Brandy State Foundation Lecture Series
Brandy Station Foundation
P.O. Box 165 Brandy Station, VA 22714
https://www.brandystationfoundation.com
P.O. Box 165 Brandy Station, VA 22714
https://www.brandystationfoundation.com
For Immediate Release
April 1, 2025
For more information, please contact:
PEGGY MISCH, Media Coordinator
BRANDY STATION FOUNDATION
pegmisch@gmail.com
540.308.9433
MEDIA ADVISORY: Brandy Stations Foundation Lecture Series. Special Guest Speakers –
Reo Hatfield II & Ron McCoy: “The Hatfields and the McCoys – From Civil War to Family
Feud”
WHAT: Special Guest Speakers Reo Hatfield II & Ron McCoy will talk about the world-famous
feud between their families, the Hatfields and the McCoys.
WHEN: Saturday, May 17, 2025, 1 PM
WHERE: Brandy Station Volunteer Fire Department Hall, 19601 Church Rd, Brandy
Station, VA 22714
Brandy Station, VA – The names of speakers Reo Hatfield II and Ron McCoy are instantly
recognizable because of the world-famous feud between the Hatfields and the McCoys.
However, in 2003, Reo and Ron signed the historic Hatfield-McCoy truce, which was broadcast
live on national television. That document would be a formal truce ending all hostilities, implied,
inferred, and real between the Hatfields and the McCoys. This talk will include the Hatfield
family’s military service during the Civil War and the years long feud between the families. We
look forward to hearing the true story behind the family feud. Please come prepared to hear
answers to many of your questions. There will be a book signing after the event.
Reo B. Hatfield II is the President and CEO of Prince Michel Vineyard, Brewery, and Winery in
Leon, Virginia. He is a former Vice Mayor, City Councilman and Planning Commissioner
member of Waynesboro, VA, as well as a retired Chief of Police of Waynesboro. Hatfield also
served for two years in Korea with the U.S. Army as a Sergeant and is a private pilot.
Hatfield is best known nationally for the historic Hatfield-McCoy Truce, which officially ended
the infamous Hatfield and McCoy feud. On June 14, 2003, in a televised event on The CBS
Early Show, Reo Hatfield, along with Ron McCoy and Bo McCoy, signed the truce live before
an estimated 3.5 million viewers. The signing symbolized a new era of unity, demonstrating that
even one of the world’s most famous feuding families could come together as one American
family.
Ron McCoy is the great-great-great-grandson of Randolph McCoy, patriarch of the family at
the time of the feud. He helped organize the first national reunion of the Hatfields and McCoys
in 2000. In 2003, he was one of the principal signers of the historic Hatfield-McCoy truce. He is
the author of Reunion, a book which chronicles the reconciliation of the Hatfields and McCoys
and one man’s journey to discover his family heritage in the shadow of America’s most famous
feud.
The Brandy Station Foundation is a non-profit 501 (c) (3) community organization which
operates the 1858 Graffiti House at 19484 Brandy Road in Brandy Station which contains Civil
War graffiti and a museum. The walls of the house contain inscriptions, drawings, messages,
and signatures of both Federal and Confederate soldiers. The Foundation relies on tax-deductible donations and volunteers to meet its goals.