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  1. The HatfieldMcCoy Feud involved two American families of the West Virginia – Kentucky area along the Tug Fork of the Big Sandy River from 1863 to 1891. The Hatfields of West Virginia were led by William Anderson "Devil Anse" Hatfield, while the McCoys of Kentucky were under the leadership of Randolph "Ole Ran'l" McCoy.

  2. Hatfields & McCoys is a 2012 American three-part Western television miniseries based on the HatfieldMcCoy feud produced by History channel. The two-hour episodes aired on May 28, 29, and 30, 2012. [1]

  3. Hatfields & McCoys: With Kevin Costner, Bill Paxton, Matt Barr, Tom Berenger. Dramatization of the bitter blood feud between the two families on the West Virginia/Kentucky border in the years after the Civil War.

  4. Hatfields and McCoys, two American Appalachian mountaineer families who, with their kinfolk and neighbours, engaged in a legendary feud that attracted nationwide attention in the 1880s and ’90s and prompted judicial and police actions, one of which drew an appeal up to the U.S. Supreme Court (1888).

  5. The first event in the decades-long feud was the 1865 murder of Randolph’s brother, Asa Harmon McCoy, by the Logan Wildcats, a local militia group that counted Devil Anse and other Hatfields among its members.

  6. Nov 8, 2021 · Updated December 10, 2021. Many Americans know the Hatfields and McCoys infamously didn't like each other, but just how bad was the animosity between these two families on the West Virginia-Kentucky border? In December 1864, Asa Harmon McCoy left the Union Army and returned to his home in Kentucky.

  7. Sep 10, 2019 · The eye-for-an-eye-for-an-eye retaliation began: three McCoys were captured by Hatfields under the command of Ellison’s brother Devil Anse, tied to a pawpaw bush, and shot to death.