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Coal

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Title: Coal Author: Default Last modified by: Default Created Date: 9/22/2002 6:17:26 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show Other titles – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Coal


1
Coal

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Types of Coal
Anthracite Anthracite is coal with the highest
carbon content, between 86 and 98 percent, and a
heat value of nearly 15,000 BTUs-per-pound. Most
frequently associated with home heating,
anthracite is a very small segment of the U.S.
coal market. There are 7.3 billion tons of
anthracite reserves in the United States, found
mostly in 11 northeastern counties in
Pennsylvania.
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Bituminous The most plentiful form of coal in the
United States, bituminous coal is used primarily
to generate electricity and make coke for the
steel industry. The fastest growing market for
coal, though still a small one, is supplying heat
for industrial processes. Bituminous coal has a
carbon content ranging from 45 to 86 percent
carbon and a heat value of 10,500 to 15,500
BTUs-per-pound.
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Subbituminous Ranking below bituminous is
subbituminous coal with 35-45 percent carbon
content and a heat value between 8,300 and 13,000
BTUs-per-pound. Reserves are located mainly in a
half-dozen Western states and Alaska. Although
its heat value is lower, this coal generally has
a lower sulfur content than other types, which
makes it attractive for use because it is cleaner
burning.
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Lignite Lignite is a geologically young coal
which has the lowest carbon content, 25-35
percent, and a heat value ranging between 4,000
and 8,300 BTUs-per-pound. Sometimes called brown
coal, it is mainly used for electric power
generation.
7
http//www.uky.edu/KGS/coal/webcoal/pages/coalming
.htm
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Coke Ovens Burning at Night Oil on canvas by
Roman Verostko
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Working the coke ovens was a hot and hard job.
This is an oven in PA.
10
  • Coal Camps
  • Life in the coal camps varied, depending on the
    benevolence of the companies and the
    fluctuations of the coal market.
  • Lynch KY was build by US Steel in 1917 for its
    captive mine.

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Lynch KY, 1918
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Main Street, Lynch KY, 1919
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Central office and bath house, Lynch KY
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  • Benham was built by International Harvester in
    1911.
  • Coal was coked and shipped to the steel mills in
    Chicago.

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Benham KY, 1935
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Rows of coke ovens in Benham
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  • Jenkins KY was build by Consolidation Coal
    Company after having purchased 100,000 acres in
    Pike, Letcher and Floyd Counties.

Main Street, 1920
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Wise County Coal Camps
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Stonega, built by Stonega Coal and Coke
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  • Labor was the variable capital which could be
    cut during the economic downturns that have
    always plagued the industry.
  • Control of labor was of primary concern to the
    owners and operators.
  • The company received rent on the housing, and
    could evict any worker and his family who was
    trouble.

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  • Miners were paid in scrip which could only be
    redeemed at the company store.

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  • They were treated by company doctors and led in
    worship by company preachers.
  • They were paid by the amount of coal they dug and
    loaded. They would be docked for slate or rock
    found in the load.
  • Companies also engaged in cribbing, using cars
    that actually held more coal that the miners were
    paid for.

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  • Low pay, cheating on wages due, high prices for
    goods at the company store, high rents, and poor
    safety conditions all contribute to the labor
    wars in the coalfields.
  • The Knights of Labor, the National Miners Union,
    the International Workers of the World, and the
    United Mine Workers of America (founded in 1890)
    all participated in attempts to organize the
    Appalachian coal fields.

26
  • In 1902 the UMWA achieved its first success in
    the Kanawha-New River coalfield. The operators
    organized and hired Baldwin-Felts to break the
    union.
  • In April, 1912, miners on Paint Creek in Kanawha
    Co. walked off, demanding
  • recognition of their constitutional rights to
    free speech and assembly
  • an end to blacklisting union organizers
  • alternatives to company stores
  • an end to the practice of using mine guards
  • prohibition of cribbing
  • installation of scales at all mines for
    accurately weighing coal
  • unions be allowed to hire their own checkweighmen
    to make sure the companies' checkweighmen were
    not cheating the miners.
  • the right to organize

27
  • The miners were evicted from their homes. They
    set up their own tent camp.
  • Organizers, including Mary Harris Mother Jones,
    came to the support of the miners.

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  • Several battles ensued between agents of the
    companies and miners. National Guardsmen were
    called in three times.
  • Mother Jones was arrested and placed on trial.
  • Gov. Henry Hatfield finally issued a resolution
    that ended the strike, giving the miners a nine
    hour day, the right to shop outside the company
    stores, the right to their own checkweighmen, and
    the end of discrimination against union members.

29
  • The next major battle began in 1919 in Mingo and
    Logan Counties. Law enforcement, with company
    paid deputies, harassed suspected union men.
  • In the Spring of 1920, non-union miners in Mingo
    Co. went on strike. Union membership grew
    rapidly.
  • At the famous Matewan Massacre, chief of police
    Sid Hatfield stood down Baldwin-Felts.

30
  • The Battle of Blair Mountain followed.
  • Union membership in southern WVA did not recover
    until the National Industrial Recovery Act of
    1933.
  • The Harlan County mine wars took place from
    1931-39.
  • There the issues were similar, but the Harlan Co.
    Coal Operators Association was the most
    anti-union of the lot.

31
  • The Brookside mine strike against Duke Power
    occurred 1973-74. It is documented in Harlan
    County, USA and celebrated in Showtimes Harlan
    Co. Wars.
  • The last major strike was against Pittston Coal
    in 1989.

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Breaker boys at a PA mine
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  • The mechanization of mining is the current threat
    to the continuation of a significant work force.
  • It is also creating a major threat to the
    environment of the coalfields.

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Continuous miner
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Scoop
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Roof bolter
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Drill
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Dragline
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Shovel and hauler
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Dozer
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A mountain top removal (MTR) job in progress.
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In MTR, the overburden is dumped over the side of
the mountain.
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A valley fill created by MTR
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  • From the 1950s through the 1970s opposition to
    surface or strip mining grew.
  • The Buffalo Creek Disaster was a turning point.
    On February 16, 1972, a dam belonging to Pittston
    Coal Co. broke. 118 persons died. 4000 were left
    homeless.

48
http//www.vcn.com/wma/coal/coalfrm/coalfrm1.htm
49
This surface mine in Wyoming has a 60-foot seam
of coal.
http//www.mine-engineer.com/mining/coalsrf1.htm
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