What We Do
Enriching Lives and Connecting People in the Heart of Eastern Kentucky
Pine Mountain Settlement School is a community nonprofit rooted in one of the most remarkable landscapes in North America: the ancient, biologically rich mountains of southeastern Kentucky. We look to the wisdom of Appalachian traditions to find innovative, lasting solutions to the real challenges facing our region. And we invite the wider world in to learn, to connect, and to be changed by what they find here.
Since 1913, this land has been a place of purpose. The work looks different than it did a century ago, but the spirit is the same: meet people where they are, honor what they carry, and build something together that lasts.
Our Approach
Environmental Education — Connecting thousands of students each year to the natural world through immersive, place-based learning on our nearly 800-acre campus and within the adjacent James E. Bickford State Nature Preserve.
Appalachian Cultures & Heritage — Preserving, practicing, and sharing the living traditions of this region, from folk arts and music to storytelling and community gathering — so they remain alive and accessible to the next generation.
Community Development — Building capacity, connection, and economic opportunity for the people of Eastern Kentucky through programs, partnerships, and the steady, long-horizon work of place-based investment.
Sustainable Agriculture — Operating a working 5-acre organic farm that feeds our kitchen, trains local growers, and fuels food security across Harlan County.
Why It Matters
Eastern Kentucky faces real challenges: economic transition, food insecurity, environmental change, and the slow erosion of community that comes when a place has been misunderstood or overlooked for too long.
Pine Mountain Settlement School doesn't pretend those challenges aren't there. We work inside them, with the people who live here, using the assets that already exist, an extraordinary landscape, a deep cultural heritage, and communities that have survived more than most people imagine.
"Pine Mountain Settlement School is the world’s best classroom. Combining the culture and charm of central Appalachia, a richly diverse ecosystem, and a unique campus steeped with history. Leaning hard on our past and developing new forms of interaction that immerses students, young and old, in our age-old mission.”
— Jason Brashear
What We Do in Practice
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More than 3,000 students visit our campus each year for programs that put them in the middle of the learning rather than in front of it. They hike ridgelines, study stream ecosystems, try their hand at weaving and pottery, and sleep in our historic dormitory under the same roof that students have occupied for over a century. We customize each program to align with state and national standards, and our instructors bring deep knowledge of this land and genuine care for every student who walks onto it.
We also steward the 348-acre James E. Bickford State Nature Preserve on our campus, home to some of the rarest plants and animals in the eastern United States. Protecting this land is itself an act of education and of faith in the future.
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At the heart of our campus is a 5-acre certified organic farm. It feeds our kitchen. It supplies the Harlan County Farmers Market, where SNAP recipients can double their purchasing power to access fresh, locally grown food. And through our Farm Institute, it teaches more than 80 growers each year how to grow food for themselves and their communities.
We run more than a dozen free workshops each year, timed to the rhythms of the growing season. We provide organic seeds and supplies. We operate four high tunnels for year-round production, raise chickens and beef cattle, tend beehives, and grow sorghum a crop as old as this region itself.
Food is not a side project here. It's a form of community building, economic development, and cultural continuity.
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Pine Mountain is a destination for people who want more from a getaway than a place to rest. Our workshops bring adults and families into the landscape as active participants. Foraging for wild plants with local experts, photographing wildflowers in bloom, hiking remote hollows, learning the craft traditions of the region. Participants stay in our historic buildings, eat food grown on our farm, and leave with something harder to name than a skill but rather a different relationship to a place, and to themselves.
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Organizations that come to Pine Mountain find something most conference centers can't offer: a setting that has meaning, a community invested in what you're doing, and a staff that can enrich your time here far beyond the meeting room. We host service organizations, university groups, professional conferences, faith communities, and nonprofits — groups who want their gathering to matter on multiple levels. Your presence here supports Harlan County directly. That's part of the offering.
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The culture of this region — its music, its crafts, its stories, its way of being in community — is not a relic. It's a living inheritance, and we treat it as such. We host folk dances, community arts nights, traditional craft demonstrations, and cultural events that draw from the past to speak to the present. These traditions are not ornament. They're how people here have always made meaning together, and they still work.
See it for yourself
The best way to understand what we do is to come do it with us.
Whether you're a teacher planning a field trip, an adult looking for a meaningful retreat, a family wanting a different kind of vacation, or an organization seeking a place to gather with purpose, there's a path to Pine Mountain for you.