Labor History in NEPA: A CourseMain MenuIntroductionAnthracite Coal MinersThis module will examine the lives and legacies of anthracite coal miners in northeastern Pennsylvania.Textile WorkersThis module will examine the lives and legacies of workers, mostly women, who worked in silk mills, textile and garment manufacturing.TeachersThis module will explore the lives and legacies of teachers in northeastern Pennsylvania.Lori Shemanski33e02d2f7ef884e219611f0eafd74ac3408b6e8e
Coal
12018-07-15T11:42:05+00:00Lori Shemanski33e02d2f7ef884e219611f0eafd74ac3408b6e8e11Chunk of anthracite coalplain2018-07-15T11:42:05+00:00Lori Shemanski33e02d2f7ef884e219611f0eafd74ac3408b6e8e
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1media/coal.jpgmedia/Bliss.jpg2018-07-15T00:41:38+00:00Anthracite Coal Miners31This module will examine the lives and legacies of anthracite coal miners in northeastern Pennsylvania.image_header32018-07-26T03:43:13+00:00
Birth of the industry
in 1808, Jesse Fell of Wilkes Barre, Pa. discovered how to burn anthracite coal as home heating fuel. Anthracite coal, or hard coal, quickly became a desirable fuel because it burned more efficiently and cleaner than soft or bituminous coal. The only deposits of anthracite in the United States lay in northeastern Pennsylvania, primarily in the counties of Luzerne, Lackawanna, Carbon, Northumberland, Schuylkill and Dauphin. Mines were established and eventually bought up by the large railroad companies who used the fuel to power their trains and could easily ship it to other locations.
We will now investigate what it was like to be an anthracite coal miner.
You are encouraged to locate additional sources on these topics in order to explore how these incidents have been remembered by local communities and analyzed by various historians.