Brickyard Hill: Papaw, the Mines, and the Family He Raised
by Robert Hamilton
Brickyard Hill is a deeply personal Appalachian memoir about family, labor, faith, and the quiet strength of a man who never sought recognition but shaped generations.
Set in the coal country hills of eastern Kentucky, this book tells the story of Papaw-a coal miner, preacher, husband, and steady presence in a world defined by hard work and harder choices. Through lived memory and plainspoken truth, Robert Hamilton traces what it meant to grow up under Papaw's guidance, where love was shown through action, responsibility, and showing up every day no matter how tired you were.
This is not a romanticized portrait of mining life. It is honest, grounded, and lived-in-about early mornings, worn hands, church benches, family dinners, and the unspoken lessons passed from one generation to the next. Brickyard Hill explores how men like Papaw carried families through lean years, how faith took root in ordinary places, and how dignity was found in work that rarely received thanks.
Woven throughout the memoir are reflections on memory, loss, and inheritance-not land or money, but values: endurance, humility, loyalty, and care for others. The book also serves as a companion piece to The Quiet Work, expanding the author's exploration of Appalachian life and the people who quietly held it together.
Brickyard Hill is for readers who value true stories, Appalachian history, working-class lives, and the power of ordinary people doing necessary things. It is a tribute to those who built lives without fanfare-and to the families who still carry their lessons forward.
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