistical challenges in higher ed classrooms, Di Bartolomeo said she wanted to give her students an alternative to exams.

For the story assignment, she instructed her students to research local folklore and fairy tales from their hometowns in the hopes of driving connectedness within families, communities, neighborhoods and history.

“There’s no better way to appreciate one’s own culture and community than hearing other people’s stories of their own experiences both with folklore and other stuff,” Jaxon Miller, a history major from Hurricane who is also a teaching assistant for the class, said.

Di Bartolomeo said her goal, the purpose of the class, is for students to learn about Russian culture and its historical context while identifying cultural commonalities, including those close to home.

Other stories includedsome of the most notable names in Appalachian folklore like Mothman and the Flatwoods monster. Such folklore, Di Bartolomeo said, is important as an expression of human psychology and sociology.

“I’m less concerned that they memorize each Russian fairy tale, I’m much more concerned that they take away the 30,000-foot view of, ‘This is what folklore is about. This is what folklore can tell us about ourselves and about our culture,’” Di Bartolomeo said.

Share this story:

Local Businesses

RECENT Stories

Football Bucs show promise despite setback to Bridgeport in season opener

Buckhannon-Upshur fell 62-14 to defending champion Bridgeport in the season opener, with Bridgeport rushing for 454 yards while the young Bucs, despite −47 rushing, showed flashes on two long touchdown passes.

Pittsburgh Jazz Orchestra returns to West Virginia Wesleyan College for highly anticipated homecoming concert

West Virginia Wesleyan College will host the Pittsburgh Jazz Orchestra for a much-anticipated Homecoming concert Sept. 25, 2025, featuring college president Dr. James Moore and tickets available for $20.

Appalachian Impact moving into a new home on Main Street in Buckhannon

Appalachian Impact is relocating from the Hampton Community Building to 64 East Main (the former H&R Block), a downtown space that officials say will support program growth after AmeriCorps funding returned.

Buckhannon Colonial Arts Center Board Agenda: September 2, 2025

The City of Buckhannon Colonial Arts Center Board will convene Sept. 2, 2025; this article publishes the meeting agenda.

City council hears traffic report on congestion at school dismissal time near Buckhannon Academy

Police told city council that congestion at Buckhannon Academy Elementary during dismissal — evidenced by an 87-car queue and three traffic pauses — would be eased by a larger pickup area.

Meteorologist Dillon Gaudet comes home to West Virginia

Meteorologist Dillon Gaudet has returned to West Virginia as WSAZ’s morning weather anchor, leaving Lexington to replace longtime forecaster Brandon Butcher.

Carpenter Crunch Time Week 1: Does Wesleyan get to Post a win this weekend?

In Carpenter Crunch Time Week 1, West Virginia Wesleyan, mired in a 24-game losing streak, visits struggling Post University — which has lost nine straight — while My Buckhannon staff launches its weekly seven-game picks contest.

Football Bucs embrace underdog role against Bridgeport in opener Friday night

Buckhannon-Upshur, acknowledging heavy underdog status against defending Class AAA champion Bridgeport Friday, will lean on home-field advantage, senior QB Dawson Tenney and focused clock management as they aim to keep the opener competitive.

First Community Bank takes fourth-quarter lead in men’s golf

First Community Bank took the fourth-quarter lead with a 26-14 win over Highland Landscaping; Chris Brady shot 33 to win Low Actual and share Low Net honors.