Appalachian Figures In November 1937 a young Kentucky miner’s wife stepped up to a Library of Congress microphone in a New York studio. She introduced herself simply as Sarah Ogan, then poured out songs about starvation wages, dead children, and coal camp sheriffs who answered to company bosses instead of the law. Alan Lomax filed the discs away as part of the Alan Lomax and Mary Elizabeth Barnicle collection.