September 14, 2009
Counseling director making music with a heart
Lawrence Pierce
Mark Spangler stopped performing for a while. After taking a stab at the world of Contemporary Christian music, he almost quit music and started working with troubled teens. It's taken years, but he's been slowly building the music back up at his home at the Davis-Stuart facility for troubled youths in Greenbrier County.
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LEWISBURG, W.Va.  -- In the 1980s and early 1990s, Mark Spangler was just another musician with big dreams of rock and roll stardom -- well, sort of.

Sitting in his office at Davis-Stuart Inc. in Lewisburg, the 45-year-old says, looking back, he was never meant to play in the mainstream.

"I played contemporary Christian music." He shook his head and frowned. "It was good stuff, but not the kind of music that got a lot of radio airplay."

Spangler is the director for Davis-Stuart, a Presbyterian therapeutic residential program for emotionally disturbed youth. He grew up in Peterstown, and long before he came to Lewisburg to work with troubled teens, he was a Christian rocker. He toured through the late 1970s and 1980s, releasing an album, "Shelter," in 1989.

Songs from the record did make it both on Christian and rock radio, he says, but his music career never caught fire.

"I think probably if I could have played a little more out west," he said. "California was a much bigger market for that kind of music back then and they wanted me, but those kinds of shows were hard to do."

Spangler was married by then. He and his wife, Tracy, had a 3-year-old. It wasn't a sacrifice. Being a husband and a father was important, but making a living and making music didn't work together.

So, he went to school, became a licensed professional counselor, and took a job with Davis-Stuart. 

After he took the job in 1993, he mostly put his guitar away -- only played on his front porch with friends or at church. He stayed busy. Spangler and his wife had another child, then another.

In 1999, he became the director of Davis-Stuart. Spangler says residents are sent to them by the state Department of Health and Human Resources. Davis-Stuart offers a wide range of support. It's not just about recovery from abuse, he says, but also gaining skills.

The facility is on a sprawling 650-acre farm. They raise vegetables and beef. Students tap trees for maple syrup, learn woodworking and attend school.

"We try to instill a work ethic in our kids," Spangler said. "Some of them come from environments where a work ethic was lacking."

Work and home are hard to separate. Spangler and his family live on the premises at a house about 200 yards from the main compound. Safety is a concern, he says, because residents are sometimes at risk from those who've hurt them before.

"We really don't have many problems here," he said. "There have been a couple of times when we've needed to protect a child from an abuser and I've walked the grounds at 2 in the morning. Mostly, it's fine. We've got good neighbors and great support from the community."

Still, with kids of his own, Spangler says his family has rules to live by.

"No dating," he said. "And no squealing."

Some of the kids in the program go to the local high school. Over the years, they've attended the same school as Spangler's children, rode on the same bus.

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