My grand father and my uncles were all minors in Shickshinny Pennsylvania. They packed up and left for New Haven Connecticut somewhere in the late 1930s. Thank you for posting this video. I'm always looking for a great insight as to how they lived and how they worked.
My mom was born in and grew up in Shickshinny! I understand some of her ancestors were coal miners. She joked about "coal crackers." The breaker boys eventually became miners usually.
Very informative and clear. I'm researching coal mining for a historical novel, and you are one of few who explains this well for someone who knows little about the process. I really appreciate the details about the early mining methods. Thank you!
My Grandfather and Father both worked at the Ravens Run Coal Mine near Centralia, they lived in Brynsville also called The Patch, near Centralia. Both got Black Lung from years in the Coal Mines.
Live in Mount Carmel Pennsylvania and still heat my home with Anthracite. Mount Carmel was the first community in the world to have electric street lights and Thomas Edison built his 6th power plant in Mount Carmel.
Anthracite fields start much further North than Wilkes-Barre. More like 30-40 miles North, in Forest City (Susquehanna County), running down South through Carbondale, the Mid-Valley, Scranton and Old Forge (all of Lackawanna County) before entering Luzerne County.
Thank you so much for your prompt answer. Don't know why I'm not familiar with that town. I try to go out there ever so often to visit my grandparents' grave. My son and I tried exploring the abandoned mine, but it is just way to dangerous. My Nana always said that we didn't know how good a life we had. What an understatement.
If you buy an older house in the areas they mine, they have showers in the basements. For the man to shower off after working the mine all day, before going upstairs.
I think my interest in anthracite comes from my interest in the railroads, ironically. The roads like the DL&W, Erie, Jersey Central, Reading, Lehigh Valley really also impacted the business, even smaller ones like the NYO&W and Lehigh & New England, I think it’d also be important to note the impact their decline they had on the industry in its decline, and the impact the mines had on the railroads.
I can understand that. I feel the same way. CSX still hauls millions of tons of coal out of WV every year. Since we have so much of it and better mining techniques today, I'd like to see more of it used to generate electricity.
An old time I spoke to years ago told me as a kid in the 30s they'd hop aboard slow moving coals trains on the DL&W out of Scranton and fetch a few buckets of the black diamonds to fire the cooking stove at home. Lackawanna also fueled their locomotives with the stuff mined right off railroad property.
Yeah I have 4 generations from mid 1800s thru 1950 My ggfathers came and worked when they left Ireland. Worked the same mines with the Molly Maguires. And then up in Scranton with my grandfather. And that was the last generation.
My grand father and my uncles were all minors in Shickshinny Pennsylvania. They packed up and left for New Haven Connecticut somewhere in the late 1930s. Thank you for posting this video. I'm always looking for a great insight as to how they lived and how they worked.
My mom was born in and grew up in Shickshinny! I understand some of her ancestors were coal miners.
She joked about "coal crackers." The breaker boys eventually became miners usually.
Very informative and clear. I'm researching coal mining for a historical novel, and you are one of few who explains this well for someone who knows little about the process. I really appreciate the details about the early mining methods. Thank you!
thank you for the kind words! best of luck with your book!
My Grandfather and Father both worked at the Ravens Run Coal Mine near Centralia, they lived in Brynsville also called The Patch, near Centralia. Both got Black Lung from years in the Coal Mines.
Good video. I worked in the soft coal mines in western PA for 17 years. Lots of good memories but a few bad ones too.
It's hard work that I wouldn't want to do but I respect those who do and I still love coal.
Live in Mount Carmel Pennsylvania and still heat my home with Anthracite. Mount Carmel was the first community in the world to have electric street lights and Thomas Edison built his 6th power plant in Mount Carmel.
i have allways been interested in northern coal mines
The northeastern part of PA (anthracite coal region) is really unique for sure. different geology. different cultures. I love it.
My grandpa was a coal miner from 1918 to 1964 in sw pa and west va.
People bitching and griping about this country don't know how good they have it.
Great video Van. in 6:40 the safety lamp should ben a Davey lamp.
Anthracite fields start much further North than Wilkes-Barre. More like 30-40 miles North, in Forest City (Susquehanna County), running down South through Carbondale, the Mid-Valley, Scranton and Old Forge (all of Lackawanna County) before entering Luzerne County.
Yeah there was an active coal mine in Carbondale
My family worked, and died at the Ellen-Gowan mines near Shenandoah. Was this filmed near there?
thanks for sharing. yes. we filmed this in Ashland only a few miles from there.
Thank you so much for your prompt answer. Don't know why I'm not familiar with that town. I try to go out there ever so often to visit my grandparents' grave. My son and I tried exploring the abandoned mine, but it is just way to dangerous. My Nana always said that we didn't know how good a life we had. What an understatement.
Great and informative video! But I gotta know, what is the song that plays at the beginning?
Thank you the song is Bootleg Miner by van wagner. It is available on iTunes, Apple Music, Spotify etc.
love ur video. as a shamokin resadent i thank you.
Greetings from Hegins! 🤠
If you buy an older house in the areas they mine, they have showers in the basements. For the man to shower off after working the mine all day, before going upstairs.
I never knew that. I'm from Mount Carmel and my shower is still in my basement but it's finished so really not like a basement.
I think my interest in anthracite comes from my interest in the railroads, ironically.
The roads like the DL&W, Erie, Jersey Central, Reading, Lehigh Valley really also impacted the business, even smaller ones like the NYO&W and Lehigh & New England, I think it’d also be important to note the impact their decline they had on the industry in its decline, and the impact the mines had on the railroads.
You forgot the D&H!
I can understand that. I feel the same way. CSX still hauls millions of tons of coal out of WV every year. Since we have so much of it and better mining techniques today, I'd like to see more of it used to generate electricity.
An old time I spoke to years ago told me as a kid in the 30s they'd hop aboard slow moving coals trains on the DL&W out of Scranton and fetch a few buckets of the black diamonds to fire the cooking stove at home. Lackawanna also fueled their locomotives with the stuff mined right off railroad property.
Anthracite = very useful and valuable fuel back in the day---and still today!
Agreed.
I believe it still is
It's a better choice than our government allowing power company's burning bit coal to create power for electricity
Cleanest burning, highest BTUs in the world.
Greetings from the Skook.🤠
Edit: We still mine here.
what is the song in the beginning?
Bootleg Miner by Van Wagner. you can fin dit on itunes, spotify, etc. thanks
Did the Scranton area miners believe in the Tommy Knockers or Knackers?
I don't know. I was a schuylkill county coal miner and I don't not believe in them :)
How much were coal miner's paid then any guess
When?
absolutely
I’ve
Got coal dust in my veins. 5 generations of miners .
Yeah I have 4 generations from mid 1800s thru 1950 My ggfathers came and worked when they left Ireland. Worked the same mines with the Molly Maguires. And then up in Scranton with my grandfather. And that was the last generation.
Somebody was getting rich off of Slave labor..
They still are.....
Fun time van
Pretty good, but a permissible safety lamp will not detect carbon monoxide
thanks for the comment. I never knew this.
That's what the birds were for.
Watched😰😰😰🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽