Skip to main content

On This Day: Today is National Miners Day


Congress has designated this day, 6 December, as National Miners Day. It is a day to honor, remember and appreciate the miners of today and days past.



The day was chosen to also specifically remember the anniversary of the worst mining accident in history.

On This Day in 1907, an explosion occurred in Mine No. 6 and Mine No. 8 of the Fairmont Coal Company’s mines in Monongah, Marion County, West Virginia.  An official cause was never determined.



The blast was so strong it was felt by those eight miles away. Streetcars were knocked off their rails. People fell to the ground.



Over 360 miners – men and boys - died that day. The official number was listed as 362 but companies did not keep records as they do today and the number may well be more. There were over 1000 widows and fatherless children left behind. The majority of those who perished were Italian immigrants. Many were laid to rest in unmarked graves.



The explosion was the beginning of the push for better safety and accountability. In 1910 Congress created the US Bureau of Mines.



Sources

History in Pictures. HistoryinPictures.com.


“Monongah mining disaster of 1907.” Encyclopaedia Britannica.



“National Miners Day” US Department of Labor. (Photo)



“The Monongah coal mine disaster.” 1907. This Day in History, History.com.







On This Day is a prompt to further explore historical events.

                

© Jeanne Ruczhak-Eckman, 2015

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Coatesville's First Serial Killer

Young Alexander Meyer was a disturbed and angry young man with some major issues. He had failed sixth and seventh grade, and instead of having to repeat eighth grade again, he finally gave up on school. At age 16 he quit Downingtown Junior High. Meyer is not a relative, nor are his victims (that I am aware). I stumbled upon young Alex while reading Tortured Minds: Pennsylvania's Most Bizarre - But Forgotten - Murders by Tammy Mal. On 11 February 1937 Alexander Thweatt Meyer killed young Helen Moyer as she walked home from school in Coatesville along Modena Road. She was not his first. The jury was out only three minutes after hearing Dr. Michael Margolis' testimony on the death of Helen Moyer. The jury determined Meyer had murdered Moyer and should be held for first degree murder. The jury also condemned the parole system which had released Meyer back into the public, after having served just 14 months in Huntingdon Reformatory, for the murder of two other girls - Anna Blasc

Thaddeus Stevens at the Lancaster Convention Center

Within the Lancaster Convention Center (Lancaster, PA) is a small section dedicated to Thaddeus Stevens and Lydia Hamilton Smith. The section is known as the Stevens & Smith Historic Site. It is scheduled for development this year. At the moment one can only get a glimpse of it through the Convention Center or by peeking in from the outside. Here at Queen and Vine Streets in Lancaster City, Pennsylvania, Thaddeus Stevens had his law office. Stevens was an abolitionist. An abolitionist is a person who favors the abolition of a practice or institution, especially capital punishment or (formerly) slavery. Stevens was born 4 April 1792 to Joshua Stevens and Sarah (Sally) Morrill in Danville Vermont. One of four children, he attended Vermont University from 1810 to 1812 when the War prompted its closure. He then went to Dartmouth, where he graduated in 1814. He then studied law and found himself set up in Gettysburg, PA in 1816. He practiced law there until 1828 when he found hi

52 Ancestors: Anna Keating Walsh is one Tough Woman

Amy Johnson Crow, of No Story Too Small , has challenged us this week with tough women. She asked “ Who is a tough, strong woman in your family tree? Or what woman has been tough to research?” My 2x great grandmother Anna Keating Walsh is indeed a tough woman.   She is a tough woman to trace and I believe she was a tough woman in her time as well. Anna (everyone past my grandparents get actual names; it is the only way I can keep people straight) was born around 1855 in Ireland . According to my grandmother, she was born in County Mayo .   My grandmother had told me that Anna had immigrated with her siblings and that she was the youngest Her parents – Patrick and Knapy Penelope Keating - had stayed behind and she settled in Ringtown which is just a stone’s throw from Shenandoah (assuming of course you can throw a bit)!   She married Michael Walsh and the lived in Shenandoah. The 1910 Census stated Anna had 11 children, with only six living in 1910. I would venture to ta