Visit Haysi VA

Visit Haysi VA Located 1.5 hours North of Abingdon/Bristol, VA via VA Route 19/80. Josephine conveyed the land to her heirs, with two of her children, James C. Winnie W. Hayter.

Before the construction of the Clinchfield Railroad, before the establishment of a post office and before the Yellow Poplar Lumber Co. erected a splash dam on the Russell Fork River, the Town of Haysi was a laurel bed referred to as “the Mouth of the McClure”. The area is surrounded by majestic cliff formations of the Appalachian Mountains and a riverside formed by the confluence of three major wa

terways of Dickenson County: the McClure River, the Russell Prater Creek and the Russell Fork Rivers. In the early 1800’s James Colley, son of Richard Colley, secured a title of 5000 acres in the vicinity of Haysi. His daughter, Josephine, married Jonathan Lender Scyphers and inherited the portions on which Haysi now stands. Scyphers and Winnie W. Scyphers receiving the Haysi portion. Scyphers married Otis L. Sifers who owned and operated a general store with Charles M. The business was located near the mouth of the McClure River and the nearest post office was several miles away. To better serve the area they petitioned the U.S. Post Office Department for a new post office to be established in their general store. The sur names of Otis L. Sifers and Charles M .Hayter were used in the naming of the new post office. The United States Post Office accepted the name Haysi and Miss Winnie W. Scyphers was the first postmaster when it opened on July 25, 1900. At the turn of the century the first store was constructed to provide for the workers of the Yellow Poplar Lumber Co. As the timber business began to grow so did the construction of the Clinchfield Railroad. The railroad was built to provide a means of export for coal and timber being extracted and logged from the surrounding Appalachian Mountains rich with these natural resources. Haysi’s first public elementary school was established in 1911. A Junior High School was organized in 1926 and in 1928 a brick school house was constructed to accommodate the elementary and high school students. Other businesses were opened to serve the local workers, residents and travelers on the Clinchfield Railroad. By 1930 notable businesses in Haysi included the Haysi Supply Co., McClure Bottling Co., Bank of Haysi, Haysi Hardware Co., and a large grocery store, The Fuller Store. Miss Elizabeth Shoemaker came to Haysi in 1929 to offer Sunday School services to the public. In the same year, Rev. Mowbray, an evangelist of the Abingdon Presbytery, was conducting preaching services in the Haysi High School. The attendance to his preaching services continued to increase as he conducted his church work in the community. The construction of the Haysi Chapel, one of three chapels representing the Dickenson First Presbyterian Church established in 1930, began in 1933 and was completed in 1934. The town was incorporated on February 17, 1936. By this time the town’s main street was lined with businesses including movie theaters, several restaurants, car dealers and garages, a drug store, a department store and a doctor’s office. In the following years, Clinchfield Coal Co. became the principle provider for employment for this small mountain town. The town’s economy continued to flourish while earlier established businesses provided services and commodities and new ones opened to fill the growing demands of the locality. The Town of Haysi has suffered several major catastrophes. On December 5, 1934, a fire almost destroyed the town’s business section. The flood of January 29, 1957, devastated Haysi with flood waters eight feet high on Main Street. In 1977, the town experienced another flood that damaged every business and building on Main Street with nine feet high flood waters. Each time the town’s leaders, merchants and residents have survived the devastation to rebuild and improve the town. The town administration has recently taken steps to begin a major downtown revitalization project. Studies and plans are being conducted that will include upgrades to the town’s infrastructure, store facades, sidewalks and landscaping. The project will also include an economic restructuring element to attract start-up businesses, tourism trade and growth in the technology sector. With all the past events and what we envision for the future, our town of Haysi, Virginia could be coined as “THE TOWN THAT WOULD NOT DIE!”.

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06/11/2026

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Rual Fuller didn't come from money. He came from Haysi, Virginia, from Depression-era Appalachia, from a life where school ended early and work started young.

By the time he was done, his name was tied to coal, land, business, and a reputation that old-timers in Dickenson County still remember.

Fuller died in May 2008 at age 75. But before that, he lived the kind of coalfield story that rarely gets written down.

With less than a seventh-grade education, he built himself into a coal operator during one of the most aggressive coal booms America ever saw. The 1970s made fortunes in Central Appalachia. Fuller made his, lost money, then made it again.

That was part of the man.

Atomic Fuel, Little Byrd Coal Company, National Energy and other ventures were linked to his work in the coal business. Public records also place his name around coal rights, Fuller Fuels, and National Energy interests in the Haysi area.

But the paperwork only tells part of it.

Family remembers a man who barely stopped moving. He ran coal business during the day, then worked the Country Club restaurant in the evening and at night. Sleep wasn't much of a habit. Neither was sitting down for a normal meal.

He was known to carry Vienna sausages or pork and beans in his pocket because stopping to eat took too much time.

That detail says more than any title.

Army veteran. Kentucky Colonel. Coal operator. Businessman. Country club owner. Real estate man.

And still, by all accounts, a man who kept a smile on his face.

Rual Fuller was a rags-to-riches coalfield figure from a small Virginia town. Not polished. Not handed anything. Just relentless.

A man who came from rock bottom, built his name in coal, and left behind a story worth saving before the memory fades.

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06/10/2026

Haysi Consignment and Thrift Store Lilly Thacker z

06/10/2026

I will be doing a live post tonight at 730pm from the Haysi Consignment and Thrift Store 6/10/26.

06/02/2026

Motocross racing June 6th gates open at 9am, registration 10am, race 12pm

06/02/2026
06/02/2026

Turtle Pit Appreciation Day June 13th free admission

05/31/2026

Trails Day and town wide yardsale happening June 6th, 2026. Food trucks and lots of bargains. Haysi Supply Company, LLC will be having kettle corn Friday and Saturday.

White Ridge Carry Out’s Current Menu for lunch and dinner! Deli open Monday through Sunday, deli closes daily at 7pmCall...
05/14/2026

White Ridge Carry Out’s Current Menu for lunch and dinner! Deli open Monday through Sunday, deli closes daily at 7pm
Call 276-835-8910 to place an order

05/13/2026

Trails Day & Town Wide Yardsale June 6th call the Town hall for areas to set up 276-865-5187 or get up with the property owners for permission.

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Haysi, VA

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