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In 1965, Senator Robert Byrd joined President Lyndon Johnson in launching a massive federal aid program for Appalachia, a mountainous region spread across 13 states, including all of West Virginia.
A year earlier, Johnson had declared a national War on Poverty; now, Appalachia would become a major battleground.
Workers from VISTA, Volunteers In Service To America, arrived in West Virginia to assist in anti-poverty programs. Local politicians charged that they were outside agitators sent in to teach communism. "They're dirty and nasty," said one official, "and they won't shave."
One volunteer came from an unlikely lineage, John D. Rockefeller IV, known as Jay.