In the early 1970s, I worked in seems that were as low as 26 to 36 inches. We didn't have continuous miners that would cut the roof rock for more height. In some of the mines I worked, the coal was drilled and blasted then loaded into cars for the trip outside. I got my back broke in a roof fall in 1982 and was paralized. That ended my mining career, but I loved working in the mines and I would go back in a heartbeat if I could. Thanks..
My friend in Maryland use to work in a deep mine in West Virginia. He told me that the most dangerous thing about working the mines was the drive to and from work.
I was an Underground & Surface Mining Surveyor for 15 years. Started at the outside where the first bit of Coal was taken-and mapped the progression for miles inside. I'd take a job doing that again in a heartbeat. God Bless our Coal Miners.
Different coal seams are different heights. If he worked in SW Virginia and in low coal he was likely working in the upper banner seam or the rolling Jawbone seam. Yea the names are weird but upper banner & Jawbone ranged from 34 inches to about 44 inches and in Norton, Wise, out to Abington Va those seems can be very low down to 28 inches. Closer to Grundy you will find the Pocahontas seam which is 6 to 8 feet high and the Low Banner seam in Coburn Va can be as high as 10 feet. It just depends on the seam. But I worked in SW Virginia for Paramont Coal for about 10 years while I was building my recording studio once it was built I quit and never looked back but I enjoyed my time mining. But it's a young mans game and I got out at 31. My Dad spent 46 years mining after leaving the military after Vietnam.
Can't wait. Just got my alabama miner card a couple weeks ago. Moved here about a year ago from wv. My husbands worked underground for over 10 years now. Hopefully I find a job soon.
I worked at an underground mine in Pilgrim, Martin County, KY. worked in section that was about 50 inches high. there was a section that was about 10 foot high at one time. I rarely worked it.
I'll stick with open pit oil sand mining. Hard hats off to you guys who will work underground. That really takes guts. I would hate to be 20 miles from the nearest exit when a bump happens.
Im glad to hear somebody finally say that...Im from northeastern Pa, and if you know your history, thats the heart of anthracite coal...and there is no room to walk in our mines even todayy. its just as dangerous...if you watched the news lately the the accident that happend at the harmony mine were one guy died. i live an hour away. and knows somebody that works there
I went down a coal mine today, its really interesting and i think i might take it up as a career. Its a really hard job but its probably one of the best, the moneys great but not only that but you get to meet some great people and become good friends with them.
That's looks like a real luxury mine... you can acutally get to stand up. In my neck of the woods, Southwest Virgina, the roofs are so low that you almost have to crawl
A little more technology then back in the day when coal minors had to pretty much do it manualy. But i'm sure it's still not an easy task, and very dangerous as well. God Bless each of them!
I'm a swickley seam roof bolter in pa..We run 8 ft supertwist bolts full resin. were a low coal mine and i see how dry they are and the fact they get to stand.. try using a fletcher dual head bolter with wetheads in a 20ft cutt merely 54 inches high. we bend our bolts into z's so we can get them into the top..by the way.. 1st glue is a 10 second quickset glue to hurry lol.. this video makes mining and bolting look so easy... come to swickley's seam and bring knee pads and a snorkel.
My dad was a roof bolter for Reliable Coal in Preston County WV. his name was Melvin Strahin or "Blue" as he was known in the mines. My son works at Jenmar in Preston County making mining bolts. .
I raised 2 heros! One Bolts top for Arch coal in Eccles, WV & One defends our Country through the United States Air Force! God bless Our Miners & Active Military! The Lord walks with my Babies, everyday! ❤
I feel my job can be difficult working in the substance usage disorder field but this is a different type of treachery...respectable ppl doing this work
using some old school gear in this video, most modern coal mines use auto bolter miners (ABM) which mine the roadways and bolt at the same time. Ive worked at an underground coal mine in Australia for 3 years, not the safest or most glamorous place to be, but with the right systems and people, coal mines are much safer today than they were 20 or even 10 years ago, and Australia has had some major mining disasters in the past.
Curious what led you to read it? I'm currently reading it too and that's why I'm here! I know Orwell wrote it sometime in the 1930s, so I decided to see how much has changed since then.
@@andreacoane4891 Jordan Peterson. But also because I read Animal Farm and 1984 and I loved them so much that I wanted to get a better idea of Orwell through his nonfiction.
@@andreacoane4891 the division of workers and the rich who benefit from those workers is still the same imo. But I don’t think anything compares to the grueling work of the miners in that book. It is very humbling and inspiring to imagine how much more our human bodies can take and how hard we can push ourselves and how much we can take and keep moving forward. After you read that book you can pack up all your complaints about your job and your struggles and start living, because wherever you are now, it’s certainly better than what those people were living like.
@@stevena3333 Yes! Me too! Read 1984 several times over the years, but never heard of Road to Wigan Pier until Jordan Peterson mentioned it. And, I'm embarrassed to say, I'm just starting The Gulag Archipelago. It should have been required reading in high school.
I'm on my way to joining the underground coal mining industry. @nikon47130 the commute really is the most dangerous part of the work day. underground mining is between farming, which is more dangerous, and cement mixing, which is less dangerous. more people died in farming accidents in 2010 then underground mines in the united states
Ryan Halsey Hell ya man! I work at B&B Coal Co. It is owned an operated by my family. We are a small strait pitch mine and we mine anthracite (hard coal). Mine has been in my family for generations and I am proud to be a coal miner.
No--the shaft only operates and the change of the shifts, unless there is an emergency--usually pockets of methane gas or some other explosion. My dad's journey down was 30 minutes,
i work in a pa mine..its low coal and there's so much air across the last open cross cutt black lung is a thing of the past... i dont wear a mask at all.. i try not to breathe much when i empty out my dust box.. other then that its fine....we use 6 or 8ft super twist bolts and bend them in half to get them in..our jloc glue sets up in 6 seconds. so you better hurry gettn them in.
I worked under ground for some time !!! i wish for one time people could see the truth about coal mining !! like in the face with no air can't see shit the mud and water to say a few, Like when there was no inspector around !! not this pretty stuff, the REAL shit !! not being rude at all just saying a lot goes on that some have no clue
BlackMan614 Hey you don't have to try and pick a fight, you have no ideal how it was where I worked buddy, I wish there was cameras back then like now, because I would get a OMG from you after seeing what work looks like in real dog holes
***** yea ban coal how about doing some research on coal then do some on nuclear power and its waste !!! lot of people get hurt playing sports lets ban it !!! OMG there is so many things that needs ban in a big way and you want to say ban coal !!!! hey I have a ideal lets have a hang out and talk all about things that need ban !!! do you think GMO need ban !!!! I can go on and on,, so what say you do a hang out live
stephen cristinzio Well to start with your afraid to show your self so I don't think you have any balls to do it, but any time you want to just come on down and ill put you down, but at the same time this sounds like a little kid that has no idea about any thing at all so I am not worried at all, but just in case your not read the 4th line again, old broke down minner from ky so think again with your head and not that mouth !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
you need to were masks so you dont get the cough later in life. The new guy is fine he will go back to day side and breath fresh air H2o for his entire life but the rest of you need oxygen masks to give you clean air so you can dig deeper and pass the knowledge on to your offspring.
My dad was a hard coal miner, black lung took him from my family when I was five. Mom went to work to keep us out of the Catholic orphanage. Don't tell me how great coal is. I've been down the mine a few times , it's not for me. I'm not some subterranean rodent, of which the mine crawls with. Someone once said only convicts mine coal, even the slaves refused to go under.
This is a bituminous mine. This is where they mine the what is basically garbage coal. In the Anthracite Region we stack the stuff mined here on the "useless" pile.
How many times I told you. Got my helmet on my head Figure out what that zombie said (What?) Lava all over the room Got a half-heart left, man, I am doomed Don't have any iron bars My pick just broke into some shards Scary noise, what should I do? Go left or right? I'll have to choose [Pre-Chorus 1] Visions of last time flash inside my mind I'm scared, oh well And I'm pretty sure there's a big creeper right there [Chorus] Don't mine at night I know you're lookin' at that cave And you're feelin' kinda' brave Go to bed, you'll be alright Don't mine at night There's nothing that is gonna change If you just wait until the day Zombies wanna eat your brains Don't mine at night I know it's me you're gonna thank Make a bed, it's not too late Three wool and three wooden planks Don't mine at night How many times I have to say Drop the pick and walk away-a, woah
@LeMaeNaDe Just ignore him. Idiots pick out when things go wrong and go ""THIS ISN'T SAFE!!!!@!!!@@!!!111!!!"" and ignore the thousands of times anything they don't like works just fine in a given day. Better yet, they call you an idiot when you point this out to them. Yes, stuff can go wrong when mining but it's actually slightly safer then driving down the road (looking at deaths per person who participates in it per year) and people drive every day and rarely complain.
I heard that everyone is moving back to Kentucky and West Virginia because Trump has created thousands of mining industry jobs for America. I feel so bad that they will have to drink coal water just to work.
Rcrby525 Steel houses would require less labor and time to build. They can also stand up to severe weather if the beams are thick enough, as well as being less of a fire hazard.
In the early 1970s, I worked in seems that were as low as 26 to 36 inches. We didn't have continuous miners that would cut the roof rock for more height. In some of the mines I worked, the coal was drilled and blasted then loaded into cars for the trip outside. I got my back broke in a roof fall in 1982 and was paralized. That ended my mining career, but I loved working in the mines and I would go back in a heartbeat if I could. Thanks..
My friend in Maryland use to work in a deep mine in West Virginia. He told me that the most dangerous thing about working the mines was the drive to and from work.
This is absolutely amazing. I have so much respect for these guys.
I was an Underground & Surface Mining Surveyor for 15 years. Started at the outside where the first bit of Coal was taken-and mapped the progression for miles inside. I'd take a job doing that again in a heartbeat. God Bless our Coal Miners.
Anyone who goes into a mine to bring our national energy out is a hero in my book.
Kinda nice being able to stand straight up in the mine, you can't stand straight up and down in all mines
These comments give me anxiety.
really great. Greetings from the Ruhr area of Germany
I do this everyday, I love mining coal
Absolutely as a last resort.
Money does not grow on trees🎉.
Philadelphia USA 🇺🇲 AMEN ☦️🙏❤️🇺🇦
🎶 I'm proud to be a coal miner's granddaughter !!!
wow , a coal mine you can stand in!! my stepdad mined for 40 years in southwest va. and probably didn't stand one time.
Different coal seams are different heights. If he worked in SW Virginia and in low coal he was likely working in the upper banner seam or the rolling Jawbone seam. Yea the names are weird but upper banner & Jawbone ranged from 34 inches to about 44 inches and in Norton, Wise, out to Abington Va those seems can be very low down to 28 inches. Closer to Grundy you will find the Pocahontas seam which is 6 to 8 feet high and the Low Banner seam in Coburn Va can be as high as 10 feet. It just depends on the seam. But I worked in SW Virginia for Paramont Coal for about 10 years while I was building my recording studio once it was built I quit and never looked back but I enjoyed my time mining. But it's a young mans game and I got out at 31. My Dad spent 46 years mining after leaving the military after Vietnam.
Can't wait. Just got my alabama miner card a couple weeks ago. Moved here about a year ago from wv. My husbands worked underground for over 10 years now. Hopefully I find a job soon.
I worked at an underground mine in Pilgrim, Martin County, KY. worked in section that was about 50 inches high. there was a section that was about 10 foot high at one time. I rarely worked it.
I'll stick with open pit oil sand mining. Hard hats off to you guys who will work underground. That really takes guts. I would hate to be 20 miles from the nearest exit when a bump happens.
I worked underground for forty one years I ran a miner for 35 years.
Do you have any lung issues now?
RIP Bob Simon...Aka Legend
Im glad to hear somebody finally say that...Im from northeastern Pa, and if you know your history, thats the heart of anthracite coal...and there is no room to walk in our mines even todayy. its just as dangerous...if you watched the news lately the the accident that happend at the harmony mine were one guy died. i live an hour away. and knows somebody that works there
I went down a coal mine today, its really interesting and i think i might take it up as a career. Its a really hard job but its probably one of the best, the moneys great but not only that but you get to meet some great people and become good friends with them.
It’s been 15 years have y’all ran out of coal yet?
That's looks like a real luxury mine... you can acutally get to stand up.
In my neck of the woods, Southwest Virgina, the roofs are so low that you almost have to crawl
A little more technology then back in the day when coal minors had to pretty much do it manualy. But i'm sure it's still not an easy task, and very dangerous as well. God Bless each of them!
I'm a swickley seam roof bolter in pa..We run 8 ft supertwist bolts full resin. were a low coal mine and i see how dry they are and the fact they get to stand.. try using a fletcher dual head bolter with wetheads in a 20ft cutt merely 54 inches high. we bend our bolts into z's so we can get them into the top..by the way.. 1st glue is a 10 second quickset glue to hurry lol.. this video makes mining and bolting look so easy... come to swickley's seam and bring knee pads and a snorkel.
I can't believe how spacious that mine is.
In the ones I've visited in Southwest Virginia, you had almost that to crawl.
I have the highest respect for the coalminer after I got to visit the face of the mine
respect to the miners! some brave souls
My dad was a roof bolter for Reliable Coal in Preston County WV. his name was Melvin Strahin or "Blue" as he was known in the mines.
My son works at Jenmar in Preston County making mining bolts.
.
I raised 2 heros!
One Bolts top for Arch coal in Eccles, WV & One defends our Country through the United States Air Force!
God bless Our Miners & Active Military!
The Lord walks with my Babies, everyday! ❤
I feel my job can be difficult working in the substance usage disorder field but this is a different type of treachery...respectable ppl doing this work
God Bless these coal miners and keep them safe...
using some old school gear in this video, most modern coal mines use auto bolter miners (ABM) which mine the roadways and bolt at the same time. Ive worked at an underground coal mine in Australia for 3 years, not the safest or most glamorous place to be, but with the right systems and people, coal mines are much safer today than they were 20 or even 10 years ago, and Australia has had some major mining disasters in the past.
I work in this mine everyday. it is mccoy # 15, pikeville kentucky.
I live in Eastern Ky.
I Ran a Roofbolter in the very Mine.
Pretty cool to see it on youtube.
The Road to Wigan Pier brought me here.
Curious what led you to read it? I'm currently reading it too and that's why I'm here! I know Orwell wrote it sometime in the 1930s, so I decided to see how much has changed since then.
@@andreacoane4891 Jordan Peterson. But also because I read Animal Farm and 1984 and I loved them so much that I wanted to get a better idea of Orwell through his nonfiction.
@@andreacoane4891 the division of workers and the rich who benefit from those workers is still the same imo. But I don’t think anything compares to the grueling work of the miners in that book. It is very humbling and inspiring to imagine how much more our human bodies can take and how hard we can push ourselves and how much we can take and keep moving forward. After you read that book you can pack up all your complaints about your job and your struggles and start living, because wherever you are now, it’s certainly better than what those people were living like.
@@stevena3333 Indeed! 👍
@@stevena3333 Yes! Me too! Read 1984 several times over the years, but never heard of Road to Wigan Pier until Jordan Peterson mentioned it. And, I'm embarrassed to say, I'm just starting The Gulag Archipelago. It should have been required reading in high school.
I cant imagine how all this was done by hand some 50 years ago.
Less coal more people
My boss almost took all the employees down a coal elevator thankfully we got ice cream sandwiches instead. Way more satisfying.....
I'm on my way to joining the underground coal mining industry.
@nikon47130 the commute really is the most dangerous part of the work day. underground mining is between farming, which is more dangerous, and cement mixing, which is less dangerous. more people died in farming accidents in 2010 then underground mines in the united states
you couldnt pqy me enough to go down into that claustraphobic hell hole
Darius Blood me either.
Very brave worker!!!
you do what you gotta do.
That's nothing compared to coal mines in southwest Virginia. They are so low.
I work underground in Southwest Virginia. I'm a foreman/manager trainee while I'm in college. I love it.
which mine do you work at
Ryan Halsey Hell ya man! I work at B&B Coal Co. It is owned an operated by my family. We are a small strait pitch mine and we mine anthracite (hard coal). Mine has been in my family for generations and I am proud to be a coal miner.
Same here I have been apart of it for a long time, we owned 3 mines(bitoniminous) called apache coal company
Looks incredibly dangerous, and quite scary..
I worked 42 years under ground , miner opr.
nice , do they have emergency stuff there i mean if smth happened ( i wish nothing will happen )
No--the shaft only operates and the change of the shifts, unless there is an emergency--usually pockets of methane gas or some other explosion. My dad's journey down was 30 minutes,
I worked at this mine
brave miners!
Underground Coal Mining For Life
haha i am from eastern ky and i totally agree with you
nothing wrong with being a miner im a wv one
Wow the end was kind of anticlimactic😕😕
i work in a pa mine..its low coal and there's so much air across the last open cross cutt black lung is a thing of the past... i dont wear a mask at all.. i try not to breathe much when i empty out my dust box.. other then that its fine....we use 6 or 8ft super twist bolts and bend them in half to get them in..our jloc glue sets up in 6 seconds. so you better hurry gettn them in.
i'll go along with that
Do you guys get alot of health problems from working in the mines?
No not really
Real Americans. No FSA to found anywhere in this area.
Well it's been 15 years. Have they been bought out or run out of coal yet?
I worked under ground for some time !!! i wish for one time people could see the truth about coal mining !! like in the face with no air can't see shit the mud and water to say a few, Like when there was no inspector around !! not this pretty stuff, the REAL shit !! not being rude at all just saying a lot goes on that some have no clue
SolarSavage
I worked in the mines too, and what you say is an affront to any competent mining engineer. No air at the face. Get real, buddy.
BlackMan614 Hey you don't have to try and pick a fight, you have no ideal how it was where I worked buddy, I wish there was cameras back then like now, because I would get a OMG from you after seeing what work looks like in real dog holes
+SolarSavage ban coal
***** yea ban coal how about doing some research on coal then do some on nuclear power and its waste !!! lot of people get hurt playing sports lets ban it !!! OMG there is so many things that needs ban in a big way and you want to say ban coal !!!! hey I have a ideal lets have a hang out and talk all about things that need ban !!! do you think GMO need ban !!!! I can go on and on,, so what say you do a hang out live
stephen cristinzio Well to start with your afraid to show your self so I don't think you have any balls to do it, but any time you want to just come on down and ill put you down, but at the same time this sounds like a little kid that has no idea about any thing at all so I am not worried at all, but just in case your not read the 4th line again, old broke down minner from ky so think again with your head and not that mouth !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
you need to were masks so you dont get the cough later in life. The new guy is fine he will go back to day side and breath fresh air H2o for his entire life but the rest of you need oxygen masks to give you clean air so you can dig deeper and pass the knowledge on to your offspring.
My family are mostly coal miners in SW Virginia. Black lung is a terrible consequence of working underground
My dad was a hard coal miner, black lung took him from my family when I was five. Mom went to work to keep us out of the Catholic orphanage. Don't tell me how great coal is. I've been down the mine a few times , it's not for me. I'm not some subterranean rodent, of which the mine crawls with. Someone once said only convicts mine coal, even the slaves refused to go under.
Which james river coal mine is this
McCoy Elkhorn Mine #15
I'd love to do that 20min ride :D
Love. This.
Instant panic attack.
This is a bituminous mine. This is where they mine the what is basically garbage coal. In the Anthracite Region we stack the stuff mined here on the "useless" pile.
Das Hangende wird nur mit Stahlanker ohne Bogenausbau gesichert,wow 🙄🤔
cheers bro
so where do u work at
Here I am 15 years later, is it still coal in there ??
anybody happen to know what mine this is?
No, its when you light your cigarette
crazy shit!
How many times I told you.
Got my helmet on my head
Figure out what that zombie said (What?)
Lava all over the room
Got a half-heart left, man, I am doomed
Don't have any iron bars
My pick just broke into some shards
Scary noise, what should I do?
Go left or right? I'll have to choose
[Pre-Chorus 1]
Visions of last time flash inside my mind
I'm scared, oh well
And I'm pretty sure there's a big creeper right there
[Chorus]
Don't mine at night
I know you're lookin' at that cave
And you're feelin' kinda' brave
Go to bed, you'll be alright
Don't mine at night
There's nothing that is gonna change
If you just wait until the day
Zombies wanna eat your brains
Don't mine at night
I know it's me you're gonna thank
Make a bed, it's not too late
Three wool and three wooden planks
Don't mine at night
How many times I have to say
Drop the pick and walk away-a, woah
@TheDocmhz come on down to logan co 29 to 31 thats low coal
Please, repost it in HD!!! 👋
Im surprised their not wearing respirators.
@GeeDurty are they hiring any green hats? Just got my underground card and need a job.
Minecraft: TOO MUCH COAL!
at 3:24 is the camera guy inby the ATRS?
😂😂😂😂😂 thanks for pointing that out I missed it
is this safe?!?!
No
@joemc111 ur friend in maryland is wrong...its prob the safest part...
@LeMaeNaDe Just ignore him. Idiots pick out when things go wrong and go ""THIS ISN'T SAFE!!!!@!!!@@!!!111!!!"" and ignore the thousands of times anything they don't like works just fine in a given day. Better yet, they call you an idiot when you point this out to them. Yes, stuff can go wrong when mining but it's actually slightly safer then driving down the road (looking at deaths per person who participates in it per year) and people drive every day and rarely complain.
They should have a 7-11 or McDonalds down in the mines...
If you see this tell Ms. hahm I said Hi
I heard that everyone is moving back to Kentucky and West Virginia because Trump has created thousands of mining industry jobs for America. I feel so bad that they will have to drink coal water just to work.
falcon Eddy
Coal Water?
Also, Coal is necessary for Steel production. Steel is necessary for building good houses, among other things.
Rcrby525
Steel houses would require less labor and time to build. They can also stand up to severe weather if the beams are thick enough, as well as being less of a fire hazard.
oh yeah well i work at a burger joint
this is bossly!!! sike!!!
a lot of this hasent changed for 50 years
where is harry warden??
I thought this was a minecraft vid -.-
That would be nice, especially when your food gets all covered in coal dust...
You would think they would have some kind of mask or somthing to keep from breathing in black caol dust.
People trap in colorado mine brought me here jaja
Are they goin to the face r somethin?
No its nick lmao
fuckin scary
I'll just stick with minecraft
Harry Warden disliked the mines,
Douglas miners is died
Revisit
Minecraft!!!! :D
Coal is for chumps, am I right?
what?