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West  Virginia  University  Libraries 
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Coal  industry  in  America 


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West  Virginia  University  Library 

This  book  is  due  on  the  date  indicated  below. 


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JUN  23  1893 

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A  Bibliography  and 
Guide  to  Studies 

Second  Edition 


Robert  F.  Munn 


WEST  VIRGINIA  UNIVERSITY  LIBRARY 
MORGANTOWN 

1977 


APPAL.  ;  .:.. 

,  C  b  ""  % 
I 

Copyright,  1977  by 
WEST  VIRGINIA  UNIVERSITY  FOUNDATION 

Morgantown,  West  Virginia 

Library  of  Congress  Card  No.  77-77913 
International  Standard  Book  No.  0-930284-00-3 


Library 


MORGANTOWN  PRINTING  &  RINDING  CO. 
MORGANTOWN,  WEST  VIRGINIA 


Cwtfekia 


Introduction v 

History 1 

Economics 38 

Labor  Relations 88 

Life  in  the  Coal  Fields 159 

Transportation 184 

Government  Regulation 197 

Environmental  Effects 208 

Surface  Mining 217 

Safety 250 

Mine  Disasters 258 

Racial  and  Ethnic  Groups 265 

Folklore 269 

Health 272 

General  Descriptive  Accounts 285 

Miscellaneous  and  Addenda 303 

Index 325 


€*&* 


OHbwdmtim 


The  first  edition  of  this  work  appeared  in  1965.  It  represent- 
ed the  first  major  effort  to  achieve  some  measure  of  control  over 
the  voluminous  and  widely-scattered  literature  of  the  coal  indus- 
try. Since  1965,  there  has  been  a  marked  increase  in  the  volume, 
and  to  some  extent  the  quality,  of  publications  on  the  coal  indus- 
try. The  increase  in  the  number  of  publications  has  been  accom- 
panied by  at  least  as  great  an  increase  in  the  demand  for  informa- 
tion. The  present  edition  is  in  response  to  that  demand.  It 
includes  all  significant  items  in  the  first  edition,  now  long  out  of 
print,  plus  approximately  one  thousand  additional  entries. 

Both  public  and  scholarly  interest  in  the  coal  industry  has  in- 
creased sharply  in  recent  years.  The  basic  reason  is  doubtless  the 
growing  concern  with  the  cost  and  availability  of  energy.  It  has 
become  clear  that  both  economic  and  foreign  policy  considera- 
tions require  a  rapid  expansion  in  the  nation's  coal  production. 
The  new  importance  of  coal  has  quite  naturally  increased  interest 
in  matters  associated  with  coal.  Among  the  more  important— and 
controversial— are  the  environmental  costs  of  mining,  the  health 
and  safety  of  miners,  and  the  concentration  of  control  in  the  coal 
industry. 

The  literature  of  the  coal  industry  is  widely  scattered.  Con- 
tributions of  great  importance  are  found  in  everything  from  Coal 
Age  to  The  Journal  of  Occupational  Medicine.  This  scattering  of 
the  literature  has  increased  rapidly  in  recent  years,  as  scholars 
representing  the  various  academic  disciplines  have  become  inter- 
ested  in  the  industry  and  the  social  and  economic  problems  as- 
sociated with  it.  It  is  now  common  to  find  significant  articles  in 
journals  devoted  to  economics,  labor  relations,  sociology,  political 
science  and  medicine,  to  mention  only  the  more  obvious.  The 
growing  interest  among  scholars  has  also  given  rise  to  an  increase 
in  the  number  of  theses  and  dissertations  on  the  problem.  There 
are  government  reports  without  number.  In  short,  the  literature 
has  become  vast  and  almost  wildly  diffused. 

It  is  clearly  desirable  that  research  on  the  coal  industry  and 
the  problems  associated  with  it  be  carried  on  as  efficiently  and 
intelligently  as  possible.  Unfortunately,  the  scattered  nature  of 
the  literature  militates  against  this.  Even  the  most  conscientious 


scholar  finds  it  increasingly  difficult  to  keep  abreast  of  the  litera- 
ture in  his  own  field.  It  is  generally  quite  impossible  for  him  to 
follow  that  of  other  disciplines.  Thus  it  is  idle  to  expect  the  soc- 
iologist to  scan  medical  journals  or  the  economist  to  master  the 
literature  of  psychology.  And  yet,  it  seems  clear  that  fruitful 
study  of  many  of  the  problems  associated  with  the  coal  industry 
must  utilize  a  multi-disciplinary  approach. 

The  chief  purpose  of  this  guide  is  to  aid  in  such  multi-dis- 
ciplinary research.  The  principal  emphasis  has  been  placed  on  the 
social  sciences.  The  enormous  body  of  literature  in  the  science 
and  technology  of  mining  is  outside  the  scope  of  this  work.  Titles 
dealing  with  technology  and  geology  are  included  only  if  they 
contain  a  significant  amount  of  material  of  potential  interest  to 
the  historian  or  social  scientist.  Every  effort  has  been  made  to  in- 
clude titles  of  real  significance  and  works  whose  bibliographies 
will  serve  as  a  guide  to  those  interested  in  a  specific  area  or  prob- 
lem. 

A  number  of  librarians  and  scholars  have  contributed  greatly 
to  whatever  utility  this  work  may  have.  Mr.  M.  H.  Ross,  Associate 
Director  of  the  Rural  Practice  Project  at  the  University  of  North 
Carolina,  provided  much  help  and  many  useful  references  on  the 
medical  problems  of  the  coal  industry.  His  knowledge  of  the  field 
is  encyclopedic.  The  compiler's  secretary,  Mrs.  Mary  F.  Casey, 
typed  thousands  of  entries  with  accuracy  and  good  cheer.  The 
staff  of  the  West  Virginia  University  Library  was,  as  ever,  both 
helpful  and  tolerant.  However,  all  sins  of  omission  and  commis- 
sion are  those  of  the  compiler;  every  bibliographer  lives  not  in  the 
fear  but  in  the  certain  knowledge  that  he  has  overlooked  titles 
of  importance. 


vi 


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Included  here  are  general  accounts  published  before  1870. 
Material  on  the  history  of  surface  mining  is  to  be  found  in 
the  section  on  surface  mining. 

1.  An  address  to  the  inhabitants  of  Rhode  Island  on  the  sub- 
ject of  their  coal  mines.  New  York,  1825.  16p. 

2.  ALLISON,  ROBERT 

Early  history  of  coal  mining  and  mining  machinery  in 
Schuylkill  County.  Schuylkill  County  Historical  Society. 
Publication  4:  135-55  1912. 

3.  AMERICAN   INSTITUTE  OF  MINING  AND  METALLURGICAL  ENGI- 
NEERS. 

Seventy-five  years  of  progress  in  the  mineral  industry. 
New  York,  1947.  817p. 

Contains  chapters  on  both  anthracite  and  bituminous  mining. 

4.  ANSTED,  D.  T. 

Report  on  the  "Wilson  survey"  near  the  great  Kanawha 
River,  Virginia.  New  York:  W.  C.  Bryant,  1853.  16p. 

5.  Anthracite  coal  applied  to  generate  steam  power.  Monthly 
American  Journal  of  Geology  1:72-74  1831. 

6.  Anthracite  coal  trade  by  railways  and  canals.  Merchants 
Magazine  11:541-44  1844. 

Emphasis  is  on  the  role  of  the  Philadelphia  and  Reading  Railroad. 
/    7.     ARMES,  ETHEL  M. 

The  story  of  coal  and  iron  in  Alabama.  Birmingham,  1910. 
581p. 

N^  8.  ASHLEY,  GEORGE  H. 

The  Cumberland  Gap  coal  field.  Mining  Magazine  10:94- 
100  1904. 


9.     BARKSDALE,  S. 

Coal  mining  thrives  on  Virginia's  "last  frontier".  Common- 
wealth Je  1949  30-32. 

The  "frontier"  is  the  area  between  Clintwood  and  Pound.  Article  in- 
cludes material  on  the  history  of  mining  in  Virginia. 

10.  BASSETT,  JOHN  W.  AND  HARRY  L.  WASHBURN 

Early  underground  coal  mining  in  Kentucky.  Kentucky 
Engineer  My  1950  7-10. 

11.  BASTIN,  S.  L.  AND  S.  A.  MORY 

History  of  coal  mining  in  Laurel  County,  Kentucky,  1750 
to  1944.  London,  Kentucky,  1944.  16p. 

12.  BAYLES,  J.  C. 

The  coal  question.  Hunt's  Merchants  Magazine  61:169-73 
1869. 

Author  urges  the  development  of  coal  fields  in  Maryland,  Virginia 
and  elsewhere  in  order  to  break  the  semi-monopoly  of  major  anthra- 
cite producers. 

13.  BEACHLEY,  CHARLES  E. 

History  of  the  Consolidation  Coal  Company,  1864-1934. 
New  York,  1934.  lOOp. 

14.  BENNETT,  WALLACE  R. 

Report  on  the  economic  growth  of  Oak  Hill,  correlated 
with  the  history  of  King  Coal.  Oak  Hill,  W.  Va.  1965.  36p. 

15.  BILLINGER,  ROBERT  D. 

History  and  development  of  the  anthracite  industry. 
Pennsylvania  Dept.  of  Internal  Affairs.  Monthly  Bulletin 
F  1951  3-9;  Mr  1951  13-27. 

16.  BELLINGER,  ROBERT  D. 

Pennsylvania's  coal  industry.  Gettysburg:  Pennsylvania 
Historical  Association,  1954.  53p.  (Pennsylvania  History 
Studies  No.  6). 

A  general  history  of  the  industry. 

17.  BILLIONS  OF  TONS  OF  COAL  TAKEN  FROM  THE  WILDERNESS  OF 
ST.  ANTHONY. 

Pennsylvania  Dept.  of  Internal  Affairs.  Bulletin  N.  1936 
3-8. 

The  anthracite  coal  region  of  Pennsylvania  was  once  considered  so 
rough  and  worthless  that  it  was  called  the  Wilderness  of  St. 
Anthony. 


18.  BINDER,  FREDRICK  M. 

Anthracite  enters  the  American  home.  Pennsylvania  Maga- 
zine of  Histoiy  &  Biography  82:  82-99  1958. 

History  of  the  development  of  stoves  for  home  heating,  thus  creat- 
ing a  market  for  anthracite  coal. 

19.  BINDER,  FREDERICK  M. 

Coal  age  empire:  Pennsylvania  coal  and  its  utilization  to 
1860.  Harrisburg:  Pennsylvania  Historical  and  Museum 
Commission,  1974.  184p. 

20.  BINDER,  FREDERICK  M. 

Pennsylvania  coal  and  the  beginnings  of  American  steam 
navigation.  Pennsylvania  Magazine  of  History  and  Bio- 
graphy 83:420-45  1959. 

21.  BLANCHARD,  D.  E. 

A  concise  history  of  the  anthracite  coal  industry  of  Penn- 
sylvania. Wilkes-Barre:  W.  H.  Seacord,  1884,  24p. 

22.  BORNE,  LAWRENCE  R. 

The  Wootton  Land  and  Fuel  Company,  1905-1910.  Colo- 
rado Magazine  46:  189-208  1969. 

Account  of  the  development  of  a  major  coal  company  near  Trinidad, 
Colorado.  James  A.  Ownbey  acquired  large  holdings  of  coal  lands 
with  the  aid  of  eastern  capitalists. 

23.  BOWEN,  ELI 

Coal  and  the  coal  trade.  Philadelphia  and  Pottsville,  1862. 
36p. 

24.  BOWEN,  ELI 

The  coal  regions  of  Pennsylvania,  being  a  general,  geologi- 
cal, historical  and  statistical  review  of  the  anthracite  coal 
districts.  Pottsville,  Pennsylvania,  1848.  72p. 

25.  BOYER,  MARY  J. 

The  old  Gravois  coal  diggings.   Festus,   Missouri.   1952. 

107p. 

Now  a  part  of  Saint  Louis,  Missouri. 

26.  BRATTON,  SAM  T. 

Coal  in  Missouri.  Missouri  Historical  Review  22:   150-56 

1928. 

A  brief  history  of  the  discovery  of  coal  and  the  development  of  the 
industry. 


27.  BRIDGES,  LEONARD  H. 

Iron  millionaire;  life  of  Charlemagne  Tower.  Philadelphia; 
University  of  Pennsylvania  Press,  1952.  322p. 

Tower  became  one  of  the  leading  coal  operators  in  the  post-Civil 
War  period  in  Pennsylvania. 

27a.  BROWN,  W.  K.  AND  J.  D.  MERCIER 

Pictorial  essay  on  Pennsylvania's  anthracite  mining  heri- 
tage. Pennsylvania  Folklife  Summer  1976  26-34. 

Largely  pictorial  account  of  the  rise  and  decline  of  Eckley,  a  typical 
anthracite  mining  town. 

28.  BUCH,  JOHN  W. 

Historical  summary  of  conveyor  mining.  Mechanization  5 
Ap  1941  59-64. 

29.  BUCK,  WILLIAM  J. 

History  of  the  early  discovery  of  coal.  Potters  American 
Monthly  4:  180-82  1875. 

30.  BULL,  MARCUS 

Experiment  to  determine  the  comparative  quantities  of 
Heat  evolved  in  the  combustion  of  the  principal  varieties 
of  Wood  and  Coal.  Journal  of  the  Franklin  Institute  1:257- 
801826. 

31.  "CC&b"  CELEBRATE  80rH  BIRTHDAY 

Black  Diamond  Ap  12,  1947  22-23. 

A  brief  history  of  Castner,  Curran  and  Bullitt,  one  of  the  oldest 
and  largest  coal  merchants  in  the  United  States. 

32.  CAMPBELL,  ROY  E. 

History  of  the  development  of  the  coal  industry  in  Kan- 
awha District,  West  Virginia.  Thesis.  West  Virginia  Uni- 
versity. 1930 

33.  CARBON  COUNTY  HISTORICAL  SOCIETY 

Centennial  anniversary  of  the  first  shipment  of  anthracite 
coal  from  the  Lehigh  region  at  Lausanne,  Pennsylvania, 
August  9,  1814.  Mauch  Chunk,  Pennsylvania:  The  Society, 
1914.  17p. 

34.  CARLSON,  ALVAR  W. 

Lignite  coal  as  an  enabling  factor  in  the  settlement  of  wes- 
tern North  Dakota.  Great  Plains  Journal  11:  145-53,  1972. 

The  easy  availability  of  lignite  coal  facilitated  the  settlement  of  this 
region.  Farmers  mined  it  themselves. 


35.     CARPENTER,  SAMUEL 

Report  of  the  engineer  in  relation  to  the  coal  mines  of 
the  Hockhocking  Valley.  Columbus,  1836.  5p. 


; 


36.  CARTLIDGE,  OSCAR 

Fifty  years  of  coal  mining.  Charleston,  West  Virginia:  Rose 
City  Press,  1936.  74p. 

Largely  autobiographical  account  of  mining  in  the  coal  fields  of 
Illinois  and  West  Virginia,  1890-1930. 

37.  CAUDELL,  HARRY  M. 

Night  comes  to  the  Cumberlands;  a  biography  of  a  de- 
pressed area.  Boston:  Atlantic-Little,  1963.  394p. 

An  account  of  the  development  and  present  status  of  the  "coal  coun- 
ties" of  Eastern  Kentucky.  The  author  feels  that  the  area  has  been 
ruthlessly  exploited  by  the  coal  industry  and  its  people  left  to  rot. 
An  important  and  widely-read  work. 

37a.  CAUDELL,  JAMES  K. 

Kentucky's  experience  with  the  broad  form  deed.  Ken- 
tucky Law  Journal  63:107-44  1974/75. 

Account  of  the  origin  and  development  of  the  broad  form  deed  in 
Kentucky. 

38.  CAUDELL,  REBECCA 

My  Appalachia.  a  reminiscence.  New  York,  Holt,  Rinehart 
and  Winston,  1966.  90p. 

The  author  tells  of  her  life  which  began  in  Harlan  County,  Ky.  and 
which  has  been  closely  attached  to  the  beauties  and  scourges  of  the 
area  ever  since. 

39.  CHADWICK,  ROBERT  A. 

Coal,  Montana's  prosaic  treasure.  Montana.  Oct.  1973 
18-31. 

History  of  the  development  of  both  deep  and  strip  mining  in  Mon- 
tana. Interesting  illustrations. 

40.  CHANDLER,  ALFRED  D. 

Anthracite  coal  and  the  beginnings  of  the  industrial  revol- 
ution in  the  United  States.  Business  History  Review  46: 
141-81  1972. 

"While  anthracite  helped  to  determine  the  timing  and  the  process 
of  accelerated  growth  and  institutional  change  in  American  manu- 
facturing and  mining,  its  impact  was  short-run.  not  long-run". 

41.  CHAPMAN,  MARY  L. 

The  influence  of  coal  in  the  Big  Sandy  Valley.  Disser- 
tation. University  of  Kentucky,  1945.  297p. 

5 


42.  CHARWICK,  DOUGLAS 

Nothing  will  ever  bring  them  back.  Goldenseal  Ja/Mr  1976 
35-42,  Ap/Je  1976  17-39. 

Well-illustrated  account  of  the  early  communities  in  the  New  River 
coal  field,  in  southern  West  Virginia. 

43.  CHTLDS,  C.  G. 

The  coal  and  iron  trade,  embracing  statistics  of  Pennsyl- 
vania. Philadelphia,  1847.  24p. 

"A  series  of  articles  published  in  the  Philadelphia  Commercial  List." 

44.  CHRISTY,  DAVID 

Report  made  at  the  request  of  the  Raccoon  Coal  and  Iron 
Company,  Cincinnati,  1854.  15p. 

45.  CIST,  JACOB 

Account  of  the  mines  of  anthracite  in  the  region  about 
YviiKes Darre,  r/ennsyivania.  Wyoming  Historical  Society. 
Proceedings  10:  98-114  1909. 


46.     CIST,  ZACHARIAH 


Account  of  the  Mines  of  Anthracite  in  the  region  about 
Wilkes-Barre,  Pennsylvania.  American  Journal  of  Science 
4:1-16  1822. 

47.  CLARK,  STANLEY 

Immigrants  in  the  Choctaw  coal  industry.  Chronicles  of 
Oklahoma  33:  440-55  1955/56. 

48.  CLD7FORD,  ALBERT  J. 

The  reorganization  of  the  Philadelphia  &  Reading  Coal  & 
Iron  Company.  Thesis.  University  of  Pennsylvania.  1952. 

49.  COAL  AND  IRON  TRADE  OF  THE  OHIO  VALLEY 

Merchant's  Magazine  16:  450-55  1847. 

50.  COAL  AND  THE  COAL  MINES  OF  PENNSYLVANIA 

Harpers  15:  451-69  1857. 

A  useful  history  of  the  early  development  of  the  Pennsylvania  coal 
industry. 

51.  COAL  OF  PENNSYLVANIA 

American  Quarterly  Register  1:  97-100  1848. 
Largely  statistical. 


52.  COAL  OF  PENNSYLVANIA  AND  OTHER  STATES 

Merchants'  Magazine  13:  67-72  1845. 

Rapid  growth  of  the  Pennsylvania  coal  trade  predicted. 

53.  COAL  POLICY  OF  PENNSYLVANIA 

Merchants  Magazine  13:  242-45  1845. 

Tolls  set  by  the  canal  commissioners  are  unfair  and  harmful  to 
the  coal  trade. 

54.  COAL  PRODUCT  OF  THE  UNITED  STATES 

De  Bow's  Review  19:  123-30  1855. 

A  general  account,  largely  statistical,  of  the  coal  trade. 

55.  COAL  PRODUCTION  IN  OHIO 

Merchants  Magazine  26:  511-12  1852. 

56.  COAL  REGION  OF  THE  SCHUYLKILL  AND  WYOMING  VALLEY 

Merchants  Magazine  14:  539-42  1846. 

57.  THE  COAL  TRADE  IN  PENNSYLVANIA 

North  American  Review  42:  241-56  1836. 

58.  COAL  TRADE  OF  PENNSYLVANIA 

Bankers'  Magazine  3:  146-50  1848. 

59.  COATES,  HAROLD  W. 

Cincinnati's  early  coal  trade.  Black  Diamond  Ja  15,  1927 
23. 

60.  COBB,  WILLIAM  H. 

The  beginning  of  coal  development  in  Randolph  County 
(West  Virginia).  Randolph  County  Historical  Society. 
Magazine  of  History  and  Biography  5:  50-53  1928. 

61.  COLEMAN,  RON       J 

We  dig  coal:  the  story  of  coal  mining  in  Buchanan 
County,  Virginia.  Radford,  Va.:  Commonwealth  Press, 
1975.  46p. 

62.  CONANT,  C.  B. 

Coal  fever:  the  price  and  prospects  of  anthracite  coal.  Mer- 
chants' Magazine  52:  349-64  1865. 

"Why  is  coal  so  high?" 


63.  CONLEY,  PHIL 

History  of  the  West  Virginia  coal  industry.  Charleston: 
Educational  Foundation,  1960.  311p. 

64.  CONLEY,  PHIL 

Early  coal  development  in  the  Kanawha  Valley.  West  Vir- 
ginia History  8:  207-15  1947. 

65.  CORRIGAN,  JAMES  J. 

Early  tariff  and  anthracite  region  problems.  Pennsylvania 
Dept.  of  Internal  Affairs.  Monthly  Bulletin  Ag  1951  3-4,  32. 

"Memorial  of  the  freeholders  and  inhabitants  of  Carbon  and  Luzerne 
Counties,  Pennsylvania,  engaged  in  the  coal  business,  demonstrating 
against  the  tariff"  ( 1846). 

66.  CUBBY,  EDWIN  A. 

The  transformation  of  the  Tug  and  Guyandot  Valleys; 
economic  development  and  social  change  in  West  Virginia. 
Dissertation.  Syracuse  University.  1962.  356p. 

67.  CUBBY,  EDWIN  A. 

Railroad  building  and  the  rise  of  the  port  of  Huntington. 
West  Virginia  History  33:  234-47  1972. 

Account  of  the  building  of  railroads  which  made  possible  the  open- 
ing of  the  Logan  coal  fields. 

68.  CUMBERLAND  COAL  REGION 

Bankers'  Magazine  4:  394-99  1849. 

Account  of  the  coal  fields  in  the  Frostburg,  Maryland  area. 

69.  DAILY  TELEGRAPH.    ( BLUEFIELD,  WEST  VIRGINIA) 

Pocahontas  flat-top  coal  field.  Bluefield,  1896.  78p. 

A  history  and  general  account  of  the  newly-opened  flat-top  bitumin- 
ous coal  field. 

70.  DANIEL,  PETE 

The  Tennessee  Convict  War.  Tennessee  Historical  Quar- 
terly 34:  273-292  1975. 

Account  of  the  Coal  Creek  Rebellion  of  1891. 

71.  DAUPHIN  AND  SUSQUEHANNA  COAL  COMPANY 

Report  of  the  stockholders.  Philadelphia:  T.  K.  and  P.  G. 
Collins,  1848.  16p. 


72.  DE  BOW,  JAMES  D. 

Coal  mines  of  Alabama  compared  with  those  of  the  other 
states.  De  Bow's  Review  10:  73-79  1851. 

73.  A  DEFENCE  OF  THE  LEHIGH  COAL  AND  NAVIGATION  COMPANY 
FROM  THE  ASSAULTS  MADE  UPON  ITS  INTERESTS  BY  X 

Philadelphia:  Jesper  Harding,  1840.  66p. 

74.  DERBY,  GEORGE 

An  inquiry  into  the  influence  upon  health  of  anthracite 
coal,  when  used  as  a  fuel  for  warming  dwelling  houses.  .  . 
Boston:  A.  Williams  &  Co.,  1868.  46p. 

75.  DESCRIPTION  OF  THE  SYCAMORE  COAL  MINES 

Plan  of  a  mining  company  now  forming  in  Cincinnati.  2nd 
ed.  Cincinnati,  1850.  12p. 

75a.  DODRILL,  GORDON 

20,000  coal  company  stores.  Pittsburgh,  1971.  287p. 

A  list  of  all  known  company  stores  in  the  U.S.,  Canada  and  Mexico 
from  1903  to  1958.  Includes  750  illustrations  of  tokens  (scrip)  is- 
sued by  the  coal  companies  owing  the  stores. 

76.  DRAKE,  RICHARD  B. 

Documents  relating  to  the  broad  form  deed.  Appalachian 
Notes  2(1-6)  First  Quarter,  1974. 

"Kentucky  today  is  the  only  state  recognizing  the  broad  form  deed." 
Reproduces  examples  of  such  deeds  held  in  eastern  Ky. 

77.  EARLY  COAL  MINING  IN  DAVIESS  COUNTY,  INDIANA 

Coal  I:  200  1882. 

78.  EATON,  AMOS 

Observations  on  the  coal  formations  in  the  State  of  New 
York.  American  Journal  of  Science  19:  21-26  1831. 

V     79.     EAVENSON,  HOWARD  N. 

Coal  through  the  ages.  New  York:  AIME,  1935.  123p. 

80.     EAVENSON,  HOWARD  N. 

The  early  history  of  the  Pittsburgh  coal  bed.  Western 
Pennsylvania  Historical  Magazine  22:  165-76  1939. 

J   81.     EAVENSON.  HOWARD  N. 

The  first  century  and  a  quarter  of  American  coal  industry. 
Pittsburgh:  Privately  printed,  1942.  701p. 

The  classic  work  in  the  field. 

9 


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82.  EAVENSON,  HOWARD  N. 

Notes  on  an  old  West  Virginia  coal  field.  West  Virginia 
History  5:  83-100  1944. 

In  the  Mason  County  area. 

83.  EAVENSON,  HOWARD  N. 

The  Pittsburgh  coal  bed;  its  early  history  and  develop- 
ment. New  York:  AIME,  1938.  55p. 

Bibliography  pp48-55. 

84.  EAVENSON,  HOWARD  N. 

Some  side-lights  on  early  Virginia  coal  mining.  Virginia 
Magazine  of  History  and  Biography  50:  199-208  1942. 

85.  ELSON,  c.  H. 

Story  of  the  Leckie  and  Douglas  mines.  Coal  Industry  1: 
323-25  1918. 

Account  of  operations  in  the  Smokeless  Coal  Field  of  West  Virginia. 
Includes  illustrations  of  coal  camps. 

86.  ENMAN,  JOHN  A. 

Coal  company  store  prices  questioned:  a  case  study  of  the 
Union  Supply  Company,  1905-1906.  Pennsylvania  History 
41:  53-62  Jan.  1974. 

"The  first  time  that  actual  accounts  of  company  store  sales  and 
prices,  rather  than  second-hand  reports.  .  .  have  been  available  for 
study"  show  that  one  store  near  Uniontown,  Fayette  County.  Pa., 
did  not  charge  excessive  prices. 

87.  ENQUIRY  INTO  THE  CHEMICAL  CHARACTERS  AND  PROPERTIES  OF 
THAT  SPECIES  OF  COAL  LATELY  DISCOVERED  AT  RHODE-ISLAND, 
WITH  SOME  OBSERVATIONS  ON  ITS  APPLICATION  TO  THE  ARTS 
AND  MANUFACTURERS  OF  THE  EASTERN  STATES. 

American  Mineralogical  journal  1:  34-40  1814. 

88.  FACTS  ILLUSTRATIVE  OF  THE  CHARACTER  OF  THE  ANTHRACITE 
OR  LEHIGH  COAL  FOUND  IN  THE  GREAT  MINES  AT  MAUCH 
CHUNK 

New  York:  Gray  &  Bunce,  1825.  18p. 


89.  FAIRBANKS,  W.  L.  AND  W.  S.  HAMELL 

The  coal  mining  industry  of  Maryland.  Baltimore:  Balti- 
more Association  of  Commerce,  1932.  271p. 

90.  FELL,  JESSE 

Notice  of  the  first  introduction  of  anthracite  coal  on  the 
Susquehanna.  Hazard's  Register  of  Pennsylvania  6:83  1830. 

The  coal  was  first  used  by  blacksmiths,  starting  about  1768. 

10 


91.  FTRMSTONE,  WILLIAM 

Sketch  of  early  anthracite  furnaces.  AIME.  Transactions  3: 
152-56  1874/75. 

In  the  Pennsylvania  fields. 

92.  FIRST  COAL.  MINING  COMPANY  OF  THE  LEHIGH  REGION 

Pennsylvania  Magazine  of  History  39:  170-75  1915. 

Copy  of  a  prospectus  dated  F  13,  1792  for  the  Lehigh  Coal  Mine 
Company. 

93.  FIRST  COAL  TOWN  MUSEUM 

Stotesbury,  West  Virginia,  1962.  32p. 

A  booklet  describing  the  coal  museum  at  Stotesbury,  West  Virginia. 
It  also  contains  several  articles  on  the  history  of  coal  mining  in  the 
Winding  Gulf  Field. 

94.  FISHER,  CASSIUS  A. 

Geology  of  the  Great  Falls  coal  fields,  Montana.  Washing- 
ton: GPO,  1909.  85p.  (USGS.  Bulletin  356). 

Includes  much  information  of  historical  value. 

95.  FISHER,  HOWELL 

Report  on  the  agriculture  and  mineral  resources  of  Virginia 
and  West  Virginia,  and  more  particularly  on  the  extent, 
quality,  and  value  of  the  coal  and  iron  deposits  situated 
along  the  line  of  the  Chesapeake  and  Ohio  Railroad,  show- 
ing the  advantage  of  that  region  for  successful  mining  and 
manufacturing  industry.  New  York:  Wyndkoop  &  Hollen- 
beck,  1870.  24p. 

96.  FISHER,  JAMES  C. 

Report  on  coal.  American  Laborer  1:  55-56  1842. 

Advocates  a  "specific  duty  of  6  cents  a  bushel  on  all  foreign  coal" 
in  order  to  encourage  the  domestic  coal  industry. 

97.  FLEMING,  A.  B. 

History  of  the  Fairmont  ( West  Virginia )  coal  region.  West 
Virginia  Coal  Mining  Institute.  Proceedings  1911  251-68. 

98.  FLOYD,  WILLIE  M. 

Thurber,  Texas,  an  abandoned  coal  field  town.  Texas  Geo- 
graphical Magazine  3  No.  2  1939  ppl-21. 

99.  FREYTAG,  R.  C. 

The  Indiana  coal  industry's  part  in  World  War  II.  Indiana 
Magazine  of  History  41:  265-86  1945. 

11 


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100.  FRICK  (H.  C.  )  COKE  CO. 

Connellsville  coke.  Pittsburgh,  189-?  44p. 

"A  brief  outline  of  the  development  of  the  great  Connellsville  coke 
region." 

101.  FRISCH,  ISADORE 

Twentieth  century  development  of  the  coal  mining  indus- 
try in  eastern  Kentucky  and  its  influence  upon  political  be- 
havior of  the  area.  Thesis.  University  of  Kentucky.  1938. 

102.  george's  creek  coal  and  iron  company 
[Baltimore]  1836.  34p. 

Contains  acts  of  incorporation  and  a  report  on  the  land  belonging 
to  the  company. 

103.  GIBSON,  A.  M. 

Early  mining  camps  in  northeastern  Oklahoma.  Chronicles 
of  Oklahoma  34:  193-202  1956. 

103a.  gillen water,  mack  h. 

Cultural  and  historical  geography  of  mining  settlements  in 
the  Pocahontas  coal  fields  of  southern  West  Virginia, 
1880  to  1930.  Dissertation.  University  of  Tennessee,  1972. 
177p. 

104.  ginger,  ray 

Company-sponsored  welfare  plans  in  the  anthracite  indus- 
try before  1900.  Business  Historical  Society.  Bulletin  27: 
112-20  1953. 

105.  GLENN,  L.  C. 

The  northern  Tennessee  coal  field.  Nashville,  1925.  478p. 
(Tennessee.  Division  of  Geology.  Bulletin  33-B). 

Although  devoted  largely  to  geology,  the  bulletin  includes  material 
on  the  history  and  economics  of  coal  mining  in  the  area. 

106.  GRAEBNER,  WILLIAM 

Great  expectations:  the  search  for  order  in  bituminous  coal, 
1890-1917.  Business  History  Review  48:  49-72  1974. 

Account  of  the  frustrating  attempts  of  the  industry  to  regulate  itself. 

107.  GREENE,  CHARLES  S. 

A  California  coal  mine.  Overland  Monthly  31:  518-27  1898. 

History  and  account  of  mining  operations  at  Tesla. 


12 


108.  GREGG,  ROBERT 

Origin  and  development  of  the  Tennessee  Coal,  Iron  and 
Railroad  Co.  New  York:  Newcomen  Society,  1948.  40p. 

109.  GRIFFITH,  WILLIAM 

Beginning  of  anthracite  coal  trade.  Coal  Age  2:  40-42  1912. 

110.  GRIFFITH,  WILLIAM 

The  proof  that  Pennsylvania  anthracite  coal  was  first  ship- 
ped from  the  Wyoming  Valley.  Wyoming  Historical  and 
Geneological  Society.  Proceedings  13:  65-71  1914. 

111.  GRIFFITH.  WILLIAM 

Some  of  the  beneficial  results  of  Judge  Jesse  Fell's  experi- 
ment with  Wyoming  coal.  Wyoming  Historical  and  Geo- 
logical Society.  Proceedings  10:  73-86  1909. 

112.  GUYANDOTTE  LAND  COMPANY 

Reports  and  letters  relating  to  the  Guyandotte  Land  Com- 
pany. London:  W.  Penney,  [1853].  53p. 

In  what  is  now  West  Virginia. 

113.  HACK,  JOHN  T. 

Prehistoric  coal  mining  in  the  Jeddito  Valley,  Arizona. 
Cambridge,  1942.  24p.  (Papers  of  the  Peabody  Museum 
35:  2). 

114.  HAGER,  CHARLES  J. 

Alabama's  coal  pioneers.  Alabama  Engineer  Sept.  1958  3-7. 

115.  HALBERSTADT,  BATRD 

An  early  coal  mine  lease  in  Pottsville.  Schuylkill  County 
Historical  Society.  Publications  4:  198-211  1912. 

The  Greenwood  Slope  Colliery  lease  was  made  in  1839. 

116.  HARDT,  ANTON 

A  brief  history  of  mining  in  Tioga  County  ( Pennsylvania ) . 
Mines  and  Minerals  26:  484-86  1905/6. 

117.  HARRINGTON,  GEORGE  B. 

Coal  mining  in  Illinois.  New  York:  Newcomen  Society, 
1950.  24p. 

Deals  especially  with  Chicago,  Wilmington,  &  Franklin  Coal  Co. 


13 


118.  HARRIS,  EVELYN  AND  FRANK  J.  KREBS 

From  humble  beginnings,  West  Virginia  State  Federation 
of  Labor  1903-1957.  Charleston,  1960.  553p. 

A  history  of  the  federation.  Contains  much  information  on  labor 
conditions  in  the  coal  fields. 

119.  HARTSOCK,  D.  LANE 

Impact  of  the  railroads  on  coal  mining  in  Osage  County, 
1869-1910.  Kansas  Historical  Quarterly  37:  429-40  1971. 

Railroads,  especially  the  Sante  Fe,  were  largely  responsible  for  the 
development  of  the  coal  field  in  the  Osage  County  area.  At  one  time, 
this  was  the  largest  field  west  of  the  Mississippi. 

120.  HARVEY,  HELEN  B. 

From  frontier  to  mining  town  in  Logan  County,  West  Vir- 
ginia. Thesis.  University  of  Kentucky.  1942. 

121.  HARVEY,  KATHERINE  A. 

The  best-dressed  miners:  life  and  labor  in  the  Maryland 
coal  region,  1835-1910.  Ithaca:  Cornell  University  Press, 
1969.  488p. 

The  standard  work  in  the  field. 

122.  HARVEY,  KATHERINE 

The  coal  miners  of  western  Maryland:  some  economic  and 
social  developments,  1850-1910.  Thesis.  American  Univer- 
sity. 1962. 

123.  HAUPT,  HERMAN 

The  coal  business  on  the  Pennsylvania  Railroad.  Philadel- 
phia. 1857.  33p. 

124.  HAWLEY,  ELLIS  W. 

Secretary  Hoover  and  the  bituminous  coal  problem,  1921- 
1928.  Business  History  Review  42:  247-70  1968. 

Account  of  Herbert  Hoover's  efforts  as  Secretary  of  Commerce  to 
aid  the  coal  industry. 

125.  HAYDEN,  F.  V. 

Remarks  on  the  possibility  of  a  workable  bed  of  coal  in 
Nebraska.  American  Journal  of  Science  and  Arts  95:  326- 
30  1868. 

"It  seems  more  than  probable  that  coal  in  paying  quantities  will 
never  be  found  within  the  limits  of  the  state  of  Nebraska". 


14 


126.  HAZARD,  ERSKINE 

History  of  the  introduction  of  anthracite  coal  into  Phila- 
delphia. .  .  and,  a  letter  from  Jesse  Fell,  esq.  of  Wilkes- 
Barre,  on  the  discovery  and  first  use  of  anthracite  in  the 
valley  of  Wyoming.  Pennsylvania  Historial  Society.  Mem- 
oirs 2:  155-64  1827. 

127.  HAZARD,  ERSKINE 

On  the  application  of  anthracite  coal  to  the  drying  of  to- 
bacco. Journal  of  the  Franklin  Institute  8:  5-6  1831. 

128.  HEINRICH,  OSWALD  J. 

The  Midlothian  Colliery,  Virginia.  AIME.  Transactions  1: 
346-64  1871/73;  4:  308-16  1875/76. 

Account  of  the  largest  and  one  of  the  oldest  mines  in  the  Rich- 
mond field. 

129.  HERMELIN,  SAMUEL  G. 

Report  about  the  mines  in  the  United  States  of  America, 
1793.  Philadelphia:  John  Morton  Memorial  Museum,  1931. 
82p. 

130.  HIGGINS,  WALLACE  W. 

Mine  dogs  and  dog  miners.  Chillicothe,  Ohio:  Ross  County 
Historical  Society,  1958.  5p. 

Working  conditions  in  small  Ohio  coal  mines  during  1870's,  1880. 
Dogs  were  used  to  help  pull  cars. 


.   131. 


HTLDRETH,  S.  P. 

Observations  on  the  bituminous  coal  deposits  of  the  valley 
of  the  Ohio.  American  Journal  of  Science  29:  1-148  1836. 


132.  HISTORY  OF  COAL  MINING  IN  IOWA 

Annals  of  Iowa  29:  61-63  1947. 

133.  HISTORY  OF  EASTERN  GAS  AND  FUEL  ASSOCIATES 

Black  Diamond  Je  30,  1962  28. 

134.  HITCHCOCK,  E. 

The  coal  field  of  Bristol  County  and  of  Rhode  Island. 
American  Journal  of  Science  and  Arts  Second  Series  16: 
327-36  1853. 

135.  HOFFMAN,  JOHN  N. 

Girard  estate  coal  lands  in  Pennsylvania,  1801-1884.  Wash- 
ington: Smithsonian  Institute  Press,  1972.  86p.  (Smithson- 
ian Studies  in  History  and  Technology,  no.  15 ) . 

15 


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136.  HUDSON  COAL  COMPANY 

The  story  of  anthracite.  New  York,  1932.  425p. 

137.  HURST,  MARY  B. 

Social  history  of  Logan  County,  West  Virginia,  1765-1923. 
Thesis.  Columbia  University. 

138.  ILLINOIS  COAL 

Hunfs  Merchants  Magazine  42:  492-94  1860. 

Brief  account  of  the  history  and  present  status  of  coal  mining  in 
Illinois. 

139.  ILLINOIS  COAL  OPERATORS  ASSOCIATION 

A  brief  outline  of  25  years  history  and  experience,  with 
special  reference  to  the  unusual  developments  of  the  war 
period  and  subsequently.  [Springfield],  1921.  78p. 

140.  ILLINOIS.  DEPT.  OF  MINES  AND  MINERALS 

A  compilation  of  the  reports  of  the  mining  industry  of  Ill- 
inois from  the  earliest  records  to  the  close  of  the  year  1930. 
Springfield,  1931. 177p. 

141.  IMBODEN,  JOHN  D. 

The  coal  and  iron  resources  of  Virginia;  their  extent,  com- 
mercial value  and  early  development.  Richmond:  Clem- 
mitt  &  Jones,  1872.  28p. 

142.  IRWIN,  WDLLIAM  G. 

Development  of  the  coal  industry.  Guntons  Magazine  22: 
544-51  1902. 

143.  JACKSON,  CHARLES  T. 

Report  of  the  coal  lands  of  Egypt,  Belmont,  Evans,  Palmer 
and  Wilcox  plantations  on  Deep  River,  North  Carolina. 
New  York:  F.  Nesbitt,  1853.  24p. 

144.  JAMES,  THOMAS  C. 

A  brief  account  of  the  discovery  of  anthracite  coal  on  the 
Lehigh.  Pennsylvania  Historical  Society.  Memoirs  1:  321- 
31  1826. 

145.  JAMES  RTVER  COAL  TRADE 

Hunt's  Merchants'  Magazine  43:  752-53  1860. 
Useful  statistics  on  the  coal  trade. 


16 


146.     JILLSON,  WTLLARD  R. 

The  coal  industry  in  Kentucky,  an  historical  sketch.  Frank- 
fort: State  Journal  Co.,  1922.  87p. 


/ 


147.  JILLSON,  WTLLARD  R. 

A  history  of  the  coal  industry  in  Kentucky.  Kentucky  His- 
torical Society.  Register  20:  21-45  1922. 

147a.  JOHNSON,  CYNTHIA 

A  new  life:  the  Iowa  coal  mines.  Palimpsest  56:  56-64  1975 

Account  of  an  Italian  immigrant  who  worked  in  the  coal  fields  of 
southeastern  Iowa  starting  in  1914. 

148.  JOHNSON,  OLE  S. 

The  industrial  store;  its  history,  operations,  and  economic 
significance.  Atlanta:  University  of  Georgia,  Atlanta  Divi- 
son,  1952.  171p. 

On  "company  stores"  in  the  coal  fields  of  the  Tri-State  area  (Ohio, 
Pennsylvania,  West  Virginia).  Written  as  a  Ph.D.  dissertation  at  the 
University  of  Pittsburgh,  1951. 

149.  JOHNSON,  WALTER  R. 

The  coal  trade  of  British  America,  with  researches  on  the 
characters  and  practical  values  of  American  and  foreign 
coals.  Washington:  Taylor  &  Maury,  1850.  179p. 

150.  JOHNSON,  WALTER  R. 

Notes  on  the  use  of  anthracite  in  the  manufacture  of  iron. 
Boston,  1841.  156p. 

151.  JOHNSON,  WALTER  R. 

Report  of  an  examination  of  the  coal  and  iron  ore  lands 
known  as  the  Wilson  Survey,  lying  on  the  south  side  of  the 
Great  Kanawha  River,  in  the  counties  of  Kanawha  and 
Fayette,  State  of  Virginia.  Washington:  Buell  &  Blanchard, 
1850.  8p. 

152.  JOHNSON,  WALTER  R. 

Report  on  the  Bradford  coal  field  (Pennsylvania).  Ameri- 
can Journal  of  Science  39:  137-49  1840. 

153.  JOHNSON,  WALTER  R. 

Report  on  the  coal  lands  of  the  Deep  River  Mining  and 
Transportation  Company  in  Chatham  and  Moore  counties, 
North  Carolina.  Albany:  Weed,  Parsons  &  Co.,  1851.  39p. 


17 


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154.  JONES,  ALFRED  C. 

Remarks  on  the  use  of  anthracite  coal  in  smith's  work. 
Journal  of  the  Franklin  Institute  13:  73-74  1834. 

155.  JONES,  ELIOT 

Anthracite  coal  combination  in  the  United  States;  with 
some  account  of  the  early  development  of  the  anthracite 
coal  industry.  Cambridge:  Harvard  University  Press,  1914. 
261p.  ( Harvard  Economic  Studies  XI ) . 

156.  KEATING,  WILLIAM 

Considerations  upon  the  art  of  mining.  To  which  are  add- 
ed reflections  on  its  actual  state  in  Europe  and  the  advan- 
tages which  would  result  from  an  introduction  of  this  art 
into  the  United  States.  Philadelphia:  M.  Carey,  1821.  87p. 

157.  KEISER,  JOHN  H. 

The  union  miners  cemetery  at  Mt.  Olive,  Illinois.  Illinois 
State  Historical  Society.  Journal  62:  229-66  1969. 

"It  is  the  only  union-owned  cemetery  in  the  nation,  and  it  contains 
the  remains  of  those  who  participated  in  most  of  the  early  major 
events  of  coal  unionism  in  Illinois".  Account  of  the  history  and 
events  associated  with  the  cemetery. 

158.  KELEMEN,  THOMAS  A. 

History  of  Lynch,  Kentucky,  1917-1930.  Filson  Club  His- 
torical Quarterly  48:  156-76  1974. 

Account  of  the  development  of  the  coal  industry  in  the  Lynch  ( Har- 
lan County)  area. 

159.  KENTUCKY  GOAL  MINING  CO. 

Act  of  incorporation,  with  the  report  of  their  engineer, 
John  Pickell,  upon  their  coal  property  at  Henderson,  Ken- 
tucky, with  a  general  view  of  the  extent,  importance  and 
value  of  the  coal  fields  of  Kentucky.  .  .  with  some  statis- 
tics showing  the  future  magnitude  of  the  coal  trade  of  the 
west.  Philadelphia:  T.  K.  &  P.  G.  Collins,  1855.  48p. 

160.  KENTUCKY.  GENERAL  ASSEMBLY 

Report  of  the  Committee  on  the  coal  trade  and  iron  inter- 
ests of  Kentucky,  n.p.  184?.  20p.  ( Reprinted  as  number  271 
in  the  Kentucky  Culture  Series ) . 

161.  rasFT.,  RICHARD  H. 

The  Raton  coal  field,  an  evolving  landscape.  New  Mexico 
Historical  Review  41:  231-50  1966. 

The  Raton  coal  field  is  located  in  northern  New  Mexico.  The  author 
traces  the  rise  and  decline  of  the  coal  industry  in  the  area  from 
1879  to  1965. 

18 


162.  KEYES,  CHARLES  R. 

Aboriginal  use  of  mineral  coal  and  its  discovery  in  the 
west.  Annals  of  Iowa  3rd  ser.  10:  431-34  1912. 

163.  KULP,  GEORGE  B. 

Coal;  its  antiquity,  discovery  and  early  development  in  the 
Wyoming  Valley.  Wilkes-Barre,  1892.  32p.  (Appears  also 
in  his  "Historical  Essays"  pp57-90). 

164.  THE  LACKAWANNA  AND  WYOMING  COAL  REGION 

Merchants  Magazine  19:  290-94  1848. 

165.  LAING,  JAMES  T. 

The  early  development  of  the  coal  industry  in  the  western 
counties  of  Virginia,  1800-1865.  West  Virginia  History  27: 
144-55  1965/66. 

The  coal  industry  developed  rather  slowly  in  western  Virginia.  The 
major  demand  for  coal  came  from  the  salt  industry  in  the  Kanawha 
Valley  and  for  steam  navigation  of  the  rivers. 

166.  LANSING,  R.  R. 

Exposition  concerning  the  mineral  coal  of  Michigan. 
Detroit:  E.  A.  Wales,  1854.  20p. 

Author  discusses  the  location,  quality,  demand,  transportation  etc. 
of  Michigan  coal. 

167.  LAVINE,  IRVIN 

Developing  the  lignite  fuel  of  North  Dakota.  Quarterly 
Journal  (Univ.  of  North  Dakota)  19:  185-89  1928/29. 

Brief  account  of  the  history,  present  status  and  prospects  of  the 
lignite  industry  in  North  Dakota. 

168.  LEAMER,  LAURENCE 

Twilight  for  a  baron.  Playboy  May  1973,  114+ . 

Interview  of  Major  W.  P.  Tarns,  Jr.,  the  last  of  the  West  Vir- 
ginia coal  barons. 

169.  LEHIGH  COAL  AND  NAVIGATION  CO. 

Facts  illustrative  of  the  character  of  the  anthracite  or  Le- 
high coal,  found  in  the  great  mines  at  Mauch  Chunk,  in 
possession  of  the  Lehigh  Coal  and  Navigation  Company 
.  .  .  Boston,  1825.  22p. 

170.  LEHIGH  COAL  AND  NAVIGATION  COMPANY 

A  history  of  the  Lehigh  Coal  and  Navigation  Company. 
Philadelphia:  W.  S.  Young,  1840.  68p. 


19 


171.  LEHIGH  NAVIGATION  COAL  COMPANY 

The  story  of  the  old  company.  Landford,  Pennsylvania, 
1941.  58p. 

172.  LEIGHTON,  GEORGE  R. 

Shenandoah,  Pennsylvania;  the  story  of  an  anthracite  town. 
Harpers  174:  131-47  1937. 

173.  LOGAN  COAL  OPERATORS  ASSOCIATION 

The  story  of  Logan  County,  West  Virginia  coal.  Logan, 
1921.  unpaged. 

174.  LONGEST,  THOMAS  C. 

Coal,  Congress  and  the  courts:  the  bituminous  coal  indus- 
try and  the  New  Deal.  West  Virginia  History  35:  101-30 
1973/74. 

175.  LOVE,  GEORGE  H. 

An  exciting  century  in  coal  (1864-1964).  New  York:  New- 
comen  Society,  1955.  24p. 

Account  of  the  Consolidation  Coal  Company. 

176.  LYCOMING  COAL  COMPANY 

A  brief  description  of  the  property  belonging  to  the  Ly- 
coming Coal  Company,  with  some  general  remarks  on  the 
subject  of  the  coal  and  iron  business.  Poughkeepsie:  P. 
Potter,  1828.  32p. 

177.  MC  AULIFFE,  EUGENE 

Early  coal  mining  in  the  West— beginning  with  1868.  New 
York:  Newcomen  Society,  1948.  32p. 

178.  MC  AULIFFE,  EUGENE 

Romance  and  tragedy  of  coal.  Omaha,  Nebraska:  Colonial 
Press,  1931.  97p. 

179.  MC  CAULEY,  RAY  L. 

The  natural  and  cultural  factors  that  have  affected  coal 
production  in  Westmoreland  County  ( Pennsylvania )  from 
1800  to  1950.  Thesis.  University  of  Pittsburgh.  1950. 

180.  MC  CLANE,  WILLIAM 

Letter  on  the  supply  of  bituminous  coal  from  North  Caro- 
lina. New  York:  George  F.  Nesbitt,  1854.  12p. 

181.  MC  CORMICK,  ALLEN 

Development  of  the  coal  industry  of  Grundy  County, 
Tennessee.  Thesis.  George  Peabody.  1934,  95p. 

20 


182.  MC  DONALD,  RITA  AND  M.  G.  BURLING AME 

Montana's  first  commercial  coal  mine.  Pacific  Northwest 
Quarterly  47:  23-28  1956. 

183.  MC  FARLAND,  CHARLES  K. 

Roosevelt,  Lewis  and  the  New  Deal,  1933-1940.  Fort 
Worth:  Texas  Christian  University  Press,  1970.  132p. 

184.  MANLEY,  ROBERT  N. 

Wealth  beneath  the  prairie:  the  search  for  coal  in  Neb- 
raska. Nebraska  History  47:  157-76  1966. 

Between  the  1850's  and  the  1880's,  there  was  a  continuous  and  of- 
ten frantic  search  for  coal  in  Nebraska.  Much  of  this  effort  was 
managed  by  "boomers",  who  hoped  that  a  discovery  of  coal  would 
increase  land  values. 

184a.  MARTIN,  ALBRO 

James  J.  Hill  and  the  first  energy  revolution.  Business  His- 
tory Review  50:  179-97  1976. 

The  first  energy  revolution  was  the  switch  from  wood  to  coal.  Hill 
played  a  major  role  in  the  expansion  of  the  coal  trade  in  the  North- 
west after  the  Civil  War. 

185.  MARYLAND  UNIVERSITY.   BUREAU  OF  BUSINESS  AND  ECONOMIC 
RESEARCH 

Coal  in  the  Maryland  economy,  1736-1965.  20p.  (Its  Stud- 
ies in  Business  and  Economics  7:  3). 

186.  MASSAY,  GLENN  F. 

Coal  consolidation:  profile  of  the  Fairmont  field  of  north- 
ern West  Virginia,  1852-1903.  Dissertation,  West  Virginia 
University,  1970.  354p. 

187.  MELDER,  F.  E. 

History  of  the  discoveries  and  physical  development  of  the 
coal  industry  in  the  state  of  Washington.  Pacific  North- 
west Quarterly  29:  151-65  1938. 

188.  MICHALIK,  BENJAMIN  A. 

The  decline  of  anthracite,  1913-1955.  Dissertation.  Ford- 
ham  University.  1957.  357p. 

189.  MTESSE,  CHARLES 

Points  on  coal  and  the  coal  business.  Myerstown,  Pennsyl- 
vania: Feese  &  Uhrich,  1887.  464p. 

Includes  "history  of  the  anthracite  coal  field  and  its  surroundings". 


21 


190.  MILLER,  GEORGE  L. 

Early  dreams  of  coal  in  Nebraska.  Nebraska  State  Histor- 
ical Society.  Proceedings  15:  189-92  1907. 

191.  MINER,  WILLIAM  P. 

"Cist  versus  Fell,"  or  the  domestic  use  of  anthracite  coal. 
Wyoming  Historical  Society.  Proceedings  7:  31-42  1902. 

192.  MITCHELL,  THOMAS  D. 

Remarks  on  burning  Anthracite  in  open  fire  places.  Jour- 
nal of  the  Franklin  Institute  3:  121-2  1827. 

Coal  is  deemed  greatly  superior  to  wood  for  home  use.  This  view 
is  supported  in  "Additional  Remarks"  by  the  Editor  (pp.  123-24). 

193.  MOONEY,  FRED 

Struggle  in  the  coal  fields.  Morgantown:  West  Virginia 
University  Library,  1967.  194p. 

The  autobiography  of  Mooney,  an  important  figure  in  the  UMWA 
in  West  Virginia.  One  of  the  few  first-hand  account  of  events.  Edit- 
ed by  J.  W.  Hess. 

194.  MORTON,  ELEANOR 

Josiah  White,  prince  of  pioneers.  New  York:  Stephen 
Daye,  1946.  300p. 

White  was  an  important  figure  in  the  development  of  the  anthra- 
cite fields  of  Pennsylvania. 

195.  MORY,  SAMUEL  A. 

History  of  coal  mining  in  Laurel  County,  Kentucky,  1750 
to  1944.  London,  Kentucky:  Sentinel-Echo,  1944.  16p. 

196.  MOSS,  ALEX 

Highlights  in  the  coal  trade  during  the  war  period.  Coal 
Age  15:  227-32  1919. 

197.  MOURAT,  MARY  P. 

A  history  of  coal  mining  in  West  Virginia  to  1933.  Thesis. 
University  of  Pennsylvania.  1947. 

198.  NEW  ERA  IN  THE  COAL  TRADE 

Engineering  &  Mining  Journal  8:  2-3  1869. 

The  introduction  of  steam  colliers  to  take  the  place  of  schooners  will 
greatly  increase  the  coal  trade  from  Pennsylvania  to  New  England. 

199.  NEW  YORK  COAL  COMPANY 

Plan  for  supplying  the  City  of  New  York  with  fuel.  New 
York:  T.  &  J.  Swords,  1814.  16p. 

22 


200.  NICOLLS,  WILLIAM  J. 

Above  ground  and  below  in  the  George's  Creek  coal  reg- 
ion. Baltimore:  Consolidation  Coal  Company,  1898.  32p. 

History  and  general  account  of  coal  mining  in  the  area. 

201.  NICOLLS,  WILLIAM  J. 

Coal  catechism.  Philadelphia:  Lippincott,  1898.  218p. 
An  introduction  to  the  history,  geology,  production  etc.  of  coal. 

202.  NICOLLS,  WILLIAM  J. 

The  story  of  American  coals.  Philadelphia:  Lippincott, 
1897.  405p. 

203.  THE  NORTH  AMERICAN   (PHILADELPHIA) 

Pennsylvania  coal  and  its  carriers.  Philadelphia:  Crissy  & 
Markley,  1852.  35p. 

204.  NOTICE  OF  COAL  MINES  IN  ILLINOIS 

Journal  of  the  Franklin  Institute  ns  17:  375  1836. 

Short  account  of  the  Mount  Carbon  coal  mines  near  Brownsville. 

205.  OHIO.    DEPT.    OF   INDUSTRIAL   RELATIONS.   DIVISION   OF  LABOR 
STATISTICS 

Two  billion  tons  of  coal;  a  report  of  bituminous  coal  pro- 
duction in  Ohio,  1838-1948.  Columbus,  1948.  79p. 

206.  ON  COAL  AS  A  FUEL  IN  AMERICA 

Literary  Magazine  2:  422-24  1804. 

"Would  it  not  be  in  the  interest  of  the  United  States  to  establish  a 
regular  coal  trade  from  Virginia  to  the  northern  states." 

207.  P.  &  M.  HISTORY 

Coal  Age  Oct.  1966  82-168. 

Includes  a  brief  history  of  the  Pittsburgh  and'  Midway  Coal  Mining 
Company  as  well  as  accounts  of  its  various  operations— underground 
mining,  sales,  reclamation  activities  etc. 

208.  PAPANIKOLAS,  HELEN  Z. 

The  Greeks  of  Carbon  County.  Utah  Historical  Quarterly 
22:  143-64  1954. 

A  large  number  of  Greek  immigrants  were  attracted  to  the  newly- 
opened  coal  mining  region  in  Carbon  County,  Utah. 

209.  PAPANIKOLAS,  HELEN  Z. 

Utah's  coal  lands:  a  vital  example  of  how  America  became 
a  great  nation.  Utah  Historical  Quarterly  43:  104-24  1975. 

Account  of  the  early  development  of  the  Utah  coal  industry. 

23 


210.  PATTERSON,  JOSEPH  F. 

Reminiscences  of  John  Maguire  after  fifty  years  of  mining. 
Schuylkill  County  Historical  Society.  Publication  4:  305- 
36  1914. 

Concerns  mining  operations  in  the  anthracite  coal  fields  of  Schuyl- 
kill County,  Pennsylvania. 

211.  PATTERSON,  LOUISE  H. 

Discovery  of  the  great  anthracite  regions  of  the  middle 
west.  Journal  of  American  History  5:  115-20  1911. 

{esse  Fell  and  his  discovery  of  anthracite  coal  in  the  Wyoming  Val- 
ey  and  its  use  for  heating  homes. 

212.  PAUL,  WOLFGANG 

Mining  lore.  Portland,  Oregon:  Morris  Printing  Co.  1970. 
940p. 

A  collection  dealing  with  the  history,  folklore,  music  etc.  of  all  types 
of  mining  in  many  countries. 

213.  PEACH  ORCHARD  COAL  COMPANY 

Peach  Orchard  coal  lands.  Cincinnati,  1853?,  lip. 

"The  works  and  lands  of  the  Company  are  situated  in  Lawrence 
county  Ky.,  on  the  Big  Sandy  river.  .  ."  Includes  list  of  stockholders 
as  of  November,  1853. 

214.  PEARCE,  ALBERT 

The  growth  and  development  of  the  Kentucky  coal  indus- 
try. Thesis.  University  of  Kentucky.  1930. 

215.  PENNSYLVANIA  COAL  REGION 

Harper  27:  455-67  1863. 
Account  of  a  trip  through  the  area. 

216.  PENNSYLVANIA.  DEPARTMENT  OF  MINES  AND  MINERAL  INDUS- 
TRIES 

History  of  Pennsylvania  bituminous  coal.  3rd  edition. 
Harrisburg,  1962.  61p. 

An  excellent  source  for  statistical  information;  arranged  by  county. 

217.  PENNSYLVANIA.  GENERAL  ASSEMBLY 

Acts  of  the  General  Assembly  of  Pennsylvania  concerning 
the  Lehigh  Coal  and  Navigation  Company;  together  with 
the  by-laws,  etc.  Philadelphia:  James  Kay,  1837.  79p. 


24 


218.  PENNSYLVANIA.  GENERAL  ASSEMBLY.   SENATE.  COMMITTEE  ON 
COAL  TRADE 

Report  of  the  committee  of  the  State  of  Pennsylvania,  upon 
the  subject  of  the  coal  trade.  Harrisburg:  Henry  Welsh, 
1834.  126p. 

219.  PHULIPPS,  G.  JENKINS 

Systems  of  mining  coal  and  metalliferous  veins  fully  ex- 
plained .  .  .  productive,  consumption  and  incidental  statis- 
tics of  coal  .  .  .  Philadelphia,  1858.  86p. 

220.  PICKARD,  CLAUDE  E. 

The  western  Kentucky  coal  field:  the  influence  of  coal 
mining  on  the  settlement  patterns,  forms  and  functions. 
Dissertation.  University  of  Nebraska.  1969.  294p. 

221.  PIERCE,  JAMES 

Anthracite  region  of  Pennsylvania.  [Hazard's]  Register  of 
Pennsylvania  1:  310-16  1828. 

222.  PIERCE,  JAMES 

In  the  anthracite  region  of  Pennsylvania.  American  Journal 
of  Science  12:  54-74  1827. 

223.  PIERCE,  RICHARD  A. 

The  Russian  coal  mine  on  the  Kenai.  Alaska  Journal  5: 
104-8  1975. 

224.  PITTSBURGH  AND  BUFFALO  COMPANY 

Coal  &  Coke  Mr.  15,  1903  7-11. 

Account  of  the  company's  development  and  operations. 

225.  POCAHONTAS  OPERATORS  ASSOCIATION 

The  story  of  Pocahontas,  1863-1915;  a  good  coal.  Roanoke, 
1915.  32p. 

226.  POLIN1AK,  LOUIS 

When  coal  was  king;  mining  Pennsylvania's  anthracite. 
Lebanon,  Pa.:  Applied  Arts  Publishers.  1971.  32p. 

"Early  coal  mining  in  picture  and  story  in  the  land  of  the  Mollie 
Maguires." 

227.  POMEROY,  S. 

Some  facts  about  the  Pomeroy  coal  mines.  Coal  1:  86  1882. 
Brief  history  of  the  mines  located  in  the  area  of  Pomeroy,  Ohio. 

25 


228.     POMEROY,  SAMUEL  W. 

Remarks  on  the  coal  region  between  Cumberland  and 
Pittsburgh.  American  Journal  of  Science  21:  342-47  1832. 


229.  POWELL,  H.  BENJAMIN 

Coal,  Philadelphia,  and  the  Schuylkill.  Dissertation.  Le- 
high University,  1968.  234p. 

230.  POWELL,  H.  BENJAMIN 

Establishing  the  anthracite  boomtown  of  Maunch  Chunk, 
1814-1825.  Pennsylvania  History  41:  249-62  1974. 

A  documentary  history  of  the  establishment  of  an  early  center  of 
the  Pennsylvania  anthracite  industry. 

231.  POWELL,  WILLIAM  E. 

European  settlement  in  the  Cherokee-Craford  coal  field  of 
southeastern  Kansas.  Kansas  Historical  Quarterly  41:  150- 
651975. 

The  demand  for  labor  in  the  mines  caused  a  considerable  immigra- 
tion of  Italians  and  Austrians  around  the  turn  of  the  century. 

232.  PROPOSED   PLAN  FOR   SMELTING  IRON   ORE  WITH  ANTHRACITE 
COAL 

Journal  of  the  Franklin  Institute  8:  231-32  1831. 

233.  PRYDE,  GEORGE  B. 

The  Union  Pacific  Coal  Company,  1868-1952.  Annals  of 
Wyoming  25:  190-205  1953. 

J 

234.  RANDOLPH,  B.  S. 

History  of  the  Maryland  coal  region.  Maryland  Geological 
Survey  5:  529-618  1905. 

Includes  short  accounts  of  the  major  coal  mining  companies  oper- 
ating in  the  area. 

235.  RANDOLPH,  L.  S. 

Virginia  anthracite  coal.  Cassier's  Magazine  27:  328-36 
1904/5. 

History  and  general  description  of  the  area. 

236.  RANICK,  ELMER 

In  the  mines  .  .  .  two  women  remember.  Mountain  Life 
and  Work  Feb.  1975,  35-37. 

Women  recall  working  in  the  mines  with  their  fathers  in  Va.  and 
W.  Va.  in  the  late  19^0's  and  1940's. 

26 


237.  RASHJLE1GH,  ALICE  V.  n 

The  story  of  Carbondale  and  the  "black  stone.  Pennsyl- 
vania. Dept.  of  Internal  Affairs.  Monthly  Bulletin  N  1951 
11-18. 

238.  RELATIVE  VALUE  OF  STONE  COAL  AND  CORD  WOOD 

Western  Journal  2:  175-77  1849. 

Coal  said  to  be  superior  to  cord  wood  as  a  fuel  for  steamboats. 

239.  REMARKS  UPON  THE  USE  OF  ANTHRACITE  AND  ITS  APPLICATION 
TO  THE  VARIOUS  PURPOSES  OF  DOMESTIC  ECONOMY 

Journal  of  the  Franklin  Institute  2:  292-95  1826. 

Author  advocates  the  use  of  anthracite  for  heating  and  cooking  in 
the  home  and  notes  ways  that  it  may  be  used  most  effectively. 

240.  REYNOLDS,  S.  C. 

The  snow-bird  mine.  Coal  Age  14:  58-59  1918. 

Discussion  of  the  many  small  "wagon  mines"  which  developed  as  a 
result  of  the  high  price  of  coal. 

241.  RHODES,  JAMES  F. 

The  coal  and  iron  industry  of  Cleveland.  Magazine  of 
Western  History  2:  337-45  1885. 

242.  RICE,  OTIS  K. 

Coal  mining  in  the  Kanawha  Valley  to  1861:  a  view  of  in- 
dustrialization in  the  Old  South.  Journal  of  Southern  His- 
tory 31:  393-416  1965. 

Problems  of  financing  and  transportation  gready  hindered  the  de- 
velopment of  the  coal  industry  in  the  Kanawha  Valley. 

243.  RICH,  PAUL  . 

Early  industries  in  Perry  County,  Illinois.  Illinois  Histor- 
ical Society.  Journal  26:  349-53  1934. 
Coal  mining  was  the  principal  industry. 

244.  RICHARDS,  W.  B. 

The  story  of  coal.  Coal  Age  15:  441-45  1919. 

Devoted  largely  to  the  early  history  of  coal  mining  in  Pennsylvania. 

245.  RICHARDSON,  RICHARD 

Memoir  of  Joseph  White;  showing  his  connection  with  the 
introduction  and  use  of  anthracite  coal  and  iron  .  .  .  Phila- 
delphia: Lippincott,  1873.  135p. 


27 


246.  RICHMOND,  WILLIAM  H. 

Recollections  of  ninety  five  years  in  Connecticut  and  the 
anthracite  regions  of  Pennsylvania.  Journal  of  American 
History  13:  257-72  1919. 

The  above  is  part  2  of  the  series  and  is  confined  to  Richmond's  ex- 
periences in  the  coal  region. 

247.  RICKARD,  THOMAS  A. 

A  history  of  American  mining.  New  York:  McGraw-Hill, 
1932.  419p. 

248.  RIDGWAY,  THOMAS  S. 

Memorial  of  Prof.  Ridgway  in  relation  to  the  coal  field  of 
Rhode  Island.  Providence,  1870.  12p. 

249.  ROBBINS,  w.  B. 

Cheap  fuel.  Louisville,  1855.  16p. 

A  discussion  of  the  need  for  "effective  organization"  in  procuring 
cheap  coal  from  Mason  County,  Virginia.  The  newly-chartered 
Kentucky  Fuel  Company  was  advanced  as  the  solution. 

250.  ROBERTS,  DERRELL 

Joseph  E.  Brown  and  his  Georgia  mines.  Georgia  Histor- 
ical Quarterly  52:  285-92  1968. 

Account  of  a  leading  business  and  political  figure  of  post  Civil  War 
Georgia. 

251.  ROBERTS,  W.  F. 

Abstract  of  a  report  on  the  coal  and  iron  estate  of  the  Little 
Scnuylkill  Navigation,  Railroad  and  Coal  Company.  Phila- 
delphia: John  C.  Clark,  1846.  21p. 

"Great  as  the  coal  trade  now  seems  ...  it  can  scarcely  yet  be  con- 
sidered as  past  its  infancy." 

252.  ROBERTS.  W.  F. 

Reports  upon  the  West  Hazleton  and  Cattawissa  Falls, 
and  the  East  Mahanoy  coal  and  iron  estates.  Philadelphia: 
John  C.  Clark,  1846.  22p. 

253.  ROCKVILLE     COAL     MINING     COMPANY      ( JEFFERSON     COUNTY, 
OHIO) 

Articles  of  association,  constitution  and  by-laws,  articles  of 
agreement.  Steubenville,  Ohio,  1853.  12p. 

254.  ROSS,  HUGH 

John  Lewis  and  the  election  of  1940.  Labor  History  17: 
160-89  1976. 

28 


255.  ROTHERT,  OTTO  A. 

Coal  mining  and  its  bearing  on  local  history.  Kentucky 
Historical  Society.  Register  12:  33-36  1914. 

256.  ROTHERT,  OTTO  A. 

Coal  mining  history  of  Muhlenberg  County,  Kentucky. 
Coal  Age  5:  10-11  1914. 

257.  ROY,  ANDREW 

The  coal  mines.  Cleveland:  Robinson,  Savage  &  Co.,  1876. 
367p. 

A  general  discussion  of  the  history,  technology  and  current  state 
of  the  industry. 

258.  ROY,  ANDREW 

A  history  of  the  coal  miners  of  the  U.S.,  from  the  develop- 
ment of  the  mines  to  the  close  of  the  anthracite  strike  of 
1902,  3rd  ed.,  rev.  and  enl.  Columbus,  Ohio;  Trouger  Print- 
ing Co.,  1907.  465p.  ( 1903  ed.  has  454  p. ) 

259.  ROY,  ANDREW 

The  Jackson  shaft  coal  and  the  Wellston  coal  of  Jackson 
County  (Ohio).  Ohio  Mining  Journal  2:  162-75  1883/84. 

Much  historical  information 

260.  ROY,  ANDREW 

The  Ohio  coal  field.  Ohio  Mining  Journal  2:  121-29  1883/ 
84. 

A  history  of  the  field's  development. 

261.  RUFFIN,  EDMUND 

Visit  to  Graham's  coal  pits.  Farmers  Register  5:  315-19 
1837. 

In  the  Virginia  coal  fields. 

262.  RUTHERFORD,  GEORGE  W. 

A  management  analysis  of  the  coal  chemical  industry. 
Thesis.  University  of  Pennsylvania.  1960. 

263.  RUTLAND,  ROBERT 

The  mining  camps  of  Iowa:  faded  sources  of  Hawkeye  his- 
tory, loxva  Journal  of  History  54:  35-42  1956. 

264.  RUTLEDGE,  J.  J. 

Recollections  on  early  mining  in  Illinois.  Illinois  Mining 
Institute.  Proceedings  52:  76-84  1944. 

29 


265.  RYAN,  FREDERICK 

The  development  of  coal  operators'  associations  in  the 
Southwest.  Southwestern  Social  Science  Quarterly  14:  133- 
441933. 

266.  SALINE  COAL  AND  MANUFACTURING  CO. 

Report  of  the  president  and  directors  .  .  .  Cincinnati:  T. 
Wrightson,  1855.  91p. 

267.  SCHAEFER,  DONALD  F. 

A  quantitative  description  and  analysis  of  the  growth  of 
the  Pennsylvania  anthracite  coal  industry,  1820-1865.  Dis- 
sertation. University  of  North  Carolina.  1967.  234p. 

268.  SHAMOKIN  COAL  AND  DRON  COMPANY 

Brief  sketch  of  the  peculiar  advantages  of  the  Shamokin 
Coal  and  Iron  Company.  Philadelphia:  Brown,  Bicking  & 
Guilbert  1841.  33p. 

269.  SHEPPARD,  MURIEL 

Cloud  by  day,  the  story  of  coal  and  coke  and  people.  Cha- 
pel Hill:  University  of  North  Carolina  Press,  1947.  266p. 

A  description  of  economic  and  social  conditions  in  the  coal  and  coke 
regions  of  south-western  Pennsylvania. 

270.  SHURICK,  ADAM 

The  coal  industry.  Boston:  Little,  Brown,  1924.  383p. 

History,  mining  methods,  distribution,  economic  and  sociological 
conditions. 

271.  Sn.T.IMAN,  BENJAMIN 

Anthracite  coal  of  Pennsylvania  .  .  .  Remarks  upon  its  pro- 
perties and  economic  uses.  American  Journal  of  Science 
10:  331-51  1826. 


j 


272.  SILLIMAN,  BENJAMIN 

Anthracite  coal  of  Rhode  Island.  American  Journal  of 
Science  11:  78-1001826. 

273.  SELLIMAN,  BENJAMIN 

Notes  on  a  journey  from  New  Haven,  Connecticut,  to 
Mauch  Chunk  and  other  anthracite  regions  of  Pennsyl- 
vania. American  Journal  of  Science  19:  1-21  1831. 


30 


274.  SILLIMAN,  BENJAMIN  &  O.  B.  HUBBARD 

Chemical  examination  of  Bituminous  Coal  from  the  pits  of 
the  Mid  Lothian  Coal  Mining  Company,  south  side  of 
James  River  .  .  .  American  Journal  of  Science  42:  369-74 
1842. 

"We  hesitate  not  to  recommend  it  as  an  excellent  fuel,  which  has 
no  occasion  to  shun  a  comparison  with  the  best  mineral  coal  of  this 
country  or  of  Europe". 

275.  SLAB  FORK  COAL  COMPANY 

Golden  Anniversary  celebration.  Beckley,  West  Virginia, 
1957.  24p. 

Slab  Fork  Coal  Co.  was  the  first  major  producer  in  the  Winding 
Gulf  smokeless  coal  field  in  West  Virginia.  This  booklet  contains 
much  historical  information. 

276.  SLUZALIS,  STANLEY  E. 

Land  of  the  black  diamond.  New  York:  Vantage  Press, 
1969.  68p. 

Sketches  of  the  history,  manners  and  customs  in  the  Pennsylvania 
anthracite  region.  Author  was  a  miner. 

277.  SMITH,  EUGENE 

Historical  account  of  coal  mining  operations  in  Alabama 
since  1853.  In  Alabama  Geological  Survey.  Progress  Report 
for  1875.  pp.  28-44. 

278.  SMURTHWAITE,  WILLIAM 

Coal  mining  at  Steuben ville,  Ohio.  Ohio  Mining  Journal 
1:  53-59  1882/83. 

279.  SMURTHWAITE,  WILLIAM 

Sketch  of  the  development  of  the  Steubenville  shaft  mines. 
Ohio  Mining  Journal  2:  100-5  1883/84. 

280.  STODDARD,  PAUL  W. 

The  knowledge  of  coal  and  iron  in  Ohio  before  1835.  Ohio 
Archaeol.  &  Historical  Quarterly  38:  219-30  1929. 

281.  STRONG,  HENRY  K. 

Report  to  the  Legislature  of  Pennsylvania  containing  a 
description  of  the  Swatara  mining  district.  Harrisburg: 
Boas  &  Coplan,  1839.  61p. 

282.  STURGEON,  MYRON  T. 

History  of  Ohio's  northernmost  coal  mine.  Ohio  Journal  of 
Science  44:  255-64  1944. 

In  Geauga  County. 

31 


283.  SWAIN,  GEORGE  T. 

The  incomparable  Don  Chafin:  review  of  the  life  of  Lo- 
gan's dauntless  and  indomitable  sheriff,  who  prevented  the 
invasion  of  Logan  County  on  two  occasions  by  armed  min- 
ers from  the  Kanawha  Valley  coal  fields.  Charleston,  West 
Virginia,  1962.  40p. 

284.  SWANK,  JAMES  M. 

History  of  the  manufacture  of  iron  in  all  ages  .  .  .  Also  a 
history  of  early  coal  mining  in  the  United  States.  Philadel- 
phia: American  Iron  &  Steel  Association  2nd  ed.  1892. 
554p. 

285.  SWANK,  JAMES  M. 

Introduction  to  the  history  of  iron  making  and  coal  mining 
in  Pennsylvania.  Philadelphia,  1878.  125p. 

286.  SWEET,  SYLVANUS  H. 

Special  report  on  coal:  showing  its  distribution,  classifica- 
tion and  cost  delivered  over  different  routes  to  various 
points  in  the  State  of  New  York  and  the  principal  cities  on 
the  Atlantic  coast.  New  York:  Van  Nostrand,  1866.  94p. 

287.  SWISHER,  JACOB  A. 

The  rise  and  fall  of  Buxton.  Palimpsest  26:  179-92  1946. 
Brief  account  of  the  famous  coal  mining  community  in  Iowa. 

288.  SWITCH-BACK  RAILROAD 

Historical  sketch  of  the  switchback  railroad,  the  discovery 
of  anthracite  coal,  and  an  account  of  the  rise  and  growth 
of  the  Lehigh  Coal  &  Navigation  Company,  New  York, 
1882.  20p. 

289.  SYCAMORE  COAL  MINES 

Description  of  the  Sycamore  Coal  Mines,  plan  of  a  mining 
company  now  forming  in  Cincinnati.  2nd  ed.  Cincinnati, 
1850.  12p.  J 

290.  TAMS,  W.  P.  JR. 

The  smokeless  coal  fields  of  West  Virginia;  a  brief  history. 
Morgantown,  West  Virginia  University  Library,  1963. 
106p. 

Tarns  was  one  of  the  leading  operators  in  the  southern  West  Vir- 
ginia coal  fields.  His  book  is  by  far  the  best  single  source  of  infor- 
mation for  this  area. 


32 


291.  TANKERSLEY,  ALLEN  P. 

Zachariah  Hemdon  Gordon  (1796-1886).  Georgia  Histori- 
cal Quarterly  36:  231-49  1952. 

Gordon  was,  among  other  things,  an  operator  of  coal  mines  in 
Georgia  and  Alabama. 

292.  TAYLOR,  GEORGE 

Effect  of  incorporated  coal  companies  upon  the  anthracite 
coal  trade  of  Pennsylvania.  Pottsville:  Bannan,  1833.  34p. 

293.  TAYLOR,  RICHARD  C. 

Statistics  of  coal.  Philadelphia:  J.  W.  Moore,  1848.  754p. 

"Production,  consumption  and  commercial  distribution  in  all  parts 
of  the  world;  together  with  their  prices,  tariffs,  duties  and  interna- 
tional regulations." 

294.  TAYLOR,  RICHARD  C. 

Two  reports  on  the  coal  lands,  mines  and  improvements  of 
the  Dauphin  and  Susquehanna  Coal  Company  and  of  the 
geological  examinations,  present  condition  and  prospects 
of  the  Stoney  Creek  Coal  Estate.  Philadelphia,  E.  G.  Dor- 
sey,  1840.  74p. 

295.     THARP,  MARILYN 

Story  of  coal  at  Newcastle.  Pacific  Northwest  Quarterly 
48:  120-26  1957. 

Brief  history  of  the  early  coal  industry  in  the  Seattle,  Washington 


296.  THOMAS,  JERRY  B. 

Coal  country:  the  rise  of  the  southern  smokeless  coal  in- 
dustry and  its  effect  on  area  development,  1872-1910. 
Dissertation.  University  of  North  Carolina,  1971.  339p. 

"As  in  much  of  Appalachia,  the  coal  industry  determined  the  na- 
ture and  pace  of  southern  West  Virginia's  social  and  economic  de- 
velopment." The  impact  of  the  coal  industry  upon  one  part  of  Ap- 
palachia—the  southern  smokeless  coal  fields— is  the  theme  of  this 
study. 

297.  THOMAS,  JERRY  BRUCE 

The  g  r  o  w  t  h  of  the  coal  industry  in  the  Great  Kanawha 
Basin.  Thesis  (M.  A.)  University  of  North  Carolina,  1967. 
122p. 

298.  THOMAS,  SAMUEL 

Reminiscences  of  the  early  anthracite-iron  industry.  AIME. 
Transactions  29:  901-28  1899. 

33 


299.  THROOP,  BENJAMIN 

A  half  century  in  Scranton,  Pennsylvania,  1895.  335p. 

Throop,  a  physician,  came  to  Scranton  in  1840.  He  gives  much  on 
the  development  of  the  mining  industry. 

300.  THURMOND,  WALTER  R. 

The  Logan  Coal  Field  of  West  Virginia;  a  brief  history. 
Morgan  town:  West  Virginia  University  Library,  1964. 
HOp. 

The  author  was  a  leading  coal  operator  in  the  Logan  Field  and  was 
for  many  years  Secretary  of  the  Southern  Coal  Producers  Associa- 
tion. 

301.  TIPTON,  J.  C. 

Cumberland  coal  fields  and  its  creators.  Middlesboro,  Ken- 
tucky. Pinnacle  Printery,  1905.  112p. 

302.  TUOMEY,  M. 

Notice  of  the  Appomattox  coal  pits.  Farmers  Register.  10: 
449-50  1842. 

Virginia  coal  fields. 

303.  UNION  PACIFIC  COAL  COMPANY 

History  of  the  Union  Pacific  coal  mines,  1868  to  1940. 
Omaha:  Colonial  Press.  1940.  265p. 

304.  UNION  POTOMAC  COMPANY 

Charters  .  .  .  with  a  letter  addressed  to  Duff  Green,  by  the 
Hon.  Charles  Kinsey,  on  the  subject  of  the  coal  and  iron 
mines  in  the  counties  of  Hampshire,  Virginia  and  Alle- 
ghany, Maryland.  Washington:  Duff  Green,  1836.  43p. 

305.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  HOUSE 

Coal  trade-Richmond.  Washington,  1837.  8p.  (24th  Cong., 
2nd.  Sess.  House.  Doc.  93). 

Petition  of  Virginia  coal  operators  against  a  reduction  of  duties  on 
coal. 

306.  VERHOFF,  MARY 

The  Kentucky  mountains,  transportation  and  commerce, 
1750-1911;  a  study  in  the  economic  history  of  a  coal  field. 
Louisville:  Filson  Club,  1911.  208p.  (Filson  Club  Publi- 
cation 26). 

307.  VENING,  STANLEY  A. 

Men  and  coal  in  Kansas,  their  history  and  politics.  Thesis. 
University  of  Kansas.  1957.  246p. 

34 


308.  VISIT  TO  A  COAL  MINE 

Hunt's  Merchants'  Magazine  30:  245-47  1854. 

Account  of  a  mining  operation  in  the  Wyoming  Valley  of  Pennsyl- 
vania. 

309.  VISIT  TO  THE  LACKAWANNA  MINES 

Knickerbocker  15:  102-6  1840. 

310.  WAGNER,  E.  A. 

The  Girard  coal  lands:  a  history  describing  the  purchase, 
attempted  development  and  later  successful  working  of  the 
coal  property,  which  was  bequeathed  to  the  City  of  Phila- 
delphia by  Stephen  Girard.  Colliery  Engineer.  In  install- 
ments through  volumes  8  and  9  (1887-1889). 

311.  WALKER,  ELMORE 

The  Pennsylvania  coal  fields  and  their  connections  with 
and  relation  to  Buffalo.  Buffalo:  Matthews  &  Warren, 
1868.  64p. 

312.  WALLING,  HENRY  F. 

The  Morris  and  Essex  R.  R.  and  the  anthracite  coal  regions 
of  Pennsylvania.  New  York,  1867.  63p. 

i"With  sketches  of  cities,  villages,  stations,  scenery,  and  objects  of 
interest  along  the  route." 

313.  WALTER,  R.  A. 

Historical  sketch  of  the  George's  Creek  (Maryland)  coal 
region.  Coal  Age  5:  995-1000  1914. 

314.  WALTERS,  A. 

Coal  deposits  of  Boulder  County,  Colorado.  American 
Journal  of  Mining  4:  242  1867. 

Brief  account  of  development  and  early  status  of  mining  in  the  area. 

315.  WALTON,  THOMAS  H. 

Life  in  coal  mines.  Lippincott's  Monthly  Magazine  3:  517- 
21  1869. 

Author  describes  the  rough  and  dangerous  work  of  miners. 
Written  from  his  own  experience  in  the  mines. 

316.  WARDLEY,  C.  S. 

The  early  development  of  the  H.  C.  Frick  Coke  Company. 
Western  Pennsylvania  Historical  Magazine  32:  79-86  1949. 

Covers  the  period  from  approximately  1882  to  1901. 

35 


317.  WEST  VIRGINIA  COAL  MINING  COMPANY,  INC. 

Charter.  Washington:  J.  T.  Towers,  1848.  23p. 

318.  WEST  VIRGINIA  GHOST  TOWNS 

Mountain  Trace  Spring  1976  41-45. 

Description  and  photographs  of  two  once  booming  coal  towns  in  the 
New  River  field. 

319.  WHITE,  ELIZABETH 

Development  of  the  bituminous  coal  mining  industry  in 
Logan  County,  West  Virginia.  Thesis.  Marshall  College. 
1956. 

320.  WHITE,  JOSIAH 

Josiah  White's  history,  given  by  himself.  [Philadelphia, 
1909].  75p. 

"The  journal  of  Josiah  White  is  published,  as  giving  in  detail  the 
circumstances  which  led  to  the  introduction  of  canal  navigation  and 
the  use  of  anthracite  coal  in  Pennsylvania." 

321.  WHITTLESEY,  CHARLES 

Discovery  of  coal  in  Ohio  and  early  mine  work.  Ohio  Min- 
ing Journal  2:  15-17  1883/84. 

322.  WHITTLESEY,  CHARLES 

History  of  the  coal  and  iron  business  from  Cleveland  as  it 
is,  1872.  [Cleveland,  1872].  8p. 

323.  WILLIAMS,  JOHN  A. 

The  bituminous  coal  lobby  and  the  Wilson-Gorman  Tariff 
of  1894.  Maryland  Historical  Magazine  68:  273-287  Sum- 
mer 1973. 

How  Henry  G.  Davis,  Stephen  B.  Elkins,  and  Richard  C.  Kerns  ral- 
lied the  seaboard  producers  to  exert  their  influence  in  congress  and 
successfully  defended  the  duty  on  coal. 

324.  WILLIAMS,  JOHN  A. 

West  Virginia  and  the  captains  of  industry.  Morgantown: 
West  Virginia  University  Library.  1976.  363p. 

Includes  much  material  on  the  development  of  the  coal  industry  in 
West  Virginia. 

325.  WITT,  MATT 

Coalfield  education:  do  our  children  leam  their  labor  her- 
itage in  school.  United  Mine  Workers  Journal  Mr  16/31, 
1975  13-23. 

With  few  exceptions,  schools  in  the  coalfields  teach  little  or  noth- 
ing about  the  dtvolopment  of  the  coal  industry. 

36 


326.  WOODWORTH,  JAY  B. 

The  history  of  conditions  of  mining  in  the  Richmond  coal 
basin,  Virginia.  AIME.  Transaction  31:  477-84  1901. 

327.  WOOLDRIDGE,  A.  S. 

Geological  and  statistical  notice  of  the  coal  mines  in  the 
vicinity  of  Virginia.  American  Journal  of  Science  43:  1-13 
1842. 

Largely  historical  in  nature,  the  title  to  the  contrary. 

328.  WYOMING  COAL 

Hazard  's  Register  of  Pennsylvania  6:  314-15  1830. 
Account  of  the  coal  trade  in  the  Wyoming  Valley,  Pennsylvania. 

329.  YEARLEY,  C.  K. 

Enterprise  and  anthracite:  economics  and  democracy  in 
Schuylkill  County,  1820-1875.  Baltimore:  Johns  Hopkins 
Press,  1961.  254p.  (Johns  Hopkins  University  Studies  in 
Historical  and  Political  Science  79:  1). 


37 


tcmcmm 


330.  ADAMS,  JOHN  W. 

Costs  and  efficiency  in  the  wholesaling  and  retailing  of 
coal.  Ann.  Amer.  Acad.  Ill:  145-54  1924. 

331.  ADAMS,  ROBERT  T. 

Technology  and  productivity  in  bituminous  coal.  MLR  84: 
1081-86  1961. 

332.  ADAMS,  RUSSELL  K. 

A  study  of  marginal  coal  mines  in  southern  West  Virginia. 
Thesis.  University  of  Pennsylvania.  1954. 

333.  ADDERFER,  EVAN 

Paleozoic  pains  in  Pennsylvania.  Federal  Reserve  Bank  of 
Philadelphia.  Business  Review  F  1963  3-13. 

334.  AM  AX  COAL  PUTS  IT  ALL  TOGETHER 

Coal  Age  Oct.  1974  91-138. 

A  "corporate  profile"  of  Amax  Coal. 

335.  AMERICAN  ENGINEERING  COUNCIL 

Industrial  coal;  purchase,  delivery  and  storage.  New  York: 
Ronald  Press,  1924.  419p. 

336.  AMERICAN     INSTITUTE     OF      MINING,      METALLURGICAL,      AND 
PETROLEUM  ENGINEERS 

Gasification  and  liquefaction  of  coal.   New  York,   1953. 
221p. 

337.  ANKENY,  MARLING  J. 

A  look  at  coal's  future  markets.  Public  Utilities  Fortnightly 
70:  413-17  1962. 

A  generally  optimistic  view  by  the  director  of  the  U.  S.  Bureau  of 
Mines. 


38 


338.  ANTHRACITE  COAL  PRODUCTION  CONTROL  PLAN 

University  of  Pennsylvania  Law  Review  102:  368-94  1954. 
A  history  and  analysis  of  the  Plan,  in  effect  since  1941. 

339.  APPALACHIAN  COAL  TODAY— AND  TOMORROW 

Coal  Age  Mid-May  1975 

Entire  issue  is  devoted  to  the  coal  industry  in  Appalachia,  its  present 
state  and  future  prospects. 

340.  ARCHBALD,  HUGH 

The  problem  of  efficiency  and  cost  reduction  in  coal  min- 
ing. Ann.  Amer.  Acad.  Ill:  181-190  1924. 

341.  ASHBURNER,  CHARLES  A. 

Coal  trade  and  miners'  wages  in  the  United  States  in  the 
year  1888.  AIME.  Transactions  18:  122-39  1889/90. 

342.  ASHLEY,  GEORGE  H. 

New  Coal  age.  Economic  Geology  44:  161-68  1949. 

Author  sees  a  bright  future  for  the  coal  industry.  His  optimism  bas- 
ed on  a  sharp  increase  in  the  need  for  power  and  the  assumed  un- 
availability of  other  power  sources  in  significant  quantities  at  com- 
petitive prices. 

343.  ASHLEY,  GEORGE  H. 

The  valuation  of  public  coal  lands.  Washington:  GPO, 
1910.  75p.  (USGS,  Bulletin  424). 

344.  ASHLEY,  WILLIAM  J. 

The  adjustment  of  wages;  a  study  in  the  coal  and  iron  in- 
dustries of  Great  Britain  and  America.  London  and  New 
York:  Longmans,  1903.  362p. 

345.  ASHMEAD,  DEVER  C. 

Can  anthracite  mines  be  operated  profitably  on  more  than 
one  shift.  AIME.  Transactions  68:  332-59  1922. 

346.  AURAND,  HAROLD  W. 

Diversifying  the  economy  of  the  anthracite  regions,  1880- 
1900.  Pennsylvania  Magazine  of  History  &  Biography  94: 
54-61  1970. 

347.  AVRIL,  LAWRENCE  P. 

Variations  in  the  financial  experience  of  bituminous  coal 
companies.  Thesis.  Indiana  University.  1950. 


39 


348.  AYER,  THOMAS  P. 

Coal  prices:  a  selected  bibliography.  Ann.  Amer.  Acad. 
Ill:  344-62  1924. 

349.  BACK  TO  GOOD  OLE  COAL 

Southern  Exposure  Fall  1974  164-69. 

"The  coal  industry  is  more  highly  concentrated,  better  financed,  and 
more  monopolistically  controlled  than  ever  before". 

350.  BACKMAN,  JULES 

Bituminous  coal  wages,  profits  and  productivity.  [Wash- 
ington], 1950.  128p. 

Prepared  for  the  Southern  Coal  Producers  Association. 

351.  BAKERMAN,  THEODORE 

Anthracite  coal;  a  study  of  advanced  industrial  decline.  Ph. 
D.  University  of  Pennsylvania.  1956. 

352.  BARGER,  HAROLD  AND  S.  H.  SCHURR 

The  mining  industries,  1899-1939.  A  study  of  output,  em- 
ployment and  productivity.  New  York:  National  Bureau  of 
Economic  Research,  1944.  452p.  (Its  Publication  No.  43). 

353.  BARKUS,  GARY 

The  West  Virginia  tax  structure:  the  people  and  coal. 
Charleston:  Appalachian  Research  and  Defense  Fund, 
1971.  27p. 

354.  BEDDOW,  w.  w. 

Coal  company  organization.  Coal  Age  13:  788-80  1918. 

Author  urges  better  coordination  of  departments  in  the  management 
of  coal  companies. 

355.  BERGER  ASSOCIATES,  AND  A.  B.  RIEDEL  ASSOCIATES 

Evaluation  of  mining  constraints  to  the  revitalization  of 
Pennsylvania  anthracite.  Washington:  Bureau  of  Mines, 
1975.  375p.  (Distributed  by  National  Technical  Informa- 
tion Service,  PB-242  580). 

"Objective  .  .  .  was  to  evaluate  the  technical  and  economic  con- 
straints on  the  extraction  and  utilization  of  anthracite  coal  and  to 
determine  the  research  and  development  needed. 

356.  BERNHEIMER,  F.  P. 

Study  of  the  Pennsylvania  anthracite  coal  tax.  Thesis.  Uni- 
versity of  Pennsylvania.  1925. 


40 


357.  BEZANSON,  ANNE 

Earnings  of  coal  miners.  Ann.  Amcr.  Acad.  11:  1-11  1924. 

358.  BIELICKI,  RICHARD  J.  AND  DAVID  C.  UHRIN 

Coal  mine  equipment  forecast  to  1985.  Washington:  GPO, 
1976.  37p.  (U.S.  Bureau  of  Mines.  Information  Circular 
8710). 

Study  "Estimates  the  number  of  major  pieces  of  coal  mining  equip- 
ment that  will  he  required  to  produce  950  million  tons  of  market- 
able coal  in  1SS0  and  1.2  billion  tons  in  1985." 

359.  BITUMINOUS  COAL;  RICHEST  MAN  ON   POOR  STREET 

Forbes  Ja  1,  1958  67-70. 

"Coal  management  rarely  makes  its  riches  pay  their  way." 

360.  BLANKENSHIP,  RONDAL  C. 

Appalachian  Coals,  Inc.;  a  bituminous  coal  producers'  mar- 
keting agency.  Thesis.  West  Virginia  University.  1949.  70p. 

361.  BLOCH,  LOUIS 

The  coal  miners'  insecurity.  New  York:  Russell  Sage  Foun- 
dation, 1922.  50p. 

Stresses  irregularity  of  employment  in  the  coal  industry. 

362.  BOCKUS,  C.  E. 

Bituminous  coal  problems.  Harvard  Business  Review  1: 
290-99  1923. 

363.  BOECKLIN,  WERNER 

The  coal  industry  of  Greater  New  York.  Engineering 
Magazine  35:  893-905  1908. 

364.  BONDURANT,  DONALD  M. 

A  new  technique  for  evaluating  coal  property  for  ad  val- 
orem tax  assessment.  West  Virginia  Law  Review  76:  337- 
341  1974. 

Describes  the  new  method  and  its  adventages.  A  major  plus  is  that 
it  "will  remove  the  county  to  county  variances  in  assessed  values.  .  ." 

365.  BOOZ,  ALLEN  AND  HAMILTON,  INC. 

Study  of  the  eastern  industrial  coal  market.  Washington: 
Office  of  Coal  Research,  1967.  95p. 

366.  BOOZ,  ALLEN  AND  HAMILTON,  INC. 

Survey  of  opportunities  to  stimulate  coal  utilization.  Wash- 
ington: Office  of  Coal  Research,  1962.  2  vols. 

41 


367.  BOSTON.     CHAMBER     OF     COMMERCE.     COMMITTEE    ON     FUEL 
SUPPLY 

The  buying  and  handling  of  steam  coal;  report  by  the 
committee  on  Fuel  Supply  of  the  Boston  Chamber  of  Com- 
merce, November,  1909.  [Boston,  1909].  48p. 

368.  BOULDING,  RUSSELL 

What  is  pure  coal.  Environment  Ja/Feb  1976  12-17. 

"The  tendency  of  coal  investigators  to  deal  with  coal  on  a  weight 
basis  rather  than  on  a  Btu  basis  has  lead  to  serious  misrepresenta- 
tions of  coal  data". 

369.  BOWDEN,  WITT 

Wage  and  price  structure  in  the  bituminous  coal  industry. 
MLR  53:  293-313  1941. 

370.  BOWMAN,  MARY  J.  AND  W.  W.  HAYNES 

Resources  and  people  in  East  Kentucky:  Problems  and  po- 
tentials of  a  lagging  economy.  Baltimore:  Johns  Hopkins, 
1963.  448p. 

371.  BRADLEY,  JOSEPH  G. 

Southern  coal  production  and  distribution  in  relation  to 
American  industry.  American  Mining  Congress.  Proceed- 
ings 25:  86-92  1922. 

372.  BRODERICK,  GRACE  N. 

Supply  and  demand  for  energy  in  the  United  States  by 
states  and  regions,  1960  and  1965.  Washington:  GPO,  1969, 
21p.  (U.S.  Bureau  of  Mines.  Information  Circular  8401). 

A  four-part  study.  This  Circular  deals  with  coal. 

373.  BROWN,  P.  AND  A.  KOUZIAN 

Wage  structure  in  bituminous  coal  mining,  fall  of  1945. 
MLR  62:  550-59  1946. 

374.  BUCHANAN,  JOHN  A. 

A  survey  of  labor  requirements  in  northern  West  Virginia 
coal  mines  in  1957.  Thesis.  West  Virginia  University.  1960. 
73p. 

375.  BURKE,  STEPHEN  P. 

"Price-fixing"  in  the  bituminous  coal  industry;  a  legal-econ- 
omic problem.  Fairmont,  West  Virginia,  1935.  40p. 

376.  BURROWS,  JOHN  S. 

Results  of  purchasing  coal  under  government  specifica- 
tions. Washington:  GPO,  1909.  44p.  (USGS.  Bulletin  378). 

42 


377.  CAMPBELL,  ROLLA  D.  AND  OTHERS 

Ad  valorum  taxation  of  coal  bearing  lands  in  West  Vir- 
ginia, a  viewpoint  of  the  coal  industry.  West  Virginia  Law 
Review  76:  343-65  1974. 

378.  CAMPBELL,  THOMAS  C. 

Competition  in  the  bituminous  coal  industry.  West  Vir- 
ginia Academy  of  Sciences.  Proceedings  23:  128-32  1951. 

"There  is  little  doublt  that  the  bituminous  coal  industry  is  almost 
perfectly  competitive." 

379.  CARTER,  EDWARD  W. 

Price  fixing  in  the  bituminous  coal  industry.  Ann.  Amer. 
Acad.  193:  120-29  1937. 

380.  CHANCE,  H.  M. 

Appraisal  of  coal  lands  for  taxation.  AIME.  Transactions 
50:  625-39  1914. 

381.  CHANCE,  H.  M. 

Appraisal  of  coal  properties.  AIME.  Transactions  74:  443- 
55  1926. 

382.  CHANCE,  H.  M. 

Appraisement  of  Michigan  coal  lands.  Coal  Age  2:  13-14. 
51-53  1912. 

383.  CHANCE,  H.  M. 

Valuation  of  coal  land.  AIME.  Transactions  47:  111-46 
1913. 

384.  CHAPLIN,  RONALD  L. 

Spatial  changes  in  coal  employment  within  Southern  Illin- 
ois. Thesis.  Southern  Illinois  University.  1961. 

385.  CHARLE,  EDWIN  G. 

The  demand  for  coal  for  power  generation  in  the  Tennes- 
see Valley.  Dissertation.  University  of  Indiana.  1958.  228p. 

386.  CHARLES  RIVER  ASSOCIATES 

Economic  impact  of  public  policy  on  the  Appalachian 
coal  industry  and  the  regional  economy.  Cambridge,  1973. 
3  vols. 


43 


J: 


387.  CHRISTENSON,  CARROLL  L. 

Economic  redevelopment  in  bituminous  coal;  the  special 
case  of  technological  advance  in  United  States  coal  mines. 
1930-1960.  Cambridge:  Harvard  University  Press,  1962. 
312p.  (Wertheim  Publications  in  Industrial  Relations). 

388.  CHRISTENSON,  CARROLL  L. 

The  impact  of  labor  disputes  upon  coal  consumption. 
American  Economic  Review  45:  79-112  1955. 

389.  CHRISTENSON,  CARROLL  L. 

The  theory  of  the  offset  factor:  the  impact  of  labor  disput- 
es upon  coal  production.  American  Economic  Review  43: 
513-47  1953. 

390.  CLAYTON,  E.  E. 

An  economic  analysis  of  labor  conditions  in  the  Indiana 
coal  industry  in  1932.  Thesis.  Indiana  University.  1941. 

391.  COAL 

Fortune  Mr  1947  85-99;  Ap  1947  99-105. 

A  series  of  articles  on  "our  No.  1  national  resources,  which  we 
mine  inefficiently,  transport  wastefully  and  consume  foolishly." 

392.  COAL  CHALLENGE  AND  RESPONSE 

Forbes  My  15,  1963  23-7. 

"Now  coal  may  be  poised  for  a  real  comeback." 

393.  COAL  COMPANY  GETS  OFF  THE  HOOK 

Business  Week  Ap  20,  1957  99-100. 

The  revitalization  of  the  Philadelphia  &  Reading  Co. 

394.  COAL  FOR  THE  70's:  A  PENNSYLVANIA  ACTION  CONFERENCE 

Middletown:  Institute  of  State  and  Regional  Affairs, 
Pennsylvania  State  University,  Capitol  Campus,  1974. 
339p. 

395.  COAL  INDUSTRY  MAKES  A  DRAMATIC  COMEBACK 

Business  Week  50-5+  Nov.  4  1972. 

396.  COAL  INDUSTRY'S  CONTROVERSIAL  MOVE  WEST 

Business  Week  My  11,  1974  134-38. 


44 


397.  COAL  SHEIK 

Forbes  Sept.  15,  1975  84-85. 

James  Harless.  a  southern  West  Virginia  coal  operator,  is  one  of 
many  who  became  rich  as  a  result  of  the  rise  in  coal  prices  as  a  re- 
sult of  OPECs  activities. 

398.  COAL:  THE  BASIC  ANSWER  FOR  THE  NEXT  DOZEN  YEARS 

Business  Week  Ap  21,  1973  54-6. 

"No  industry  has  a  greater  opportunity  to  capitalize  on  the  energy 
crisis  than  coal." 

399.  COAL:  THE  DWINDLING  DOMAIN 

Fortune  S  1953  61-2. 

"We  are  a  450-million-ton  industry  still  trying  to  act  like  a  750-mil- 
lion  ton  industry." 

400.  COAL,  THE  PITT-CONSOL  ADVENTURE 

Fortune  Jl  1947  96-105. 

Account  of  the  Pittsburgh-Consolidation  Coal  Co. 

401.  coal's  COMEBACK  AT  MOSS  NO.  3 
Fortune  O  1963  130-35. 

Moss  No.  3  is  the  giant  mine  of  the  Clinchfield  Coal  Company 
( Pittston )  in  south-west  Virginia.  The  mine  is  an  example  of  the 
massive  investment  now  being  made  in  coal. 

402.  COHN,  ELCHANAN  AND  OTHERS 

Forecasting  aggregate  demand  for  coal  miners.  Applied 
Economics  7:  81-92  1975. 

"Based  on  the  demand  and  supply  forecasts,  it  does  not  appear  that 
manpower  shortages  are  likly  to  occur  in  the  bituminous  coal  min- 
ing industry  either  in  1985  or  2000." 

403.  COHN,  ELCHANAN  AND  OTHERS 

Forecasting  aggregate  supply  of  coal  miners.  Socio-Econ- 
omic  Planning  Sciences  8:  293-99  1974. 

404.  COLEMAN,  RON 

Coal's  Happy  Face.  Commonwealth  (Virginia)  Ja  1976 
18-21. 

Account  of  the  economic  boom  in  Buchanan  County,  Va. 

405.  COMANOR,  WILLIAM  S. 

Competition  and  the  performance  of  the  midwestern  coal 
industry'.  Journal  of  Industrial  Economics  14:  212-225  1966. 

"The  midwestern  coal  industry  does  not  appear  to  be  a  valid  ex- 
ception to  the  general  proposition  that  market  performance  is  best 
served  by  the  promotion  of  competition." 

45 


406.  COMPLETED  WAGE  SCHEDULE  FOR  BITUMINOUS  COAL  INDUS- 
TRY 

MLR  37:  1073-81  1933. 

407.  CONE,  FREDERICK  L.  AND  JACK  SCHMULOWITZ 

Impact  of  black  lung  benefits  on  public  assistance.  Social 
Security  Bulletin  Nov.  1972  15-19. 

408.  CONFERENCE  ON  THE  COMMERCIAL  AND  ECONOMIC  HEALTH 
OF  THE  BITUMINOUS  COAL  INDUSTRY,  WEST  VIRGINIA  UNIVER- 
SITY, 1953. 

Proceedings.  Morgantown:  West  Virginia  University,  1954. 
14p.  (Business  and  Economic  Studies  3:  1). 

409.  CONFERENCE  ON  ECONOMIC  RESEARCH  IN  THE  BITUMINOUS 
COAL  INDUSTRY 

Proceedings.  Morgantown:  West  Virginia  University,  1953. 
15p.  ( West  Virginia  University  Business  &  Economic  Stud- 
ies 2:2). 

410.  CONFERENCE  ON  PRICE  RESEARCH 

Report  of  the  Committee  on  Prices  in  the  Bituminous  Coal 
Industry.  New  York:  National  Bureau  of  Economics  Re- 
search, 1938.  144p. 

411.  CONSOLIDATED  COAL  COMPANY 

Coal  Age  Sept.  1972  89-156. 

Issue  devoted  to  the  various  operations  of  the  Consolidation  Coal 
Co. 

412.  COWAN,  DONALD  R. 

More  capital  equipment:  coal's  foremost  economic  need. 
Washington:  National  Coal  Association,  [1948].  59p. 

413.  CREWS,  RALPH 

Cooperation  in  the  marketing  of  coal.  American  Marketing 
Congress.  Proceedings  19:  184-92  1916. 

414.  CRUM,  W.  L.  AND  H.  B.  VANDERBLUE 

Coal  mining  and  the  business  cycle.  Harvard  Business  Re- 
view 4:  71-77  1925. 

415.  CUSHING,  GEORGE  H. 

Selling  coal.  American  Economic  Association.  Papers  & 
Proceedings  11:  85-93  1921. 


46 


416.  DAVID,  JOHN  P. 

Earnings,  health,  safety,  and  welfare  of  bituminous  coal 
miners  since  the  encouragement  of  mechanization  by  the 
United  Mine  Workers  of  America.  Dissertation.  West  Vir- 
ginia University,  1972.  295p. 

417.  DAVIS,  BLAINE  A. 

Marketing  problems  of  bituminous  coal.  Harvard  Business 
Review  11:  97-106  1932. 

418.  DAY,  DAVID  T. 

The  course  of  the  retail  coal  trade.  National  Geographic 
13:  394-98  1902. 

419.  DEANS,  PARKE  P. 

Coal  mining  and  workmen's  compensation  (with  discus- 
sion). U.S.  Bureau  of  Labor  Statistics.  Bulletin  511:  279- 
91  1930. 

420.  DEASY,  GEORGE  F.  AND  PHYLLIS  R.  GRIESS 

Local  and  regional  differences  in  long  term  bituminous 
coal  production  prospects  in  eastern  United  States.  Asso- 
ciation of  American  Geographers.  Annals  57:  519-33  1967. 

The  major  objective  of  the  study  is  to  attempt  "to  forecast  future 
local  and  regional  responses  to  the  forthcoming  increase  in  national 
demands  for  energy". 

421.  DEMAND  FOR  ENERGY  AND  APPALACHIA's  COAL 

Appalachia  Feb/Mr  1972  1-5. 

422.  DEVINE,  EDWARD  T. 

Coal;  economic  problems  of  the  mining,  marketing  and 
consumption  of  anthracite  and  soft  coal  in  the  United 
States.  Bloomington,  Indiana:  American  Review  Service 
Press,  1925.  448p. 

423.  DIALS,  GEORGE  E.   AND  ELIZABETH  C.   MOORE 

Cost  of  coal.  Environment  Sept  1974  18-24  +  . 

The  demand  for  energy  is  such  that  the  human  and  environmental 
costs  of  coal  mining  can  be  met  without  jeopardizing  coal's  competi- 
tive advantage. 

424.  DIEHL,  RICHARD  A. 

How  international  energy  elite  rules.  Peoples  Appalachia 
Apr/xMy  1970  1,  7-12. 

Oil  companies  aim  to  control  the  coal  industry  and  thus  gain  a  near 
monopoly  on  energy. 

47 


425.  DILWORTH,  JOHN  B.   (  CHAIRMAN  ) 

Report  of  Committee  on  Methods  of  Valuing  Coal  Proper- 
ties. AIME.  Transactions  108:  400-42  1934. 

426.  DILWORTH,  JOHN  B. 

Valuation  of  coal  properties.  AIME.  Transactions  76:  215- 
36  1928. 

427.  DIXON,  HARRY  M. 

The  Illinois  coal  mining  industry.  Dissertation.  University 
of  Illinois.  1951.  277p. 

428.  DOERR,  ARTHUR 

Chicago's  coal;  its  origin,  movement  to  market  and  use. 
Journal  of  Geography  49:  261-69  1950. 

429.  DONNEGAN,  JOHN  J. 

Sales  promotion  activity  in  the  anthracite  industry.  Thesis. 
University  of  Pennsylvania.  1951. 

430.  DORLAND,  JACK  A. 

The  5/2  year  cycle  in  soft  coal  stocks.  Cycles  13:  181-3 
1962. 

431.  DRURY,  HORACE  B. 

Social  cost  of  irregular  employment  in  coal  mining.  Ameri- 
can Labor  Legislation  Review  14:  81-89  1924. 

432.  DRURY,  HORACE  B. 

Wages  in  the  coal  industry  as  compared  with  wages  in 
other  industries.  Ann  Amer.  Acad.  Ill:  314-343  1924. 

432a.  DUFFIELD,  JOHN  AND  OTHERS 

Defining  the  market  for  great  plains  coal.  Montana  Busi- 
ness Quarterly  Summer  1976  18-25. 

433.  DULUTH  AND  WEST  SUPERIOR;  THEIR  PRESENT  AND  FUTURE  AS 
GREAT  COAL  DISTRIBUTING  CENTERS 

Black  Diamond  6:  179-81  1890/91. 

434.  DUNBAR,  FRED  C. 

Appalachian  coal  industry  in  1980— how  it  looks  through 
the  eyes  of  professional  forecasters.  Coal  Age  Sept.  1973 
90-95. 

Discussion  of  the  contents  of  a  three-volume  report  to  the  Appala- 
chian Regional  Commission  by  the  Charles  River  Associates.  Title 
of  report  is  "The  Economic  Impact  of  Public  Policy  on  the  Appala- 
chian Coal  Industry  and  the  Regional  Economy." 

48 


435.     DUNHAM,  JAMES  AND  OTHERS 

High  sulfur  coal  for  generating  electricity.  Science  184: 
346-51  1974. 

Account  of  the  major  economic  and  technical  problems  involved. 

436.  DUNN,  STEPHEN  F. 

Position  paper  of  United  States  employer  delegate  to  ILO 
tripartite  technical  meeting  on  the  social  consequences  of 
the  crisis  in  the  coal  mining  industry,  Geneva,  Switzerland, 
January  16-26,  1961.  Washington:  National  Coal  Associa- 
tion, 1961.  17p. 

437.  DURAND,  WALTER 

Where  the  consumer's  dollar  goes.  Ann.  Amer.  Acad.  Ill: 
125-44  1924. 

Analysis  of  prices  and  profits  in  the  anthracite  coal  industry. 

438.  ECKEL,  EDWIN  C. 

Coal,  iron,  and  war.  New  York:  Holt,  1920.  375p. 

439.  EASTERN  ASSOCIATED  COAL  CORP. 

Coal  Age  Oct.  1969  94-188. 

Much  of  this  issue  is  devoted  to  the  development  and  current  oper- 
ations of  Eastern. 

440.  EAVENSON,  HOWARD  N. 

Data  about  labor  employed  in  various  bituminous  mines. 
AIME.  Transactions  70:  805-25  1924. 

441.  EDMONSON,  NATHAN 

Real  price  and  the  consumption  of  mineral  energy  in  the 
United  States,  1901-1968.  Journal  of  Industrial  Economics 
23:  161-73  1975. 

442.  EDWARDS,  M.  W.  A. 

Bituminous  coal  economics.  Mining  Congress  Journal  Feb. 
1966  115-19. 

Survey  of  production,  consumption  and  exports. 

443.  EMPLOYMENT  IN  RELATION  TO  MECHANIZATION  IN  THE  BIT- 
UMINOUS COAL  INDUSTRY 

MLR  36:  256-78  1933. 

444.  EVEREST,  HERBERT  A. 

Economics  in  a  small  coal  mine.  AIME.  Transactions  54: 
185-87  1916. 

49 


445.  FALTERMAYER,  EDMUND 

It's  back  to  the  pits  for  coal's  new  future  Fortune  Je  1974 
136-9+ . 

446.  FEDERAL  RESERVE  BANK  OF  CLEVELAND 

Changing  fortunes  of  bituminous  coal.  Cleveland,  1957. 
31p. 

Appeared  first  in  four  issues  of  its  Monthly  Review  for  1956. 

447.  FIES,  MILTON  H. 

Case  of  the  Alabama  coal  operators.  .  .  Birmingham,  1934. 
16p. 

Argument  against  the  threatened  competition  of  the  TVA. 

448.  FISHER,  STAN 

Profile  of  the  Drummond  Co.  Coal  Age  Mr  1974  88-92. 

Account  of  the  development  and  current  operations  of  a  major  Ala- 
bama mining  company  with  large  reserves  of  metallurgical  coal. 

449.  FISHER,  WALDO  E. 

Economic  consequences  of  the  seven-hour  day  and  wage 
changes  in  the  bituminous  coal  industry.  Philadelphia, 
1939.  130p.  (Industrial  Research  Department,  Wharton 
School  of  Finance  &  Commerce,  University  of  Pennsyl- 
vania. Research  Studies  XXXII ) . 

450.  FISHER,  WALDO  E.  AND  CHARLES  M.  JAMES 

Minimum  price  fixing  in  the  bituminous  coal  industry. 
Princeton:  Princeton  University  Press,  1955.  523p. 

451.  FISHER,  WALDO  E.  AND  ANNE  BENZANSON 

Wage  rates  and  working  time  in  the  bituminous  coal  indus- 
try 1912-1922.  Philadelphia:  University  of  Pennsylvania 
Press,  1932.  374p. 

452.  FISHMAN,  LEO  AND  BETTY  G. 

Bituminous  coal  production  during  World  War  II.  South- 
ern Economic  Journal  18:  391-96  1952. 

453.  FLEDDERUS,  MARY  L.  AND  MARY  VAN  KLEECK 

Technology  and  livelihood.  New  York:  Russell  Sage,  1944. 
237p. 

Contains  data  on  technical  change  and  increasing  labor  productivity 
in  the  bituminous  coal  industry. 


50 


454.  FLEMING,  HENRY  S. 

Report  to  the  Bituminous  Coal  Trade  Association  on  the 
present  and  future  of  the  bituminous  coal  trade.  New 
York,  1908.  87p. 

455.  focus  on  Alaska's  coal  75 

Fairbanks:  University  of  Alaska,  1975.  281p. 

Proceedings  of  a  conference  held  at  the  University  of  Alaska,  Octo- 
ber 15-17,  1975.  Edited  by  P.  D.  Rao  and  Ernest  N.  Wolff. 

456.  FOHL,  W.  E. 

Division  of  labor  in  bituminous  coal  mining.  Engineering 
Magazine  40:  175-80  1910. 

"The  energies  of  most  coal  miners  are  being  inefficiently  and  dan- 
gerously directed."  Author  blames  poor  management  for  many  of 
the  difficulties  of  the  coal  industry. 

457.  FOREIGN  MARKETS  FOR  AMERICAN  COAL 

Washington:  GPO,  1900.  312p.  (Special  Consular  Reports 
XXI,  pt.  1). 

458.  FORSYTHE,  J.  R. 

Coal's  comeback;  an  evaluation.  Analysts  Journal  Nov. 
1958  33-36. 

459.  FOSTER  ASSOCIATES,  INC. 

Prospective  regional  markets  for  coal  conversion  plant  pro- 
ducts projected  to  1980  and  1985.  Washington,  1974.  3  vols. 

460.  FOSTER,  JOHN  F.  AND  RICHARD  E.  LUND 

Economics  of  fuel  gas  from  coal.  New  York:  McGraw-Hill, 
1950.  289p. 

461.  FRAZIER,  EDWARD  K. 

Annual  earnings  in  the  bituminous  coal  industry.  MLR  45: 
29-37  1937. 

462.  FRISCIA,  AUGUST  B. 

Industrial  retardation  and  economic  growth:  a  case  study 
of  secular  and  structural  change  in  the  bituminous  coal  in- 
dustry of  the  United  States.  Dissertation.  New  York  Uni- 
versity. 1970.  168p. 

463.  FRITZ,  W.  G.  AND  T.  A.  VEENSTRA 

Regional  shifts  in  the  bituminous  coal  industry.  Pittsburgh: 
University  of  Pittsburgh,  Bureau  of  Business  Research, 
1935.  197p.  (Its  Monograph  No.  4). 

"With  special  reference  to  Pennsylvania." 

51 


J 


464.  FULLER,  JUSTIN 

History  of  the  Tennessee  Coal,  Iron  and  Railroad  Com- 
pany. Dissertation.  University  of  North  Carolina.  1966. 
414p. 

465.  GANDY,  HARRY  L. 

Some  trends  in  the  bituminous  coal  industry.  Ann.  Amer. 
Acad.  147:  84-88  1930. 

466.  GANYARD,  DAVID  W. 

The  degree  of  relationship  between  bituminous  coal  min- 
ing and  chemical  manufacturing  in  the  Kanawha  County 
region.  Dissertation,  1967,  Ohio  State  University,  216p. 

467.  GENERAL  POLICIES  COMMITTEE  OF  ANTHRACITE  OPERATORS 

Competition  in  the  anthracite  industry,  n.p,,  1923.  72p. 

"A  statement  showing  unrestricted  competition  between  more  than 
100  Anthracite  Producers,  with  the  largest  company  producing  15% 
of  the  total." 

468.  GINGER,  RAY 

Managerial  employees  in  anthracite,  1902:  a  study  in  oc- 
cupational mobility.  Journal  of  Economic  History  14:  146- 
57  1954. 

469.  GITLOW,  A.  L. 

Some  economic  effects  of  industrial  concentration.  South- 
ern Economic  Journal  17:  191-95  1950. 

Examination  of  the  effects  of  concentration  in  the  coal  industry. 

470.  GOLDENWEISER,  E.  A. 

Incomes  of  bituminous  coal  producers.  J  AS  A  17:  203-9 
1920. 

471.  GORDON,  RICHARD  L. 

Alternatives  to  oil  and  natural  gas.  Academy  of  Political 
Science.  Proceedings  31:  74-86  Dec.  1973. 

"The  special  case  of  coal-based  energy  alternatives  is  examined  as 
an  illustration  of  the  difficulties  in  securing  competitive  alternatives 
to  oil  and  gas." 

472.  GORDON,  RICHARD  L. 

U.  S.  coal  and  the  electric  power  industry.  Baltimore:  Johns 
Hopkins.  1975.  213p. 

"The  widespread  belief  in  the  likelihood  of  substantial  growth  in 
coal  output  rests  on  a  weak  basis." 


52 


473.  GRADY,  WILLIAM  H. 

Cost  factors  in  coal  production.  AIME.  Transactions  51: 
138-76  1915. 

474.  GRAYSON,  CHARLES 

Fresh  appraisal  of  coal  industry  today.  Magazine  of  Wall 
Street  101:  343-45  1957. 

474a.  GREENBAUM,  MARGARET  E. 

Kentucky  coal  reserves:  effects  on  coal  industry  structure 
and  output.  Lexington:  Institute  for  Mining  and  Minerals 
Research.  1975.  23p. 

475.  HACHMAN,  FRANK  C. 

Utah  coal-market  potential  and  economic  impact.  Utah 
Economic  and  Business  Review  Apr  1969  1-7. 

476.  HALE,  G.  E. 

The  case  of  coal:  should  all  horizontal  mergers  be  held  il- 
legal. Journal  of  Law  and  Economics  13:  421-37  1970. 

477.  HALL,  ROBERT  E. 

Domestic  coal  vs.  foreign  residual  oil.  Natural  Resources 
Lawyer  3:  266-70  1970. 

Consideration  of  the  national  security  and  balance  of  payments  dic- 
tate that  more  use  be  made  of  coal. 

478.  HAMILTON,  WALTER  H. 

Coal  and  the  economy;  a  demurrer.  Yale  Law  Journal  50: 
595-612  1941. 

"Joinder  in  demurrer"  by  Eugene  V.  Rostow.  Yale  Law  Journal  50: 
613-20. 

479.  HAMILTON,  WALTER  H. 

The  problem  of  bituminous  coal.  American  Labor  Legisla- 
tion Review  16:  217-29  1926. 

480.  HAMILTON,  WALTER  H.  AND  HELEN  R.  WRIGHT 

A  way  of  order  for  bituminous  coal.  New  York:  Macmillan, 
1928.  365p. 

481.  HAMILTON,  WALTER  H.  AND  HELEN  R.  WRIGHT 

The  case  of  bituminous  coal.  New  York:  Macmillan,  1925. 

310p. 

"This  inquiry  is  concerned  with  the  question  of  how  adequately  the 
prevailing  form  of  organization  enables  the  industry  to  do  the  things 
which  the  community  may  reasonably  expect  from  it. 

53 


482.  HAMMOND,  M.  B. 

The  Coal  Commission  reports  and  the  coal  situation.  Quar- 
terly Journal  of  Economics  38:  541-81  1924. 

483.  HAND,  ALFRED 

Titles  to  coal  land  in  Pennsylvania  and  incidental  mono- 
polies connected  therewith.  Yale  Law  Journal  16:  167-75 
1907. 

484.  HARD  COAL 

Fortune  Feb  1931  72-83. 

A  general  survey  of  the  development  and  current  status  of  the 
anthracite  industry. 

485.  HARDESTY,  C.  HOWARD 

Coal  and  the  energy  crisis.  West  Virginia  Law  Review  76: 
257-66  1973. 

The  nation  has  failed  to  implement  policies  which  would  make  pos- 
sible a  rapid  increase  in  coal  production. 

486.  HARLINE,  OSMOND  L. 

Economics  of  the  Indiana  coal  industry.  Dissertation.  In- 
diana University.  1958. 

487.  HARRIS,  GEORGE  W. 

The  Consolidation  Coal  Company.  Coal  Age  14:  1148-53 
1918. 

General  account  of  its  operations. 

488.  HARSHBARGER,  RICHARD  B. 

TVA  coal  buying  policies:  effects  on  prices  and  method  of 
mining  in  supplying  states.  Dissertation.  Indiana  Univer- 
sity, 1964.  177p. 

488a.  HARVEY,  CURTIS  E. 

Eastern  Kentucky  coal  industry:  an  economic  analysis. 
Lexington:  University  of  Kentucky.  Institute  for  Mining 
and  Minerals  Research,  1975.  80p. 

489.  HARVEY,  CURTIS  E.  AND  PHILIP  J.  KARST 

Economic  impact  of  a  severance  tax  on  Kentucky  coal. 
Frankfurst:  Kentucky  legislative  research  commission, 
1972.  125p.  (Kentucky  Legislative  Research  Commission. 
Research  report  67 ) . 


54 


490.  HAYNES,  WILLIAM  H. 

Present  and  prospective  markets  for  West  Kentucky  Coal. 
Lexington,  1955.  124p.  ( University  of  Kentucky.  Bureau  of 
Business  Research.  Bulletin  30). 

491.  HEDSTROM,  ERIC  L. 

The  coal  trade  of  Buffalo.  Black  Diamond  Sept.  15.  1888 
105-8. 

492.  HENDERSON,  JAMES  M. 

Efficiency  and  pricing  in  the  coal  industry.  Review  of 
Economics  &  Statistics  38:  50-60  1956. 

493.  HENDERSON,  JAMES  M. 

The  efficiency  of  the  coal  industry;  an  application  of  linear 
planning.  Cambridge:  Harvard  University  Press,  1958. 
146p.  (Harvard  Economic  Studies  103). 

494.  HENDERSON,  JAMES  M. 

A  short-run  model  for  the  coal  industry.  Review  of  Econ- 
omics &  Statistics  37 :  336-46  1955. 

495.  HENRY,  JOHN  P.  AND  RICHARD  A.  SCHMIDT 

Coal:  still  old  reliable?  Ann.  Amer.  Acad.  410:  35-51  1973. 

Analysis  of  the  ability  of  coal  to  contribute  significantly  to  the  solu- 
tion of  the  energy  problem. 

496.  HESSE,  ALFRED  W. 

The  principals  of  coal  property  evaluation.  New  York:  J. 
Wiley,  1930.  183p. 

497.  HIGH  PRICES  NOT  SO  HIGH  FOR  THE  MINER 

Literary  Digest  Dec.  20,  1919  69-74. 

Study  in  southern  West  Virginia  shows  that  prices  have  not  advan- 
ced so  much  as  to  require  a  large  increase  in  wages. 

498.  HOFFMAN,  JOHN  N. 

Major  economic  changes  in  the  mining  and  distribution  of 
Pennsylvania  bituminous  coal.  Dissertation.  Pennsylvania 
State  University.  1961.  285p. 

499.  HOLM,  EDWIN  E. 

Production  and  marketing  of  coal  in  Virginia  and  the  na- 
tion. Richmond:  Virginia  Department  of  Conservation  and 
Development,  1955.  102p.  proc. 


55 


500.  HOOPER,  WALLACE  D. 

Operating  costs  of  retailing  coal  in  Columbus.  Columbus. 
Ohio  State  University,  1932.  43p.  ( OSU  Bureau  of  Business 
Research.  Monograph  20). 

501.  HOTCHKISS,  WILLARD  E.  AND  OTHERS 

Mechanization,  employment  and  output  per  man  in  bitum- 
inous coal  mining.  Philadelphia:  WPA,  1939.  436p.  (Na- 
tional research  project  on  reemployment  opportunities  and 
recent  changes  in  industrial  techniques  .  .  .  Mineral  tech- 
nology and  output  per  man  studies  .  .  .  Report  E-9). 

502.  HOWE,  R.  E. 

The  coal  marketing  agency.  Journal  of  Marketing  10:  35-41 
1945/46. 

Account  of  Appalachian  Coals,  Inc.,  a  marketing  agency  in  the 
southern  high  volatile  fields. 

503.  HUDSON  INSTITUTE 

Policy  analysis  for  coal  development  at  a  wartime  urgency 
level  to  meet  the  goals  of  "project  independence".  Wash- 
ington: Office  of  Coal  Research,  1974.  72p. 

504.  HURST,  THOMAS  E. 

Tennessee  coal  mining  and  marketing  trends.  Thesis.  East 
Tennessee  State  College.  1951. 

505.  HUTCHINSON,  SPENCER  AND  A.  J.  BRErTENSTEIN 

Competitive  position  of  coal  and  petroleum  in  the  United 
States.  AIME.  Transactions  108:  461-75  1934. 

506.  ILLINOIS  COAL  OPERATORS  ASSOCIATION 

Illinois  mining  machine  differential,  n.  p.,  1923.  24p. 

"An  illustration  of  arbitrary  maintenance  ...  of  conditions  of  com- 
petitive inequality,  to  the  great  prejudice  of  one  of  the  largest  coal 
producing  states. '  Statement  submitted  to  the  U.  S.  Coal  Commis- 
sion. 

507.  IOWA.  STATE  PLANNING  BOARD 

Some  aspects  of  the  Iowa  coal  industry.  Des  Moines,  1939. 
64p.  proc. 

508.  IRWIN,  n.  o. 

How  modern  employment  practices  assure  contented  and 
efficient  personnel.  Coal  Age  19:  1077-80  1921. 

Practices  at  the  Benham,  Kentucky  mines  of  the  Wisconsin  Steel. 


56 


509.  ISLAND  CREEK;  COAL  AT  A  PROFIT 

Fortune  Mr  1938  86-94. 

Account  of  the  development  and  operation  of  the  Island  Creek  Coal 
Co. 

510.  JACKSON,  DANIEL 

Rowland's  three-stage  mining.  Coal  Age  Nov.  1970  76-85. 

Account  of  the  development  and  current  operations  of  the  Rowland 
Coal  Co.,  a  division  of  Consol.  Located  near  Beckley,  W.  Va.  The 
Company  will  operate  the  largest  surface  mine  in  W.  Va. 

511.  JACKSON,  DANIEL 

Sherwood  Diversified  Services  joins  nation's  coal  produ- 
cers. Coal  Age  Ag  1971  58-65. 

Development  and  current  operations  of  Sherwood's  surface  mining 
operations  in  eastern  Kentucky  and  southern  West  Virginia. 

512.  JACKSON,  DANIEL 

Zapata  Norness  emerging  as  a  major  coal  producer.  Coal 
Age  Sept  1971  64-71. 

Development  and  operations  of  the  Boone  Co.  Coal  Corp.,  now  own- 
ed by  Zapata  Norness,  Inc. 

513.  JAMES,  CHARLES  M. 

Measuring  productivity  in  coal  mining.  Philadelphia:  Uni- 
versity of  Pennsylvania.  Warton  School  of  Finance  and 
Commerce,  1952.  96p.  (Research  Report  13). 

"A  case  study  of  multiple  input  measurement  at  the  county  level  in 
Pennsylvania  1919-1948." 

514.  JOHNSON,  JAMES  P. 

A  "New  Deal"  for  soft  coal;  the  attempted  revitalization  of 
the  bituminous  coal  industry  under  the  New  Deal.  Dissert- 
ation. Columbia  University,  1968.  303p. 

515.  JONES,  F.  ADDISON 

Depletion,  depreciation  and  coal  mining.  Taxes  38:  31-42 
1960. 

516.  KATELL,  SIDNEY  AND  OTHERS 

Basic  estimated  capital  investment  and  operating  costs  for 
underground  bituminous  coal  mines.  Washington:  GPO, 
1975.  41p.   (U.S.  Bureau  of  Mines.  Information  Circular 

8682). 

Covers  mines  with  annual  production  of  1.06  to  4.99  million  tons 
from  a  72-inch  coalbed.  Continued  by  I.  C.  8682A.  A  revision  of  I. 
C.  8632. 

57 


517.     KATELL,  SIDNEY  AND  OTHERS 

Basic  estimated  capital  investment  and  operating  costs  for 
underground  bituminous  coal  mines.  Washington:  GPO, 
1975,  32p.  (U.  S.  Bureau  of  Mines.  Information  Circular 
8689). 

Covers  mines  with  annual  production  of  1.03  to  3.09  million  tons 
from  a  48-inch  coalbed.  Revision  of  IC  8641. 

518.  KELLER,  JOSEPH  H. 

The  accounting  and  tax  aspects  of  depletion  in  the  coal 
mining  industry.  Thesis.  University  of  Pennsylvania.  1949. 

519.  KF.T.I.EY,  JAY  H. 

Economics  of  mining.  Dissertation.  Pennsylvania  State  Uni- 
versity. 1952.  190p. 

520.  KENNEDY,  THOMAS 

Wages,  hours  and  working  conditions  in  the  anthracite  in- 
dustry. Ann.  Amer.  Acad.  Ill:  43-52  1924. 

521.  KENNELL,  H.  RICHARD  AND  OTHERS 

Panel  on  problems  of  employment  and  retraining.  In: 
United  States.  Congress.  Senate.  Subcommittee  on  pro- 
blems of  the  aged  and  aging.  Part  5.  1960  pl095-1113. 

Discussion  of  the  problems  involved  in  retraining  older  workers— 
largely  unemployed  coal  miners— for  other  occupations. 

522.  KIESSLING,  O.  E. 

Coal  mining  in  the  south.  Ann.  Amer.  Acad.  153:  84-93 
1931. 

523.  KIESSLING,  O.  E.  AND  F.  G.  TYRON 

The  economics  of  distribution.  Coal  Age  33:  19-23  1928. 

524.  KILLEEN,  JOHN  F. 

The  National  Coal  Policy  Conference:  an  approach  to  the 
functional  economy.  Dissertation.  Georgetown  University. 
1962. 

525.  KING,  CLYDE  L.,  ED. 

The  price  of  coal,  anthracite  and  bituminous.  Ann.  Amer. 
Acad.  Ill:  1-362  1924. 

526.  KISH,  GABE 

A  program  for  coal.  Political  Affairs  26:  1029-39  1947. 


58 


527.  KOLDE,  ENDEL  JAKOB 

From  mine  to  market;  a  study  of  production,  marketing, 
and  consumption  of  coal  in  the  Pacific  Northwest.  Seattle: 
University  of  Washington.  Bureau  of  Business  Research, 
1956.  64p. 

528.  LAMB,  GEORGE  A. 

The  bituminous  coal  rate  structure.  Thesis.  Yale  University. 
1932. 

529.  LEBUS,  WILLIAM  F. 

Economic  data  on  Eastern  Kentucky  coal  field.  Frankfort: 
Agricultural  &  Industrial  Development  Board,  1956.  32p. 

530.  LEHIGH  COAL  AND  NAVIGATION  COMPANY 

Mine  management  policies,  published  for  the  information 
of  executives  of  the  mining  department.  Lansford,  Pa., 
1925.  103p. 

531.  I.ETSENRTNG,  E.  B. 

Western  coal— the  sleeping  giant.  Rocky  Mountain  Mineral 
Law  Institute  19:  1-18  1974. 

532.  LEO  KRAMER,  INC. 

Coal  manpower  projections  1970-80.  Washington,  1972. 
63p. 

533.  LEONARD,  JOSEPH  W.  AND  CHARLES  T.  HOLLAND 

Market-oriented  research:  the  West  Virginia  story.  Coal 
Age  Jl  1966  92-6. 

The  West  Virginia  University  Coal  Research  Bureau  attempts  to 
"discover  and  develop  new  uses  and  new  markets  for  West  Virginia 
coal." 

534.  LESHER,  C.  E. 

An  introductory  survey  of  the  bituminous  coal  industry. 
American  Economic  Association.  Papers  &  Proceedings  11: 
49-56  1921. 

535.  LESHER,  C.  E. 

Prices  of  coal  and  coke.  Washington:  GPO,  1919.  115p. 

536.  LESSING,  LAWRENCE 

Capturing  clean  gas  and  oil  from  coal.  Fortune  Nov  1973 
128-31. 

Suggests  the  establishment  of  a  new  agency  to  administer  an  accel- 
erated development  program. 

59 


537.  LEWIS,  W.  DAVID 

The  early  history  of  the  Lackawana  Iron  and  Coal  Com- 
pany: a  study  in  technological  adaptation.  Pennsylvania 
Magazine  of  History  &  Biography  96:  424-68  1972. 

538.  LIBBY,  JOHN  H. 

Bituminous  wages  from  the  point  of  view  of  an  operator. 
Ann.  Amer.  Acad.  Ill:  32-38  1924. 

539.  LIGNITE  HAS  ITS  DRAWBACKS  BUT  ITS  CHEAP 

Business  Week  Mr  16,  1974  102-6. 

Useful  review  of  lignite's  assents  and  limitations. 

540.  LELIENTHAL,  DAVTD  E. 

Dissolution  of  coal  industry  likely  if  government  assistance 
is  rejected.  Annalist  44:  684-86  1934. 

541.  LITTLE  (ARTHUR  d)  INC. 

Current  appraisal  of  underground  coal  gasification,  n.p. 
1971.  1  vol. 

542.  LITTLE  (  ARTHUR  D  )   INC. 

Future  market  for  utility  coal  in  New  England.  Cambridge, 
1966.  182p. 

543.  LOVE,  ROBERT  A. 

Anthracite  distribution;  a  report  on  possible  adjustments  in 
the  existing  marketing  arrangements,  n.p.,  1930.  173p. 

"Submitted  to  the  Philadelphia  and  Reading  Coal  and  Iron  Com- 
pany." 

544.  LOWRIE,  RAYMOND  L. 

Recovery  percentage  of  bituminous  coal  deposits  in  the 
United  States.  Part  1:  Underground  mines.  Washington: 
GPO,  1968,  19p.  (U.  S.  Bureau  of  Mines.  Report  of  Investi- 
gations 7109). 

545.  LUBIN,  ISADOR 

Miners'  wages  and  the  cost  of  coal.  New  York:  McGraw- 
Hill,  1924.  316p. 

"An  inquiry  into  the  wages  system  in  the  bituminous  coal  industry 
and  its  effects  on  coal  costs  and  coal  consumption." 

546.  LUCAS,  JOHN  W. 

Regional  sales  agencies  in  the  distribution  of  bituminous 
coal.  Thesis.  Ohio  State  University.  1935. 

60 


547.  LUCAS,  JOSEPH  R. 

The  competitive  position  of  bituminous  coal  in  the  utility 
markets  of  the  northeast.  Dissertation.  Columbia  Univer- 
sity, 1965.  351p. 

548.  MC  AULIFF,  EUGENE 

Stabilization  of  the  bituminous  coal  industry.  Coal  Age 
17:  486-93  1920. 

549.  MC  CLOUD,  LELAND  W. 

Comparative  costs  of  competitive  fuels.  Morgantown: 
West  Virginia  University,  1951.  89p.  (West  Virginia  Uni- 
versity Business  &  Economic  Studies  1:4). 

550.  MC  GRAW-HILL  DEPARTMENT  OF  ECONOMICS 

The  outlook  for  bituminous  coal,  1964-1975.  Coal  Age  My 
1964  73-80. 

551.  MC  KIE,  JAMES  W. 

The  southern  industries  fuel  economy.  Southern  Economic 
Journal  29:  269-78  1963. 

"The  shift  of  industry  from  other  energy  sources  toward  electric 
power  can  only  react  favorahly  on  coal  demand." 

552.  MADDALA,  G.  S. 

Productivity  and  technological  change  in  the  bituminous 
coal  industry,  1919-54.  Journal  of  Political  Economy  73: 
352-65  1965. 

"In  the  bituminous  coal  industry  the  increased  labor  productivity 
is  almost  entirely  attributable  to  the  increase  in  the  horsepower  of 
equipment  per  worker". 

553.  MARKON,  GEORGE 

United  States  coals  in  world  markets.  Washington:  GPO, 
1968.  87p.  (U.  S.  Bureau  of  Mines.  Information  Circular 
8380). 

554.  MARKS,  AVRUM 

The  future  market  for  United  States  exports  of  coking 
quality  coal  to  O.  E.  E.  C.  Europe.  Thesis.  University  of 
Pennsylvania.  1958. 

555.  MARTENS,  CHARLES  D. 

How  C  &  K  Coal  Co.  grew.  Coal  Age  Sept.  1974  83-87. 

Account  of  the  history  and  present  operation  of  the  C  &  K  Coal  Co., 
a  major  producer  of  surface  mined  coal  in  western  Pennsylvania. 

61 


556.  MEAD,  RICHARD  R. 

An  analysis  of  the  decline  of  the  anthracite  industry  since 
1921.  Ph.D.  University  of  Pennsylvania.  1933. 

557.  MEADE,  EDWARD  S. 

Investor's  interest  in  the  demands  of  the  anthracite  miners. 
Ann.  Amer.  Acad.  21:  36-45  1903. 

558.  MELTON,  JOHN  R. 

Coal  reserves  should  be  the  subject  of  equitable  ad  valo- 
rem taxation.  West  Virginia  Law  Review  76:  325-35  1974. 

559.  MERRILL,  WILLIAM  M. 

Economics  of  the  southern  smokeless  coals.  Ph.D.  Univer- 
sity of  Illinois.  1953. 

Deals  with  coal  from  seven  counties  of  Virginia  and  West  Virginia, 
1873-1950. 

560.  MIERNYK,  WTLLIAM  H. 

Coal  and  the  Appalachian  economy.  West  Virginia  Law 
Review  76:  281-284  1974. 

"If  Appalachia  is  to  realize  long-range  benefits  from  the  depletion 
of  one  of  its  basic  resources,  there  will  have  to  be  a  specific  tax  on 
coal."  The  author  favors  "an  ad  valorem  severance  tax  which  would 
tie  the  state's  yield  to  the  rising  delivered  price  of  coal." 

561.  MIERNYK,  WILLIAM  H. 

Coal  and  the  future  of  the  Appalachian  economy.  Appal- 
achia Oct/Nov  1975  29-35. 

The  worldwide  demand  for  energy  all  but  insures  the  future  pros- 
perity of  the  Appalachian  coal  industry. 

562.  MIERNYK,  WILLIAM  H. 

Regional  economic  consequences  of  high  energy  prices  in 
the  United  States.  Journal  of  Energy  and  Development  1: 
213-39  1976. 

The  rising  price  of  coal  in  U.  S.  will  cause  "a  regional  shift  of  real 
income  from  emergy  consumers  to  energy  producers." 

563.  MIHALEK,  JOHN  A. 

An  analysis  of  the  changing  bituminous  coal  markets,  1937- 
1952.  Thesis.  University  of  Pittsburgh.  1954. 

564.  MILLER,  E.  WILLARD 

The  southern  anthracite  region;  a  problem  area.  Econom- 
ic Geography  31:  331-50  1955. 


62 


565.  MILLER,  E.  WILLARD 

Trends  in  the  coal  mining  industry  of  the  Susquehanna 
Basin.  Pennsylvania  Academy  of  Science.  Proceedings  38: 
227-35  1965. 

565a.  MILLER,  SAUNDERS 

The  economics  of  nuclear  and  coal  power.  New  York:  Prae- 
ger,  1976.  151p. 

566.  M1SCHAIKOW,  MICHAEL  K. 

Postwar  changes  in  the  export  markets  for  American  coal, 
a  study  in  the  industry  response  to  variations  in  foreign  de- 
mand. Morgantown,  West  Virginia  University,  Bureau  of 
Business  Research,  1965.  60p.  (West  Virginia  University 
Business  and  Economic  Studies  9,  No.  3). 

567.  MONELL,  LOUIS  F. 

Factors  affecting  international  coal  trade.  Thesis.  West  Vir- 
ginia University.  1962.  174p. 

568.  MOORE,  JAMES  R. 

An  inquiry  concerning  the  status  of  the  coal  economy  in 
Southern  Illinois  and  the  potential  benefits  which  may  be 
derived  from  canalization  of  the  Big  Muddy  River  and 
Beaucoup  Creek.  Thesis.  Southern  Illinois  University. 
1962. 

569.  MORGAN,  JOHN  D. 

The  domestic  mining  industry  of  the  United  States  in 
World  War  II.  Washington:  National  Resources  Confer- 
ence Board,  1949.  500p. 

570.  MORRIS,  ISRAEL  W. 

The  duty  on  coal.  Philadelphia:  Baird,  1872.  31p. 

571.  MORROW,  j.  D.  A. 

The  general  coal  situation.  American  Mining  Congress. 
Proceedings  23:  436-42  1920. 

572.  MORROW,  j.  d.  a.  # 
Distribution    of    coal    under   U.  S.    Fuel    Administration. 
AIME.  Transactions  61:  310-14  1918. 

573.  MOSES,  h.  m.  .„.  1A 
Out  of  the  wilderness.  Business  Week  S  23,  1950  104-10. 

Interview  with  Moses,  head  of  the  newly-formed  Bituminous  Coal 
Operators  Association. 

63 


574.  MOYER,  REED 

Competition  and  the  performance  of  the  midwestern  coal 
industry.  Journal  of  Industrial  Economics  15:  242-46  1966/ 
67. 

A  reply  to  an  article  by  William  Comanor  in  the  same  journal  (see 
No.  405). 

575.  MOYER,  REED 

Competition  in  the  midwestern  coal  industry.  Cambridge: 
Harvard  University  Press,  1964.  226p.  (Harvard  Economic 
Studies  CXXII). 

576.  MUELHOF,  WILLIAM  E. 

An  evaluation  of  the  pension  plans  in  the  anthracite  coal 
industry.  Thesis.  Pennsylvania  State  University,  1959.  87p. 

577.  MULHOLLAND,  JOSEPH  P.  AND  DOUGLAS  W.  WEBRINK 

Concentration  levels  and  trends  in  the  energy  sector  of  the 
U.  S.  economy.  Washington:  GPO,  1974.  298p. 

Includes  a  section  on  the  coal  industry. 

578.  MURPHY,  RAYMOND  E. 

Wartime  changes  in  the  patterns  of  United  States  coal  pro- 
duction. Association  of  American  Geographers.  Annals  37: 
185-96  1947. 

579.  MURRAY,  T.  J. 

Investment  nobody  knowns  about.  Duns  Review  Ap  1965 
40-3+ . 

Favorable  income— tax  provisions  on  capital  gains  and  cost  depletion 
allow  investors  in  coal  land  to  lease  their  property  to  operators  at 
great  profit. 

580.  MUTSCHLER,  PAUL  H. 

Impact  of  changing  technology  on  the  demand  for  metal- 
lurgical coal  and  coke  produced  in  the  United  States  to 
1985.  Washington:  GPO,  1975.  26p.  (U.  S.  Bureau  of  Min- 
es. Information  Circular  8677). 

581.  NATHAN    (ROBERT  R.)    ASSOCIATES 

The  foreign  market  potential  for  United  States  coal.  Wash- 
ington, 1963.  4  vols.  proc. 

582.  NATHAN   (  ROBERT  R.  )   ASSOCIATES 

The  potential  market  for  far  western  coal  and  lignite. 
Washington,  1965.  2  vols. 


64 


583.  NATHAN  (ROBERT  R.)  ASSOCIATES 

The  potential  market  for  midwestem  and  Alaskan  coal  and 
lignite.  Washington,  1966.  1  vol.  (various  paging). 

584.  NATIONAL  COAL  ASSOCIATION 

The  facts  about  the  billion  dollar  water  power  develop- 
ment of  the  federal  government:  the  menace  to  the  coal 
industry  of  the  TVA  and  similar  projects.  Washington, 
1934.  12p. 

585.  NATIONAL  COAL  ASSOCIATION 

The  regional  sales  agency  plan.  Washington,  1931.  53p. 

586.  NATIONAL  FUELS  AND  ENERGY  STUDY  GROUP 

Report  on  an  assessment  of  available  information  on  en- 
ergy in  the  United  States.  Washington:  GPO,  1962.  501p. 
87th  Cong.,  2d  Sess.  Senate  Doc.  159). 

587.  NATIONAL  INDUSTRIAL  CONFERENCE  BOARD 

The  competitive  position  of  coal  in  the  United  States.  New 
York,  1931.  288p. 

588.  NATIONAL  INDUSTRIAL  CONFERENCE  BOARD 

The  cost  of  living  among  wage  earners,  anthracite  region 
of  Pennsylvania,  February  1922.  41p.  (Its  Special  Report 
21). 

589.  NATIONAL  PETROLEUM  COUNCIL 

U.  S.  energy  outlook:  coal  availability.  Washington,  1973. 
287p. 

A  detailed  study  of  the  supply  and  likely  demand  for  coal.  New 
technologies  for  solving  environmental  problems  and  for  transform- 
ing solid  coal  into  synthetic  gaseous  and  liquid  fuels  are  promising. 
"However,  even  under  the  most  favorable  circumstances,  it  is  un- 
likely that  coal  alone  could  completely  eliminate  the  Nation's  de- 
pendence on  imported  fuels  prior  to  1985". 

590.  NEARING,  SCOTT 

Anthracite;  an  instance  of  natural  resource  monopoly. 
Philadelphia:  J.  C.  Winston,  1915.  251p. 

591.  NEARING,  SCOTT 

The  coal  question;  some  reasons  why  it  is  pressing  and 
some  suggestions  for  solving  it.  New  York:  Rand  School 
of  Social  Science,  1918.  47p. 


65 


592.  NEBRASKA.  UNIVERSITY.  COMMITTEE  ON  BUSINESS  RESEARCH 

Trade  practices  and  costs  of  the  retail  coal  business  in  Lin- 
coln, Nebraska,  in  1922.  Lincoln,  1923.  34p.  (Nebraska 
Studies  in  Business.  Bulletin  7). 

593.  NEPHEW,  EDMUND  A. 

The  challenge  and  promise  of  coal.  Technology  Review 
Dec  1973  21-29. 

Underground  mining  must  be  made  more  efficient  and  safer,  since 
the  vast  bulk  of  the  nation's  coal  is  inaccessible  by  surface  mining. 

594.  NERLOVE,  MARC 

On  the  efficiency  of  the  coal  industry.  Journal  of  Business 
32:  271-78  1959. 

595.  NEWHOUSE,  JOSEPH 

Labor  cost  in  the  bituminous  coal  industry.  Thesis.  West 
Virginia  University.  1951.  112p. 

596.  norris,  r.  v. 

Anthracite  mining  costs.  AIME.  Transactions  61:  323-45 
1918. 

597.  NORRIS,  R.  V. 

The  taxation  of  coal  land.  American  Mining  Congress.  Pro- 
ceedings 16:  331-38  1913. 

598.  OHIO  CHAMBER  OF  COMMERCE 

Ohio's  coal  problem.  Columbus,  1926. 19p. 
'^abor  costs  are  too  high. 

599.  OHIO.  COAL  MINING  COMMISSION 

Report  to  the  governor  of  Ohio.  Columbus:  F.  J.  Heer, 
1913.  70p. 

"To  investigate  and  report  an  equitable  method  of  weighing  coal  at 
the  mines  when  the  employees  are  to  be  paid  for  their  labor  on  the 
basis  of  weight  measure  or  quantity.  .  ." 

600.  ORMISTON,  THOMAS  AND  ROGER  BROWN 

Changing  fortunes  of  bituminous  coal.  Cleveland:  Federal 
Reserve  Bank  of  Cleveland,  1957.  31p. 

601.  OSBORN,  ELBURT  F. 

Coal  and  the  present  energy  situation.  Science  183:  477-81 
1974. 

Author  is  former  director  of  Bureau  of  Mines.  Optimistic  overall 
review  of  the  ability  of  coal  to  contribute  greatly  to  the  energy 
needs  of  the  nation. 

66 


602.  PABST,  WILLIAM  R. 

Monopolistic  expectations  and  shifting  control  in  the  an- 
thracite industry.  Review  of  Economic  Statistics  22:  45-52 
1940. 

603.  PARKER,  EDWARD  W. 

Coal  supplies  and  coal  production  of  the  United  States. 
J  ASA  13:  139-56  1912. 

604.  PARKER,  EDWARD  W. 

Conserving  our  coal  deposits.  American  Mining  Congress. 
Proceedings  13:  228-34  1910. 

Low  profit  margins  in  the  industry  cause  wasteful  and  unsafe 
methods  of  mining. 

605.  PARKER,  EDWARD  W. 

Conservation  of  Pennsylvania  coal  supplies.  Geographical 
Society  of  Philadelphia.  Bulletin  10:  1-7  1912. 

The  coal  industry  in  Pennsylvania  is  extremely  wasteful  and  ineffi- 
cient by  European  standards. 

606.  PARKER,  EDWARD  W. 

Cooperation,  conservation  and  competition  in  coal.  Ameri- 
can Mining  Congress.  Proceedings  19:  241-49  1916. 

607.  PARKER,  EDWARD  W. 

The  cost  of  coal  mining.  American  Mining  Congress.  Pro- 
ceedings 16:  384-90  1913. 

608.  PARKER,  GLEN  L. 

The  coal  industry;  a  study  in  social  control.  Washington: 
American  Council  on  Public  Affairs,  1940.  198p. 

609.  parry,  v.  F. 

Trends  in  the  use  of  energy  in  the  Western  states,  with 
particular  reference  to  coal.  Washington:  GPO,  1943.  43p. 
(U.S.  Bureau  of  Mines.  Report  of  Investigations  3680). 

610.  PEABODY  COAL  COMPANY 

Coal  Age  Oct  1971  97-180. 

Much  of  this  issue  is  devoted  to  the  various  aspects  of  the  operations 
of  Peabody. 

611.  PEARSON,  RONALD  C 

Coal's  new  values  and  our  national  priorities.  West  Vir- 
ginia Law  Review  76:  277-80  1973/74. 

67 


J 


612.  PECK,  MAYNARD  A. 

Some  economic  aspects  of  the  coal  industry  in  Boulder 
County,  Colorado.  Ph.  D.  University  of  Colorado.  1948. 

613.  PENNSYLVANIA.  ANTHRACITE  COAL  COMMISSION 

Report  of  the  Commission  to  investigate  the  increase  in 
the  cost  of  anthracite  coal  in  the  Commonwealth  of  Penn- 
sylvania, to  the  Governor  and  Legislature.  [Harrisburg, 
1915].  120p. 

614.  PENNSYLVANIA.  ANTHRACITE  COAL  INDUSTRY  COMMISSION 

Bootlegging  or  illegal  mining  of  anthracite  coal  in  Pennsyl- 
vania: a  census  and  survey  of  the  facts:  Philadelphia,  1937. 
87p. 

615.  PENNSYLVANIA.  ANTHRACITE  COAL  INDUSTRY  COMMISSION 

Report  of  the  Anthracite  Coal  Industry  Commission.  Har- 
risburg, 1937.  82p. 

616.  PENNSYLVANIA.  ANTHRACITE  COAL  INDUSTRY  COMMISSION 

Report.  Sayre,  Pennsylvania:  Murrelle  Printing  Co.,  1938. 
652p. 

617.  PENNSYLVANIA.    COMMISSIONERS    TO    INVESTIGATE    THE    BITU- 
MINOUS COAL  MINES 

Report.  Harrisburg:  B.  F.  Meyers,  1875.  50p. 

618.  PENNSYLVANIA.    GENERAL    ASSEMBLY.    JOINT    STATE    GOVERN- 
MENT COMMISSION 

Coal  in  Pennsylvania:  recent  developments  and  prospects. 
Harrisburg,  1963.  17p. 

619.  PENNSYLVANIA.  GREATER  PENNSYLVANIA  COUNCIL 

The  decline  of  the  bituminous  coal  industry  in  Pennsyl- 
vania. Harrisburg,  1932.  20p.  (Its  Soft  Coal  Bulletin  No. 

!)• 

620.  PENNSYLVANIA.  GREATER  PENNSYLVANIA  COUNCIL 

Freight  rates  on  bituminous  coal.  Harrisburg,  1933.  28p. 
(Its  Soft  Coal  Bulletin  No.  2). 

621.  PERRY,  HARRY 

Gasification  of  coal.  Scientific  American  Mr  1974  19-25. 
General  review  of  methods  and  problems. 


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622.  PHILLIPS,  JAMES  G. 

Troubled  coal  industry.  Natioml  Journal  Reports  6:  951-61 
1974. 

Government  regulations,  lack  of  capital  and  other  factors  make  it 
difficult  to  increase  coal  production  very  greatly  in  the  near  future. 

623.  PICKETT,  TOM 

Coal  mining  becomes  a  pushbutton  industry.  Manufactur- 
ers Record  D  1957  35-38. 

Optimistic  view  of  the  future  of  the  southern  coal  industry. 

624.  PINCHOT,  GEFFORD 

Wages,  margins  and  anthracite  prices.  Ann.  Amer.  Acad. 
Ill:  61-81  1924. 

625.  PINKOWSKI,  EDWARD 

Joseph  Battin.  Pennsylvania  Magazine  of  History  &  Rio- 
graphy  73:  337-48  1949. 

Battin  developed  the  coal  breaker,  the  introduction  of  which  in 
1844  did  much  to  improve  the  economic  condition  of  the  coal  in- 
dustry. 

626.  PITTSBURGH.  CHAMBER  OF  COMMERCE 

Plight  of  the  coal  industry  in  Western  Pennsylvania  and 
what  the  united  business  interests  are  doing  to  restore  it  to 
prosperity.  Pittsburgh,  1925.  22p. 

627.  POSEY,  THOMAS  E. 

Unemployment  compensation  and  the  coal  industry  in 
West  Virginia.  Southern  Economic  Journal  7:  347-61  1941. 

628.  POTTER,  CHARLES  J. 

Forecasting  United  States  coal  requirements.  Mining 
Engineering  Ap  1962  55-59. 

629.  PRIVRATSKY,  BRUCE 

Coal  taxes  in  southwest  Virginia.  Appalachia,  Va.,  1973. 
55p. 

630.  PULTZ,  J.  L. 

Consolidation  of  five  large  coal  mines.  Engineering  &  Min- 
ing Journal  82:  640-42  1906. 

Account  of  the  formation  of  the  Pittsburgh  and  Westmoreland  Coal 
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631.  RANDALL,  D.  T. 

The  purchase  of  coal  under  government  and  commercial 
specifications  on  the  basis  of  its  heating  value.  Washing- 
ton: GPO,  1908.  27p.  (USGS.  Bulletin  339). 

632.  RAU,  OTTO  M. 

Preliminary  report  on  stabilization  of  Illinois  coal  industry. 
Philadelphia,  1925.  39p. 

Prepared  for  District  12,  UMWA. 

633.  RAUSHENBUSH,  HILMAR 

The  anthracite  question.  New  York:  H.  W.  Wilson,  1924. 
165p. 

Study  of  the  organization  and  economic  situation  of  the  industry. 

634.  REED,  WILLIAM  B. 

Bituminous  coal  mine  accounting.  New  York:  McGraw- 
Hill,  1922.  221p. 

635.  REES,  ALBERT 

The  economic  impact  of  collective  bargaining  in  the  steel 
and  coal  industries  during  the  post-war  period.  Industrial 
Research  Assoc.  Proceedings  3:  203-12  1950. 

636.  REEVES,  H.  C.  AND  H.  A.  SPALDING 

Assessment  of  coal  producing  properties  in  Kentucky.  Na- 
tional Tax  Journal  3:  173-78  1950. 

637.  REITELL,  CHARLES 

The  shift  in  soft  coal  shipments,  n.p.,  1927.  33p.  (Pennsyl- 
vania Industrial  Survey.  Bulletin  1). 

638.  RICE,  GEORGE  S. 

Standardization  of  coals  for  the  trade.  American  Mining 
Congress.  Proceedings  22:  699-710  1919. 

639.  RICE,  JAMES  P. 

Taxation  and  assessment  of  coal,  gas,  and  oil  with  special 
reference  to  western  Pennsylvania,  eastern  Ohio,  and 
northern  West  Virginia.  Ph.D.  University  of  Pittsburgh. 
1957. 

640.  RIDGEWAY,  JAMES 

Japanese  colonialism  in  Appalachia  Ramparts.  11:  16-18+ 
N,  1972. 

".  .  .  the  Japanese  are  quietly  boring  from  within,  establishing  the 
beginning  of  a  virtual  colony  in  Appalachia." 

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641.  RIDGEWAY,  JAMES 

Last  play;  the  struggle  to  monopolize  the  world's  energy 
resources.  New  York:  E.  P.  Dutton,  1973.  446p. 

641a.  RIEBER,  MICHAEL 

Low  sulfur  coal:  a  revision  of  reserve  and  supply  estimates. 
Journal  of  Environmental  Economics  &  Management  2:  40- 
59  1975. 

"When  calculated  on  a  Btu  basis,  maximizing  low  sulfur  coal  pro- 
duction results  in  a  supply  shortage  by  1985. ' 

642.  RISSER,  HUBERT  E. 

Coal  in  the  future  energy  market.  Urbana,  1960.  15p.  (Ill- 
inois. State  Geological  Survey.  Circular  310). 

643.  RISSER,  HUBERT  E. 

Economic  trend  favoring  the  use  of  Illinois  coal  for  metal- 
lurgical coke.  Urbana,  1962.  15p.  ( Illinois.  State  Geological 
Survey,  Circular  338). 

644.  RISSER,  HUBERT  E. 

The  economics  of  the  coal  industry.  Laurence,  Kansas: 
University  of  Kansas,  Bureau  of  Business  Research,  1958. 
177p. 

645.  RISSER,  HUBERT  E. 

Effect  of  coal  inventories  on  stability  of  the  coal  industry. 
Urbana,  1959.  lip.  ( Illinois.  State  Geological  Survey.  Cir- 
cular 268). 

646.  ROBERTS,  PETER 

The  anthracite  coal  industry.  New  York:  Macmillan,  1901. 
261p. 

"A  study  of  the  economic  conditions  and  relations  of  the  cooperative 
forces  in  the  development  of  the  anthracite  coal  industry  in  Pennsyl- 


647.  ROEPKE,  HOWARD  H. 

Changing  patterns  of  coal  production  in  the  Eastern  Inter- 
ior field.  Economic  Geography  31:  234-47  1955. 

648.  RYAN,  JOHN  T. 

The  future  of  the  bituminous  coal  industry.  Harvard  Bus- 
iness Review  14:  325-336  1936. 

649.  SAALBACH,  WILLIAM  F. 

United  States  bituminous  coal  markets;  trends  since  1920 
and  prospects  to  1975.  Pittsburgh:  University  of  Pittsburgh 
Press,  1960.  44p. 

71 


650.  SALARIES  OF  MINE  OFFICIALS 

Coal  Age  12:  594-95,  629  1917. 

Gives  average  salaries  by  state  of  mine  officials— superintendents, 
foremen,  etc. 

651.  SALVATERRA,  A.  C. 

The  application  of  computers  in  the  mining  industry. 
Thesis.  West  Virginia  University.  1962. 

652.  SALVATI,  RAYMOND  E. 

Island  Creek,  a  career  company  devoted  to  coal.  New 
York:  Newcomen  Society,  1957.  24p. 

653.  SAUNDERS  (W.  B. )  &  CO. 

An  economic  analysis  of  the  U.  S.  export  coal  distribution 
system.  Washington,  1966.  182p. 

654.  SAWARD,  FREDERICK 

The  coal  trade;  a  compendium  of  valuable  information  re- 
lative to  coal  production,  prices,  transportation,  etc.  New 
York,  1874.  73p. 

655.  SAWARD,  FREDERICK 

The  growth  of  American  coal  exports.  Engineering  Maga- 
zine 22:  321-32  1901/02. 

656.  SAWARD,  FREDERICK 

Large  coal  consumers  of  New  England.  New  York,  [1910]. 
75p. 

List  of  consumers  who  use  1,200  tons  or  more  a  year. 

657.  SAWARD,  FREDERICK 

Problems  of  the  expansion  of  the  American  coal  trade. 
Engineering  Magazine  30:  374-79  1905/06. 

658.  SAWARD,  FREDERICK 

The  world's  need  of  coal  and  the  United  States'  supplies. 
Engineering  Magazine  20:  1-8  1901. 

659.  SAWHILL,  JOHN  C. 

The  crucial  role  of  coal.  Vital  Speeches  40:  617-20  1974. 

660.  SAYE,  WILLIAM  H. 

The  development  and  present  status  of  the  bootleg  anthra- 
cite industry  and  its  influence  on  legitimate  producers. 
Thesis.  Temple  University,  1941. 

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661.  SCHENCK,  GEORGE  H.  K.  AND  JOHN  J.  SCHANZ 

The  economic  importance  of  the  coal  industry  to  Pennsyl- 
vania. University  Park:  Pennsylvania  State  University, 
Dept.  of  Mineral  Economics,  1967.  289p.  ( Special  Research 
Report  SR-64). 

An  extensive  analysis  of  the  net  contributions  of  coal  to  the  econ- 
omy. 

662.  SEAR1GHT,  WALTER  V. 

Coal  production,  distribution  and  consumption  in  Missouri. 
Rolla,  1949.  52p.  (Missouri.  Division  of  Geological  Survey 
&  Water  Resources.  Information  Circular  3). 

663.  SHURICK,  ADAM 

Coal  mining  costs.  New  York:  McGraw-Hill,  1922.  515p. 

664.  SISLER,  JAMES  D. 

The  economic  aspects  of  coal  losses  in  Ohio,  Pennsylvania, 
and  West  Virginia.  Morgantown,  West  Virginia,  1931.  13p. 
(West  Virginia  Geological  Survey.  Mimeograph  Series  1, 
Bulletin  4). 

665.  SKAGGS,  CHARLES  P. 

Income  tax  problems  of  the  coal  industry.  Thesis.  West 
Virginia  University.  1963.  87p. 

666.  SMITH,  BRUCE  W. 

Analysis  of  the  location  of  coal-fired  power  plants  in  the 
eastern  United  States.  Economic  Geography  49:  243-50 
1973. 

667.  SMITH,  FRANK  G. 

The  attempted  stabilization  of  the  bituminous  coal  indus- 
try. Harvard  Business  Review  17:  177-88  1939. 

668.  SMITH,  GEORGE  O.  AND  C.  E.  LESHER 

The  cost  of  coal.  American  Mining  Congress.  Proceedings 
19:  452-64  1916. 

669.  SMITH,  GEORGE  O. 

The  1920  soft  coal  shortage;  underlying  reasons  for  it  and 
how  it  was  overcome.  Washington:  National  Coal  Assoc, 
1921.  15p. 

670.     SMITHERS,  F.  S.  &  COMPANY 

Bituminous  coal;  a  basic  raw  material  with  a  new  value. 
New  York,  1956.  lOlp. 

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671.  SOMERS,  GERALD  G. 

Effects  of  North-South  wage  uniformity  on  southern  coal 
production.  Southern  Economic  Journal  20:  121-29  1953. 

672.  SOMERS,  GERALD  G. 

Labor  supply  for  manufacturing  in  a  coal  area.  Monthly 
Labor  Review  77:  1327-30  1954. 

673.  SOUTHERN  WEST  VIRGINIA  ECONOMIC  DEVELOPMENT  CORPORA- 
TION 

Coal,  the  curse  and  the  key.  Overall  economic  develop- 
ment program  for  the  southern  West  Virginia  economic  de- 
velopment district,  n.p.,  1968.  1  vol.  (various  pagings). 

674.  SPAID,  ORA 

Forecast:  doubled  coal  production  in  Appalachia.  Appal- 
achia  Je/Jl  1975  1-10. 

Very  substantial  growth  in  Appalachian  coal  production  will  take 
place  in  the  next  quarter  century  "under  any  supply,  demand  and 
price  conditions  in  the  energy  field  that  seem  in  any  way  feasible". 

675.  SQUIRES,  ARTHUR  M. 

Clean  power  from  coal.  Science  169:  821-8  1970. 

Clean  power  is  possible  provided  there  is  a  large  investment  in  re- 
search. 

676.  SQUIRES,  ARTHUR  M. 

Clean  fuels  from  coal  gasification.  Science  184:  340-6  1974. 

677.  STARR,  GEORGE  W. 

Costs  of  retailing  coal.  Bloomington:  Indiana  University, 
1941.  35p.  (Indiana  Business  Reports.  Study  23). 

678.  "statement  of  facts"  from  the  operators  of  the  middle 

WEST 

Coal  Age  7:  498-501  1915. 

"The  near  future  contains  nothing  but  diaster  unless  some  relief 
is  extended." 

679.  STEIN,  JANE 

Coal  is  cheap,  hated,  abundant,  filthy,  needed.  Smithsonian 
Feb  1973  19-27. 

A  general  account  of  the  problems  and  prospects  as  coal  becomes 
increasingly  important  as  a  source  of  energy. 

680.  STEPHENS,  RODERICK 

Margins  of  retail  coal  dealers.  Ann.  Amer.  Acad.  Ill:  167- 
70  1924. 

74 


680a.  STEVENS,  THOMAS  H. 

Economic  implications  of  coal  development  policy  alterna- 
tives. New  Mexico  Business  Ap  1975  3-12. 

681.  STEWART,  E. 

Analysis  of  coal  mine  labor  productivitv.  MLR  31:  1333- 
38  1930. 

682.  STEWART,  E. 

Extent  of  over-development  in  the  bituminous  coal  indus- 
try. MLR  32:  304-11  1931. 

683.  STEWART,  E. 

Tonnage  output  per  pick  miner  per  day  in  bituminous  coal 
fields.  MLR  11:  249-59  1921. 

684.  STEWART,  PAUL  D. 

New  small  business  in  a  redevelopment  coal  area  in  West 
Virginia.  Washington:  Small  Business  Administration, 
1962.  192p. 

A  socio-economic  study  of  Boone,  Logan  and  Raleigh  counties. 

685.  STOCK,  A.  R. 

The  story  of  22  coal  men  who  refused  to  take  the  count. 
Sales  Management  Jl  15,  1940  20-22. 

Coal  operators  in  Missouri  and  Kansas  establish  a  cooperative  ad- 
vertising fund. 

686.  SUFFERN,  ARTHUR  E.  AND  OTHERS 

The  bituminous  coal  industry.  American  Economic  Asso- 
ciation. Papers  &  Proceedings  11:  116-22  1921. 

687.  SYMPOSIUM  ON  GOAL  AND  PUBLIC  POLICIES 

Sponsored  by  the  University  of  Tennessee  and  Oak  Ridge 
National  Laboratory.  Held  Oct.  13-15,  1971.  Knoxville: 
Center  for  Business  and  Economics  Research,  University 
of  Tennessee,  1972.  170p. 

688.  TABB,  WILLIAM  K. 

A  recursive  programming  model  of  resource  allocation  and 
technological  change  in  the  U.S.  Bituminous  Coal  Industry. 
Dissertation.  University  of  Wisconsin,  1968. 

689.  TAYLOR,  JOHN  R. 

Study  of  the  financial  structures  of  fifteen  selected  coal 
companies  operating  in  the  bituminous  industry'.  Thesis. 
University  of  Illinois.  1937. 

75 


690.  TAYLOR,  SAMUEL  A. 

The  purchase  of  coal  by  the  B.T.U.  method,  and  some 
practical  questions  connected  therewith.  American  Mining 
Congress.  Proceedings  12:  335-49  1909. 

691.  TENNESSEE.  GENERAL  ASSEMBLY 

Legislative  Council  Committee  study  on  the  coal  industry. 
Final  Report.  Nashville,  1964.  29p. 

692.  TENNESSEE.  UNIVERSITY.  APPALACHIAN  RESOURCES  PROJECT 

The  economics  of  the  private  and  social  costs  of  Appala- 
chian coal  production;  a  progress  report  for  the  period 
January  1,  1973  -  June  30,  1973.  Knoxville,  Tenn.,  1973. 
34p. 

693.  TENNESSEE  VALLEY  AUTHORITY.  OFFICE  OF  POWER. 

Comparison  of  coal-fired  and  nuclear  power  plants  for  the 
TVA  system.  Chattanooga,  1966.  36p. 

694.  THOMAS,  B.  B. 

The  coal  monopoly.  Correspondence  between  B.  B.  Tho- 
mas, president  of  the  Thomas  Coal  Company,  and  F.  B. 
G  o  w  e  n,  president  of  the  Philadelphia  and  Reading  Rail- 
road Company.  New  York:  Coal  Trade  Circular  Print, 
[1873].  13p. 

695.  THOMAS,  E.  H.  C. 

Coal  profits;  the  truth  about  the  money  made  in  the  coal 
industry.  New  York,  1920.  15p. 

696.  THOMPSON,  J.  c. 

Stabilization  of  the  coal  market  through  storage.  American 
Mining  Congress.  Proceedings  22:  691-98  1919. 

697.  THOMPSON,  JAMES  H. 

The  changing  markets  for  West  Virginia  Coal  1951-1963. 
Morgantown:  West  Virginia  University,  Bureau  of  Busin- 
ess Research,  1964.  40p.  (West  Virginia  University  Busi- 
ness and  Economic  Studies  9,  No.  2). 

698.  THOMPSON,  JAMES  H. 

Markets  and  marketing  methods  of  the  West  Virginia  coal 
industry.  Morgantown:  West  Virginia  University,  1953. 
15p.  (Bureau  of  Business  Research,  Business  and  Economic 
Studies  2:  3). 


76 


rHOMPSON,  I  wii  s  H. 

Significant  trends  in  the  West  Virginia  coal  industry,  1900- 

1957.  Morgantown:   West  Virginia  University,  1958.  65p. 

(West  Virginia  University  Business  &  Economic  Studies  6: 

1). 

Devoted  largely  to  statistics  on  production,  employment,  wages, 
accidents,  etc. 

700.  THOMPSON,  JAMES  H. 

State  and  local  taxation  of  the  bituminous  coal  industry. 
West  Virginia  Law  Review  76:  297-323  1974. 

"Purpose  of  this  paper  is  to  describe  and  analyze,  from  an  economic 
standpoint,  present  methods  of  taxing  this  product  and  industry  at 
the  state  and  local  levels." 

701.  THORNLEY,  FRED  C. 

Coal:  plan  for  organized  distribution.  New  York,  [1920]. 
7p. 

702.  THORP,  WILLIAM  L. 

Coal  for  Europe.  State  Dept.  Bulletin  17:  697-702  1947. 

703.  TOMIMATSU,  T.  T.  AND  ROBERT  E.  JOHNSON 

The  state  of  the  U.  S.  coal  industry.  Washington:  GPO, 
1976.  32p.  (U.  S.  Bureau  of  Mines.  Information  Circular 

8707). 

"A  financial  analysis  of  selected  coal-producing  companies  with  ob- 
servation on  industry  structure". 

704.  TRACY,  ELEANOR  J. 

The  rise  of  John  Samuels.  Fortune  Oct  1975  144-49. 

The  International  Carbon  and  Minerals  Group,  controlled  largely  by 
Samuels,  has  become  a  major  factor  in  the  coal  industry. 

705.  TRAER,  GLENN  W. 

Conservation  in  the  coal  industry.  American  Mining  Con- 
gress. Proceedings  11:  152-65  1908. 

Author  urges  greater  efficiency  and  the  merging  of  small  units. 

706.  TRAPNELL,  W.  C.  AND  RALPH  ISLEY 

The  bituminous  coal  industry,  with  a  survey  of  competing 
fuels.  Washington:  Federal  Emergency  Relief  Administra- 
tion. 1935.  154p.  plus  appendix. 

707.  TROTT,  HARLAN 

Oil  from  coal:  we  wouldn't  run  out.  Progressive  June  1974 
43-6. 

77 


Author  maintains  that  oil  could  now  be  produced  economically  from 
coal.  However,  this  development  has  been  blocked  by  the  oil  com- 
panies to  keep  their  profits  high. 

708.  TRYON,  F.  G. 

The  irregular  operation  of  the  bituminous  coal  industry. 
American  Economic  Association.  Papers  &  Proceedings  11: 
57-73  1921. 

709.  TUGENDHAT,  GEORGE 

A  billion  dollar  coal  market?  Fortune  D  1962  102-5. 
"Europe  is  going  to  need  cheap  coal,  which  the  U.S.  has  in  plenty." 

710.  TURNER,  HARRY 

Coal  merchandising;  a  manual  for  retail  coal  merchants. 
Topeka,  Kansas,  1933.  76p. 

711.  U.  S.  ATOMIC  ENERGY  COMMISSION.  TECHNICAL  INFORMATION 
CENTER 

Coal  processing,  gasification,  liquefaction,  desulfurization; 
a  bibliography.  Oak  Ridge,  1974.  757p. 

712.  U.  S.  BUREAU  OF  LABOR  STATISTICS 

Bituminous  coal  mines,  1933-66,  wage  chronology.  Wash- 
ington: GPO,  1965.  15p.  (Bulletin  1461). 

Traces  the  change  in  wage  scales  and  related  benefits. 

713.  U.  S.  BUREAU  OF  LABOR  STATISTICS 

Increase  of  prices  of  anthracite  coal  following  the  wage 
agreement  of  May  20,  1912.  Washington:  GPO,  1913.  128p. 
(62nd  Cong.,  3d  Sess.  House.  Doc.  1442). 

713a.  U.  S.  BUREAU  OF  LABOR  STATISTICS 

Wage  chronology,  bituminous  coal  mine  operators  and 
United  Mine  Workers  of  America,  October  1933— Novem- 
ber 1974.  Washington:  GPO,  1973.  34p.  (Bulletin  1799) 


714.  U.  S.  COAL  COMMISSION 

Report  of  the  United  States  Coal  Commission.  Washing- 
ton: GPO,  1925.  5  volumes.  (68th  Cong.,  2d  Sess.  Senate. 
Doc.  195). 

715.  U.  S.  COMMISSIONER  OF  LABOR 

Bituminous  coal,  cost  of  production.  In  Sixth  Annual  Re- 
port ( 1890 )  of  the  Commissioner  of  Labor,  ppl95-282. 


78 


716.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  COMMITTEE  ON  THE  DISTRICT  OF  COLUMBIA 

The  coal  supply  of  the  District  of  Columbia.  Washington: 
GPO,  1903.  6  vols. 

717.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  HOUSE 

Anthracite  and  bituminous  coal  situation.  Letter  from  the 
chairman  of  the  Federal  Trade  Commission  transmitting 
report  on  anthracite  and  bituminous  coal  situation  and  the 
relation  of  rail  and  water  transportation  to  the  present  fuel 
problem.  Washington:  GPO,  1917.  29p.  (65th  Cong.,  1st 
Sess.  House.  Doc  193). 

718.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  HOUSE 

Preliminary  report  by  the  Federal  Trade  Commission  on 
the  production  and  distribution  of  bituminous  coal;  letter 
from  the  chairman  of  the  Federal  Trade  Commission 
transmitting  preliminary  report  by  the  Federal  Trade 
Commission  on  the  production  and  distribution  of  bitum- 
inous coal.  Washington:  GPO,  1917.  8p.  (65th  Cong.,  1st 
Sess.  House.  Doc.  152). 

719.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  HOUSE.  COMMITTEE  ON  INTERSTATE  AND  FOR- 
EIGN COMMERCE 

Coal.  Washington:  GPO,  1926.  3  vols. 

720.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  HOUSE.  COMMITTEE  ON  WAYS  AND  MEANS 

Prohibition  upon  importation  of  anthracite  coal,  hearings, 
71st  Congress,  2d  session,  on  H.  R.  12061,  for  prohibition 
upon  importation  into  United  States  of  certain  anthracite 
coal,  June  17,  1930.  Washington:  GPO,  1930.  20p. 

721.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  HOUSE  COMMITTEE  ON  WAYS  AND  MEANS 

Stabilization  of  bituminous  coal  mining  industry.  Washing- 
ton: GPO,  1935.  600p. 

722.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  SENATE 

Anthracite  coal  prices;  letter  from  the  federal  trade  com- 
mission transmitting,  in  response  to  Senate  Resolution  of 
June  22,  1916,  a  report  of  the  Federal  Trade  Commission 
to  the  Senate  of  the  United  States  on  Anthracite  coal  pri- 
ces. Washington:  GPO,  1917.  4p.  (65th  Congress,  1st  Sess. 
Senate.  Doc.  19). 

723.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  SENATE 

Coal  industry  stabilization  bill.  Report  submitted  by  Mr. 
Frelinghuysen,  from  the  Committee  on  Interstate  Com- 
merce. Washington:  GPO,  1921.  4p.  (67th  Cong.,  1st 
Sess.  Senate.  Report  55). 

79 


724.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  SENATE 

Distribution  and  price  of  coal,  conference  report  on  H.  R. 
12472,  to  declare  national  emergency  to  exist  in  produc- 
tion, transportation,  and  distribution  of  coal  and  other 
fuel,  granting  additional  powers  to  Interstate  Commerce 
Commission,  providing  for  declaration  of  car-service  prior- 
ities in  interstate  commerce  during  present  and  any  suc- 
ceeding emergency,  and  to  prevent  extortion  in  sale  of 
fuel;  submitted  by  Mr.  Cummins.  Sept.  14,  1922.  Wash- 
ington: GPO,  1922.  4p.  (67th  Cong.,  2d  Sess.  Senate.  Doc- 
ument 251 ) . 

725.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  SENATE 

Effect  of  strike  upon  bituminous  coal  prices.  Letter  from 
the  Secretary  of  Commerce,  transmitting  in  response  to 
Senate  Resolution  of  June  2,  1922,  a  statement  relative  to 
the  production  and  prices  of  bituminous  coal  and  the  ac- 
tion of  governmental  agencies  to  end  the  strike.  Washing- 
ton: GPO,  1922.  7p.  (67th  Cong.,  2d  Sess.  Senate.  Docu- 
ment 209). 

726.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  SENATE.  COMMITTEE  ON  INTEROIR  AND  INSU- 
LAR AFFAIRS 

Coal  policy  issues.  Washington:  GPO,  1974.  2  vols. 

727.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.   SENATE.  COMMITTEE  ON  INTERIOR  AND  INSU- 
LAR AFFAIRS 

Coal  research.  Hearings  before  the  Sub-committee  on 
Mineral,  Materials,  and  Fuels  ...  on  S.  49  and  S.  1362, 
bills  to  encourage  and  stimulate  the  production  and  con- 
servation of  coal  in  the  United  States.  Washington:  GPO, 
1959.  70p. 

728.  U.   S.  CONGRESS.   SENATE.  COMMITTEE  ON  INTERIOR  AND  INSU- 
LAR AFFAIRS 

Greater  coal  utilization.  Washington:   GPO,  1975.   469p. 

Hearings  on  S.  1777,  a  bill  to  require  that  electric  powerplants  "be 
capable  of  utilizing  coal  as  their  primary  energy  fuel". 

729.  U.   S.  CONGRESS.   SENATE.  COMMITTEE  ON   INTERIOR  AND  INSU- 
LAR AFFAIRS 

National  fuels  study.  Hearings  before  the  Committee  on 
Interior  and  Insular  Affairs,  United  States  Senate,  Eighty- 
seventh  Congress,  First  Session,  on  Senate  resolution  105, 
a  resolution  to  create  a  Special  Committee  on  a  Special 
National  Fuels  Study.  June  12  and  13,  1961.  Washington: 
GPO,  1961.  239p. 

80 


730.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  SENATE.  COMMITTEE  ON  INTERIOR  AND  INSU- 
LAR AFFAIRS 

Report  of  the  national  fuels  and  energy  study  group  on 
an  assessment  of  available  information  on  energy  in  the 
United  States.  Washington:  GPO,  1962.  499p.  (87th  Con- 
gress, 2nd  Session). 

731.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  SENATE.  COMMITTEE  ON  INTERIOR  AND  INDUS- 
TRIAL AFFAIRS.  SUBCOMMITTEE  ON  MINERALS,  MATERIALS, 
AND  FUELS 

Coal  gasification  development.  Washington:  GPO,  1971. 
169p. 

732.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  SENATE.  COMMITTEE  ON  INTERIOR  AND  INSU- 
LAR AFFAIRS.  SUBCOMMITTEE  ON  MINERIALS,  MATERIALS,  AND 
FUELS 

Review  of  the  developments  in  coal  gasification.  Wash- 
ington: GPO,  1972.  122p. 

733.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  SENATE.  COMMITTEE  ON  INTERSTATE  COM- 
MERCE 

Increased  price  of  coal;  hearings  before  subcommittee  pur- 
suant to  S.  Res.  126,  directing  Committee  on  Interstate 
Commerce  to  hold  hearings  in  order  to  make  inquiry  into 
causes  which  have  brought  about  enormous  increase  in 
market  price  of  coal  and  to  report  its  findings  and  recom- 
mendations with  view  to  Congressional  or  Executive  ac- 
tion. Washington:  GPO,  1919-20,  483p. 

734.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  SENATE.  COMMITTEE  ON  INTERSTATE  AND  FOR- 
EIGN COMMERCE 

Oil  and  Coal  Shortage.  Hearing  before  a  subcommittee  of 
the  Committee  on  Interstate  and  Foreign  Commerce,  U.  S. 
Senate,  80th  Congress,  1st  Session  on  oil  and  coal  shortage. 
December  9,  1947.  Washington:  GPO,  1947.  129p. 

735.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  SENATE.  COMMITTEE  ON  LABOR  AND  PUBLIC 
WELFARE 

Causes  of  unemployment  in  the  coal  and  other  domestic 
industries.  Washington:  GPO,  1950.  512p. 

736.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  SENATE.  COMMITTEE  ON  LABOR  AND  PUBLIC 
WELFARE 

Causes  of  unemployment  in  the  coal  and  other  domestic 
industries.  Washington:  GPO,  1955.  772p. 

737.  U.   S.    CONGRESS.     SENATE.     COMMITTEE    ON     MANUFACTURERS 

Shortage  of  coal.  Washington:  GPO,  1918-19.  3  vols. 

81 


738.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  SENATE.  COMMITTEE  ON  MANUFACTURE 

Publication  of  production  and  profits  in  coal.  Washington: 
GPO,  1921.  3  vols,  in  2. 

739.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  SENATE.  COMMITTEE  ON  PUBLIC  WORKS.   SUB- 
COMMITTEE ON  ECONOMIC  DEVELOPMENT 

Impact  of  energy  development  on  northwestern  New  Mex- 
ico. Washington:  GPO,  1976.  635p. 

740.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  SENATE.  SPECIAL  COMMITTEE  TO  INVESTIGATE 
INDUSTRIAL  CENTRALrZATION 

Investigation  of  industrial  centralization.  Part  3:  Iowa 
coal  resources.  Washington:  GPO,  1945. 

741.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  SENATE.  SPECIAL  COMMITTEE  TO  INVESTIGATE 
THE  FUEL  SITUATION  IN  THE  MIDDLE  WEST 

The  fuel  situation  in  the  Middle  West.  Washington:  GPO, 
1943.  1300p. 

742.  U.  S.  FEDERAL  ENERGY  ADMINISTRATION 

Task  force  report  of  the  Interagency  Task  Force  on  Coal. 
Washington:  GPO,  1974.  175p. 

"This  report  contains  the  final  technical  analysis  of  the  Project  In- 
dependence Interagency  Coal  Task  Force  chaired  by  the  Depart- 
ment of  the  Interior". 

743.  UNITED  STATES  FEDERAL  TRADE  COMMISSION 

Cost  reports  of  the  Federal  Trade  Commission.  Coal.  1919- 
1921.  Washington.  7  volumes,  vl.  Pennsylvania— bitumin- 
ous. v2.  Pennsylvania— anthracite.  v3.  Illinois— bituminous. 
v4.  Alabama,  Tennessee  and  Kentucky— bituminous.  v5. 
Ohio,  Indiana,  Michigan— bituminous.  v6.  Maryland,  West 
Virginia  and  Virginia— bituminous.  v7.  Trans-Mississippi 
states— bituminous. 

744.  U.  S.  FEDERAL  TRADE  COMMISSION 

Investment  and  profit  in  soft  coal  mining.  Washington: 
GPO,  1922.  pt.  1:  lOp,  pt.  2:  208p.  (67th  Congress,  2d  Ses- 
sion. Senate  Document  207). 

745.  U.  S.  FEDERAL  TRADE  COMMISSION 

Preliminary  report  of  the  Federal  Trade  Commission  on 
investment  and  profit  in  soft  coal  mining.  Washington: 
GPO,  1922.  222p. 


82 


746.  U.  S.  INTERSTATE  COMMERCE  COMMISSION 

Report  on  discriminations  and  monopolies  in  coal  and  oil. 
Washington:  GPO,  1907.  81p.  (59th  Cong.,  2nd  Session. 
House.  Document  561 ) . 

747.  U.  S.  LIBRARY  OF  CONGRESS.  CONGRESSIONAL  RESEARCH  SERVICE 

Factors  affecting  the  use  of  coal  in  present  and  future 
energy  markets.  Washington:  GPO,  1973.  43p. 

748.  U.  S.  STEEL  COAL  ALSO  IS  INVOLVED 

Coal  Age  Oct  1973  88-144. 

Comprehensive  account  of  all  aspects  of  the  coal  operations  of  the 
United  States  Steel  Corp. 

749.  U.  S.  TREASURY  DEPARTMENT 

Taxes  of  anthracite  coal  mining  companies.  Washington: 
GPO,  1926.  lOp.  (69th  Cong.,  1st  Sess.  Senate.  Doc.  48). 

750.  UNUSED  MANPOWER  IN  PENNSYLVANIA  ANTHRACITE  AREA 

MLR  54:  1101-6  1942. 

751.  UP  IN  SMOKE 

Forbes  Dec  15,  1975  28-30. 

Environmentalists  have  made  it  "sheer  fantasy  to  talk  about  doub- 
ling U.  S.  coal  production  over  the  next  decade". 

752.  UTAH.   COMMITTEE  TO  STUDY  OPERATIONS  OF  STATE  GOVERN- 
MENT 

An  economic  study  of  the  development  of  Utah's  coal  re- 
sources, n.p.,  1936.  139p. 

753.  vaile,  r.  s. 

Coal  distribution  in  the  twin  cities.  Minneapolis:  Univer- 
sity of  Minnesota,  1932.  99p.  ( Minnesota  Studies  in  Econ- 
omics and  Business  No.  2). 

754.  VANCE,  STANLEY  C. 

A  critical  analysis  of  the  data  and  methods  available  for 
technical  capital  measurement  in  bituminous  coal  mining. 
Ph.  D.  University  of  Pennsylvania.  1951. 

755.  VAN  HISE  CHARLES  R. 

Relation  of  big  business  to  mining.  Coal  Age  4:  691-95 
1913. 

756.  VEENSTRA,  T.  A.  AND  W.  G.  FRITZ 

Major  economic  tendencies  in  the  bituminous  coal  indus- 
tries. Quarterly  Journal  of  Economics  51:  106-130  1936. 

83 


757.  VINCENT,  MERLE  D. 

Chaotic  coal.  Survey  Graphic  22:  539-45  1903. 
Discussion  of  the  role  of  the  "captive"  bituminous  mines. 

758.  VIRGINIA.  DIVISION    OF    PLANNING    AND    ECONOMIC    DEVELOP- 
MENT 

Production  and  marketing  of  coal  in  Virginia  and  the  na- 
tion. Richmond,  1955.  102p. 

759.  VIRTUE,  g.  o. 

The  anthracite  combinations.  Quarterly  Journal  of  Econ- 
omics 10:  296-323  1896. 

760.  VOGTLE,  A.  W. 

Coal  by  wire.  Public  Utilities  63:  433-41  1959. 

The  increase  in  transportation  costs  may  force  the  location  of  elec- 
tric utility  plants  near  mines  and  the  utilization  of  high  transmis- 
sion lines. 

761.  VOSKUIL,  WALTER  H. 

Economic  and  competitive  position  of  Illinois  coal.  AIME. 
Transactions  119:  392-404  1936. 

762.  VOSKUIL,  WALTER  H. 

Potential  markets  for  Illinois  coal  on  the  Upper  Mississippi 
Waterway.  Illinois  Geological  Survey.  Circular  41,  1938. 
19p. 

763.  WADLEIGH,  F.  R. 

International  trade  in  coal.  Ann.  Amer.  Acad.  127:  102-11 
1926. 

764.  WADLEIGH,  F.  R. 

Our  future  in  the  trade.  Coal  Age  2:  894-97  1912;  3:  215-17 
1913. 

765.  WADLEIGH,  F.  R. 

Substitutes  for  anthracite  as  a  domestic  fuel,  with  some  re- 
marks on  the  purchase  of  coal  by  industrial  users.  Ann. 
Amer.  Acad.  Ill:  266-89  1924. 

The  very  high  price  of  anthracite  may  make  it  necessary  to  turn  to 
other  fuels. 

766.  WALKER,  ALBERT  H. 

The  black  elephant  of  Reading;  being  a  study  in  coal  and 
finance.  New  York,  1910.  15p. 

Deals  largely  with  the  Philadelphia  &  Reading  Coal  &  Iron  Co. 

84 


767.  WALKER,  FRANCIS 

The  development  of  the  anthracite  combination.  Ann. 
Amer.  Acad.  Ill:  234-248  1924. 

768.  WALSH,  JOHN 

Problems  of  expanding  coal  production.  Science  184:  336- 
9  Ap  19,  1974. 

769.  WARNE,  FRANK  J. 

Trade  agreement  in  the  coal  industry.  Ann.  Amer.  Acad. 
36:  340-48  1910. 

770.  WARNER,  FAYETTE  S. 

The  future  movement  of  iron  ore  and  coal  in  relation  to 
the  St.  Lawrence  waterway.  Philadelphia:  University  of 
Pennsylvania,  1930.  195p.  (Wharton  School  of  Finance  & 
Commerce.  Research  Studies.  VIII). 

771.  WARRINER.  S.  D. 

The  anthracite  industry:  wage,  prices  and  regulation.  Ann. 
Amer.  Acad.  Ill:  53-60  1924. 

772.  WATKINS,  HAROLD  M. 

Coal  and  men;  an  economic  and  social  study  of  the  Brit- 
ish and  American  coal  fields.  London:  Allen  &  Unwin. 
1934.  460p. 

773.  WATSON,  WTLLIAM  D. 

Costs  of  air  pollution  control  in  the  coal-fired  electric 
power  industry.  Quarterly  Review  of  Economics  and  Busi- 
ness 12:  63-85  1972. 

774.  WEAVER,  PAUL  H. 

Behind  the  big  scrubber  fracas.  Fortune  Feb  1975  106-10. 

Government  insists  that  vast  sums  be  spent  for  scrubbers,  although 
the  relationship  between  sulfur  dioxide  and  health  is  not  clear. 

775.  WEBB,  JOHN  N. 

Unemployment  in  a  depressed  coal-mining  area  in  south- 
ern Illinois.  MLR  49:  1295-1310  1939. 

776.  WEINBERG,  EDGAR 

Technological  change  and  productivity  in  the  bituminous 
coal  industry.  Washington:  CPO,  1961.  136p.  (U.S.  Bur- 
eau of  Labor  Statistics.  Bulletin  1305). 


85 


777.  WEST,  JIM 

U.  S.  oils  pour  money  into  expanding  coal  production.  Oil 
&  Gas  Journal  Je  30,  1975  41-5. 

778.  WEST  VIRGINIA.  LEGISLATURE.  JOINT  COMMITTEE  ON  GOVERN- 
MENT AND  FINANCE.  SUBCOMMITTEE  ON  COAL  MINING. 

A  study  of  the  West  Virginia  Coal  Industry  and  ways  to 
help  it.  Charleston,  W.  Va.,  1975. 

779.  WESTERN  COAL. 

Coal  Age  Apr  1973  41-257 

This  issue  is  devoted  to  the  opportunities  and  problems  involved  in 
mining  coal  in  the  western  states. 

780.  WIMPFEN,  SHELDON  P. 

Factors  affecting  development  of  the  new  values  of  coal. 
West  Virginia  Law  Review  76:  267-75  1973/4. 

781.  WTNG,  DAVID  L. 

Cost,  prices,  and  profits  of  the  bituminous  coal  industry. 
American  Economic  Association.  Papers  &  Proceedings  11: 
74-84  1921. 

782.  WING,  DAVID  L. 

The  need  for  uniform  and  up-to-date  data  on  the  cost  of 
production,  investment  and  profits  of  operators.  Ann 
Amer.  Acad.  Ill:  256-65  1924. 

Neither  the  government  nor  the  public  has  sufficient  information  on 
the  costs  and  profits  of  the  anthracite  industry. 

783.  WOLFE,  CHARLES  F. 

The  marketing  of  Hocking  Valley  coal  in  the  Columbus 
area.  Thesis.  Ohio  State  University.  1932. 

784.  WOLFE,  THOMAS  M. 

Recent  changes  in  the  bituminous  coal  industry.  Harvard 
Business  Review  10:  149-160  1931/2. 

785.  WOOLRICH,  WILLIS  R. 

The  purchase  and  storage  of  domestic  coal.  Knoxville, 
1925.  15p.  (University  of  Tennessee.  Engineering  Experi- 
ment Station.  Bulletin  No.  6). 

786.  WOZNIEWICZ,  EDWARD  J. 

Causes  and  remedies  of  declining  employment  in  the 
Pennsylvania  anthracite  area.  Thesis.  New  York  Univer- 
sity. 1954. 

86 


787.  YOUNG,  GORDON 

Will  coal  be  tomorrow's  "Black  Gold".  National  Geo- 
graphic Ag  1975  234-59. 

Useful  and  well-illustrated  review  of  the  problems  and  prospects  of 
the  coal  industry. 

788.  YOUNG,  W.  H.  AND  F.  G.  TYRON 

Distribution  statistics  in  coal  market  analysis.  JASA  26, 
supp.:  20-261931. 

789.  ZANDARSKI,  JOSEPH  R. 

Problems  in  the  anthracite  industry  with  special  reference 
to  marketing.  Dissertation.  University  of  Pittsburgh,  1964. 
183p. 

790.  ZWARTENDYK,  JAN 

Economic  aspects  of  surface  subsidence  resulting  from  un- 
derground mineral  exploitation.  Dissertation.  Pennsyl- 
vania State  University,  1971.  411p. 

This  study  consists  of  two  distinct  parts.  Part  1  is  a  comprehensive 
overview  of  pertinent  information.  Part  II  provides  an  analysis  of 
economic  aspects  of  surface  subsidence  and  establishes  a  frame- 
work for  assessing  available  alternatives. 


87 


£tdm  Udatiami, 


791.  ALABAMA  COAL  COMMISSION 

Message  of  Thomas  E.  Kilby,  governor  .  .  .  with  report  of 
Commission  to  Inquire  into  the  Differences  between  Op- 
erators and  Miners.  Montgomery:  Brown  Printing  Co., 
1920.  13p.  (Legislative  Doc.  #5). 

Supplemental  report.  Montgomery:  Brown  Printing  Co.,  1920.  12p. 
(Legislative  Doc.  #7). 

792.  ALABAMA  COAL  OPERATORS  ASSOCIATION 

Joint  scale  convention  of  the  Alabama  Coal  Operators  As- 
sociation and  the  United  Mine  Workers  of  America.  .  .  and 
the  proceedings  of  the  Board  of  Arbitration.  Birmingham: 
Roberts  &  Son,  1903.  947p. 

793.  ALBRIGHT,  CHARLES 

The  great  Mollie  Maguire  trials  in  Carbon  and  Schuylkill 
Counties,  Pennsylvania  .  .  .  1876.  Pottsville,  Pennsylvania: 
Chronicle,  1876.  94p. 

794.  ALINSKY,  SAUL 

John  L.:  something  of  a  man.  Nation  208:  827-8  1969. 

795.  ALINSKY,  SAUL 

John  L.  Lewis,  an  unauthorized  biography.  New  York: 
Putnams,  1949.  387p.  (Re-issued  by  Vintage  Books  in 
1970). 

796.  ALLEN,  DANIEL 

Mine  war  in  Pennsylvania.  Nation  137:  176-77  1933. 

Highly  partisan  account  of  the  strike  in  the  bituminous  coal  fields 
of  southwestern  Pennsylvania. 

797.  ALLEN,  HENRY  J. 

How  Kansas  broke  a  strike  and  would  solve  the  labor  pro- 
blem. Current  Opinion  68:  472-78  1920. 

88 


As  the  result  of  a  coal  strike,  Kansas  established  a  Court  of  Indus- 
trial Relations  to  eompel  settlement  of  labor  disputes 

798.  AMERICAN  CIVIL  LIBERTIES  UNION 

The  Kentucky  miners'  struggle.  New  York,  1932.  23p. 

799.  AMERICAN  CIVIL  LIBERTIES  UNION 

War  on  the  Colorado  miners.  New  York,  1928.  lip. 

800.  AMMONS,  ELIAS  M. 

Colorado  strike.  North  American  Review  200:  35-44  1914. 
Author  was  Governor  of  Colorado. 

801.  ANDERSON,  GEORGE  J. 

Labor  policy  in  the  bituminous  coal  industry.  New  York, 
1922.  41p. 

802.  ANDERSON,  L.  C. 

Mine  labor  conditions  in  West  Virginia.  Outlook  82:  861- 
62  1906. 

803.  ANGLE,  PAUL  M. 

Bloody  Williamson;  a  chapter  in  American  lawlessness. 
New  York:  Knopf,  1952.  300p. 

Account  of  the  so-called  Herrin  Massacre  (Sept.  1922)  and  related 
violence  in  the  coal  fields  of  southern  Illinois. 

804.  ANSLEY,  FRAN  AND  BRENDA  BELL 

Miners'  insurrection/convict  labor.  Southern  Exposure.  1: 
3/4  1973/4  144-159. 

Account  of  the  violence  growing  out  of  the  use  of  convict  labor  in 
the  coal  mines  of  East  Tennessee. 

805.  ANSLEY,  FRAN  AND  BRENDA  BELL 

Strikes  in  the  coal  camps.  Southern  Exposure  1:  3/4  114-36 
1973/74. 

Account  of  labor  disputes  in  the  Cumberland  Plateau  of  Tennessee 
in  1937.  Center  of  trouble  was  in  the  Davidson-Wilder  area. 

806.  ANSON,  CHARLES  F. 

A  history  of  the  labor  movement  in  West  Virginia.  Thesis. 
University  of  North  Carolina.  1940.  343p. 

807.  ANTHRACITE  BUREAU  OF  INFORMATION 

The  anthracite  strike  of  1922;  a  chronological  statement  of 
the  communications  and  negotiations  between  the  hard 
coal  operators  and  the  United  Mine  Workers  of  America. 
Philadelphia,  n.d.  62p. 

89 


808.  ANTHRACITE  BUREAU  OF  INFORMATION 

The  anthracite  strike  of  1925-1926  .  .  .  Philadelphia,  1926. 
54p. 

809.  ANTHRACITE  COAL  CRISIS  AND  CONDITIONS  IN  WEST  VIRGINIA 

Outlook  82:  575-78  1906. 

810.  THE  ANTHRACITE  MINERS'  CONVENTION 

Coal  Age  1:  1076-77  1911/12. 

Report  of  a  tri-district  convention  of  anthracite  miners. 

811.  ANTHRACITE  OPERATORS 

Before  the  U.  S.  Anthracite  Coal  Commission.  Exhibits  of 
the  anthracite  operators  in  reply  to  exhibits  presented  by 
the  anthracite  mine  workers.  Scranton,  1920.  Various  pag- 
ing. 

812.  ANTHRACITE  STRIKE:   ITS  SOCIAL  AND  RELIGIOUS  EFFECTS 

Outlook  72:  585-89  1902. 

813.  APPALACHIAN   COAL   MINERS   WANT  DECENT  WORKING   CONDI- 
TIONS 

Brookside,  Ky.?,  1973.  7p. 

A  pro-union  account  of  the  issues  and  events  relating  to  the  strike 
against  the  Eastover  Mining  Co.,  near  Brookside,  Ky. 

814.  ARCHBALD,  HUGH 

The  four  hour  day  in  coal;  a  study  of  the  relation  between 
the  engineering  of  the  organization  of  work  and  the  dis- 
content among  the  workers  in  the  coal  mines.  New  York: 
H.  W.  Wilson,  1922.  148p. 

815.  ARMBRISTER,  TREVOR 

Act  of  Vengeance.  New  York:  Saturday  Review  Press, 
1975  341p. 

"The  Yablonski  murders  and  their  solution". 

816.  ARTICLES  OF  AGREEMENT  BETWEEN  THE  KANAWHA  OPERATORS 
AND  THE  UMWA 

Coal  and  Coke  My  1,  1904  10-13;  N  1,  1904  8-9. 
Includes  wages,  hours,  working  conditions,  etc. 

817.  AURAND,  AMMON  M. 

Historical  account  of  the  Mollie  Maguires  and  James  "Mc- 
Kenna"  McParlan,  detective  extraordinary;  origin,  depre- 
ciations and  decay  of  a  terrorist  secret  organization  in  the 

90 


Pennsylvania  coal  fields  during  and  following  the  Civil 
War.  Harrisburg:  Priv.  print.,  1940.  32p. 

818.  AURAND,  HAROLD  W. 

The  anthracite  mine  workers,  1869-1897:  a  functional  ap- 
proach to  labor  history.  Dissertation.  Pennsylvania  State 
University.  1969.  396p. 

819.  AURAND,  HAROLD  W. 

From  the  Molly  Maguires  to  the  United  Mine  Workers;  the 
social  ecology  of  an  industrial  union.  Philadelphia:  Temple 
University  Press,  1971.  221p. 

820.  AURAND,  HAROLD  W. 

Workingmen's  Benevolent  Association.  Labor  History  7: 
19-34  1966. 

"During  its  brief  seven-year  life  (1868-1975)  the  Workingmen's 
Benevolent  Association  became  the  anthracite  miners'  first  industry- 
wide labor  union". 

821.  BACH,  E.  E. 

Social  and  religious  organizations  as  factors  in  labor  pro- 
blems. AIME.  Transactions  59:  590-611  1918. 

Mr.  Bach  was  "Sociological  Director"  of  the  Ellsworth  Collieries 
Co.,  Ellsworth,  Pennsylvania. 

822.  BAILEY,  KENNETH  R. 

Tell  the  boys  to  fall  in  line.  West  Virginia  History  32:  224- 
37  1970/71. 

Account  of  the  unsuccessful  strikes  of  the  UM WA  in  West  Virginia 
during  the  first  half  of  1894. 

823.  BAKER,  RAY  S. 

The  right  to  work:  the  story  of  the  non-striking  miners. 
McClures  20:  323-36  1902/3. 

The  Anthracite  Strike. 

824.  BALTIMORE  SUN  (  NEWSPAPER  ) 

Mingo  County  West  Virginia  coal  strike.  Baltimore,  1921. 
18p. 

Beprint  of  a  series  of  articles  appearing  in  the  Baltimore  Sun.  Janu- 
ary 23-25,  1921. 

825.  BANCROFT,  THOMAS  B. 

Strikes  in  the  Ohio  coal  fields.  Ohio  Mining  Journal  3:  3 
1885  27-40. 

Includes  copies  of  agreements  and  contracts  between  miners  and 
operators. 

91 


826.  BANNARD,  WILLIAM  N. 

Weary  land,  a  study  of  the  early  labor  relations  in  the  an- 
thracite coal  fields,  n.p.,  194-?.  166p.  proc. 

827.  BARATZ,  MORTON  S. 

The  union  and  the  coal  industry.  New  Haven:  Yale  Uni- 
versity Press,  1955.  170p.  (Yale  Studies  in  Economics  4). 

828.  BARB,  JOHN  MELLIKEN 

Strikes  in  the  southern  West  Virginia  coal  fields,  1912-1922. 
Thesis.  West  Virginia  University.  1949.  137p. 

829.  BARTHOLOMEW,  HARVEY  E. 

Anarchy  in  Colorado:  who  is  to  blame.  Denver:  Bartholo- 
mew Publishing  Company,  1905.  136p. 

830.  BATTLE  AT  BROOKSIDE 

United  Mine  Workers  Journal  Apr.  1-15,  1974  5-7. 

831.  BAYARD,  CHARLES  J. 

The  1927-1928  Colorado  coal  strike.  Pacific  Historical  Re- 
view 32:  235-50  1963. 

832.  BEAME,  EDMOND  M. 

Jacksonville  agreement:  quest  for  stability  in  coal.  Indus- 
trial and  Labor  Relations  Review  8:  195-203  1955. 

The  Jacksonville  Agreement,  signed  F  19,  1924,  was  a  three-year 
contract  between  UMW  and  Operators  of  the  Central  Competitive 
Field. 

833.  BEMIS,  EDWARD  W. 

Mine  labor  in  the  Hocking  Valley.  Saratoga,  New  York: 
American  Economic  Association,  1888.  15p.  (American 
Economic  Association.  Publication  1888-89.  3:  3  pp.27-42). 

834.  BENSON,  h.  w. 

Miners  for  Democracy:  a  report  from  West  Virginia.  Dis- 
sent 19:  632-38  1972. 

835.  BERLE,  A.  A. 

The  Colorado  mine  war.  Bibliotheca  Sacra  1914:  548-72. 

836.  BERNSTEIN,  IRVING  AND  HUGH  G.  LOVELL 

Are  coal  strikes  national  emergencies?  Industrial  &  Labor 
Relations  Review  6:  352-67  1953. 

Reviews  legal  decisions  concerning  such  strikes,  1937-50. 

92 


837.  BESHOAR,  BARRON  B. 

Out  of  the  depths;  the  story  of  John  R.  Lawson,  a  labor 
leader.  Denver,  1942.  372p. 

£?,nota^S,  .much  useful  '"nformation  on  the  Colorado  miners'  strike  of 
1913-1914. 

838.  BETHELL,  THOMAS  N. 

Conspiracy    in    coal.    Huntington,    W.  Va.:    Appalachian 
Movement  Press  1971.  36p. 

UMWA  officials  have  little  interest  in  providing  any  real  help  to 
the  miners. 

839.  BETHELL,  THOMAS  N. 

South-east  Coal  Co.  in  a  battle  for  life.  Appalachian  Look- 
out Dec  1968,  3-6. 

The  efforts  of  a  small  coal  mining  company  to  hold  out  against  the 
pressures  of  the  union  and  of  the  giant  companies  of  the  coal  in- 
dustry. 

839a.  BETHELL,  TOM 

1974:  Contract  at  Brookside.  Southern  Exposure  4-  114-18 
1976. 

Account  of  UMWA  activities  and  problems  in  Harlan  County  Ken- 
tucky. 

840.  BIMBA,  ANTHONY 

The  Molly  Maguires.  New  York:  International  Publishers, 
1932.  144p. 

Deals  with  the  troubles  in  the  anthracite  coal  regions  of  Pennsyl- 
vania, circa  1875. 

840a.  BISHOP,  BILL 

1931:  The  battle  at  Evarts.  Southern  Exposure  4:  92-101 
1976. 

Labor  troubles  in  Harlan  County,  Kentucky. 

841.  BITTNER,  VAN  A. 

Wages  in  bituminous  coal  mines  as  viewed  by  the  miners. 
Ann.  Amer.  Acad.  Ill:  39-42  1924. 

"The  earning  of  bituminous  coal  miners  have  always  been  notorious- 
ly low.' 

842.  BITUMINOUS  COAL  STOPPAGE,  1939 

MLR  49:  691-703  1939. 

Includes  text  of  Appalachian  Agreement. 

93 


843.  bituminous  operators'  special  committee 
Comparative  efficiency  of  labor  in  the  bituminous  coal  in- 
dustry under  union  and  non-union  operation.  Submitted  to 
the  United  State  Coal  commission  by  the  Bituminous  Op- 
erators' Special  Committee,  September  10,  1923.  [Wash- 
ington, 1923].  253p. 

844.  bituminous  operators'  special  committee 

Letter  and  brief  on  the  campaign  of  aggression  of  the  Uni- 
ted Mine  Workers  of  America  in  1922.  in  enforcing  the 
domination  of  their  monoploy  in  the  State  of  Ohio.  Wash- 
ington, 1923.  18p. 

845.  bituminous  operators'  special  committee 

Letter  and  statement  to  the  United  States  Coal  Commis- 
sion on  Herrin.  n.p.,  [1923].  50p. 

846.  bituminous  operators'  special  committee 
Maryland;  the  campaign  of  violence  conducted  by  the 
UMWA  against  the  open  shop  mines  in  the  Georges  Creek 
and  Upper  Potomac  fields  n.p.,  1923.  50p. 

847.  bituminous  operators'  special  committee 

United  Mine  Workers  in  West  Virginia;  submitted  to  the 
United  States  Coal  Commission,  Aug.  1923.  n.p.,  1923. 
121p. 

Account  of  violations  of  law  and  order  on  the  part  of  the  UMWA 
and  its  supporters. 

848.  the  "black  diamond"  vs.  demagogism 
Black  Diamond  5:  210,  251-52  1889/90. 

Attack  on  labor  leaders  who  hold  miners  in  "demagogic  thraldom." 

849.  blankenhorn,  heber 

Marching  through  West  Virginia.  Nation  113:  288-89  1921. 

Account  of  events  leading  up  to  the  "march  on  Logan". 


850.     BLANKENHORN,  HEBER 

The  strike  for  unions  a  study  of  the  non-union  question  in 
coal  and  the  problems  of  the  democratic  movement.  New 
York:  H.  W.  Wilson,  1923  (1924).  259p. 

"Based  on  the  record  of  the  Somerset  (Pennsylvania)  strike,  1922- 
23." 


94 


851.  BLIZZARD,  WILLIAM  C. 

There's  never  peace  in  West  Virginia's  hills.  Nation  177: 
548-49  1953. 

Description  of  conditions  at  Widen,  West  Virginia. 

852.  BLOCH,  LOUIS 

Labor  agreements  in  coal  mines;  a  case  study  of  agree- 
ments between  miners'  and  operators'  organizations  in  the 
bituminous  coal  mines  of  Illinois.  New  York:  Russell  Sage 
Foundation,  1931.  513p. 

853.  BLUE  EAGLE  AND  THE  MINERS 

New  Republic  77:  34-5  1933. 

i\RA  officials  said  to  favor  J.  L.  Lewis  in  his  struggle  with  the  Pro- 
gressive Miners  of  America  in  Illinois. 

854.  BOARD  OF  REFERENCE  REPORTS  ON  WAGE  DISPUTE  IN  ANTHRA- 
CITE INDUSTRY 

MLR  36:  815-18  1933. 

855.  BOUGHTON,  EDWARD  J. 

Coal  strike  and  rebellion  in  Colorado.  Chicago:  National 
Founders'  Association,  1915.  27p. 

856.  BOWDEN,  WITT 

The  changing  status  of  bituminous  coal  miners,  1937-1946. 
Washington:  GPO,  1946.  lOp.  (Bureau  of  Labor  Statistics. 
Bulletin  882). 

Appeared  also  in  MLR  63:  165-76  1946. 

857.  BOWDEN,  WITT 

Two  alternatives  in  the  settlement  of  the  Colorado  coal 
strike.  Survey  31:  320-22  1913. 

858.  BRADLEY,  JOSEPH  G. 

The  coal  operator  and  the  coal  miner— a  partnership,  n.p., 
West  Virginia  Mining  Institute,  1922.  16p. 

859.  BRANSCOME,  JAMES 

Death  and  rebellion  in  the  UMW;  an  epitaph  for  corrup- 
tion. Appalachian  Journal  Autumn  1973,  209-12. 

Summary  of  the  many  facets  of  corruption  within  the  union  and  the 
betrayal  of  the  Appalachian  miner  by  John  L.  Lewis  and  Tony 
Boyle. 


95 


860.  BRANSCOME,  JAMES 

Through  mine  disaster,  carnage  and  the  Yablonski  murders 
emerges  Arnold  Miller.  Southern  Voices  Mr/ Apr  1974  66, 
68-70. 

861.  BROEHL,  WAYNE  G. 

The  Molly  Maguires.  Cambridge:  Harvard  University 
Press,  1964.  409p. 

862.  BROOKS,  JOHN  G. 

An  impression  of  the  anthracite  coal  troubles.  Yale  Review 
6:  306-11  1897/98. 

Strike  of  1897. 

863.  BROOKS,  JOHN  G. 

The  public  and  the  anthracite  coal  strike.  Economic  Jour- 
nal 13:  364-72  1903. 

864.  BROOKSIDE  MINE  1974 

Southern  Exposure  Spring/ Summer  1974  52-56. 
Account  of  aspects  of  the  strike,  including  two  ballads. 

865.  BROPHY,  JOHN 

A  miner's  life.  Madison:  University  of  Wisconsin  Press, 
1964.  320p. 

Autobiography  of  one  of  the  more  important  leaders  in  the  Amer- 
ican labor  movement. 

866.  BROPHY,  JOHN 

President  Lewis  and  the  coal  miners.  New  Republic  61: 
145-6  1929. 

"Judged  by  any  standard,  the  Lewis  machine  has  failed." 

867.  BROPHY,  JOHN 

Report  of  John  Brophy,  president,  to  the  membership  of 
District  2,  UMWA.  March,  1927.  n.p.,  1927.  20p. 

868.  BROWN,  STUART 

A  man  named  Tony.  New  York:  W.  W.  Norton,  1975. 
Deals  with  the  trials  growing  out  of  the  Yablonski  murders. 

869.  BRUERE,  ROBERT  W. 

Mind  of  the  anthracite  miners.  Survey  55:  16-19  1925. 

Author  feels  that  the  relations  between  miner  and  mine  owner  have 
improved  and  will  continue  to  do  so. 

96 


870.  BUBKA,  TONY 

Harlan  County  coal  strike  of  1931.  Labor  History  11:  41- 
57  1970. 

An  account  of  the  Harlan  strike  both  before  and  after  the  entry  of 
the  National  Miners  Union. 

871.  BYARS,  J.  C.  JR. 

Harlan  County,  act  of  God?  Nation  134:  672-4  1932. 
Miners  and  their  families  are  close  to  starvation. 

872.  CALDWELL,  NAT  AND  GENE  S.  GRAHAM 

The  strange  romance  between  John  L.  Lewis  and  Cyrus 
Eaton.  Harpers  Dec  1961  25-32. 

"The  first  full  report  on  a  case  revealing  a  conspiracy  in  which  a 
big  union  and  a  big  capitalist  got  together  to  force  little  coal  mines 
out  of  business  and  thousands  of  miners  out  of  work." 

873.  CAPTIVE  COAL  MINE  STRIKE  AND  SETTLEMENT 

Monthly  Labor  Review  54:  94-7  1942. 

Captive  mines  were  located  in  Kentucky,  Pennsylvania  and  West 
Virginia. 

874.  CARNES,  CECIL 

John  L.  Lewis:  leader  of  labor.  New  York:  Robert  Speller, 
1936.  331p. 

874a.  CARR,  JOE  D. 

Labor  conflict  in  the  eastern  Kentucky  coal  fields.  Filson 
Club  Historical  Quarterly  47:  179-92  1973. 

Account  of  conflicts  during  the  1930*s. 

875.  CARRITT,  G. 

American  students  and  Kentucky  gunmen.  New  Statesman 
and  Nation  3:  703-704  1932. 

Short  account  of  the  expedition  of  the  National  Student  League  to 
the  Kentucky  coal  fields. 

876.  CARTER,  CHARLES  F. 

The  West  Virginia  coal  insurrection.  North  American  Re- 
view 198:  457-69  1913. 

877.  CARTER,  CHARLES  F. 

Murder  to  maintain  coal  monopoly.  Current  History  15: 
597-603  1922. 

".  .  .  twenty-three  years  of  arson,  assault  and  assassination  in  West 
Virginia." 

97 


878.  GARY,  LORIN  L. 

Adolph  Germer:  from  labor  agitator  to  labor  professional. 
Dissertation.  University  of  Wisconsin.  1968.  276p. 

Germer  was  active  in  the  UMWA  from  1900  to  1916. 

879.  CARY,  LORIN  L. 

The  Reorganized  Mine  Workers  of  America,  1930-1931. 
Illinois  State  Historical  Society  Journal  66:  245-70  1973. 

Account  of  the  development  and  demise  of  the  organization. 

880.  CASHMAN,  JOSEPH  T. 

America  asleep;  the  menace  of  radicalism.  New  York:  Na- 
tional Security  league,  1923.  15p. 

Attack  on  the  UMWA. 

881.  CASSIDY,  ROBERT 

Solidarity:  mine  workers  united  against  the  United  Mine 
Workers.  New  Republic  Mr  6,  1971  14-16. 

882.  CAUSES  AND  SETTLEMENT  OF  COAL  STRIKE 

Review  of  Reviews  26:  515-527  1902. 

883.  CENTRAL  PENNSYLVANIA  COAL  PRODUCERS'  ASSOCIATION 

Bituminous  coal  mining  lectures.  Altoona,  Pennsylvania, 
1949.  148p. 

Contains  sections  on  labor  relations  and  economics. 

884.  CHAMBERLAIN,  JOHN 

The  special  case  of  John  L.  Lewis.  Fortune  Sept  1943  106- 

9+. 

"His  philosophy  of  expedience  has  immediate  and  long-term 
dangers". 

885.  CHAMBERLAIN,  NEIL  W.  AND  JANE  M.  SCHILLING 

The  impact  of  strikes;  their  social  and  economic  costs.  New 
York:  Harper,  1954.  257p. 

Chapters  4-6  deal  with  coal  strikes,  1939-1950. 

886.  CHAPLIN,  HERMAN  W. 

The  coal  mines  and  the  public.  Boston,  New  York:  J.  B. 
Millet,  1902.  63p. 

"A  popular  statement  of  the  legal  aspects  of  the  coal  problem,  and 
of  the  rights  of  consumers."  Deals  with  the  anthracite  strike  of 
1902. 


98 


887.  CHILDS,  MARQUIS  W. 

Illinois  mine  battle.  New  Republic  72:  121-23  1932. 

888.  CITIZENS  PUBLIC  INQUIRY  INTO  THE  BROOKSIDE  STRIKE 

Proceedings  of  the  citizens  public  inquiry  into  the  Brook- 
side  Strike,  March  11  and  12,  1974,  Harlan  County,  Ken- 
tucky. Evarts,  Ky.,  1974.  300p. 

889.  CLAPP,  THOMAS  C. 

The  bituminous  coal  strike  of  1943.  Dissertation.  Univer- 
sity of  Toledo,  1974.  27 lp. 

890.  CLARK,  J.  M. 

Coal  production  and  the  strike  settlement.  Journal  of  Poli- 
tical Economy  28:  80-84  1920. 

891.  CLARK,  WALTER 

Government  ownership  the  inevitable  if  not  the  immediate 
result  of  the  strike.  American  Law  Review  56:  776-83  1922. 

892.  COAL  AND  KENTUCKY 

Commonweal  30:  129-30  1939. 

A  collection  of  editorial  opinion  on  the  coal  strike  of  1939. 

893.  COAL  MINERS'  COMBINATION 

Scientific  American  20:  377  1869. 

Editorial  against  the  "excessive"  demands  of  the  miners. 

894.  COAL  MINING  CONDITIONS  IN  COLORADO 

Monthly  Labor  Review  26:  1131-36  1928. 

Report  of  the  Industrial  Commission  of  Colorado  concerning  the 
strike  in  the  Colorado  coal  fields  organized  by  the  IWW  in  1927. 

895.  COCHRAN,  JOHN  A. 

Collective  bargaining  in  the  bituminous  coal  industry.  Dis- 
sertation. Harvard  University,  1949. 

896.  COLE,  E.  L. 

Anthracite  coal  strike  situation.  Coal  Age  1:  601-3  1911/12. 

897.  COLEMAN,  JAMES  W. 

Labor  disturbances  in  Pennsylvania,  1850-1880.  Disserta- 
tion. Catholic  University.  1936. 

A  study  of  the  labor  disturbances  in  the  Pennsylvania  coal  regions 
led  by  the  Molly  Maguires.  (Published  without  thesis  notes  as:  The 
Molly  Maguire  riots). 

99 


898.  COLEMAN,  JAMES  W. 

The  Molly  Maguire  riots;  industrial  conflict  in  the  Pennsyl- 
vania coal  region.  Richmond:  Garratt  &  Massie,  1936. 
189p. 

899.  COLEMAN,  MCALISTER 

A  week  in  West  Virginia.  Survey  53:  532-34  1925. 
Account  of  labor  unrest  in  the  southern  West  Virginia  coal  fields. 

900.  COLEMAN,  MCALISTER 

Men  and  coal.  New  York:  Farrar  &  Rinehart,  1943.  350p. 

Deals  largely  with  labor  relations  and  working  conditions  in  the 
coal  industry.  Part  of  the  "Labor  in  Twentieth  Century  America" 


901.  COLLECTIVE  BARGAINING  AND  COLORADO 

Survey  33:  426-30  1915. 

Exchange  of  letters  between  J.  D.  Rockefeller,  Jr.;  W.  L.  M.  King 
and  J.  F.  Welbom. 

902.  COLORADO  INDUSTRIAL  COMMISSION 

The  United  Mine  Workers  of  America,  District  No.  15,  em- 
ployees of  the  Colorado  Fuel  &  Iron  Co.  vs.  the  Colorado 
Fuel  &  Iron  Co.  Findings  and  award.  [Denver.  1917?]  25p. 

903.  COLORADO  MINE  OPERATORS'  ASSOCIATION 

Criminal  record  of  the  Western  Federation  of  Miners, 
Coeur  DAlene  to  Cripple  Creek  1894-1904.  [Denver], 
1904.  32p. 

904.  COLORADO  NATIONAL  GUARD.  COMMANDING  GENERAL 

The  military  occupation  of  the  coal  strike  zone  of  Colorado 
by  the  Colorado  National  Guard,  1913-1914.  Denver: 
Smith-Brooks  Printing  Co.,  1914.  119p. 

905.  COLORADO.  SPECIAL  BOARD  OF  OFFICERS  TO  INQUIRE  INTO  THE 
ARMED  CONFLICT,  APRIL  20,  1914 

Report.  Denver:  Williamson-Hafner  Co.,  1914.  29p. 

906.  COLORADO  STATE  FEDERATION  OF  LABOR 

Militarism  in  Colorado.  Denver,  1914.  16p. 

907.  COLORADO  STRIKE 

Coal  Age  5:  770-77,  809-11,  851-52,  885-86,  891-92,  929-30 
1914. 


100 


908.  COMMITTEE  OF  COAL  MINE  MANAGERS 

Facts  concerning  the  struggle  in  Colorado  for  industrial 
freedom.  Denver,  1914.  72p. 

A  reissue  of  "The  struggle  in  Colorado  for  industrial  freedom"  bul- 
letins 1-15,  June  22  to  Sept.  4,  1914. 

909.  THE  CONNELLSVILLE  SCALE 

Black  Diamond  6:  470-71  1890/91. 

Includes  wage  demands  of  union  and  reply  of  operators. 

910.  COOLIDCE,  WILLIAM  H. 

Brief  in  behalf  of  Island  Creek  Coal  Company.  Boston 
1921.  16p. 

"In  the  matter  of  the  hearing  before  the  Committee  on  Education 
and  Labor  of  the  United  States  Senate  to  investigate  conditions  in 
the  coal  fields  of  West  Virginia  and  the  territory  adjacent  to 
Kentucky." 

911.  CORBIN,  DAVTD 

The  Socialist  and  Labor  Star.  Huntington,  W.  Va.:  Appala- 
chian Movement  Press,  1970.  71p. 

Account  of  a  newspaper  published  in  Huntington,  West  Virginia 
which  supported  the  miners  in  various  disputes  between  1912  and 
1915. 

912.  CORNELL,  ROBERT  J. 

The  Anthracite  coal  strike  of  1902.  Washington:  Catholic 
University  of  America  Press,  1957.  279p. 

Bibliography:  p.  260-270.  The  work  was  submitted  as  a  Ph.D.  dis- 
sertation at  the  Catholic  University. 

913.  CORT,  JOHN  C. 

Lewis  and  the  miners.  Commonweal  38:  118-22  1943. 
The  "miner's  side"  of  the  1943  strike. 

914.  COSTELLO,  E.  J. 

The  shame  that  is  Kentucky's.  Chicago:  General  Defense 
Committee,  1932.  27p. 

The  "war"  in  Harlan  County. 

915.  COSTIGAN,  EDWARD  P. 

Conditions  in  the  coal  mines  of  Colorado.  Washington: 
GPO,  1914.  60p. 

"Brief  for  the  striking  miners." 


101 


916.  COWAN,  PAUL 

Harlan  County,  April  1974.  Village  Voice  My  2,  1974  32- 
36;  My  9,  1974  22-23. 

Account  of   conditions   in   Harlan   County,   Kentucky  with   special 
emphasis  on  the  Brookside  strike. 

917.  CRAWFORD,  CHARLES  B. 

The  mine  war  on  Cabin  Creek  and  Paint  Creek,  West  Vir- 
ginia in  1912-13.  Thesis.  University  of  Kentucky.  1939. 

918.  CREEL,  GEORGE 

High  cost  of  hate.  Everybody's  Magazine  30:  755-70  1914. 
Colorado  coal  strike. 

919.  CULIN,  STEWART 

A  trooper's  narrative  of  service  in  the  anthracite  coal  strike, 
1902.  Philadelphia:  G.  W.  Jacobs,  1903.  91p. 

920.  CUMMINGS,  JOHN 

The  passing  of  the  coal  strike.  Journal  of  Political  Econ- 
omy 11:  55-74  1902. 

921.  DANIEL,  PETE 

The  Tennessee  convict  war.  Tennessee  Historical  Quarter- 
ly 34:  273-92  1975. 

Struggle  during  the  1890's  of  the  coal  miners  of  East  Tennessee 
against  the  use  of  convict  labor  to  mine  coal. 

922.  DAVIS,  FRANKLIN  R. 

Public  reaction  and  the  coal  strike  of  1919.  Thesis  (M.A.), 
East  Tennessee  State  University  1968.  97p. 

923.  DAVIS,  JEROME 

Human  rights  and  coal.  Journal  of  Social  Forces  3:  102-6 
1924. 

Author  finds  little  in  the  way  of  human  rights  for  the  coal  miner  in 
the  West  Virginia  and  southern  coal  fields. 

924.  DAVIS,  W.  T. 

Southern  Colorado  coal  strike.  Outlook  106:  24-26  1914. 

925.  DAVIS,  w.  T. 

Strike  war  in  Colorado.  Outlook  107:  67-73  1914. 


102 


926.  DEIMEL,  ROBERT  W. 

The  public  relations  activity  of  the  United  Mine  Workers 
of  America  between  1946  and  1950.  Thesis.  West  Virginia 
University,  1971.  272p. 

927.  DENNETT,  TYLER 

Walking  delegate.  Outlook  114:  338-41  1916. 

Account  of  problems  and  responsibilities  of  a  union  "trouble  shoot- 
er" in  the  coal  fields. 

928.  DENNISON,  HENRY  S.  AND  OTHERS 

Labor  relations  in  the  anthracite  industry.  Washington, 
1923.  66p. 

929.  DESTLER,  CHESTER 

On  the  eve  of  the  anthracite  coal  strike  arbitration:  Henry 
D.  Lloyd  at  United  Mine  Workers  headquarters  October- 
November  1902.  Labor  History  13:  279  95  1972. 

"The  correspondence  reproduced  here  gives  us  an  insight  into  the 
situation  at  UMW  headquarters  in  Wilkes  Barres  fsicl  as  the  strike 
drew  to  a  close  and  the  arbitration  impended.  The  letters  illumin- 
ate Lloyd's  changing  view  of  Roosevelt  and  the  Commission,  his 
contribution  to  the  miners'  defense,  and  his  relation  to  Mitchell." 

930.  DEWEES,  FRANCIS  P. 

The  Molly  Maguires;  the  origin,  growth  and  character  of 
the  organization.  Philadelphia:  Lippincott,  1877.  380p. 

931.  DEX,  KEITH 

Analysis  of  West  Virginia  work  stoppages.  Morgantown: 
West  Virginia  University,  1971.  84p.  (Institute  for  Labor 
Studies.  Research  Series  5). 

932.  DEX,  KEITH 

Mother  Jones.  Peoples'  Appalachia  Jun/Jul  1970.  6-13. 

933.  DEX,  KEITH 

Union  membership  in  West  Virginia:  a  profile.  Morgan- 
town:  West  Virginia  University,  1970.  28p.  (Institute  for 
Labor  Studies.  Research  Series  4). 

934.  DEX,  KEITH 

Work  stoppages  and  the  grievance  procedure  in  the  Ap- 
palachian coal  industry.  Morgantown:  West  Virginia  Uni- 
versity. Institute  for  Labor  Studies.  1972.  104p. 

Study  focuses  on  the  question  "why  do  coal  miners  resort  to  wildcat 
strikes  rather  than  use  their  grievance  procedure". 

103 


935.  DOS  PASSOS,  JOHN 

Harlan:  working  under  the  gun.  New  Republic  Dec  2, 
1931  62-67. 

Account  of  labor  troubles  in  Harlan  County,  Kentucky. 
935a.  DRAPER,  THEODORE 

Communists  and  miners.  Dissent  19:  371-92  1972. 

History  of  the  generally  unsuccessful  attempt  of  the  Communist 
Party  to  organize  the  miners. 

936.  DRUM,  FRANCIS  J. 

Labor  relations  from  the  standpoint  of  the  union.  Ann. 
Amer.  Acad.  Ill:  120-24  1924. 

937.  DUNBAR,  ANTHONY 

U.M.W.  vs.  Duke  Power:  Picket  lines  in  "Bloody  Harlan." 
Christianity  and  Crisis  Jan.  21,  1974  290-95. 

938.  DURAND,  E.  DANA 

The  anthracite  coal  strike  and  its  settlement.  Political 
Science  Quarterly  18:  385-414  1903. 

939.  EBERLING,  ERNEST  J. 

The  issues  of  the  anthracite  problem.  Current  History  and 
Forum  2A:  247-53  1926. 

Author  feels  that  the  miners  have  been  underpaid  and  provided 
with  poor  and  unsafe  working  conditions. 

940.  EDWARDS,  DEBBIE  AND  OTHERS 

Brookside,  Kentucky.  Mountain  Life  &  Work  Oct.  1973  2-5 
Account  of  strike  for  union  recognition. 

941.  EMMET,  BORIS 

Labor  relations  in  the  Fairmont,  West  Virginia  bituminous 
coal  field.  Washington:  GPO,  1924.  86p.  (Bureau  of  Labor 
Statistics.  Bulletin  361). 

942.  EVANS,  CHRIS 

History  of  United  Mine  Workers  of  America.  Indianapolis 
[1918-1920]  vl  1860-1890,  v2  1890-1900. 

943.  EVERETT,  WOODROW  W. 

A  caterwaul  from  Egypt;  anatomy  of  the  1922  Herrin  Mass- 
acre. New  York:  Vantage  Press,  1970.  105p. 


104 


944.  FEDER,  BERNARD 

The  collective  bargaining  and  the  legislative  policies  of  the 
United  Mine  Workers  of  America.  1933-1947.  Dissertation. 
New  York  University.  1957.  557p. 

945.  FEDERAL   COUNCIL    OF    THE   CHURCH   OF    CHRIST    IN    AMERICA. 
COMMISSION  ON  CHURCH  AND  SOCIAL  SERVICE 

The  coal  controversy  .  .  .  New  York:  The  Council,  1922. 
63p.  (Its  Bulletin  No.  2). 

946.  FEDERAL  COUNCIL  OF  THE  CHURCHES  OF  CHRIST  IN  AMERICA. 
DEFT.  OF  RESEARCH  AND  EDUCATION 

The  coal  strike  in  western  Pennsylvania.  New  York:  The 
Council,  1928.  99p.  (Its  Research  Bulletin  No.  7). 

947.  FEDERATION    OF   MINERS   AND   MINE  LABORERS   OF   WEST   VIR- 
GINIA 

Report  of  convention.  Black  Diamond  Ag  1,  1888  p7. 

948.  FENOLI,  JOHN  R. 

Era  of  conflict  in  southern  Illinois  coal  fields  since  1890. 
Thesis  (M.A.).  Southern  Illinois  University.  1962.  150p. 

949.  FETHERLING,  DALE 

Mother  Jones,  the  miners'  angel;  a  portrait.  Carbondale: 
Southern  Illinois  University  Press,  1974.  263p. 

"This  book^  is  an  attempt  to  chronicle  her  major  actions,  to  sketch 
her  legacy."  Includes  extensive  footnotes  and  bibliography. 

949a.  FILIPPELLI,  RONALD  L. 

Diary  of  a  strike:  George  Medrick  and  the  coal  strike  of 
1927,  in  Western  Pennsylvania.  Pennsylvania  History  43: 
253-66  1976. 

950.  FINK,  WALTER  H. 

The  Ludlow  massacre.  [Denver:  Williamson-Haffner, 
1914]  91p. 

951.  FINLEY,  JOSEPH 

The  corrupt  kingdom;  the  rise  and  fall  of  the  United  Mine 
Workers.  New  York:  Simon  &  Schuster,  1972.  315p. 

952.  FISHER,  WALDO  E. 

Collective  bargaining  in  bituminous  coal.  Personnel  Jour- 
nal 27:  367-76  1949. 


105 


953.  FISHER,  WALDO  E. 

Collective  bargaining  in  the  bituminous  coal  industry;  an 
appraisal.  Philadelphia:  University  of  Pennsylvania  Press, 
1948.  43p, 

954.  FITCH,  JOHN  A. 

Law  and  order;  the  issue  in  Colorado.  Survey  33:  241-58 
1914. 

955.  FITCH,  JOHN  A. 

What  Rockefeller  knew  and  what  he  did.  Survey  34:  461- 
72  1915. 

956.  FONER.  PHILIP  S.  AND  ARCHIE  GREEN 

Coal  creek  rebellion;  East  Tennessee  Miners  vs.  Convict- 
Labor  System.  Huntington,  W.  Va.:  Appalachian  Move- 
ment Press,  1973.  32p. 

957.  FOSTER,  JACK  RICHARD 

Union  on  trial:  the  United  Mine  Workers  of  America,  Dis- 
trict No.  11  of  Indiana,  1930-1940.  Dissertation.  Ball  State 
University,  1967.  225p. 

958.  FOSTER,  WILLIAM  Z. 

The  coal  miners;  their  problems  in  war  and  peace.  New 
York:  New  Century  Publishers,  1945.  24p. 

959.  FOWLER,  CHARLES  B. 

Collective  bargaining  in  the  bituminous  coal  industry.  New 
York:  Prentice  Hall,  1927.  161p. 

960.  FOX,  HARRY  D. 

Thomas  T.  Haggerty  and  the  formative  years  of  the  United 
Mine  Workers  of  America.  Dissertation.  West  Virginia 
University,  1975.  388p. 

Biography  of  one  of  the  most  important  of  the  early  leaders  of  the 
UMW. 

961.  FRANK,  B. 

Miners  unite,  for  one  class  struggle  union.  New  York: 
Workers  Library,  1934.  47p. 

Violent  attack  on  John  L.  Lewis. 
961a.  FRANK,  E.  R. 

John  L.  Lewis  and  Roosevelt's  labor  policy.  Fourth  Inter- 
national 4:  102-6  1943. 


106 


962.  FRANKLIN  D.  ROOSEVELT  AND  JOHN  L.  LEWIS 

Catholic  World  145:  385-9  1937. 

963.  FRIEDMAN,  MORRIS 

The  Pinkerton  labor  spy.  New  York:  Wilshire  Book  Co., 
1907.  229p. 

Deals  largely  with  activities  of  Pinkerton  agents,  especially  in  Col- 
orado ana  Wyoming. 

964.  FULLER,  CAROL  A. 

Analysis  of  fluctuations  in  strike  activity  in  the  bituminous 
coal  industry.  Thesis.  West  Virginia  University,  1973.  61p. 

965.  GAGLIARDO,  DOMENICO 

Labor  legislation  for  Kansas  coal  mines.  Lawrence:  Uni- 
versity of  Kansas,  1936.  49p.  (Kansas  Studies  in  Business 

17). 


966.  GALLAGHER,  MARY  B. 

John  L.  Lewis:  the  oratory  of  pity  and  indignation.  To- 
day's Speech  S  1961  15-16. 

967.  GANNES,  HARRY 

Kentucky  miners  fight.  New  York:  Workers  International 
Relief,  1932.  31p. 

968.  GARTIN,  EDWIN  V. 

West  Virginia  Mine  War  of  1912-1913:  The  progressive 
response.  North  Dakota  Quarterly  41:  12-27  Autumn  1973. 

969.  GAY,  KATHERINE 

Background  of  the  Gallup  riot.  Nation  140:  511-12  1935. 

Account  of  conditions  in  Gallup.  New  Mexico  leading  to  the  murder 
of  a  sheriff  while  evicting  an  unemployed  miner. 

970.  GAY,  KATHERINE 

Fascism  enters  New  Mexico.  Nation  141:  537-38  1935. 
The  Gallup  case. 

971.  GEBHART,  JOHN  G. 

The  economic  impact  of  an  industry-wide  strike:  a  case 
study  of  the  1949-50  coal  strike.  New  York:  1950.  15p. 
(National  Assoc,  of  Manufacturers.  Economic  Policy  Divi- 
sion Series  27 ) . 


107 


972.  GENERAL  POLICIES  COMMITTEE  OF  ANTHRACITE  OPERATORS 

The  anthracite  emergency  of  1922-1923,  and  how  it  was 
handled.  Submitted  to  the  United  States  Coal  Commission 
April  23,  1923.  n.p.,  22p. 

973.  GENERAL  POLICIES  COMMITTEE  OF  ANTHRACITE  OPERATORS 

Need  for  greater  democracy  in  the  union.  Philadelphia, 
1923.  lip. 

974.  GENERAL  POLICIES  COMMITTEE  OF  ANTHRACITE  OPERATORS 

The  union  ultimatum;  the  checkoff  or  no  anthracite.  Phila- 
delphia, 1923.  12p. 

975.  GEORGE,  HENRY 

Tragedy  of  the  great  Pennsylvania  coal  strike.  New  York, 
1902.  24p. 

976.  GEORGE,  JOHN  E. 

The  coal  miners'  strike  of  1897.  Quarterly  Journal  of  Econ- 
omics 12:  186-208  1898. 

977.  GEORGE,  JOHN  E. 

Settlement  in  the  coal  mining  industry.  Quarterly  Journal 
of  Economics  12:  447-60  1898. 

978.  GLASSER,  CARIE 

Union  wage  policy  in  bituminous  coal.  Industrial  &  Labor 
Relations  Review  1:  609-23  1948. 

979.  GLEASON,  ARTHUR 

Company-owned  Americans.  Nation  110:  794-95  1920. 

Life  in  the  southern  West  Virginia  coal  fields  is  controlled  by  the 
companies. 

980.  GLEASON,  ARTHUR 

Private  ownership  of  public  officials.  Nation  110:  724-25 
1920. 

Control  of  public  officials  by  coal  operators  in  the  southern  West 
Virginia  coal  fields. 

981.  CLUCK,  ELSIE 

John  Mitchell,  miner.  New  York:  John  Day,  1929.  270p. 
( Reprinted  by  AMS  Press  in  1971 ) . 

982.  GOMPERS,   SAMUEL 

Core  of  the  miners'  strike.  American  Federationist  27:  57- 
60  1920. 

108 


983.  GOMPERS,  SAMUEL 

President  Gompers  on  labor,  the  courts  and  the  law.  Wash- 
ington: AFL,  1921.  72p. 

"Being  the  testimony  of  Mr.  Gompers  before  the  United  States  Sen- 
ate Committee  on  Manufacturing  in  its  hearings  on  production  and 
profits  in  coal." 

984.  GOMPERS,  SAMUEL 

Strikes  and  the  coal  miners.  Forum  2A:  27-33  1897. 

984a.  GOWASKIE,  JOSEPH  m. 

From  conflict  to  cooperation:  John  Mitchell  and  bitumin- 
ous coal  operators,  1898-1908.  Historian  38:  669-88  1976. 

984b.  GOWASKIE,  JOSEPH  M. 

John  Mitchell:  a  study  in  leadership.  Dissertation.  Catholic- 
University  of  America,  1968.  381p. 

985.  GRAUMAN,  LAWRENCE 

That  little  ugly  running  sore  (Kentucky  coal  fields,  1931- 
32).  Filson  Club  History  Quarterly  36:  340-54  1962. 

"Some  observations  on  the  participation  of  American  writers  in  the 
investigations  of  conditions  in  the  Harlan  and  Bell  County,  Ken- 
tucky, coal  fields  in  1931-32." 

986.  GRAY,  GEORGE 

Arbitration  as  a  factor  in  the  mining  industry.  American 
Mining  Congress.  Proceedings  11  pt.  2:  230-34  1908. 

987.  THE  GREAT  COAL  STRIKE  AND  ITS  LESSONS 

Arena  29:  1-25  1903. 

988.  GREEN,  WILLIAM 

Does  the  U.  S.  want  a  labor  dictator?  Readers  Digest  D 
1937  104-7. 

Attack  on  John  L.  Lewis. 

989.  GREEN,  WILLIAM 

Mr.  Green's  reply  to  the  miners.  American  Federationist 
45:  249-57  1938. 

Letter  to  Thomas  Kennedy.  UMWA  Secretary-Treasurer,  concerning 
the  UMWA's  demand  that  Creen  resign. 

990.  GREENBAUM,  FRED 

A  "new  deal"  for  the  bituminous  coal  miners;  the  United 
Mine  Workers  of  America  and  national  labor  relations 
Policy,  1933-1941.  Thesis.  University  of  Wisconsin.  1953. 

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991.  GREENSLADE,  RUSH  V. 

The  economic  effects  of  collective  bargaining  in  bitumin- 
ous coal  mining.  Dissertation.  University  of  Chicago.  1952. 

992.  GROGAN,  DENNIS  S. 

Unionization  in  Boulder  and  Weld  counties  to  1890.  Col- 
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History  of  the  growth  of  union  in  the  coal  fields,  which  began  about 
1870. 

993.  GRONER,  ISAAC  N. 

John  L.  Lewis;  a  study  in  the  dynamics  of  unionism. 
Thesis.  New  York  University.  1942. 

994.  GROSSMAN,  JONATHAN 

The  coal  strike  of  1902— turning  point  in  U.S.  policy.  Mon- 
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Federal  intervention  in  the  strike  "set  a  precedent  for  the  Federal 
Government  to  intervene  in  labor  disputes,  not  as  strikebreaker  but 
as  a  representative  of  the  public  interest." 

995.  GROSSMAN,  JONATHAN 

The  great  coal  strike  of  1902.  Worklife  Jl  1976  28-32. 

996.  GUNDLACK,  DORIS 

Wages,  employment,  and  unionism  in  the  bituminous  coal 
mining  industry  of  the  United  States  from  1929  to  1933. 
Thesis.  University  of  Illinois.  1934. 

997.  GUTMAN,  HERBERT  G. 

Black  coal  miners  and  the  Greenbank-Labor  party  in  Re- 
deemer Alabama  1878-1879  Labor  History  10:  506-35  1969. 

"These  are  selected  and  edited  letters  written  by  black  and  white 
coal  miners  in  1878  and  1879  to  the  National  Labor  Tribune  in 
Pittsburgh. 

998.  GUTMAN,  HERBERT  G. 

The  Braidwood  Lockout  of  1874.  Illinois  State  Historical 
Society.  Journal  53:  5-28  1960. 

Early  labor  problems  in  the  Illinois  coal  fields. 

999.  GUTMAN,  HERBERT  G. 

The  Buena  Vista  affair.  Pennsylvania  Magazine  of  History 
and  Biography  88:  251-93  1964. 

Account  of  the  first  major  use  of  Italian  laborers  as  strikebreakers 
in  the  bituminous  coal  fields.  Location  of  the  trouble  was  southeast 
of  Pittsburgh. 

110 


1000.  GUTMAN,  HERBERT  G. 

Two  lockouts  in  Pennsylvania,  1873-1874.  Pennsylvania 
Magazine  of  History  and  Biography  83:  307-26  1959. 

Labor  struggles  in  the  Johnstown  and  Tioga  County  areas. 

1001.  GUYER,  JOHN  P. 

Pennsylvania  Cossacks  and  the  state's  police.  Reading: 
People's  Publishing  Co.,  1923.  96p. 

1002.  HAAS,  ERIC 

John  L.  Lewis  exposed.  New  York:  Labor  News  Co.,  1937. 
69p. 

1003.  HACKAMACK,  LAWRENCE  C. 

Cooperation-conflict  in  labor-management  relations;  a 
study  of  contrasting  cases  ( women's  garment  industry  and 
bituminous  coal  industry).  Dissertation.  State  University 
of  Iowa.  1956. 

1004.  HALL,  BETTY  S. 

The  role  of  rhetoric  in  the  northern  West  Virginia  activit- 
ies of  the  United  Mine  Workers,  1897-1927.  Thesis.  West 
Virginia  University.  1955.  279p. 

1004a.  HALL,  BOB 

We  had  a  victory.  Southern  Exposure  4:  118-24  1976. 

Interviews  with  participants  in  the  Brookside  strike. 

1005.  HANFORD,  BEN 

The  labor  war  in  Colorado.  New  York:  Socialist  Coopera- 
tive Publishing  Assoc,  1904.  48p. 

1006.  HAPGOOD,  POWERS 

In  non-union  mines:  the  diary  of  a  coal  digger  in  central 
Pennsylvania,  August-September  1921.  New  York:  Bureau 
of  Industrial  Research,  1922.  48p. 

1007.  HARD,  WILLIAM 

Class  policy  in  coal.  New  Republic  20:  352-55  1919. 

"The  injunction  against  the  miners.  .  .  is  our  historic  declaration  of 
the  class  war  at  home." 

1008.  HARD,  WTLLIAM  AND  PAUL  R.  LEACH 

Labor  in  a  basic  industry,  studies  in  coal  production— ef- 
fects of  the  miner's  environment  upon  his  mode  of  thought. 
Chicago:  Chicago  Daily  News,  1920.  34p. 

Ill 


1009.  HARDMAN,  J.  B.  S. 

John  L.  Lewis,  labor  leader  and  man:  an  interpretation. 
Labor  History  2:  3-29  1961. 

1010.  HARGER,  CHARLES  M. 

Kansas's  volunteer  coal-digging  army.  Outlook  123:  538- 
39  1919. 

Volunteers  dug  coal  after  a  strike  threatened  to  cut  off  the  fuel 
supply. 

1011.  HARRIS,  FRED 

Burning  up  people  to  make  electricity.  Atlantic  Jl  1974  29- 
36. 

Account  of  conditions,  especially  labor  relations,  in  Harlan  County, 
Kentucky. 

1012.  HARRIS,  HERBERT 

Labor  in  America  (the  United  Mine  Workers).  Current 
History  N  1937  75-83;  D  1937  66-74. 


1013.  HARRIS,  SHELDON  H. 

Letters  from  West  Virginia;  management's  version  of  the 
1902  coal  strike.  Labor  History  10:  228-240  1969. 

Letters  to  Abram  S.  Hewitt,  owner  of  West  Virginia  Mines,  from 
his  field  agent,  William  N.  Page,  and  other  related  correspondence. 

1014.  HARRISON,  S.  M.  AND  P.  U.  KELLOG 

Westmoreland  strike.  Survey  25:  345-66  1910. 

Labor  disputes  in  the  coal  fields  of  Westmoreland  County,  Pennsyl- 
vania. 

1015.  HARVEY,  KATHERINE  A. 

The  Knights  of  Labor  in  the  Maryland  coal  fields,  1878- 
1882.  Labor  History  10:  555-83  1969. 

After  a  brief  success,  the  Knights  of  Labor  were  destroyed  as  an  ef- 
fective force  in  Maryland  by  the  strike  of  1882. 

1015a.  HECKER,  DAVID  B. 

Internal  politics  splits  Mine  Workers  convention.  MLR  Jan 
1977  58-61. 

1016.  HENRY,  PATRICIA  A. 

The  attempts  of  John  L.  Lewis  to  stabilize  the  coal  indus- 
try. Thesis.  University  of  Wyoming.  1958. 


112 


1017.  HERLIIIY,  AW 

Work  stoppages,  bituminous  coal  mining  industry.  Wash- 
ington: GPO,  1955.  18p.  (Bureau  of  Labor  Statistics.  BLS 
Report  95). 

1018.  HERLING,  JOHN 

Building  a  militant  mine  union.  World  Tomorrow  16:  162- 
63  1933. 

The  Progressive  Miners  of  America. 

1019.  HERRINGTON,  FRED 

Conditions  in  the  coal  mines  of  Colorado.  Washington: 
GPO,  1914.  81p. 

"Brief  of  the  eoal  mining  operators." 

1020.  HEVENER,  JOHN  W. 

A  new  deal  for  Harlan;  the  Roosevelt  labor  policies  in  a 
Kentucky  coal  field,  1933-1939.  Dissertation.  Ohio  State 
University.  1971.  351p. 

1021.  HICKEN,  VICTOR 

The  Virden  and  Pana  mine  wars  of  1898.  Illinois  State  His- 
torical Society.  Journal  52:  263-78  1959. 

Account  of  some  of  the  clashes  "between  coal  feudalism  and  the 
rising  labor  movement  in  Illinois." 

1022.  HILDEBRAND,  JOHN  K. 

Tlie  disunited  mine  workers.  International  Socialist  Review 
12:  759-61  1911/12. 

Most  of  the  UMWA  members  are  "considerably  worse  off"  than  be- 
fore they  joined. 

1023.  HILL,  JOSEPH   (  PSEUD.  ) 

In  the  wake  of  John  L.  Lewis,  Commonweal  Jl  11,  1969 
430-31. 

Attack  on  the  UMWA  and  its  collusion  with  the  industry. 

1024.  HINDS,  ROY  W. 

The  last  stand  of  the  open  shop.  Coal  Age  18:  1037-40 
1920. 

Account  of  labor  unrest  in  Mingo  County,  West  Virginia  and  Pike 
County,  Kentucky. 

1025.  HINRICHS,  ALBERT  F. 

United  Mine  Workers  of  America  and  the  non-union  coal 
fields.  New  York:  Columbia,  1923.  194p.  (Columbia  Uni- 
versity. Studies  in  Historv,  Economics  and  Public  Law 
246). 

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1026.  HOERR,  J. 

Coal  and  the  mine  workers.  Atlantic  Mr  1974  10-11+. 

Consideration  of  the  impact  of  the  democratization  of  the  UMWA 
on  the  miners  and  on  the  national  economy. 

1027.  HOLBROOK,  STEWART  H. 

The  Rocky  Mountain  revolution.  New  York:   Holt,  1956. 
318p. 

Albert  Horsley  and  the  International  Union  of  Mine,  Mill  &  Smelter 
Workers. 

1028.  HOLLOWAY,  RICHARD  B. 

The  labor  problem  in  the  coal  mining  industry  of  Kansas. 
Thesis.  University  of  Kansas.  1920. 

1029.  HOLMES,  CHARLES 

Colorado  plays  the  red  game.  Technical  World  Magazine 
21:  648-53  1914. 

Account  of  the  violence  surrounding  the  "Ludlow  Massacre." 

1030.  HOLT,  HOMER  A. 

Message  to  the  miners  of  West  Virginia.  Charleston,  1939? 
79p. 

A  general  attack  by  the  Governor  of  West  Virginia  on  the  leader- 
ship of  the  UMWA. 

1031.  HOLWERK,  DAVID 

Dusty  death  in  Kentucky.  Nation  211:  657-9  D  21.  1970 

Despite  the  new  health  and  safety  law,  conditions  in  the  mines 
remain  bad.  In  the  face  of  the  failure  of  the  UMWA  to  lead  the 
miners,  grass-roots  groups  are  organizing. 

1032.  HOTCHKISS.  WILLARD  E. 

Management  leadership  in  industrial  relations.  Ann.  Amer. 
Acad.  Ill:  108-14  1924. 

Management  in  coal 'mining  has  little  interest  and  less  training  in 
industrial  relations. 

1033.  HUDSON,  HARRIET  D. 

The  progressive  Mine  Workers  of  America;  a  study  in  rival 
unionism.  Urbana:  University  of  Illinois,  1952.  152p.  (Bur- 
eau of  Economic  and  Business  Research.  Bulletin  73). 

1034.  HUGHES,  FRANCIS  W. 

Commonwealth  versus  Patrick  Hester,  Patrick  Tully,  and 
Peter  McHugh.  Philadelphia,  1877.  114p. 

Trials  for  murder  asising  from  labor  troubles  in  the  anthracite  fields. 
114 


1035.  HUGHES,  MARY  M. 

United  Mine  Workers  of  America  as  a  social  control. 
Ph.D.  University  of  Pittsburgh.  1937.  150p. 

1036.  HUMBLE  JOHN 

Time  My  15,  1939  18-19. 

John  L.  Lewis  and  the  1939  coal  strike. 

1037.  HUME,  BRIT 

Death  and  the  mines;  rebellion  and  murder  in  the  United 
Mine  Workers.  New  York:  Grossman  Publishers,  1971. 
280p. 

An  expose  of  the  corruption  of  the  leadership  of  the  United  Mine 
Workers  of  America. 

1038.  HUTSON,  ANDREW  C. 

The  coal  miners'  insurrections  of  1891  in  Anderson  Coun- 
ty, Tennessee.  East  Tennessee  Historical  Society.  Publica- 
tion 7:  103-21  1935. 

1039.  HUTSON,  ANDREW  C. 

The  overthrow  of  the  convict  lease  system  in  Tennessee. 
East  Tennessee  Historical  Society.  Publication  8:  82-103 
1936. 

Free  labor  resorted  to  violence  to  force  the  abolition  of  the  "un- 
fair competition"  of  convict  coal  miners. 

1040.  ICKES,  HAROLD  L. 

Crisis  in  coal.  Colliers.  S  4,  1943  17,  56-8. 
The  1943  strike. 

1041.  ILLINOIS  COAL  OPERATORS  ASSOCIATION 

Statement,  brief  and  exhibits  on  behalf  of  the  Coal  Opera- 
tors Association  of  Illinois,  n.p.,  1928.  55p. 

Submitted  to  the  Illinois  Joint  Wage  Commission. 

1042.  ILLINOIS  COAL  OPERATORS  ASSOCIATION 

Union  mine  labor  in  Illinois  and  the  determination  of  wage 
scales  and  working  conditions,  n.p.,  1923.  85p. 

"Submitted  to  the  United  States  Coal  Commission  by  the  Illinois 
coal  operators." 

1043.  ILLINOIS  MINING  QUESTIONS 

Black  Diamond  6:  812,  844-45  1890/91. 

"Reply  of  the  coal  miners  to  the  protest  and  argument  of  the  coal 
operators  of  Illinois  against  adverse  legislation." 

115 


1044.  ILLINOIS,  SPECIAL  COMMISSIONERS  TO  INVESTIGATE  THE  COAL 
MINER'S  STRIKE  AND  LOCK-OUT 

Report.  Springfield,  1889.  30p. 

1045.  INDUSTRIAL  WORKERS  OF  THE  WORLD 

Coal  mine  workers  and  their  industry.  Chicago,  1922. 
108p. 

1046.  INDUSTRIAL  WORKERS  OF  THE  WORLD 

Coal  mines  and  coal  miners.  Chicago,  1922.  109p. 

1047.  INTERNATIONAL  LABOR  LEAGUE 

The  battle  of  Virden,  Illinois.  Chicago.  [1899].  28p. 

1048.  ITES,  ALFRED 

A  presidential  make-believe  and  a  sinister  precedent  con- 
tained in  the  method  of  the  hard  coal  strike  settlement. 
Washington:  Neale  Publishing  Co.,  1904.  38p. 

1049.  ITTER,  WILLIAM  A. 

Early  labor  troubles  in  the  Schuylkill  anthracite  district. 
Pennsylvania  History  1:  28-37  1934. 

Covers  the  period  1825-1860. 

1050.  JENSEN,  BILLIE  BARNES 

Woodrow  Wilson's  intervention  in  the  coal  strike  of  1914. 
Labor  History  15:  63-77  1974. 

Account  of  the  circumstances  surrounding  Wilson's  reluctant  decis- 
ion to  send  troops  to  the  area  around  Ludlow.  Colorado  during  the 
strike. 

1051.  JENSEN,  RICHARD  J. 

Rebellion  in  the  United  Mine  Workers:  the  Miners  for 
Democracy,  1970-1972.  Dissertation.  Indiana  University. 
1972.  183p. 

1052.  JOHN  L.  AND  AFTER 

Fortune  N  1954  73-4. 

Speculations  as  to  the  fate  of  the  UMW  after  the  death  of  Lewis. 

1053.  JOHN  L.  LEWIS,  BUSINESSMAN 

U.  S.  News  Je  29,  1956,  58-60. 

Account  of  the  UMWA's  "huge  business  empire." 


116 


1054.  JOHNSON,  ELIZABETH  S. 

The  coal  miner  and  his  family  in  strike  times  of  1931. 
Labor  &  Industry  N  1931  3-26. 

1055.  JOHNSON,  JAMES  P. 

Theories  of  labor  union  development  and  the  United  Mine 
Workers,  1932-33.  Kentucky  Historical  Society.  Register 
73:  150-70  1975. 

Arthur  considers  the  factors  which  made  it  possible  for  the  UMWA 
to  quadruple  its  membership  in  less  than  a  year. 

1056.  JOINT  CONFERENCE  OF  COAL  OPERATORS  AND  COAL  MINERS 

Proceedings  of  informal  and  formal  conferences.  April  5-6, 
April  12-17,  1917.  n.p.;  1917. 

1057.  JOINT  CONFERENCE  OF  COAL  OPERATORS  AND  COAL  MINERS 

Proceedings  of  joint  conference  of  coal  operators  and  coal 
miners  of  western  Pennsylvania,  Ohio  and  Indiana.  Janu- 
ary 25  to  February  2,  and  March  20  to  29,  1906.  [Joliet, 
111.]  1906.  272p. 

A  stenographic  report  of  the  proceedings. 

1058.  JONES,  DAVID  R. 

The  mining  conflict:  being  an  exposition  of  the  grievances 
of  the  miners.  Pittsburgh:  Thomas,  1880.  74p. 

1059.  JONES,  MARY  H. 

Autobiography  of  Mother  Jones.  Chicago:  C.  H.  Kerr, 
1925.  242p.  (Reprinted  by  Arno,  1969). 

1060.  JONES,  MARY  H. 

Coal  miners  of  the  Old  Dominion.  International  Socialist 
Review  2:  575-78  1901/2. 

1061.  JONES,  MARY  H. 

Thoughts  of  Mother  Jones;  compiled  from  her  writings  and 
speeches.  Edited  by  Jim  Axelrod.  Huntington,  W.  Va.:  Ap- 
palachian Movement  Press,  1973.  12p. 

1062.  JUSTI,  HERMAN 

The  coal  mine  operator  versus  the  public.  Chicago:  Illin- 
ois Coal  Operators  Association,  [1904].  23p. 

Address  with  similar  title  appeared  in  Mines  &  Minerals  25:  195-99 
1904/5. 


117 


1063.  JUSTI,  HERMAN 

Counciliation  and  arbitration  in  the  coal  mining  industry. 
Chicago,  [1902].  40p. 

1064.  KANAREK,  HAROLD  K. 

Disaster  for  hard  coal:  the  anthracite  strike  of  1925-1926. 
Labor  History  15:  44-62  1974. 

"Oil,  gas  and  electricity,  because  of  their  greater  efficiency,  even- 
tually would  have  usurped  the  hard  coal  market.  However,  the 
1925-1926  strike  allowed  the  new  fuels  to  win  by  default." 

1065.  KANAREK,  HAROLD  K. 

The  Pennsylvania  anthracite  strike  of  1922.  Pennsylvania 
Magazine  of  History  and  Biography  99:  207-25  1975. 

Both  operators  and  miners  suffered  much  and  gained  nothing  as  a 
result  of  the  strike.  "The  anthracite  strike  of  1922  was  a  major  step 
in  a  chronicle  of  industrial  failure" 

1066.  KANAREK,  HAROLD  K. 

Progressivism  in  crisis:  the  United  Mine  Workers  and  the 
anthracite  coal  industry  during  the  1920's.  Dissertation. 
University  of  Virginia.  1972.  321p. 

1067.  KANAWHA  LABOR  AGREEMENT 

Coal  Age  6:  188-90  1914. 

Text  of  the  agreement  ending  the  long  strike  in  the  Kanawha  ( West 
Virginia)  field. 

1068.  KARSH,  BERNARD  AND  JACK  LONDON 

The  coal  miners:  a  study  of  union  control.  Quarterly  Jour- 
nal of  Economics  68:  415-36  1954. 

1069.  KEELY,  JOSIAH 

The  psychology  of  strikes  at  coal  mines.  Coal  Age  8:  294- 
96  1915. 

1070.  KEHOE,  JOHN,  DEFENDANT 

Report  of  the  case  of  the  Commonwealth  vs.  John  Kehoe 
et  al,  members  of  the  Ancient  Order  of  Hibernians,  com- 
monly known  as  Molly  Maguires.  Pottsville,  Pennsylvania. 
1876.  262p. 

1071.  KENNEDY,  THOMAS  F. 

Class  war  in  the  coal  fields.  International  Socialist  Review 
11:  141-48  1910/11. 

Account  of  the  Irwin,  Pennsylvania  strike. 

118 


1072.  KENNEDY,  THOMAS  F. 

The  Irwin  coal  strike.  International  Socialist  Review  11: 
99-103  1910/11. 

Strike  was  in  the  Westmoreland  County,  Pennsylvania  coal  fields. 

1073.  KENT,  RAYMOND  P. 

Labor  issues  in  the  captive  bituminous  coal  mines.  Thesis. 
University  of  Pittsburgh.  1934. 

1074.  KILLEEN,  JOHN  F. 

Coal  industry- the  leader.  Social  Order  11:  23-28  1961. 

Author  lauds  the  introduction  of  the  Vocational  Group  concept  into 
the  coal  industry's  labor-management  relationship. 

1075.  KING,  F.  A. 

Check-off  system  and  the  closed  shop  among  the  United 
Mine  Workers.  Quarterly  Journal  of  Economics  25:  730-41 
1911. 

1076.  KING,  LAWRENCE  T. 

Peace  in  the  mines.  Commonweal  65:  506-9  1957. 

1077.  KIRBY,  RICHARD  M. 

The  wage  policy  of  the  United  Mine  Workers  of  America, 
Dissertation.  Harvard.  1943. 

1078.  KIRCHWAY,  FREDA 

Miners'  wives  in  the  coal  strike.  Century  105:  83-90  N 
1922. 

"If  the  miners  are  slaves  of  coal,  the  women  are  slaves  of  slaves." 
Study  made  in  the  West  Virginia  coal  fields. 

1079.  KLOCK,  JOSEPH  J.  AND  DORIS  PALZER 

Democracy  in  the  UMW?.  Labor  Law  Journal  25:  625-31 
1974. 

1080.  KRAFFT,  FRED  A. 

Possibilities  of  an  industrial  relations  program  in  the  coal 
industry.  West  Virginia  Coal  mining  Institute.  Proceedings 
1935  40-57. 

1081.  LABOR  AND  THE  N.  R.  A. 

New  Republic  77:  282  1934. 

The  United  Anthracite  Miners  of  Pennsylvania. 


119 


1082.  LACEY,  JOHN  W. 

Attitudes  of  coal  miners  toward  their  union.  Thesis.  West 
Virginia  University.  1962.  90p. 

1083.  LANE,  JOHN  Q.  AND  S.  W.  PETITT 

Arguments  before  the  investigating  committee  of  the 
Pennsylvania  Legislature,  July  28-31,  1875,  showing  the  il- 
legality and  criminal  conspiracy  of  the  anthracite  mono- 
poly. Philadelphia:  Zeising,  1875.  94p. 

1084.  LANE,  WINTHROP  D. 

Civil  war  in  West  Virginia;  a  story  of  the  industrial  conflict 
in  the  coal  mines.  New  York:  Huebach,  1921.  128p.  (On 
cover:  The  Freeman  Pamphlets). 

1085.  LANE,  WINTHROP  D. 

The  denial  of  civil  liberties  in  the  coal  fields.  New  York. 
1924.  44p. 

1086.  LANE,  WINTHROP  D. 

Labor  spy  in  West  Virginia.  Survey  47:  110-12  1921. 
C.  E.  Lively,  a  Baldwin  Felts  agent,  was  the  spy. 

1087.  LANGDON,  EMMA  F. 

The  Cripple  Creek  strike;  a  history  of  industrial  wars  in 
Colorado,  1903-4-5.  Denver:  Great  Western,  1904-5.  463p. 
( Reprinted  by  Arno,  1969 ) . 

1088.  LANGDON,  EMMA  F. 

Labor's  greatest  conflict.  Denver:  Great  Western,  1908. 
167p. 

1089.  LASLETT,  JOHN  H.  M. 

End  of  an  alliance:  selected  correspondence  between  Soc- 
ialist Party  Secretary  Adolph  Germer  and  UMW  of  A  lead- 
ers in  World  War  One.  Labor  History  12:  570-95  1971. 

1090.  LATEST  PHASE  OF  THE  COAL  TROUBLES 

Nation  12:  254-56  1871. 

Railroads  are  blamed  for  preventing  labor  agreement  in  the 
Pennsylvania  anthracite  fields. 

1091.  LAUCK,  REX  (  EDIT.  ) 

John  L.  Lewis  and  the  International  Union,  United  Mine 
Workers  of  America:  the  story  from  1917  to  1952.  Wash- 
ington: UMWA,  1952.  255p. 


120 


1092.  LEAMER,  LAURENCE 

United  Mine  Workers  holds  an  election.  New  York  Times 
Magazine  N  26,  1972  40-1 +. 

"This  is  a  race  not  only  between  two  men,  two  states,  but  between 
two  views  on  how  workers  in  a  democratic  society  can  govern  them- 
selves." 

1093.  LEE,  HOWARD  B. 

Bloodletting  in  Appalachia.  Morgantown:  West  Virginia 
University  Library,  1969.  216p. 

A  first-hand  account  of  the  Cabin  Creek,  Paint  Creek,  Tug  Valley, 
Logan  and  other  famous  mine  wars  in  West  Virginia,  written  by  a 
former  state  attorney  general. 

1094.  LEEDS,  JOSEPH 

The  miners  called  her  mother.  Masses  &  Mainstream  Mr. 
1950  38-50. 

Account  of  the  life  and  activities  of  Mother  ( Mary  H. )  Jones. 

1095.  LEHIGH  COAL  AND  NAVIGATION  COMPANY 

Answer  of  the  Lehigh  Coal  and  Navigation  Company.  Phil- 
adelphia, [1902].  32p. 

In  reply  to  the  Anthracite  Coal  Strike  Commission. 

1096.  LEISERSON,  WILLIAM  M. 

Labor  conditions  in  the  mines  of  the  Pittsburgh  district. 
Ann.  Amer.  Acad.  33:  316-25  1909. 

1097.  LEWIS,  ARTHUR  H. 

Lament  for  the  Molly  Maguires.  New  York:  Harcourt, 
Brace,  1964.  308p. 

1098.  LEWIS,  ARTHUR  H. 

Murder  by  contract.  New  York:  Macmillan,  1975.  323p. 

Account  of  the  murder  of  Joseph  Yablonski,  the  investigation  and 
the  trial  and  conviction  of  W.  A.  (Tony)  Boyle. 

1099.  LEWIS,  JOHN  L. 

Anthracite  coal  facts.  American  Federationist  32:  1008-16 
1925. 

1100.  LEWIS,  JOHN  L. 

The  anthracite  controversy:  an  address  by  John  L.  Lewis, 
international  president  United  Mine  Workers  of  America 
at  the  Altamont  Hotel,  Hazelton,  Pennsylvania,  August 
25th,  1925.  Washington:  American  Federation  of  Labor. 
1925.  12p. 

121 


1101.  LEWIS,  JOHN  L. 

Guests  at  labor's  table  [speech].  Vital  Speeches  3:  731-3 
1937. 

1102.  LEWIS,  JOHN  L.  AND  J.  B.  WARRINER 

A  half  century  of  successful  labor-management  relations, 
1903-1953.  [Hazelton,  Pennsylvania?] :  Anthracite  Board  of 
Conciliation,  1953.  24p. 

Addresses  ...  at  50th  anniversary  dinner,  Anthracite  Board  of  Con- 
ciliation, Oct  1,  1953. 

1103.  LEWIS,  JOHN  L. 

Jobs,  peace,  unity.  Washington,  1940.  16p.  ( CIO  Publica- 
tion No.  40). 

1104.  LEWIS,  JOHN  L. 

Labor  and  the  National  Recovery  Administration.  Ann. 
Amer.  Acad.  172:  58-63  1934. 

1105.  LEWIS,  JOHN  L. 

The  little  NRA.  American  Labor  Legislation  Review  25: 
133-35  1935. 

Article  supporting  the  Bituminous  Coal  Stabilization  Act. 

1106.  LEWIS,  JOHN  L. 

Miners'  achievement.  American  Federationist  29:  645-46 
1922. 

"The  United  Mine  Workers  have  fought  and  won  the  industrial 
struggle  of  the  age." 

1107.  LEWIS,  JOHN  L. 

The  miners'  fight  for  American  standards.  Indianapolis: 
Bell,  1925.  189p. 

1108.  LEWIS,  JOHN  L. 

Miners'  service  to  all  labor.  American  Federationist  29: 
740-41  1922. 

1109.  LEWIS,  JOHN  L. 

More  machines,  fewer  men,  a  union  that's  happy  about  it. 
U.  S.  News  N  9,  1959  60-64. 

An  interview  with  Lewis  concerning  the  UMWA's  attitude  toward 
automation. 

1110.  LEWIS,  JOHN  L. 

Proposed  NLRA  amendments.  Fortune  Ap  1939  76. 
122 


1111.  LEWIS,  JOHN  L. 

Should  the  Wagner  collective  bargaining  proposal  be 
adopted    Congressional  Digest  14:  119-23  1935. 

1112.  LEWIS,  JOHN  L. 

Testimony  of  John  L.  Lewis  before  the  House  of  Repre- 
sentatives Committee  on  Education  and  Labor,  April  3, 
1947.  .  .  Washington:  Labor's  Non-Partisan  League,  1947. 
128p. 

1113.  LEWIS,  JOHN  L. 

A  union's  non-union  line.  Nation  120:  287  1925. 

An  attack  on  Warren  S.  Stone  and  the  Brotherhood  of  Locomotive 
Engineers  for  refusing  to  employ  union  miners  at  the  Coal  Run 
Collieries,  owned  by  the  Brotherhood. 

1114.  LEWIS,  JOHN  L. 

United  Mine  Workers  demands  [address  Mr.  12,  1946]. 
Reference  Shelf  19  No.  4  180-95  1946. 

The  1946  strike. 

1115.  LEWIS,  JOHN  L. 

United  Mine  Workers  of  America.  American  Federationist 
38:  1211-18  1931. 

1116.  LEWIS,  JOHN  L. 

What  democracy  means  to  me.  Scholastic  My  21,  1938. 
p33. 

1117.  LEWIS,  THOMAS  L. 

Arbitration  as  factor  in  the  mining  industry.  American 
Mining  Congress.  Proceedings  11  pt.  2:  235-38  1908. 

1118.  LEWIS,  THOMAS  L. 

Settlement  of  disputes  among  the  mine  workers.  Ann. 
Amer.  Acad.  36:  333-39  1910. 

1119.  LILIENTHAL,  DAISY  M. 

The  meaning  of  unionism;  a  study  of  the  perspectives  of 
members  of  the  plumber's  union,  of  the  United  Mine 
Workers,  and  of  the  United  Automobile  Workers  of  Amer- 
ica. Thesis.  University  of  Chicago.  1956. 

1120.  LINTON,  RON  M. 

Kentucky's  tragic  strike.  Nation  188:  471-73  1959. 


123 


1121.  LLOYD,  HENRY  D. 

A  strike  of  millionaires  against  miners;  or,  the  story  of 
Spring  Valley.  2nd  ed.  Chicago:  Belford-Clarks,  1890. 
299p. 

Labor  troubles  in  the  Illinois  coal  fields. 

1122.  LOAF,  T. 

Der  Kampf  der  Kohlenarbeiter  in  den  Vereinigten  Staaten 
von  Nordamerika.  Hamburg:  Verlag  der  Kommunistischen 
Internationale,  1922.  68p. 

1123.  LOGAN,  SAMUEL  C. 

A  city's  danger  and  defense;  or  issues  and  results  of  the 
strikes  of  1877.  Scranton,  Pennsylvania,  1877.  355p. 

1123a.  LONG.  PRISCTLLA 

Mother  Jones,  woman  organizer.  Cambridge,  Mass.:  Red 
Sun  Press,  1976.  40p. 

Emphasis  is  on  "her  relations  with  miners'  wives,  working  women, 
and  the  suffrage  movement." 

1124.  LOWITT,  RICHARD  (EDIT.  ) 

Frostburg,  1882:  German  strikers  vs.  German  strikebreak- 
ers. Society  for  the  History  of  Germans  in  Maryland.  Re- 
port 28:  72-79  1953. 

The  dispute  between  the  Knights  of  Labor  and  the  Consolidation 
Coal  Co. 

1125.  LUCY,  ERNEST  W. 

The  Molly  Maguires  of  Pennsylvania,  or  Ireland  in  Amer- 
ica. London:  G.  Bell,  1882.  152p. 

1125a.  LUNDSTROM,  MEG 

Ludlow  revisited.  Mountain  Gazette  47:  20-23  1976. 

1126.  LYNCH,  LAWRENCE  R. 

The  West  Virginia  coal  strike.  Political  Science  Quarterly 
29:  626-63  1914. 

1127.  MC  CABE,  JAMES  D.   (  EDWARD  W.  MORTON,  PSEUD.  ) 

The  history  of  the  great  riots.  Being  a  full  and  authentic 
account  of  the  strikes  and  riots  on  the  various  railroads  of 
the  United  States  and  in  the  mining  regions.  Philadelphia: 
National  Publishing  Co.,  1877.  516p. 


124 


1128.  MC  CARTHY,  JUSTIN 

Brief  history  of  the  United   Mine  Workers  of  America 
Washington:  UMW  Journal,  1956.  18p. 

1129.  MC  CLURG,  DONALD  J. 

The  Colorado  coal  strike  of  1927;  tactical  leadership  of  the 
IWW.  Labor  History  4  68-92  1962/63. 

1130.  MC  CONAGHA,  WILLIAM  A. 

The  history  and  progress  of  the  United  Mine  Workers  of 
America.  Dissertation.  University  of  Illinois.  1925.  153p. 

1131.  MC  CONNELL,  GEORGE  W. 

"We  demand";  anthracite  and  the  high  cost  of  cheap  labor. 
World's  Work  31:  645-51;  32:  85-96  1916. 

1132.  MC  CORMICK,  KYLE 

The  National  Guard  of  West  Virginia  during  the  strike 
period  of  1912-1913.  West  Virginia  History  22:  34-35  1960. 

1133.  MC  CORMICK,  KYLE 

The  New-Kanawha  River  and  the  mine  war  of  West  Vir- 
ginia. Charleston:  Matthews  Printing  Co.,  1959.  176p. 

1134.  MC  DONALD,  DAVID  J.  AND  EDWARD  A.  LYNCH 

Coal  and  unionism;  a  history  of  the  American  coal  miners' 
unions.  Silver  Spring,  Md.,  and  Indianapolis,  Ind.,  Corne- 
lious  Press,  1939.  226p. 

1135.  MC  DO  WELL  RECORDER,  WELCH,  W.  VA. 

Life  and  history  of  'Mother'  Jones,  the  most  sensational 
agitator  of  the  Twentieth  century.  Welch,  1915.  8p. 

Report  published  in  the  McDowell  Recorder  in  December  1912  and 
not.  at  the  time  of  this  reprint,  contradicted  by  Mother  Jones  and 
her  followers.  (According  to  the  foreword).  A  bitter  attack  on 
Jones  and  her  methods. 

1136.  MC  GOLDRICK,  JOSEPH 

College  students  and  Kentucky  miners.  American  Scholar 
1:  363-5,  1932. 

The  expulsion  of  "invading"  students  by  the  authorities  of  east  Ken- 
tucky mining  counties. 

1137.  MC  GOVERN.  GEORGE  S.  AND  LEONARD  F.  GUTTRIDGE 

The  great  coalfield  war.  Boston:  Houghton  Mifflin,  1972. 
383p. 

Account  of  the  Colorado  coal  strike  of  1913/14. 

125 


1138.  MAHANY,  ROWLAND  B. 

The  slaughter  of  unarmed  miners  at  Lattimer,  Pennsyl- 
vania. Washington:  GPO,  1898.  6p. 

1139.  MAILLY,  WILLIAM 

The  anthracite  coal  strike.  International  Socialist  Review 
3:  79-85  1902/3. 

1140.  MARBLE,  SAMUEL  W. 

Justice  and  coal.  Christian  Century  45:  77-79  1928. 

The  Colorado  coal  strike  of  1927-1928.  For  a  sharp  reply  to  the 
above  see  pl49  of  the  same  volume. 

1141.  MARCUS,  IRWIN  M. 

Labor  discontent  in  Tioga  County,  Pennsylvania  1865- 
1905:  the  Gutman  thesis,  a  test  case.  Labor  History  14: 
414-22  1973. 

1142.  MARLEY,  HAROLD  P. 

Cowbells  shall  not  ring  tonight.  Survey  Graphic  2A:  385- 
87  1935. 

Account  of  labor  trouble  in  the  Kentucky  coal  fields.  Men  unpopu- 
lar with  the  miners  were  "belled"  and  driven  from  the  area. 

1143.  MARSHALL,  ELIOT 

Bloody  Harlan  revisited.  New  Republic  Je  8,  1974  14-16. 

Account  of  the  strike  at  the  Brookside  mine  of  the  Eastover  Min- 
ing Co. 

1144.  MARTIN,  JOHN  B. 

What  the  miners  say  about  John  L.  Lewis.  Sat.  Eve.  Post 
Ja  15,  1949  26-7. 

1145.  MARY  EV ANGELA,  SISTER 

Bishop  Spauldings's  work  on  the  Anthracite  Coal  Strike 
Commission.  Catholic  Historical  Review  28:  184-205  1942. 

1146.  MATHEWS,  WILLIAM  G. 

Martial  law  in  West  Virginia,  an  address  .  .  .  Washington: 
GPO,  1913.  21p.  (63rd  Congress,  1st  Session.  Senate  Docu- 
ment 230). 

1147.  MATTHrESSEN,  F.  O. 

New  Mexican  workers'  case.  New  Republic  82:  361-63 
1935. 

The  Gallup,  New  Mexico  affair. 

126 


1148.  MAUER,  M.  AND  C.  F.  SENNTNG 

Billy  Mitchell,  the  Air  Service,  and  the  Mingo  War.  West 
Virginia  History  30:  339-50  1968/69. 

U.  S.  Army  Air  Service  planes  were  used  for  reconnaissance  purpos- 
es in  the  1921  strike  in  the  southern  West  Virginia  coal  fields. 

1149.  MAURER,  CHARLES  E. 

The  bituminous  coal  industry  of  the  central  states.  Ameri- 
ican  Mining  Congress.  Proceedings  25:  93-98  1922. 

Deals  largely  with  labor  relations. 

1150.  MENEFEE,  SELDON  C. 

Why  they  follow  John  L.  Lewis.  Nation  156:  477-9  1943. 
1943  strike. 

1151.  MERRICK,  MARY  A.   (  SISTER  ) 

A  case  in  practical  democracy;  settlement  of  the  anthracite 
coal  strike  of  1902.  Notre  Dame,  Ind.,  1942.  86p.  (Ph.  D. 
Notre  Dame  University). 

1152.  MERRITT,  WALTER  G. 

Coronada  Coal  Company  vs.  United  Mine  Workers;  an  an- 
alysis of  the  decision  of  the  United  States  Supreme  Court. 
New  York:  League  of  Industrial  Rights,  1922.  6p. 

1153.  MERRITT,  WALTER  G. 

Issues  in  the  anthracite  strike  of  1925.  Philadelphia:  Anth- 
racite Operators'  Conference,  1925.  19p. 

1154.  MICHELSON,  M. 

Feudalism  and  civil  war  in  the  United  States.  Everybody's 
Magazine  28:  615-28  1913. 

Description  of  labor  troubles  in  the  coal  fields  of  the  Paint  Creek 
(West  Virginia)  area. 

1155.  MTKEAL,  JUDITH  E. 

Mother  Mary  Jones:  the  labor  movement's  impious  Joan  of 
Arc.  Thesis.  University  of  North  Carolina,  1965.  189p. 

1156.  MILLER,  GLENN  W. 

Recent  struggles  among  the  coal  miners'  organizations  in 
bituminous  fields.  Thesis.  University  of  Illinois.  1935. 

1157.  MILLER,  RICE 

Some  problems  in  labor  relations  in  the  coal  industry  as 
viewed  by  operators.  Ann.  Amer.  Acad.  Ill:  115-19  1924. 

127 


/ 


1158.  MILLER,  STANLEY 

The  United  Mine  Workers,  a  study  of  how  trade  union 
policy  relates  to  technological  change.  Dissertation.  Uni- 
versity of  Wisconsin,  1957.  215p. 

1159.  MILLET,  PHILIPPE 

Trial  in  a  coal  mine.  Outlook  89:  296-301  1908. 
Account  of  an  arbitration  meeting  in  the  Illinois  coal  field. 

1160.  MILLS,  C.  WRIGHT 

Case  for  the  coal  miner.  New  Republic  108:  695-8  1943. 
1943  strike. 

1161.  MILLS,  TED 

Altering  the  social  structure  in  coal  mining.  Monthly  Labor 
Review  Oct  1976  3-10. 

"An  underground  experiment  using  autonomous  work  groups  showed 
increased  production,  motivation  and  safety,  but  increased  discon- 
tent among  other  workers  at  the  mine". 

1162.  miners'  maverick 

Time  Feb.  24,  1975  39-40. 

Report  on  the  new  face  of  the  UMW  Journal  under  Don  Stillman, 
editor. 

1163.  MINERS'  MEETING;  TROUBLES  WITHIN 

Newsweek  F  7,  1938  p32-4. 
Internal  problems  of  UMWA. 

1164.  MINERS'  SHOWDOWN  FOR  INDUSTRIAL   &  UNION  DEMOCRACY 

Peoples  Appalachia  Winter  1972-73. 

Entire  issue  dedicated  to  "Regional  Workers'  Movement,  and  parti- 
cularly the  broader  international  miners'  campaign." 

1165.  MITCHELL,  JOHN 

The  coal  strike.  McClures  20:  219-24  1902/3. 

1166.  MITCHELL,  JOHN 

The  great  coal  strike.  Independent  52:  2613-16  1900. 

1167.  MITCHELL,  JOHN 

Mine  worker's  life  and  aims.  Cosmopolitan  31:  622-30 
1901. 


128 


1168.  MITCHELL,  JOHN 

Organized  labor;  its  problems,  purposes  and  ideals.  Phila- 
delphia: American  Book  and  Bible  House,  1903.  436p. 

1169.  MITCHELL,  JOHN 

Recognition  of  trade  union.  Independent  53:  1895-98  1901. 

1170.  MITCHELL,  JOHN 

The  wage  earner  and  his  problems.  Washington:  P.  S. 
Risdale.  1913.  186p. 

1171.  MORONY,  IVES  GUY 

Attitude  of  coal  miners  toward  union  and  coal  industry. 
Thesis.  West  Virginia  University.  1959.  52p. 

Study  made  in  Northern  West  Virginia. 

1172.  MORROW,  FELIX 

Roosevelt  and  labor  after  the  third  coal  strike.  Fourth  In- 
ternational 4:  202-6  1943. 

1173.  MOSES,  HARRY  M. 

The  facts  about  the  United  Mine  Workers'  false  case  to  ex- 
tract a  royalty  on  coal.  Washington,  1946.  6p. 

1174.  MOUNTAINEERS  FIGHTING  FOR  FREEDOM:   AN  INTERVIEW  WITH 
DON  WEST 

Mountain  Life  and  Work  Jan.  1971.  6-13. 

Describes  the  violence  which  accompanied  efforts  to  unionize  the 
coal  workers  in  the  1930's. 

1175.  MURRAY,  ELLEN  P. 

Why  foreign  miners  are  restless.  Coal  Age  12:  620-21  1917. 

Kind  words  and  personal  interest  are  more  important  than  high 
wages  to  foreign  miners. 

1176.  MURRAY,  PHILIP 

The  case  of  the  anthracite  coal  mine  workers:  open- 
ing statement  and  closing  argument  .  .  .  before  the  U.  S. 
Anthracite  Coal  Commission.  Baltimore:  UMWA,  1920. 
95p. 

1177.  MURRAY,  PHILIP 

The  case  of  the  West  Virginia  coal  mine  workers:  Opening 
statement  .  .  .  Before  the  Committee  on  Education  and  La- 
bor of  the  U.  S.  Senate,  October,  1921.  Washington: 
UMWA,  1921.  74p. 


129 


1178.  MURRAY,  PHELIP 

Unemployment  in  the  coal  industry.  American  Labor  Leg- 
islation Review  12:  37-40  1922. 

1179.  MUSTE,  a.  j. 

The  crisis  in  the  miners'  union.  Labor  Age  Mr  1930  4-8. 

Account  of  the  opposition,  centered  in  Illinois,  to  the  control  of  the 
UMWA  by  John  L.  Lewis. 

1180.  MYERS,  ROBERT  J. 

Experience  of  the  UMWA  Welfare  and  Retirement  Fund. 
Industrial  and  Laboi'  Relations  Review  10:  93-100  1956. 

1181.  MYERS,  ROBERT  J. 

Further  experience  of  the  UMWA  Welfare  and  Retirement 
Fund.  Industrial  and  Labor  Relations  Review  14:  556-62 
1961. 

1182.  MYERSCOUGH,  TOM 

The  name  Lewis— John  L.  Pittsburgh,  n.d.  39p. 

Subtitle  reads:  Czar  of  the  U.M.W.A./Servant  of  the  Big  Coal  In- 
terest/An Example  of  an  A.F.  of  L.  Leader.  Myerscough  was  presi- 
dent of  the  National  Miners  Union. 

1183.  NADAR,  RALPH 

Yablonski's  unfinished  business.  Nation  Ja  26,  1970  70-72. 

Real  improvement  in  the  UMWA  will  come  only  when  the  govern- 
ment helps  rather  than  hinders  reformers. 

1184.  NATIONAL  COAL  ASSOCIATION 

The  Herrin  conspiracy.  Washington,  1922.  38p. 

1185.  NATIONAL  COAL  ASSOCIATION 

Petition  of  coal  operators  located  in  Division  V  of  the  code 
of  fair  competition  for  the  bituminous  coal  industry,  for 
the  restoration  of  the  eight-hour  day  and  the  privilege  of 
working  six  days  per  week  when  work  is  available,  to  the 
National  Recovery  Administration.  Washington,  1934.  9p. 
proc. 

1186.  NATIONAL  COMMITTEE  FOR  THE  DEFENSE  OF  POLITICAL  PRI- 
SONERS 

Harlan  miners  speak;  report  on  terrorism  in  the  Kentucky 
coal  fields.  New  York.  Harcourt,  Brace,  1932.  348p. 

The  famous  report  by  Theodore  Dreiser,  Anna  Rochester,  etc. 


130 


1187.  NATIONAL  SAVE  THE  MINERS  UNION 

Save  the  Miners  Union  from  the  coal  operators  and  the 
corrupt  Lewis  machine.  Pittsburgh,  1928.  15p. 

1188.  NEWCOMB,  HARRY  T. 

Anthracite  Coal  Strike  Commission.  Philadelphia,  1903. 
104p. 

Argument  on  behalf  of  the  Philadelphia  &  Reading  Coal  &  Iron  Co. 

1189.  NEW  OPPONENT  FOR  LEWIS 

Business  Week  My  20,  1950  21. 

Account  of  the  founding  of  the  Bituminous  Coal  Operators  Associa- 
tion. 

1190.  NEW  YORK  (CITY).  COMMITTEE  ON  LABOR  CONDITIONS  AT  THE 
BERWIND-WHITE  COMPANY^  MINES  IN  SOMERSET  AND  OTHER 
COUNTIES,  PENNSYLVANIA 

Statement  of  facts  and  summary.  New  York:  M.  B.  Brown, 
1922.  35p. 

1191.  NICHOLLS,  T.  D. 

Anthracite  Board  of  Conciliation.  Ann.  Am.  Acad.  36:  366- 
72  1910. 

1192.  NORTH,  DAN 

Muzzle  not  the  ox.  Nation  Apr  2,  1973  421-22. 

UMW  under  Arnold  Miller  is  becoming  involved  in  progressive 
causes  such  as  a  recent  Virginia  hospital  strike. 

1193.  NORTHERN  WEST  VIRGINIA  COAL  ASSOCIATION 

Classification  index  of  labor  decisions,  Northern  West  Vir- 
ginia Coal  Association  and  District  No.  31,  United  Mine 
Workers  of  America,  from  October  2,  1933  to  June  1,  1948. 
[Fairmont,  W.  VA.,  1948]  64p. 

1194.  NYDEN,  PAUL  J. 

The  coal  miner's  struggle  in  Eastern  Kentucky.  Mountain 
Life  and  Work  Feb.  1972  4-11. 

1195.  NYDEN,  PAUL 

Coal  miners,  "their"  union  and  capital.  Science  and  Society 
34:  194-223  1970. 

A  Marxist  analysis  of  industry,  the  union,  and  the  lives  of  miners 


A  Marxist  analysis  or  industry,  trie  union,  a 
and  ex-miners  both  above  and  below  ground 


131 


1196.  NYDEN,  PAUL  J. 

Coal  the  killer.  Nation  Sept.  20,  1971  238-42. 

A  portrait  of  dissatisfied  miners,  their  hopes  and  concerns,  with  an 
appeal  to  support  them. 

1196a.  NYDEN,  PAUL  J. 

Miners  for  Democracy:  struggle  in  the  coal  fields.  Dissert- 
ation. Columbia  University,  1974.  998p. 

1197.  NYDEN,  PAUL  J. 

Voting  for  their  lives.  Nation  Feb.  15,  1971  206-10. 
Account  of  election  for  the  presidency  of  UMWA's  District  5. 

1198.  O'BRIEN,  LARRY  D. 

The  Ohio  National  Guard  in  the  coal  strike  of  1932.  Ohio 
History  84:  127-44  1975. 

1199.  O'HANLON,  THOMAS 

Anarchy  threatens  the  kingdom  of  coal.  Fortune  Ja  1971 

78-82. 

Examines  the  opposition  to  the  leadership  of  the  UMWA. 

1200.  OHIO.    GENERAL   ASSEMBLY.    HOCKING    VALLEY    INVESTIGATION 
COMMITTEE 

Proceedings.  Columbus,  1885,  324p. 

Committee  was  established  "to  make  an  investigation  into  and  as- 
certain the  causes  of  the  strike  in  the  Hocking  Valley." 

1201.  OLDER,  CORA   (MRS.  FREMONT ) 

Answering  a  question:  martial  law  in  West  Virginia.  Col- 
liers Ap  19,  1913  26,  28. 

Paint  Creek  strike. 

1202.  OLDER,  CORA  (MRS.  FREMONT ) 

Last  day  of  the  Paint  Creek  court  martial.  Independent 
74:  1085-88  1913. 

Account  of  the  trial  of  Mother  Jones  and  others  during  the  "mine 
war"  in  the  Paint  Creek  (West  Virginia)  area. 

1203.  OLMSTED,  HARRY 

Statement  of  Harry  Olmsted,  chairman  of  the  labor  com- 
mittee of  the  Operators'  Association  of  Williamson  field,  to 
the  Senate  Investigating  Committee,  July  14,  1921.  Wash- 
ington: W.  F.  Roberts  Co..  [1921].  55p. 


132 


1204.  ON    DARK    AND    BLOODY    GROUND;    AN    ORAL    HISTORY    OF    THE 
UMWA  IN  CENTRAL  APPALACHIA  1920-1935. 

Charleston:  Miner's  Voice,  1973.  269p. 

1205.  OPERATORS'  ASSOCIATION  OF  THE  WILLIAMSON  FIELD 

Statement  before  the  Sub-Committee  of  the  Committee  on 
Education  and  Labor  of  the  United  States  Senate,  n.  p., 
1921.  59p. 

The  purpose  of  the  hearing  was  to  "investigate  conditions  in  the 
coal  fields  of  West  Virginia  in  the  territory  adjacent  to  Kentucky." 

1206.  OWENS,  JOHN  W. 

Gunmen  in  West  Virginia.  New  Republic  28:  90-92  1921. 

1207.  PALMER,  FRANK  L. 

Solidarity  in  Colorado.  Nation  126:  118-20  1928. 
Account  of  the  Colorado  coal  strike  of  1927/28. 

1208.  PALMER,  FRANK  L. 

War  in  Colorado.  Nation  125:  623-4  1927. 

1209.  PAPANIKOLAS,  HELEN  Z. 

Unionism,  Communism  and  the  Great  Depression.  Utah 
Historical  Quarterly  41:  254-300  1973. 

Account  of  the  coal  strike  of  1933  in  Carbon  County,  Utah. 

1210.  PARKER,  EDWARD  W. 

The  anthracite  question:  the  operators'  standpoint.  Current 
History  2A:  416-19  1926. 

A  reply  by  the  Secretary  of  the  Anthracite  Operators'  Conference 
to  the  article  by  E.  J.  Eberling. 

1211.  PARKER,  EDWARD  W. 

Conciliation  in  the  anthracite  region.  American  Mining 
Congress.  Proceeding  22:  309-16  1919. 

Strike  of  1919. 

1212.  PARKER,  U.  S. 

Collective  bargaining  in  the  soft  coal  industry.  Journal  of 
Political  Economy  12:  546-54  1904. 

1213.  PARSONS,  FLOYD  W. 

Employment  of  women  in  mining.  Coal  Age  13:  859  1918. 

Author  deplores  successful  efforts  to  prevent  women  from  being 
employed  above  ground  in  the  Pennsylvania  anthracite  fields. 

133 


1214.  PATTERSON,  JOSEPH  F. 

Old  W.  B.  A.  days.  Schuylkill  County  Historical  Society. 
Publiciatiom  2:  355-84  1909. 

The  Workingmen's  Benevolent  Association.  An  interesting  account  of 
labor  relations  in  the  Pennsylvania  anthracite  fields. 

1215.  PEARSE,  BEN 

What  has  John  L.  Lewis  done  with  his  $400,000,000?  Sat. 
Eve.  Post  Ag  30,  1952  26-7. 

The  Welfare  and  the  Retirement  Fund. 

1216.  PENNSYLVANIA.    COMMISSION    ON    SPECIAL    POLICING    IN    IN- 
DUSTRY 

Report  to  Governor  Gifford  Pinchot.  Harrisburg,  1934. 
31p.  ( Dept.  of  Labor  &  Industry.  Special  Bulletin  38 ) . 

Deals  largely  with  mine  police. 

1217.  PENNSYLVANIA.  GENERAL  ASSEMBLY.  SENATE 

Report  ...  in  relation  to  the  Anthracite  coal  difficulties, 
with  accompanying  testimony.  Harrisburg:  B.  Singerly, 
1871. 

1218.  PERRY,  VERNON  F. 

The  labor  struggle  at  Wilder,  Tennessee.  Thesis.  Vander- 
bilt  University.  1934. 

1219.  PETRAS,  GEORGE  S. 

Wage  policies  of  the  United  Mine  Workers  of  America. 
Thesis.  New  York  University.  1947. 

1220.  PHILLIPS,  CABELL 

The  West  Virginia  Mine  War.  American  Heritage  Ag  1974 
58-61. 

Account  of  the  labor  troubles  in  the  southern  West  Virginia  coal 
fields  during  1921. 

1221.  PHOEBUS,  J.  W. 

Have  coal  operators  any  rights.  Black  Diamond  6:  764-65 
1890/91. 

1222.  PINKERTON,  ALLAN 

The  Molly  Maguires  and  the  detectives.  New  and  enl.  ed. 
New  York:  G.  W.  Dillingham,  1905.  552p. 


134 


1223.  PENKOWSKI,  EDWARD 

John  Siney,  the  miner's  martyr.  Philadelphia:  Sunshine 
Press,  1963.  335p. 

Pp.  259-322  bibliographical  essay  and  notes. 

1224.  PINKOWSKI,  EDWARD 

Lattimer  massacre.  Philadelphia:  Sunshine  Press,  1950. 
40p. 

The  killing  of  striking  coal  miners  by  sheriff's  deputies.  Luzerne 
County,  Pennsylvania,  1897. 

1225.  POLLAK,  KATHERINE  H. 

What  a  union  did  for  the  coal  miners.  Katonah,  New 
York:  Brookwood  Labor  College  1931.  32p. 

"A  picture  of  life  in  the  coal  fields  35  years  ago  and  of  the  change* 
brought  through  a  union  in  such  a  state  as  Illinois." 

1226.  POLLARD,  SPENCER  D. 

Some  aspects  of  the  problem  of  democracy  in  its  applica- 
tion to  the  government  of  labor  unions,  with  special  refer- 
ence to  the  United  Mine  Workers  of  America  and  the 
United  Automobile  Workers.  Dissertation.  Harvard  1940. 

1227.  PORTER,  EUGENE  O. 

The  Colorado  coal  strike  of  1913— an  interpretation.  His- 
torian 12:  3-27  1949. 

1228.  POSEY,  THOMAS  E. 

The  labor  movement  in  West  Virginia.  Dissertation.  Uni- 
versity of  Wisconsin.  1948.  310p. 

1229.  POWELL,  ALLEN  K. 

The  "foreign  element"  and  the  1903-4  Carbon  County  coal 
miners'  strike.  Utah  Historical  Quarterly  43:  125-54  1975. 

The  Utah  Fuel  Co.  played  on  antiforeign  sentiments  to  help  defeat 
the  miners. 

1230.  PRIMACK,  PHIL 

Miners  for  democracy:  closing  in  on  Tony  Boyle.  Nation 
Je  19,  1972  786-89. 

1231.  PR1TCHARD,  PAUL  W. 

William  B.  Wilson,  master  workman.  Pennsylvania  His- 
tory 12:  81-108  1945. 

Account  of  Wilson's  early  career  as  a  miner  and  union  organizer  in 
Pennsylvania. 

135 


1232.  PRITCHARD,  PAUL  W. 

William  B.  Wilson;  the  evolution  of  a  central  Pennsylvania 
mine  union  leader.  Dissertation.  University  of  Pennsyl- 
vania. 1942. 

1233.  PURCELL,  WILLIAM  J. 

Study  of  the  methods  of  decision  used  by  arbitrators  in 
fifty  cases  involving  the  United  Mine  Workers  of  America. 
Thesis.  University  of  Illinois.  1950. 

1234.  RANDALL,  JAMES  G. 

Miners  and  the  law  of  treason.  North  American  Review 
216:  312-22  1922. 

The  West  Virginia  "treason  trial." 

1235.  RASKIN,  A.  H. 

John  L.  Lewis  and  the  mine  workers.  Atlantic  My  1963 
53-58. 

The  UMWA's  efforts  to  increase  the  efficiency  of  the  coal  industry 
have  without  question  helped  the  industry  survive.  However,  this  is 
little  comfort  to  thousands  of  unemployed  miners,  many  of  whom 
"fight  off  the  union  they  once  fought  to  build." 

1236.  RASMUSSEN,  JEANNE  M. 

The  miners:  what  happens  now?  Mountain  Life  and  Work 
Feb  1970  3-7+. 

The  author,  who  was  West  Virginia  press  representative  for 
Yablonski,  summarizes  the  campaign  for  the  presidency  of  the 
UMW  and  action  taken  following  the  Yablonski  murders. 

1237.  RASMUSSEN,  JEANNE  M. 

Revolt  in  the  ranks,  Yablonski  challenges  Boyle.  Appala- 
chian Lookout  Oct  1969  5-8. 

A  pro- Yablonski  view  of  the  campaign  waged  for  leadership  of  the 
United   Mine  Workers  of  America  presidency. 

1238.  RAUSHENBUSH,  HILMAR 

The  people's  fight  for  coal  and  power.  New  York:  League 
for  Industrial  Democracy,  1926.  36p.  (League  publication 

13). 

1239.  RAUSHENBUSH,  STEPHEN 

Coal  without  strikes.  Harper  194:  492-99  1947. 
Long-term  labor  contracts  are  among  the  suggested  reforms. 

1240.  READ,  THOMAS  L. 

Is  the  coal  crisis  permanent.  Sat.  Eve.  Post  S  25,  1943  22, 
109-10. 

136 


1241.  RENEWAL  OF  APPALACHIAN  AGREEMENT  IN  BITUMINOUS  GOAL 
INDUSTRY 

MLR  41:  1576-80  1935. 

1242.  REPORT    OF    PRESIDENTS    COMMITTEE    ON    PORTAL-TO-PORTAL 
TRAVEL  TIME  IN  BITUMINOUS  COAL  MINING 

MLR  59:  81-3  1944. 

1243.  REYNOLDS,  ROBERT  J. 

Coal  kings  come  to  judgment.  American  Heritage  Ap  1960 
54-61. 

"When  the  anthracite  miners  downed  tools  in  1902,  economic  feud- 
alism went  on  trial." 

1244.  REYNOLDS,  SIM  C. 

Carpet  bagging:  its  effects  on  mining.  Coal  Age  2:  387 
1912. 

Deplores  the  "aimless  drift  from  employer  to  employer"  on  the  part 
of  many  miners. 

1245.  RHODES,  JAMES  F. 

Molly  Maguires  in  the  anthracite  region  of  Pennsylvania. 
American  Historical  Review  15:  547-61  1910. 

1246.  RICE,  MILLARD  M. 

Bloody  Monday  again  in  Colorado.  Independent  119:  655- 
6  1927. 

Brief  review  of  the  history  of  labor  violence  in  the  coal  fields  of 
Colorado. 

1247.  RIDGEWAY,  JAMES 

Politics  mine-worker  style,  New  Republic  Nov.  4,  1972 
15-18. 

Description  of  1972  UMWA  election  campaign. 

1248.  RIMLINGER,  GASTON 

International  differences  in  the  strike  propensity  of  coal 
miners.  Industrial  &  Labor  Relations  Review  12:  389-405 
1959. 

Study  of  the  frequency  of  strikes  in  France,  Germany,  Great  Bri- 
tain and  the  United  States. 

1249.  RINGER,  STRAWDER  A. 

History  of  the  United  Mine  Workers  of  America.  Thesis. 
University  of  Pittsburgh,  1929. 


137 


1250.  ROBERTS,  PETER 

The  anthracite  coal  strike  in  its  social  aspects.  Economic 
Journal  13:  20-29  1903. 

1251.  ROBINSON,  NEIL 

West  Virginia  on  the  brink  of  a  labor  struggle.  Charleston: 
West  Virginia  Mining  Association.  1912.  7p. 

1252.  ROCHESTER,  ANNA 

Labor  and  coal.  New  York:  International,  1931.  225p. 

1253.  ROCKEFELLER,  JOHN  D. 

The  Colorado  industrial  plan.  New  York,  1916.  94p. 

Includes  a  copy  of  the  plan  of  representation  and  agreement  adopt- 
ed at  the  coal  and  iron  mines  of  the  Colorado  Fuel  and  Iron  Com- 
pany. 

1254.  ROOD,  HENRY  E. 

The  public  and  the  coal  conflict.  North  American  Review 
181:  603-15  1905. 

Author  objects  to  the  UMWA's  lack  of  concern  for  the  public  in- 
terest. 

1255.  ROOSEVELT,  FRANKLIN  D. 

Production  of  coal  will  not  be  stopped  [radio  address]. 
Vital  Speeches  9:  450-52  1943. 

1943  strike. 

1256.  ROTHMAN,  RICHARD  M. 

On  the  speaking  of  John  L.  Lewis.  Central  States  Speech 
Journal  14:  177-85  1963. 

1257.  ROUSE,  ELAINE 

Union  economic  policies  and  union  discipline  in  the  bitu- 
minous wage  dispute  of  1949-1950.  Thesis.  West  Virginia 
University,  1953.  214p. 

1258.  ROY,  ANDREW 

The  origin  and  results  of  miners'  unions.  Ohio  Mining 
Journal  2:  113-20  1883/84. 

1259.  ST.  CLAIR  COAL  COMPANY 

Answer  of  the  St.  Clair  Coal  Company  before  the  Anthra- 
cite Coal  Strike  Commission.  Scranton,  Pennsylvania,  1902. 
42p. 


138 


1260.     SALIERS,  EARL  A. 

The  coal  miner;  a  study  of  his  struggle  to  secure  regulated 
wages  in  the  Hocking  Valley.  Bethlehem,  Pennsylvania, 
1912.  65p. 


1261.  SAUER,  NORA 

Some  attitudes  of  the  United  Mine  Workers  of  America 
on  international  affairs  affecting  its  membership.  Thesis. 
University  of  Illinois.  1944. 

1262.  SAXON,  GEORGE 

From  the  miners'  point  of  view.  Modern  Review  1:  409-21 
1947. 

"The  revolt  of  the  miner  is  the  revolt  against  the  atomization  of  the 
individual  in  production." 


1263.  SCHLEGEL,  MARVIN  W. 

The  Workingmen's  Benevolent  Association:  first  union  of 
anthracite  miners.  Pennsylvania  History  10:  243-67  1943. 

1264.  SCOTT,  GEORGE  H. 

A  study  of  the  United  Mine  Workers  of  America  Welfare 
and  Retirement  Fund.  Thesis.  West  Virginia  University, 
1951.  145p. 

1265.  SCOTT,  KARL  M. 

The  coal  industry  and  the  coal  miners'  unions  in  the  Unit- 
ed States  since  the  World  War.  Dissertation.  University  of 
Illinois,  1931.  y 

1266.  SCOTT,  NELL 

Social  workers  and  labor  unions.  National  Conference  of 
Social  Work.  Proceedings  56:  354-64  1928. 

Family  case  work  among  members  of  the  United  Mine  Workers  dur- 
ing the  strike  of  1927-28. 


1267.     SEEGER,  PETE 

Coal  Creek  rebellion.  Sing  Out  Summer  1955  19-21. 

Includes  score  of  song  written  about  the  use  of  convict  labor  in  the 
Tennessee  mines,  ca  1890. 


139 


1268.  SELEKMAN,  BENJAMIN  M.,  AND  MARY  VAN  KLEECK 

Employes'  representation  in  coal  mines.  New  York:  Rus- 
sell Sage  Foundation.  1924.  454p. 

A  study  of  the  representation  plan  of  the  Colorado  Fuel  and  Iron  Co. 

1269.  SELEKMAN,  BENJAMIN  M. 

Miners  and  murder;  what  lies  back  of  the  labor  feud  in  an- 
thracite. Survey  60:  150-55  1928. 

1270.  SELTZER,  CURTIS 

The  unions-how  much  can  a  good  man  do.  Washington 
Monthly  Je  1974  7-24. 

A  sympathetic  account  of  the  progress  being  made  by  the  reform 
leaders  of  the  UMWA. 

1271.  SELVIN  DAVID  F. 

The  thundering  voice  of  John  L.  Lewis.  New  York:  Loth- 
rop,  Lee  &  Shepard,  1969.  224p. 

Intended  for  young  readers. 

1272.  SETTLEMENT  OF  THE  CLEARFIELD  STRIKE 

Black  Diamond  6:  183-184A  1890/91. 

Includes  exchange  of  correspondence  between  the  union  and  offi- 
cials of  the  Cresson  &  Clearfield  Coal  &  Coke  Company,  Pennsyl- 


1273.  SHALLOO,  JEREMIAH  P. 

Private  police,  with  special  reference  to  Pennsylvania. 
Philadelphia:  American  Academy  of  Political  and  Social 
Sciences.  1933.  224p.  (Monograph  No.  1  of  the  Aca- 
demy ) . 

1274.  SHANE,  MICHAEL 

Why  coal  miners  strike.  Common  Sense  12:  243-46  1943. 
"They  suffer  from  the  industry's  poverty  and  slothfulness". 

1275.  SHERRILL,  ROBERT 

Black  lung  rebellion.  Nation  Ap  28,  1969  529-35. 

Account  of  the  efforts,  opposed  by  UMWA  leadership,  of  West  Vir- 
ginia miners  to  obtain  compensation  for  black  lung. 

1276.  SHIELDS,  ART 

The  miners  did  it.  Political  Affairs  Apr  1974  3-16. 
"Progressive"  elements  have  at  last  won  control  of  UMWA. 


140 


1277.  SINCLAIR,  HAMISH 

Hazard,  Kv.:  Document  of  the  struggle.  Radical  America 
Jan/Feb  1968  1-24. 

Author  presents  a  critical  appraisal  of  the  efforts  <>!  radical  students 
to  aid  in  the  organization  of  unemployed  and  striking  miners  around 

Hazard,  ky.  in  the  early  sixties. 

1278.  SINCLAIR,  WARD  E. 

Building  a  hillbillies'  union:  The  UMW.  Race  Relations 
Reporter  Mar  1974  14-16. 

Suggests  that  "an  Appalachian  poor  people's  renaissance"  was  start- 
ed by  the  political  victories  of  the  Black  Lung  Association  and  by 
the  election  of  the  miners  for  democracy  slate  in  the  UMW 

1279.  SINCLAIR,  WARD  E. 

Miners  for  democracy:  year  one  at  the  UMW.  Ramparts  \e 
1974  37-41. 

1280.  SLXTY-TWO  YEARS  OF  UMW 

Business  Week  Je  7,  1952  132-38. 

1281.  SLZER,  SAMUEL  A. 

This  is  union  man's  country:  Sebastian  County  1914.  Ark- 
ansas Historical  Quarterly  27:  306-39  1968. 

Account  of  a  bitter  labor  dispute  in  the  Arkansas  coal  fields. 

1282.  SLOCUM,  WILLIAM  J. 

Love  comes  to  the  soft  coal  fields.  Nation's  Business.  Jl 
1950  27-8. 

The  threat  of  oil  has  brought  and  will  enforce  "love"  between  min- 
er and  operator. 

1283.  SMITH,  FRANK  G. 

Handling  labour  grievances  in  the  bituminous  coal  indus- 
try. Harvard  Business  Review  19:  352-63  1941. 

1284.  SMITH,  GEORGE  O. 

Human  relations  in  the  coal  industry'.  National  Conference 
of  Social  Work.  Proceedings  1922:  287-99. 

1285.  SOMERS,  GERALD  G. 

Grievance  settlement  in  coal  mining.  Morgantown:  Wesl 
Virginia  University,  1956.  44p.  (West  Virginia  University 
Business  and  Economic  Studies  4:  4). 


141 


1286.  SOUTHERN  APPALACHIAN  COAL  OPERATORS'  ASSOCIATION 

Statement  to  the  United  States  Coal  Commission,  n.p., 
1923.  26p. 

1287.  SOUTHERN  EXPOSURE 

East  Tennessee  coal  mining  battles.  Southern  Exposure 
Winter  1974  112-59. 

1288.  SPERO,  STERLING  D.  AND  JACOB  ARONOFF 

War  in  the  Kentucky  mountains.  American  Mercury  25: 
226-33  1932. 

1289.  SPERRY.  J.  R. 

Rebellion  within  the  ranks:  Pennsylvania  anthracite,  John 
L.  Lewis,  and  the  coal  strike  of  1943.  Pennsylvania  History 
40:  298-312  1973. 

Lewis  "turned  a  rebellion,  which  was  in  fact  directed  against  his 
leadership,  into  a  crusade  for  a  $2  a  day  wage  increase". 

1289a.  SPRAGUE,  STUART  S. 

Unionization  struggles  on  Paint  and  Cabin  creeks,  1912- 
1913.  West  Virginia  History  38:  185-213  1977. 

A  chapter  in  the  story  of  the  "mine  wars"  in  southern  West  Virginia. 

1290.  STANG,  ALAN 

King  coal,  the  Communists  behind  the  crunch.  American 
Opinion  D  1974  11-13+. 

"In  other  words,  Miners  for  Democracy  stood  ready  to  do  whatever 
it  could  to  help  the  Communists.  And  ever  since  it  has  worked  both 
ways." 

1291.  STANLEY,  LOUIS 

Miners'  rebellion.  Nation  130:  356-57  1930. 

A  highly  partisan  account  of  the  Springfield  Convention  of  the 
UMWA. 

1292.  STEEL,  EDWARD  M. 

Mother  Jones  in  the  Fairmont  field  1902.  Journal  of  Ameri- 
can History  57:  290-307  1970. 

An  account  of  the  unsuccessful  attempt  of  the  UMWA  to  organize 
the  miners  of  West  Virginia  in  1902,  and  the  crucial  role  played  by 
Mother  Jones. 

1293.  STEFFENS,  LINCOLN 

John  Mitchell  and  what  he  stands  for.  McClures  19:  355- 
57  1902. 


142 


1294.  STEIN',  LEON  AND  PHILIP  TAFT 

Massacre  at  Ludlow:  four  reports.  New  York:  Amo   1971 
NP. 

Reprint  of  four  contemporary  publications. 

1295.  STEVENSON,  GLORIA 

That's  no  lady,  that's  Mother  Jones.  Worklife  July  1976  24- 
28. 

A  brief  account  of  her  life. 

1296.  STILLMAN,  DON 

The  U.M.W.  historic  breakthrough  for  union  democracy. 
New  Politics  10  (2)  9-13  1973. 

1297.  STOCKING,  GEORGE  W. 

Labor  problems  in  the  American  bituminous  coal  industry. 
Economic  Journal  37:  213-25  1927. 

1298.  STODDARD,  C.  E. 

Bituminous  coal  strike.  MLR  9:  1725-42  1919. 

A  general  history  of  the  1919  strike.   Pertinent  documents  are  re- 
produced. 

1299.  STRAW,  RICHARD  A. 

The  United  Mine  Workers  of  America  and  the  1920  coal 
strike  in  Alabama.  Alabama  Review  28:  104-28  1975. 

The  strike  was  a  failure  and  the  UMWA  was  destroyed  as  an  ef- 
fective organization  in  the  state. 

1300.  STRIKE  IN  THE  ANTHRACITE  REGION 

Colliery  Engineer  8:  45-46  1887. 

Includes  a  copy  of  the  wage  demands  of  miners. 

1301.  STRIKE  IN  WEST  VIRGINIA 

Coal  &  Coke  Jl  15,  1902  12-13;  Ag  15,  1902  12-13;  S  15, 
1902  12-13. 

1302.  STRIKES  IN  THE  HISTORY  OF  COAL  MINING  IN  PENNSYLVAN1  \ 

Coal  1:  237-38,  247-48,  255,  263-65  1882. 

1303.  SUFFERN,  ARTHUR  E. 

Coal  miners'  struggle  for  industrial  status.  New  York:  Mac- 
millan.  1926.  462p. 


143 


1304.     SUFFERN,  ARTHUR  E. 

Conciliation  and  arbitration  in  the  coal  industry  of  Amer- 
ica. Boston:  Houghton  Mifflin,  1915.  376p. 

1306.     SUGGS,  G.  G. 

Colorado  coal  mine  strike,  1903-1904:  a  prelude  to  Lud- 
low? Journal  of  the  West  12:  36-52  1973. 

"More  than  any  other  factor,  the  intransigence  of  the  southern  op- 
erators sabotaged  the  slim  chance  for  industrial  peace  in  Colorado's 
southern  fields." 

1306.  SULZBERGER,  C.  L. 

Sit  down  with  John  L.  Lewis.  New  York:  Random  House, 

1938.  163p. 

1307.  SWAIN,  GEORGE  T. 

Facts  about  the  two  armed  marches  on  Logan.  Charleston: 
Ace  Enterprises,  1962.  44p. 

1308.  SYDENSTRICKER,  EDGAR 

Collective  bargaining  in  the  anthracite  coal  industry. 
Washington:  GPO,  1916.  171p.  (Bureau  of  Labor  Statis- 
tics. Bulletin  191). 

1309.  SYDENSTRICKER,  EDGAR 

Settlement  of  disputes  under  agreements  in  the  anthracite 
industry.  Journal  of  Political  Economy  24:  254-83  1916. 

1310.  TAYLOR,  PAUL  F. 

Coal  and  conflict:  the  UMWA  in  Harlan  County,  1931- 

1939.  Dissertation.  University  of  Kentucky.  1969.  349p. 

1311.  TAYLOR,  PAUL  F. 

The  Coal  Mine  War  in  Harlan  County,  Kentucky,  1931-32. 
Thesis.  University  of  Kentucky.  1955. 

1312.  TAYLOR,  PAUL  F. 

London:  focal  point  of  Kentucky  turbulence.  Filson  Club 
Historical  Quarterly  49:  256-65  1975. 

Many  of  the  court  trials  growing  out  of  the  labor  troubles  in  Har- 
lan County  in  the  1930s  were  held  at  London. 

1313.  THOMPSON,  CRAIG 

Reign  of  terror  at  Widen,  West  Virginia.  Saturday  Even- 
ing Post  F20,  1954  17-19. 


144 


1314.  TIPPETT,  THOMAS 

Miners  fight  their  leaders.  American  Mercury  32:  129-37 
1934. 

A  bitter  attack  on  John  L.  Lewis. 

1315.  TITLER,  GEORGE  J. 

Hell  in  Harlan.  Beckley,  W.  Va.:  BJW  Printers,  1972. 
236p. 

Account  of  attempts  by  the  UMWA  to  organize  the  Harlan  County 
coal  fields.  Titler  played  a  leading  role  in  this  effort. 

1316.  TOOIIEY,  PAT 

N.R.A.,  martial  law,  "insurrection";  the  miners  strike  in 
New  Mexico.  New  York:  Workers  Library,  1934.  62p. 

1317.  TRAIL,  WILLIAM  R. 

History  of  the  United  Mine  Workers  in  West  Virginia, 
1920-1945.  Thesis.  New  York  University.  1950.  71p. 

1218.     TRESTER,  DELMER  J. 

Unionism  among  Ohio  miners  in  the  19th  Century.  Thesis. 
Ohio  State  University,  1947. 

1319.  TROUBLE  IN  THE  COAL  MINES,  1889 

Documents  of  an  incident  at  Newcastle,  W.  T.  Pacific 
Northwest  Quarterly  37:  231-57  1946. 

1320.  TRYON,  F.  G. 

The  effect  of  competitive  conditions  on  labor  relations  in 
coal  mining.  Ann.  Amer.  Acad.  Ill:  82-95  1924. 

1321.  UMWA  ON  STRIKE,  BROOKSIDE  HARLAN  COUNTY 

Journal  of  Social  Issues  Spring  1974  3-65. 

Entire  issue  is  devoted  to  the  strike  and  related  matters. 

1322.  UNITED  MINE  WORKERS  OF  AMERICA 

Attempt  by  communists  to  seize  the  American  labor  move- 
ment. Prepared  by  the  United  Mine  Workers  of  America 
and  published  in  newspapers  of  the  United  States.  Wash- 
ington: GPO,  1924.  43p.  (68th  Congress,  1st  Session.  Sen- 
ate Document  14). 

1323.  UNITED  MINE  WORKERS  OF  AMERICA 

The  case  of  the  bituminius  coal  mine  workers,  as  present- 
ed by  the  United  Mine  Workers  of  America  to  the  Presi- 
dent's Coal  Commission,  appointed  December,  1919. 
Washington:  1920.  78p. 

145 


1324.  UNITED  MINE  WORKERS  OF  AMERICA 

John  L.  Lewis  and  the  international  union,  United  Mine 
Workers  of  America;  the  story  from  1917  to  1952.  Washing- 
ton, 1952.  255p. 

1325.  UNITED  MINE  WORKERS  OF  AMERICA 

Minutes  of  special  convention  to  consider  the  anthracite 
Strike,  July  17,  18  and  19,  1902.  Indianapolis:  Hollenbeck 
Press,  1902.  55p. 

1326.  UNITED  MINE  WORKERS  OF  AMERICA 

Official  records— containing  correspondence  between  the 
president's  office  and  Warren  S.  Stone.  Indianapolis,  1924. 
30p. 

Stone  was  president  of  the  Brotherhood  of  Locomotive  Engineers 
and  also  an  official  in  a  non-union  mine. 

1327.  UNITED  MINE  WORKERS  OF  AMERICA 

Official  statement  by  the  International  Executive  Board, 
United  Mine  Workers  of  America,  in  regard  to  the  Kansas 
controversy.  Indianapolis,  1921.  15p. 

1328.  UNITED  MINE  WORKERS  OF  AMERICA 

Statement  to  the  United  States  Coal  Commission,  1923,  by 
the  anthracite  representatives  of  the  United  Mine  Work- 
ers of  America.  Washington,  1923.  32p. 

Cover  title:  the  anthracite  monopoly. 

1329.  UNITED  MINE  WORKERS  OF  AMERICA 

Statement  of  the  United  States  Coal  Commission  on  anth- 
racite accounting  and  finance.  Washington,  1923.  86p. 

Cover  title:  Anthracite  accounting  and  finance. 

1330.  UNITED  MINE  WORKERS  OF  AMERICA 

The  truth  about  Coal  River  Collieries,  of  which  Warren  S. 
Stone  is  Chairman  of  the  Board  of  Directors.  Indianapolis, 
1925.  16p. 

Stone  was  president  of  the  Brotherhood  of  Locomotive  Engineers  at 
the  time. 

1331.  UNITED  MINE  WORKERS  OF  AMERICA 

The  United  Mine  Workers  of  America  and  the  United 
States  Coal  Commission,  containing  copies  of  the  commun- 
ications filed  with  the  Commission  by  the  miners'  union. 
Indianapolis,  1923?.  47p. 


146 


1332.  UNITED  MINE  WORKERS  OF  AMERICA 

Wage  agreements,  bituminous  coal  industry,  division  No. 
1,  consisting  of  districts  No.  2-3-4-5-6-16-17-19-24-28-30-31; 
together  with  the  Code  of  Fair  Competition  and  the  Ap- 
palachian Agreement.  Washington,  1934.  594p. 

1333.  UNITED  MINE  WORKERS  OF  AMERICA 

Wage  agreements,  bituminous  coal  industry,  1935-1937,  to- 
gether with  Guffey-Snyder  Coal  Stabilization  Act  and  the 
Appalachian  Agreement.  Indianapolis,  1935?.  824p. 

1334.  UNITED  MINE  WORKERS  OF  AMERICA.  DISTRICT  1.  TRI-DISTRICT 
CONVENTION 

Scale  resolutions.  Hazleton,  Pennsylvania,  1930.  48p. 

1335.  UNITED  MINE  WORKERS  OF  AMERICA.  DISTRICT  2 

The  government  of  coal.  Clearfield,  Pennsylvania.  [1921]. 
24p. 

1336.  UNITED  MINE  WORKERS  OF  AMERICA.  DISTRICT  2 

Why  the  miners'  program?  Clearfield,  Pennsylvania, 
[1921].  12p. 

1337.  UNITED  MINE  WORKERS  OF  AMERICA.  DISTRICT  6 

Proceedings  of  special  convention.  Columbus.  1906?.  103p. 

1338.  UNITED  MINE  WORKERS  OF  AMERICA.  DISTRICT  19 

Officers'  report  to  special  convention.  Knoxville,  Ten- 
nessee, 1919.  21p. 

1339.  UNITED    MINE    WORKERS.    NATIONALIZATION    RESEARCH    COM- 
MITTEE 

Compulsory  information  in  coal;  a  fact  finding  agency.  Al- 
toona,  Pennsylvania,  1922.  28p. 

1340.  UNITED    MINE   WORKERS   OF   AMERICA.    NATIONALIZATION   RE- 
SEARCH COMMITTEE 

How  to  run  coal,  n.p.,  1922.  39p. 

"Suggestions  for  plan  of  public  ownership,  public  control,  and 
democratic  management  in  the  coal  industry." 

1341.  UNITED   MINE  WORKERS   OF  AMERICA.    WELFARE  AND  RETIRE- 
MENT FUND 

A  Chronology  of  the  U.M.W.A.  Welfare  and  Retirement 
Fund,  covering  the  period  between  1945  and  April  26, 
1951.  [Washington,  1951] .  31p. 


147 


1342.  U.  S.  ANTHRACITE  COAL  STRIKE  COMMISSION 

Report  to  the  President  on  the  Anthracite  Coal  Strike  of 
May-October  1902.  Washington:  GPO,  1903.  257p. 

Appeared  also  as  Bulletin  43  of  the  Commissioner  of  Labor. 

1343.  U.  S.  BUREAU  OF  LABOR 

Report  on  the  miners'  strike  in  bituminous  coal  field  in 
Westmoreland  County,  Pennsylvania,  in  1910-11.  Washing- 
ton: GPO,  1912.  255p.  (62nd  Congress,  2nd  Session.  House 
Document  847). 

1344.  U.  S.  COLORADO  COAL  COMMISSION 

Labor  difficulties  in  the  coal  fields  of  Colorado,  letter  from 
the  President  of  the  United  States,  transmitting  report  of 
the  Colorado  Coal  Commission  on  the  labor  difficulties  in 
coal  fields  of  Colorado  during  the  years  1914  and  1915. 
Washington:  GPO,  1916.  16p.  (64th  Cong.,  1st  Sess.  House 
Doc.  859). 

1345.  U.  S.  COMMISSION  ON  INDUSTRIAL  RELATIONS 

Final  Report  and  Testimony.  Washington:  the  Commis- 
sion, 1916.  11  volumes. 

1346.  U.  S.  COMMISSION  ON  INDUSTRIAL  RELATIONS 

Report  on  the  Colorado  Coal  Strike.  Washington:  the 
Commission,  1915.  189p. 

1347.  U.  S.  COMMISSIONER  OF  LABOR 

A  report  on  labor  disturbances  in  the  State  of  Colorado, 
from  1880  to  1904.  Washington:  GPO.  1904.  365p.  (58th 
Cong.,  Senate  Doc.  122). 

1348.  U.   S.  CONGRESS.  HOUSE.   COMMISSION  ON  EDUCATION  AND  LA- 
BOR. SUBCOMMITTEE  IN  LABOR 

Oversight  hearing  on  Brookside  mine  labor-management 
disputes.  Washington:  GPO,  1974.  75p. 

1349.  U.   S.   CONGRESS.    HOUSE.   COMMITTEE  ON   LABOR  TROUBLES   IN 
PENNSYLVANIA 

Labor  troubles  in  the  anthracite  regions  of  Pennsylvania, 
1887-88.  Washington:  GPO,  1889.  783p.  (50th  Cong.,  2d 
Sess.  House.  Report  4147). 

Concerned  largely  with  the  activities  of  the  Reading  Railroad. 

1350.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  HOUSE.  COMMITTEE  ON  MINES  AND  MINING 

Conditions  in  the  coal  mines  of  Colorado.  Washington: 
GPO,  1914.  2913p. 

148 


1351.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  HOUSE.  COMMITTEE  ON  MINES  AND  MINING 

Report  on  the  Colorado  Strike  Investigation.  Washington: 
GPO,  1915.  53p.  (63rd  Congress,  3d  Session.  House.  Doc. 
1630). 

1352.  U.  S.   CONGRESS.   HOUSE.   SELECT  COMMITTEE  ON  EXISTING  LA- 
BOR TROUBLES  IN  PENNSYLVANIA 

Labor  troubles  in  the  anthracite  regions  of  Pennsylvania, 
1887-88.  Washington:  GPO,  1889.  783p.  (50th  Congress, 
2nd  Session.  House.  Report  4147). 

1353.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  SENATE.  COMMITTEE  ON  EDUCATION  AND  LA- 
BOR 

Conditions  in  the  Paint  Creek  district,  West  Virginia. 
Washington:  GPO,  1913.  3  vols. 

1354.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  SENATE.  COMMITTEE  ON  EDUCATION  AND  LA- 
BOR 

Investigation  of  Paint  Creek  coal  fields  of  West  Virginia. 
.  .  Report.  Washington:  GPO,  1914.  41p.  (63d  Cong.,  2d 
Sess.  Senate.  Report  321 ) . 

Running  title:  Paint  Creek  coal  fields  of  West  Virginia. 

1355.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  SENATE.  COMMITTEE  ON  EDUCATION  AND  LA- 
BOR 

Report  upon  the  relations  between  labor  and  capital,  and 
testimony  taken  by  the  Committee.  Washington:  GPO, 
1885.  4  volumes. 

The  "Blair  Hearings".  References  to  coal  mining  are  scattered 
throughout  the  testimony.  Each  volume  is  indexed. 

1356.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.   SENATE.  COMMITTEE  ON  EDUCATION  AND  LA- 
BOR 

West  Virginia  coal  fields.  Hearings  ...  to  investigate  the 
recent  acts  of  violence  in  the  coal  fields  of  West  Virginia 
and  adjacent  territory  and  the  causes  which  led  to  the  con- 
ditions which  now  exist  in  said  territory.  Washington: 
GPO,   1921-22  1078p. 

1357.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  SENATE.  COMMITTEE  ON  EDUCATION  AND  WEL- 
FARE 

West  Virginia  coal  fields.  Personal  views  of  Senator  Ken- 
yon  and  views  of  Senators  Sterling,  Phipps  and  Warren  .  .  . 
Washington:  GPO,  1922.  30p.  (67  Congress,  2d  Session. 
Senate.  Report  457 ) . 


149 


1358.  U.    S.    CONGRESS.    SENATE.    COMMITTEE    ON    INTERSTATE   COM- 
MERCE 

Conditions  in  the  coal  fields  of  Pennsylvania,  West  Vir- 
ginia, and  Ohio.  Hearings  before  the  Committee  on  inter- 
state commerce,  U.  S.  Senate.  Seventieth  Congress,  first 
session,  pursuant  to  S.  Res.  105,  a  resolution  to  investi- 
gate conditions  in  the  coal  fields  of  Pennsylvania,  West 
Virginia,  and  Ohio.  .  .  Printed  for  the  use  of  the  Commit- 
tee on  interstate  commerce.  Washington:  GPO,  1928.  2 
volumes. 

1359.  U.    S.   CONGRESS.   SENATE.   COMMITTEE  ON  LABOR  AND  PUBLIC 
WELFARE. 

Providing  for  the  welfare  of  coal  miners.  Hearings  before 
the  Sub-committee  on  Mine  Safety.  Washington:  GPO, 
1952.  443p. 

1360.  U.   S.   CONGRESS.    SENATE.   COMMITTEE  ON  LABOR  AND  PUBLIC 
WELFARE. 

UMW  Welfare  and  Retirement  Fund.  Washington:  GPO, 
1971.  228p. 

1361.  U.    S.   CONGRESS.    SENATE.   COMMITTEE  ON  LABOR  AND  PUBLIC 
WELFARE.  SUBCOMMITTEE  ON  LABOR 

United  Mine  Workers'  election,  Hearings.  Washington: 
GPO,  1971,  1972.  2  volumes. 

1362.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  SENATE.  COMMITTEE  ON  MANUFACTURES 

Conditions  in  coal  fields  in  Harlan  and  Bell  counties,  Ken- 
tucky. Washington:  GPO,  1932.  286p. 

1363.  UNITED  STATES  INDUSTRIAL  COMMISSION 

Report.  Washington:  GPO,  1900-1902.  19v. 

vl2  On  the  relations  and  conditions  of  capital  and  labor 
employed  in  the  mining  industry.  747p. 

vl5  389-420  Foreign  born  in  the  coal  mines. 

vl7  Reports  on  labor  organizations,  labor  disputes  and  ar- 
bitration. Chapter  8:  Labor  organizations  of  mine  work- 
ers. 

1364.  U.  S.  TAKES  OVER  THE  COAL  MINES 

Life  My  10,  1943  23-29. 
1943  strike. 


150 


1365.  VAN  KLEECK,  MARY 

Miners  and  management;  a  study  of  the  collective  agree- 
ment between  the  United  Mine  Workers  of  America  and 
the  Rocky  Mountain  Fuel  Company,  and  an  analysis  of  the 
problem  of  coal  in  the  U.  S.  New  York:  Russell  Sage,  1934. 
391p. 

1366.  VEAL,  PHIL 

Obstructionists  in  the  United  Mine  Workers.  New  York: 
New  York  Labor  News,  1911.  16p. 

"Crippling  hand  of  false  leadership— how  it  keeps  most  powerful 
craft  union  in  the  land  at  mercy  of  employers." 

1367.  VIRTUE,  G.  O. 

The  anthracite  mine  laborers.  U.  S.  Department  of  Labor. 
Bulletin  13:  728-74  1897. 

A  useful  history  of  labor  relations  and  unionization  in  the  anthra- 
cite industry. 

1368.  VIRTUE,  G.  O. 

The  anthracite  miners'  strike  of  1900.  Journal  of  Political 
Economy  9:  1-23  1900. 

1369.  VORSE,  MARY  H. 

Illinois  miners.  Scribners  93:  169-72  1933. 

The  Progressive  Miners  of  America  and  its  struggle  with  the  United 
Mine  Workers. 

1370.  WAKEFIELD,  D. 

In  Hazard  Kentucky.  Commentary  36:  209-17  1963. 

Account  of  a  longlasting  wildcat  strike.  "The  strike,  with  its  drama 
and  violence,  became  an  outlet  for  and  a  means  of  protest  against 
the  bitter  frustrations  that  have  been  building  up  here  for  a  decade." 

1371.  WALKER,  CHARLES  R. 

Red  blood  in  Kentucky;  why  100  percent  Americans  turn 
Communist.  Forum  87:  18-23  1932. 

The  "miner  wars"  in  Harlan  County. 

1372.  WALKER,  SAMUEL  E. 

Terence  V.  Powderly.  Dissertation.  Ohio  State  University. 
1973.  306p. 

Emphasis  is  on  Powderly \s  activities  in  Scranton  in  the  period  1870- 
1884. 


151 


1373.  WALLACE,  GEORGE  SELDEN 

In  the  matter  of  the  Hearing  before  a  subcommittee  of  the 
Committee  on  education  and  labor  of  the  United  States 
Senate  Resolution  37,  authorizing  the  appointment  of  a 
Committee  to  make  an  investigation  of  conditions  in  the 
Paint  Creek  district,  West  Virginia.  Brief  of  George  S. 
Wallace  for  the  state  of  West  Virginia,  dealing  with  the 
fourth  section  of  the  investigation.  Charleston,  West  Vir- 
ginia, Tribune  Printing  Co.  [1913].  63p. 

1374.  WALSH,  WILLIAM  J. 

The  United  Mine  Workers  of  America  as  an  economic  and 
social  force  in  the  anthracite  territory.  Dissertation.  Catho- 
lic University  of  America.  1931. 

1375.  WALTERS,  ROBERT 

Locking  the  barn  door:  Secretary  Shultz  and  the  miners. 
Washington  Monthly  Feb  1970  64-71. 

1376.  WAR  IN  THE  COAL  FIELDS;  THE  NORTHERN  FIELDS,  1931. 

Huntington,  W.  Va.:  Appalachian  Movement  Press,  1972. 
12p. 

1377.  WARFARE  IN  THE  COAL  FIELDS 

U.  S.  News  Ag  28,  1953  54-57. 

Account  of  the  bitter  struggle  between  the  UMWA  and  J.  G.  Brad- 
ley, the  owner  of  mines  in  the  Widen,  West  Virginia  area. 

1378.  WARNE,  COLSTON  E. 

Armistice  or  peace  in  coal.  Current  History  ns4:  242-48 
1943. 

The  1943  strike. 

1379.  WARNE,  COLSTON  E. 

Coal  dispute  enters  its  second  year.  Current  History  ns6: 
207-13  1944. 

The  1944  strike. 

1380.  WARNE,  FRANK 

The  anthracite  coal  strike.  Ann.  Amer.  Acad.  17:  15-52 
1901. 

1381.  WARNE,  FRANK 

Coal  mine  workers;  a  study  in  labor  organization.  New 
York:  Longmans,  1905.  252p. 


152 


1382.  WARNE,  FRANK 

Effect  of  unionism  upon  the  mine  worker.  Ann.  Amer. 
Acad.  21:  20-35  1903. 

Deals  with  the  anthracite  fields. 

1383.  WARNE,  FRANK 

John  Mitchell;  the  labor  leader  and  the  man.  Review  of 
Reviews  26:  556-60  1902. 

1384.  WARNE,  FRANK 

Miner  and  operator;  a  study  of  labor  conditions  in  the  an- 
thracite coal  fields.  Outlook  82:  643-56  1906. 

1385.  WARNE,  FRANK 

The  miners'  union,  its  business  management.  Ann.  Amer. 
Acad.  25:  67-86  1905. 

1386.  WARNE,  FRANK 

Union  movement  among  coal  mine  workers.  Washington: 
GPO,  1904.  (U.  S.  Bureau  of  Labor.  Bulletin  51  pp.  380- 
414). 

1387.  WARNER,  ARTHUR 

West  Virginia— industrialism  gone  mad.  Nation  113:  372-3 
1921. 

Mine  operators  go  to  almost  any  lengths  to  prevent  unionization. 

1388.  WECHSLER,  JAMES  A. 

Labor  baron;  a  portrait  of  John  L.  Lewis.  New  York:  Mor- 
row, 1944.  278p.  (Reprinted  by  Greenwood  Press  in  1972). 

1389.  WECKESSER,  ERNEST 

The  radio  rhetoric  of  John  L.  Lewis.  Dissertation.  Michi- 
gan State  University.  1963.  302p. 

1390.  WEITZELL,  E.  H. 

Industrial  relations  in  coal  mines.  American  Mining  Con- 
gress. Proceedings  25:  78-85  1922. 

1391.  WERSTEIN,  raVTNG 

Labors  defiant  lady;  the  story  of  Mother  Jones.  New  York: 
Crowell.  1969.  146p. 

Intended  for  young  readers. 


153 


1392.  WEST,  HAROLD  E. 

Civil  war  in  the  West  Virginia  coal  mines.  Survey  30:  37- 
50  1913. 

A  letter  by  the  secretary  of  the  West  Virginia  Mining  Association 
protesting  this  article  appears  on  p.8  of  the  same  issue. 

1393.  WEST  VIRGINIA.  ATTORNEY  GENERAL'S  OFFICE 

Conditions  in  the  Paint  Creek  district  of  West  Virginia.  In- 
vestigation by  Sub-Committee  of  the  Committee  of  Edu- 
cation and  Labor  of  the  United  States  Senate.  Senate  Re- 
solution No.  37.  Brief  of  John  B.  Morrison  and  J.  E.  Brown, 
Charleston,  Assistant  Attorneys  General  on  behalf  of  the 
state  of  West  Virginia.  Tribune  Printing  Co.,  [1913].  133p. 

1394.  WEST  VIRGINIA.   GOVERNOR'S  COMMISSION   ON  LOGAN  COUNTY 
SITUATION 

Report  and  digest  of  evidence  taken  by  Commission  ap- 
pointed by  the  Governor  of  West  Virginia  in  connection 
with  the  Logan  County  situation.  Charleston,  West  Vir- 
ginia: [Tribune  Print.  Company,  1919].  69p. 

The  "situation"  was  the  labor  unrest  in  the  coal  fields  of  southern 
West  Virginia. 

1395.  WEST  VIRGINIA.  GOVERNOR'S  INVESTIGATING  COMMITTEE 

Report  and  proceedings  of  Widen  Strike  Committee. 
Charleston,  1953.  184p.  (Appears  in  West  Virginia.  Legis- 
lature. House  of  Delegates.  Journal.  Appendix  Mr  2,  1953). 

1396.  WEST  VIRGINIA.  MINING  INVESTIGATION  COMMISSION,  1912 

Report  of  West  Virginia  Mining  Investigation  Commission, 
appointed  by  Governor  Glasscock  on  the  28th  day  of  Aug- 
ust, 1912.  .  .  [Charleston,  W.  Va.,  Tribune  Printing  Co., 
1912].  24p. 

1397.  WESTERN  FEDERATION  OF  MINERS 

Category  of  crime  of  the  Mine  Operators'  Association.  Den- 
ver: The  Federation,  1904.  31p. 

"A  partial  list,  showing  851  men  murdered  in  less  than  four  years." 
Cover  title  reads:  Reply  of  the  Western  Federation  of  Miners  to 
the  "Red  Book"  of  the  Mine  Operators'  Association. 

1398.  WEYL,  WALTER 

John  Mitchell;  the  man  the  miners  trust.  Outlook  82:  657- 
62  1906. 


154 


1399.  WHEELER,  HOYT  N. 

Mountaineer  mine  wars:  an  analysis  of  the  West  Virginia 
mine  wars  of  1912-1913  and  1920-1921.  Business  History 
Review  50:  69-91  1976. 

1400.  WHITE,  THOMAS  E. 

Development  and  operation  of  the  welfare  and  retirement 
fund  in  the  bituminous  coal  industry.  Dissertation.  Univer- 
sity of  Pittsburgh,  1955.  226p. 


1401.  THE  WHITE  SLAVES  OF  MONOPOLIES:    OR,  JOHN  FITZ  PATRICK, 
THE  MINER,  SOLDIER  AND  WORKINGMAN's  FRIEND 

A  history  of  his  struggles  with  mine  owners,  corporations  . 
.  .  Harrisburg:  L.  S.  Hart,  1884.  371p. 

1402.  WICE,  MARSHA  N. 

Revolution  in  the  mines:  an  analysis  of  the  miners  revolt  of 
1969-70.  Dissertation.  University  of  Illinois.  1973.  213p. 

1403.  WICKERSHAM,  EDWARD  D. 

Opposition  to  the  international  officers  of  the  United  Mine 
Workers  of  America:  1919-1933.  Dissertation.  Cornell  Uni- 
versity. 1951  231p. 

1404.  WIEBE,  ROBERT  H. 

The  anthracite  strike  of  1902;  a  record  of  confusion.  Mis- 
sissippi Valley  Historical  Review  48:  229-51  1961. 

1405.  WTECK,  AGNES 

Ku  Kluxing  in  the  miners  country.  New  Republic  38:  122- 
24  1924. 

Williamson  County,  Illinois. 

1406.  WIECK,  EDWARD  A. 

The  American  Miners'  Association;  a  record  of  the  origin  of 
coal  miners'  unions  in  the  United  States.  New  York:  Rus- 
sell Sage,  1940.  330p. 

Contemporary  documents  illustrating  the  development  of  mine  un- 
ions are  reproduced  on  pages  217-309. 

1407.  WIECK,  EDWARD  A. 

Coal  miners  journal.  Atlantic  Monthly  134:  5-16  1924. 

Describes  the  activities  of  a  member  of  the  pit  committee  in  a  bit- 
uminous coal  mine. 


155 


1408.  WEECK,  EDWABD  A. 

General  Alexander  Bradley.  American  Mercury  8:  69-74 
1926. 

Account  of  Bradley's  activity  during  the  labor  disputes  in  the  Illin- 
ois coal  fields,  1897. 

1409.  WTECK,  EDWARD  A. 

The  miners'  case  and  the  public  interest;  a  documented 
chronology.  New  York:  Russell  Sage,  1947.  92p. 

1410.  wnxcox,  DAVID 

Comments  upon  suggestions  presented  by  a  committee  in 
behalf  of  some  of  the  employees  to  the  producers  of  anth- 
racite coal.  New  York,  1906.  26p. 

1411.  WILLIAMS,  GERTRUDE  M. 

Twenty-nine  men  in  contempt.  Nation  140:  443-45  1935. 

Account  of  the  struggle  of  the  United  Anthracite  Miners  in  the  area 
around  Wilkes-Barre,  Pennsylvania. 

1412.  WILLIAMS,  TALCOTT 

The  Anthracite  coal  crisis.  Atlantic  87:  447-56  1901. 

1413.  WTLLITS,  JOSEPH  H. 

The  conclusions  and  recommendations  of  the  U.  S.  Coal 
Commission  as  to  labor  relations  in  bituminous  coal  min- 
ing. Ann.  Amer.  Acad.  Ill:  96-107  1924. 

1414.  WILSON,  EDMUND 

Frank  Keeney's  coal  diggers.  New  Republic  67:  195-99, 
229-31  1931. 

Account  of  destitution  and  labor  polities  in  the  southern  West  Vir- 
ginia coal  fields. 

1415.  WILSON,  WILLIAM  B. 

Speech  of  W.  B.  Wilson,  Secretary-Treasurer,  United  Mine 
Workers  of  America.  Delivered  at  Ashland  .  .  .  October, 
1901.  Indianapolis:  Hollenbeck  Press,  1901.  20p. 

1416.  WITT,  MATT 

Bribe  at  Brookside;  story  of  a  desperate  plot  to  break  the 
Duke  Power  Strike.  United  Mine  Workers  Journal,  May 
16-31, 1974,  8-15. 

The  attempt  to  bribe  two  UMWA  strike  leaders  "has  led  to  the  fil- 
ing of  formal  charges  against  Duke  Power  and  the  Southern  Labor 
Union." 


156 


1417.  WOLFE,  GEORGE 

Survey  of  conditions  of  operators  and  production  in  so- 
called  open-shop  districts  of  West  Virginia.  American  Min- 
ing Congress.  Proceedings  23:  315-22  1920. 

Miners  are  happier  in  non-union  fields;  thus  "the  United  Mine 
Workers  of  America  will  not  have  very  much  chance  to  gain  a 
foothold  in  our  midst." 

1418.  WOLL,  MATTHEW 

Injunctions  in  West  Virginia.  American  Federationist  32: 
572-78  1925. 

1419.  WOLTMAN,  FREDERICK  AND  W.  L.  NUNN 

Cossacks.  American  Mercury  15:  399-406  1928. 

The  "cossacks"  are  local  officials  in  general  and  the  Pennsylvania 
State  Police  in  particular. 

1420.  WOOLLEY,  BRYAN  AND  FORD  REDD 

We  be  here  when  the  morning  comes.  Lexington:  Univer- 
sity of  Kentucky  Press,  1975.  103p. 

1421.  WORK  OR  IDLENESS  IN  THE  BrTUMTNOUS  COAL  INDUSTRY 

New  York:  Consolidation  Coal  Company,  1925.  13p. 

"A  correspondence  between  John  D.  Rockefeller,  Jr.,  C.  W.  Wat- 
son, President.  Consolidation  Coal  Company,  and  John  L.  Lewis, 
President,  United  Mine  Workers  of  America." 

1422.  WORKERS  INTERNATIONAL  INDUSTRIAL  UNION 

The  mines  to  the  control  of  the  miners.  Detroit,  1919.  19p. 

1423.  WRIGHT,  CARROLL  D. 

Importance  of  arbitration  as  a  factor  in  the  advancement 
of  the  mining  industry.  American  Mining  Congress.  Pro- 
ceedings 11  Pt.  2:  52-56  1908. 

1424.  WRIGHT,  HELEN  S. 

Coal's  worst  year.  Boston:  R.  G.  Badger,  1924.  202p. 
The  anthracite  strike  of  1922. 

1425.  YOUNG,  DALLAS  M. 

A  history  of  the  Progressive  Miners  of  America.  Disserta- 
tion. University  of  Illinois.  1940. 

1426.  YOUNG,  DALLAS  M. 

Origin  of  the  Progressive  Mine  Workers  of  America.  Illin- 
ois State  Historical  Society.  Journal  40:  313-30  1947. 


157 


1426a.  ZIEGER,  ROBERT  H.  , 

Pennsylvania  coal  and  politics.  Pennsylvania  Magazine  of 

History  and  Biography  93:  244-62  1969. 

Account  of  the  political  aspects  of  the  anthracite  strike  of  1925-26. 


158 


Ufa  9k  Tlce  (M  Kddt 


1427.  ABBOTT,  GRACE 

Immigrant  and  coal  mining  communities  of  Illinois. 
Springfield:  Illinois  Department  of  Registration  and  Edu- 
cation, 1920.  43p.  (Bulletin  2  of  the  Immigrants  Com- 
mission ) . 

1428.  ABBOTT,  GRACE 

Improvement  in  rural  public  relief:  the  lesson  of  the  coal- 
mining communities.  Social  Service  Review  6:  183-222 
1932. 

1429.  AHRENHOLZ,  GLADYS 

Factors  affecting  social  participation  in  coal  communities. 
Thesis.  West  Virginia  University.  1951.  46p. 

1430.  ALLRED,  CHARLES  E.  AND  OTHERS 

Grundy  County,  Tennessee;  relief  in  a  coal  mining  comm- 
unity. Tennessee.  Agriculture  Experiment  Station.  Report 
11.  1936. 

1431.  ALTHOUSE,  RONALD 

Work,  safety  and  life  style  among  southern  Appalachian 
coal  miners;  a  survey  of  the  men  of  Standard  Mines.  Mor- 
gantown:  West  Virginia  University,  1974.  152p. 

1432.  AMERICAN  CONSTITUTIONAL  ASSOCIATION 

Life  in  a  West  Virginia  Coal  Field.  Charleston,  West  Vir- 
ginia, 1923.  58p. 

Written  to  refute  "scurrilous  articles"  which  have  depicted  the  coal 
fields  as  "an  island  of  barbarity  in  a  sea  of  civilization." 

1433.  AQUIZAP,  ROMAN  B.  AND  ERNEST  A.  VARGAS 

Technology,  power  and  socialization  in  Appalachia.  Social 
Casework  51:  131-39  1970. 

Study  of  the  effects  of  the  coal  industry  on  the  social  system  in  a 
coal  mining  area. 

159 


1433a.  ARBLE,  MEADE 

The  long  tunnel:  a  coal  miner's  journal.  New  York:  Ath- 
eneum,  1976.  239p. 

Author  worked  as  a  miner  in  Pennsylvania. 

1434.  ARBLE,  MEADE 

Notes  from  a  coal  mine.  New  York  Times  Magazine  Ja  12, 
1975  28-32. 

Notes  from  the  diary  of  a  writer  who  worked  as  a  miner  in  Pennsyl- 
vania. 

1435.  ARBLE,  MEADE 

Turning  off:  my  life  underground;  A  young  father's  story. 
Redbook  Feb  1976  74+ 

Describes  the  dispirited  life  of  a  young  coal  miner  in  Pennsylvania. 

1436.  ARCHER,  C.  H. 

School  consolidation  at  Gary,  McDowell  County,  West 
Virginia.  Coal  Age  My  6,  1916.  807-8. 

Account  of  education  in  the  area  of  the  main  operation  of  the  U.  S. 
Coal  &  Coke  Co. 

1437.  ARKANSAS.  STATE  EMERGENCY  RELIEF  ADMINISTRATION 

A  study  of  the  Arkansas  coal  mines  and  miners.  Little 
Rock,  1934.  97p.  proc. 

1438.  BALL,  RICHARD  A. 

The  Southern  Appalachian  coal  community;  an  explora- 
tive study.  Thesis.  West  Virginia  University.  1960.  143p. 

1439.  BARNES,  CLARENCE  E. 

The  pattern  and  nature  of  the  informal  and  formal  institu- 
tional contacts  participated  in  by  residents  of  New  Hill. 
Thesis.  West  Virginia  University.  1952.  58p. 

New  Hill  is  a  small  mining  community  in  north-central  West  Vir- 
ginia. 

1440.  BAUMGARDNER,  RILEY  G.  AND  D.  E.  STEINER 

Cabin  Creek:  an  accumulation  of  unpaid  social  and  envi- 
ronmental costs  in  Appalachia.  Water  Spectrum  6(2)  32- 
38  1974. 

Account  of  the  economic  and  social  plight  of  the  Cabin  Creek  area 
in  southern  West  Virginia.  Possible  plans  for  improvement  are  pre- 
sented. 


160 


1441.  BENTLEY,  J.  G. 

Methods  of  improving  mining  camp  sanitation  from  stand- 
point of  industrial  medicine.  Virginia  Medical  Monthlu  54- 
638-40, 1928. 

1442.  BERTHOFF,  ROWLAND 

The  social  order  of  the  anthracite  region,  1825-1902. 
Pennsylvania  Magazine  of  History  and  Biography  89:  261- 
91  1965. 

1443.  BEURY,  WILLIAM 

The  social  aspects  of  coal  mines.  West  Virginia  Coal  Min- 
ing Institute.  Proceedings  1934  63-77. 

A  generally  cheerful  view  of  life  in  the  West  Virginia  coal  fields 
by  a  company  executive. 

1444.  BLEAK  LIFE  OF  SKILLED  DIGGERS 

Fortune  Jan  1971  83-85. 
Chiefly  photographs. 

1445.  BRACKER,  MILTON 

Portrait  in  black  and  white.  N.  Y.  Times  Magazine  N  30, 
1941.  p5+. 

Life  in  the  southwestern  Pennsylvania  coal  fields  ( Uniontown  area ) . 

1446.  BRANDT,  L. 

Housing  the  coal  industry.  West  Virginia  Coal  Mining  In- 
stitute. Proceedings  1923  51-64. 

Author  concentrates  on  the  investment  required  by  the  operator  to 
supply  housing  of  various  standards. 

1447.  BROSKY,  A.  F. 

Building  a  town  for  a  mountain  community.  Coal  Age  23: 
560-563  1923. 

Description  of  the  'Model'  coal  mining  town  of  Jenkins,  Kentucky. 

1448.  BROWN,  MALCOLM  J. 

Seven  stranded  coal  towns;  a  study  of  an  American  de- 
pressed area.  Washington:  GPO,  1941.  188p.  (WPA.  Re- 
search Monograph  23). 

The  Illinois  coal  fields. 

1449.  BROWN,  ROLLO  W. 

The  hills  are  strong.  Boston:  Beacon  Press,  1953  (1952), 
244p. 

Includes  an  account  of  the  author's  early  life  in  the  coal-mining  sec- 
tion of  southeastern  Ohio. 

161 


1450.  BROWNELL,  BAKER 

The  other  Illinois.  New  York:  Duell,  Sloan  and  Pearce, 
1958.  276p. 

Southern  Illinois  is  the  "other  Illinois".  Much  material  on  the  coal 
fields. 

1451.  BUIS,  LOIS  s.  c. 

Kay  Jay  in  its  heyday.  Applachian  Heritage.  Summer  1974 
61-69. 

Describes  the  community  and  the  every  day  life  of  a  small  mining 
town  in  Southeastern,  Ky.,  ten  years  ago. 

1452.  CABIN  CREEK  Y.M.C.A.   (dECOTA,  WEST  VIRGINIA) 

Coal  Age  4:  741-42  1913. 

1453.  CAUDELL,  HARRY  M. 

The  mountain,  the  miner  and  the  Lord.  Appalachian  Herit- 
age Summer  1974  28-39. 

Tells  the  story  of  a  black  miner  who  struggles  to  survive  the  de- 
pression and  send  his  daughter  to  college. 

1454.  CAUDELL,  HARRY  M. 

Permanent  poor:  The  lesson  of  eastern  Kentucky.  Atlantic 
Je  1964  49-53. 

1455.  CHAMBERLAIN,  J.  G. 

Are  the  avenues  to  a  higher  social,  industrial  and  political 
position  increasing  or  diminishing  with  the  miner.  Ohio 
Mining  Journal  5:  2  1887  68-73. 

1456.  CHAMBERLAIN,  J.  G. 

Social  possibilities  of  the  miner.  Ohio  Mining  Journal  2: 
73-79  1883/84. 

Operators  should  help  miners  own  their  own  homes  and  become 
"solid"  citizens. 

1457.  CHURCH,  RUTH  AND  CATHY  STANLEY 

Women  miners— in  the  40's;  today.  Mountain  Life  and 
Work  Nov  1974  14-15. 

Two  women  who  worked  in  the  mines  in  the  1 940*8  file  for  black 
lung  benefits;  and  two  women  presently  working  in  Va.  mines  des- 
cribe their  work. 

1458.  coal's  boom  creates  a  new  kind  of  town 
Business  Week  164+  Sept  16,  1967. 


162 


Because  of  the  coal  industry's  prosperity,  companies  are  using  new 
recruiting  techniques  such  as  Eastern  Associated  Coal  Corporation's 
new  town  for  miners  near  Beckley.  W.  Va. 

1459.  COLES,  ROBERT 

Life  in  Appalachia.  The  case  of  Hugh  McCaslin.  Trans- 
Action  Je  1968  23-33. 

A  sympathetic  look  at  a  disabled  miner,  his  ideas,  life  style,  and 
past. 

1460.  CONROY.  JACK 

Boyhood  in  a  coal  town.  American  Mercury  23:  83-92  1931. 

1461.  COWLEY,  MALCOLM 

Kentucky  coal  town.  New  Republic  70:  67-70  Mr  2,  1932. 

Town  is  Pineville.  Replies  to  this  article  appeared  in  the  same  jour- 
nal, issues  of  Mr.  30  and  My  18. 

1462.  CRAWFORD,  BRUCE 

Piney  Ridge,  Virginia.  Virginia  Quarterly  Review  8:  371- 

84  1932. 

Description  of  life  in  a  coal  mining  area  near  the  Kentucky  border. 

1463.  CRESSEY,  PAUL  FREDERICK 

Social  disorganization  and  reorganization  in  Harlan  Coun- 
ty, Kentucky.  American  Sociological  Review  14:  389-94 
1949. 

1464.  DEAN,  LOIS 

Minersville-a  study  in  socioeconomic  stagnation.  Human 
Organization  2A:  254-61  1965. 

Attempt  to  understand  the  value  system  and  attitudes  of  an  econom- 
ically depressed  Illinois  mining  town. 

1465.  DEASY,  GEORGE  F.  AND  PHYLLIS  R.  GRIESS 

Effects  of  a  declining  mining  economy  on  the  Pennsyl- 
vania anthracite  region.  Association  of  American  Geo- 
graphers. Annals  55:  239-59  1965. 

"The  Pennsylvania  anthracite  region  is  experiencing  increasing 
economic  and  social  dislocations  as  a  result  of  continuing  decline  of 
its  coal  mining  industry". 

1466.  DE  LAURETIS,  FRANK  T. 

Anthracite  coal:  a  case  study  of  the  social  problems  of  a 
declining  industry.  Thesis.  University  of  Illinois.  1956. 


163 


1466a.  DENSMORE,  RAYMOND  E. 

The  coal  miner  of  Appalachia.  Parsons,  W.  Va.;  McClain 
Printing  Co.,  1977.  49p. 

Account  of  life  in  the  coal  fields  of  Maryland  and  northern  West 
Virginia,  during  the  period  1920-1940.  Author  was  a  miner  and 
mine  official. 

1467.  DENTON,  ALMA 

Standards  of  living  among  bituminous  coal  miners'  fam- 
ilies in  southern  Illinois.  Thesis.  University  of  Illinois. 
1934. 

1468.  DOWNING,  THOMAS  F. 

Where  to  build  our  mining  towns  and  what  to  build.  West 
Virginia  Coal  Mining  Institute.  Proceedings  1923  41-51. 

The  general  manager  of  a  large  coal  company  discusses  the  pro- 
blems of  building  towns  in  the  narrow  valleys  of  the  coal  country. 

1469.  EAVENSON,  HOWARD  N. 

Building  complete  thousand-dwelling  town  for  a  mine 
population  of  7,000  at  Lynch,  Kentucky.  Coal  Age  20:  532- 
36  1921. 

1470.  EDUCATION  IN  COLORADO  FUEL  AND  ERON  VILLAGES 

Coal  Age  7:  466-70  1915. 

1471.  EDWARDS,  J.  H. 

Helping  man  and  family.  Coal  Age  D  1944  86-93. 

Describes  efforts  of  the  Jewell  Ridge  Coal  Company  to  make  the 
coal  towns  "better  places  in  which  to  live"  and  "to  raise  the  em- 
ployees esteem  of  his  job."  Area  located  in  the  coal  fields  of  south- 
ern Virginia,  near  Bluefield,  West  Virginia. 

1472.  THE  EDWARDSVILLE  IMPROVEMENTS 

Coal  Age  5:  936-39  1914. 

Account  of  the  transformation  of  Edwardsville,  Luzerne  County, 
Pennsylvania  into  a  model  coal  mining  community. 

1473.  ELLIS,  MABEL  B. 

Children  of  the  Kentucky  coal  fields.  American  Child  1: 
285-405  1920. 

1474.  ENVIRONMENT    AND    OPPORTUNITIES     FOR     WOMEN     OF    COAL 
MINERS'  FAMILIES 

MLR  21:  333-34  1925. 


164 


1475.  ERNST,  HARRY  W.  AND  CHARLES  H.  DRAKE 

Poor,  proud  and  primitive.  Nation  188:  490-93  1959. 

Deals  largely  with  the  depressed  coal  areas  of  southern  West  Vir- 
ginia. (Reprinted  in  ML  &  W  35:  3  1959  under  the  title:  Region 
in  Need). 

1476.  FAY,  C.  L. 

Liquor  problem  in  mining  communities.  Coal  Age  1:  90, 
192,  222-24,  258-59  1911/12. 

1477.  FITZPATRICK,  JOHN  S. 

Underground  mining:  a  case  study  of  an  occupational  sub- 
culture of  danger.  Dissertation.  Ohio  State  University, 
1974.  280p. 

Examines  the  patterns  of  behavior  produced  by  mining  and  the  ef- 
fects of  danger  on  the  miners'  belief  systems,  social  interaction,  and 
concepts  of  safety. 

1478.  FOWLER,  GEORGE  L. 

Social  and  industrial  conditions  in  the  Pocahontas  coal 
fields.  Engineering  Magazine  27:  383-96  1904. 

1479.  FRENCH,  JACK 

Segregation  patterns  in  a  coal  camp.  Thesis.  West  Virginia 
University.  1953.  67p. 

1480.  FRIENDS.  SOCIETY  OF 

Report  of  the  child  relief  work  in  the  bituminous  coal 
fields  by  the  American  t  riends  service  Committee.  Phila- 
delphia: Engle  Press,  1932.  67p. 

Covers  the  period  S  1,  1931 -Ag  31,  1932. 

1481.  FRIENDS,  SOCIETY  OF 

A  report  of  the  services  and  relief  in  the  bituminous  coal 
fields  by  the  American  Friends  Service  Committee.  Phila- 
dephia:  Engle  Press,  1933.  32p. 

Covers  the  period  S  1  1932-Ag  31,  1933. 

1482.  GIBBONS,  P.  E. 

Miners  of  Scranton.  Harpers  New  Monthly  Magazine  55: 
916-27  1877. 

Account  of  the  life  style  of  the  miners,  then  largely  Welsh,  German 
and  Irish. 


165 


1483.  GILFILLAN,  HARRIET  W.  (  LAUREN  GILFILLAN,  PSEUD.  ) 

I  went  to  pit  college.  New  York:  Viking,  1934.  288p. 

Account  of  life  in  the   Pennsylvania   coal  fields   during  the  early 
years  of  the  depression. 

1484.  GLADDEN,  JAMES  W.  AND  CHRISTIANSEN,  JOHN  R. 

Emergence  of  urban  values  in  mining  families  in  eastern 
Kentucky.  Rural  Sociology  21:  135-39  1956. 

1485.  GOLDWASSER,  T. 

Coal  mining  2.  Benton,  Illinois.  Atlantic  Nov.  1969  28+. 

Description  of  life  above  and  below  ground  in  Benton,  Illinois,  a 
coal  town. 


1486.  GOODRICH,  CARTER 

Machine  and  the  miner.  Harper  154:  649-54  1927. 

The  introduction  of  machines  will  mean  "an  end  to  the  unique  and 
traditional  freedom  of  the  mines." 

1487.  GOODRICH,  CARTER 

The  miners'  freedom.  Boston:  Marshall  Jones,  1925.  189p. 

"A  study  of  the  working  life  in  a  changing  industry." 

1488.  GOODRICH,  CARTER 

Nothing  but  a  coal  factory:  machinery  in  coal  mining. 
New  Republic  44:  91-93  1925. 

Author  maintains  that  the  introduction  of  machines  means  end  to 
miners'  freedom. 

1489.  GORDON,  LELAND 

Peanut  hill.  Nation  140:  270-71  1935. 
Human  misery  in  the  Ohio  coal  fields. 

1490.  GRIFFIN,  GERALD 

The  truth  about  eastern  Kentucky.  Mountain  Life  &  Work 
31:  4  1955  17-24. 

A  discussion  of  the  desperate  economic  conditions  in  the  coal  fields 
of  eastern  Kentucky. 

1490a.  HAINES,  MICHAEL  R. 

Fertility,  marriage,  and  occupation  in  the  Pennsylvania 
anthracite  region,  1850-1880.  Journal  of  Family  History  2: 
28-55  1977. 


166 


1491.  HALL,  HEL1  \ 

Miners  must  eat.  Atlantic  152:  153-62  1933. 
Conditions  in  the  West  Virginia  coal  fields. 

1492.  HALL,  R.  D. 

The  industrial  clean-up.  American  Mining  Congress.  Pro- 
ceedings 22:  717-25  1919. 

Urges  companies  to  create  better  housing,  recreational  facilities,  etc., 
in  the  mining  towns. 

1493.  HAMBRIDCE,  JAY 

An  artist's  impressions  of  the  colliery  region.  Century  Mag- 
azine 55:  822-28  1897/98. 

The  Pennsylvania  anthracite  area. 

1494.  HAMTLL,  R.  H. 

Design  of  buildings  in  mining  towns.  Coal  Age  11:  1045- 
48  1917. 

1495.  HEDGEPETH,  WILLIAM 

George's  Branch,  Ky.  Look  Mr  4,  1969  25-33. 

"Eight  full  years  after  America  became  aware  of  Appalachia,  hun- 
ger hangs  on  in  the  hollows  as  strip  miners  dismember  the  moun- 
tain land  and  a  stubborn  poverty  threatens  to  create  an  American 
peasantry." 

1496.  HODGSON,  BRYAN 

Mountain  voices,  mountain  days.  National  Geographic  Jl 
1972  118-46. 

Includes  text  and  photographs  of  coal  mining  areas. 

1497.  HOFFMAN,  BETTY  HANNAH 

Meet  a  soft-coal  miner's  family  of  Harlan  County.  Ken- 
tucky. Ladies  Home  Journal  64:  225-32.  Mr  1947. 

1498.  HOLLANDS  WORTH,  GENEVIEVE 

Youth  recreation  in  the  coal  mining  towns  of  West  Vir- 
ginia. Thesis.  West  Virginia  University.  1948. 

1499.  HUEBNER,  A.  F. 

Houses  for  mine  villages.  Coal  Age  12:  717-20  1917. 

Good  housing  is  not  only  a  profitable  investment  but  has  become 
necessary  to  keep  reliable  labor. 


167 


1500.  HUSBAND,  JOSEPH 

A  year  in  a  coal  mine.  Boston:   Houghton  Mifflin,  1911. 
171p. 

Description,  by  a  young  Harvard  graduate,  of  work  as  an  unskilled 
miner  in  the  Illinois  coal  fields. 

1501.  HUSKINSON,  FRANK 

How  a  western  coal-mining  village  manages  a  social  club. 
Coal  Age  12:  670-71  1917. 

Delagua,  Colorado. 

1502.  INSTITUTE  ON  MAN  AND  SCIENCE 

Project  approach:  the  revitalization  of  Stump  Creek.  Rens- 
selaerville,  N.  Y.,  1973.  28p.  (ERIC  Ed  082  880). 

Account  of  a  pilot  project  to  improve  housing  conditions  in  a  "de- 
clining Pennsylvania  coal  town." 

1503.  JACKSON,  BRUCE 

In  the  Valley  of  the  Shadows:  Kentucky.  Transaction  Je 
1971  28-38. 

Account  of  conditions  in  Pike  County,  Kentucky,  including  activities 
of  the  Appalachian  Volunteers. 

1504.  JORDAN,  MARGARET  W. 

A  plea  for  the  West  Virginia  miner.  Coal  Age  6:  914-16 
1914. 

Experiences  of  a  social  worker  in  the  coal  fields  of  southern  West 
Virginia. 

1505.  JUTELIS,  VICTORIA 

The  effects  of  a  depression  upon  a  mining  village.  Thesis. 
University  of  Illinois.  1934. 

1506.  KAPLAN,  STELLA  A. 

Recent  developments  in  housing  for  bituminous  coal  min- 
ers. Thesis.  University  of  Pittsburgh.  1945. 

1507.  KARSCH,  CARL  G. 

Hardship  in  the  valleys.  Presbyterian  Life  S  1,  1960  7-12. 
Life  in  "the  declining  coal  towns  of  West  Virginia." 


1508.     KEELY,  JOSIAH 

Successful  wives  in  coal  camps.  Coal  Age  11:  591-2  1917. 

Author  deplores  the  rivalries  of  the  wives  of  mine  officials  and  their 
unsettling  effects. 


168 


1509.  KELLY,  JAMES  F.   AND  THOMAS  W.  HARRELL 

Job  satisfaction  among  coal  miners.  Personnel  Psychology 
2:  161-70  1949. 

Study  made  among  miners  in  the  Illinois  coal  fields. 

1510.  KNIPE,  EDWARD  E. 

Occupational  ingress  and  egress;  a  survey  of  Appalachian 
coal  miners.  Richmond:  Virginia  Commonwealth  Univer- 
sity, 1973.  118p. 

"A  study  of  those  factors  related  to  choosing  to  be  a  coal  miner  in 
Appalachia." 

1511.  KNIPE,  EDWARD  E.  AND  HELEN  M.  LEWIS 

Toward  a  methodology  of  studying  coal  miners'  attitudes. 
Johnson  City:  East  Tennessee  State  University,  1968.  34p. 

1512.  LANTZ,  HERMAN  R. 

People  of  Coal  Town.  New  York:  Columbia,  1958.  310p. 
A  study  of  life  in  a  small  mining  community  in  southern  Illinois. 

1513.  LAUCK,  W.  J. 

Bituminous  coal  miner  and  coke  worker  of  Western  Penn- 
sylvania. Survey  26:  34-51  1911. 

1514.  LEAMER,  LAURENCE 

Eccles  no.  6:  working  the  seam  in  a  West  Virginia  coal 
mine.  Harpers  Dec  1971  100-2+ . 

1515.  LEE,  JENNIE 

Kentucky  through  English  eyes.  Living  Age  342:  184-5 
1932.  (Alternate  title:  My  Old  Kentucky  Home). 

"Of  all  the  God-forsaken  spots  I  have  visited,  American  mining 
camps  are  certainly  the  worst." 

1516.  LEISTRITZ,  F.  LARRY  AND  THOR  A.  HERTSGAARD 

Coal  development  in  North  Dakota:  effects  on  agriculture 
and  rural  communities.  North  Dakota  Farm  Research 
Sept/Oct  1973  3-9. 

1517.  LEWIS,  HELEN  M. 

Fatalism  or  the  coal  industry?  Contrasting  views  of  Appal- 
achian problems.  Mountain  Life  and  Work  Dec  1970  4-15. 

1518.  LEWIS,  HELEN  M. 

Occupational  role  and  family  roles:  a  study  of  coal  mining 
families  in  the  southern  Appalachians.  Dissertation.  Uni- 
versity of  Kentucky.  1970.  332p. 

169 


1519.  LEWIS,  HELEN  M.  AND  EDWARD  E.  KNIPE 

The  sociological  impact  of  mechanization  on  coal  miners 
and  their  families.  Johnson  City:  East  Tennessee  State 
University,  1969.  40p. 

1520.  LINDSAY,  J.  J. 

Why  they  still  go  into  the  mines.  NY  Times  Magazine  Nov. 
24,1963  37+. 

Conditions  in  the  mines  are  very  hazardous,  but  miners  continue  to 
work  "because  they  have  to;  most  of  them  have  no  choice." 

1521.  LIVINC  CONDITIONS  OF  BITUMINOUS  MINE  WORKERS 

MLR  18:  529-35  1924. 

1522.  LIVING  WITH  UNEMPLOYMENT  IN  A  COAL  TOWN 

Business  Week  Ja  8,  1955  44-50. 
Luzerne  County,  Pennsylvania. 

1523.  LrVINGSTON,  WILLIAM  J. 

Coal  miners  and  religion.  Thesis.  Union  Theological  Sem- 
inary, Richmond.  1951. 

Research  was  done  in  Logan  County,  West  Virginia. 

1524.  LOHMANN,  KARL  B. 

Improving  colliery  surroundings  in  anthracite  region.  Coal 
Age  6:  739-41  1914. 

"There  is  no  good  reason  why  colliery  plants  should  be  blots  on  the 
surrounding  landscape." 

1525.  LOVEJOY,  OWEN  R. 

Child  labor  in  the  soft  coal  mines.  Ann.  Amer.  Acad.  29: 
26-34  1907. 

1526.  LOVEJOY,  OWEN  R. 

Coal  mines  of  Pennsylvania.  Ann.  Amer.  Acad.  38:  Supp. 
133-38  1911. 

Child  labor  in  the  mines. 

1527.  LOVEJOY,  OWEN  R. 

The  extent  of  child  labor  in  the  anthracite  coal  industry. 
Ann.  Amer.  Acad.  29:  35-49  1907. 

1528.  LOZIER,  JOHN 

Ambivalence  toward  promotion  among  Appalachian  coal 
miners:  the  legend  of  Larry  Harper.  Appalachian  Journal 
2:  111-15  Winter  1975. 

170 


Larry  Harper,  Long  a  highly  competent  miner,  was  made  a  foreman 
His  neighbors  and  fellow  workers  fell  that  the  promotion  destroyed 
him.  His  personality  changed,  he  drank  heavily  and  finally  killed 
himself. 

1529.  MC  CARTHY,  COLMAN 

Who's  who  in  Appalachia.  Atlantic  Jl  1976  68-75. 

Account  of  the  impact,  largely  unfortunate,  of  the  coal  industry  on 
Appalachia  and  its  people. 

1530.  MACLEAN,  ANNIE  M. 

Life  in  the  Pennsylvania  coal  fields  with  particular  refer- 
ence to  women.  American  Journal  of  Sociology  14:  329- 
oi  lyuy. 

1531.     MC  GILL,  NETTIE  P. 

Welfare  of  children  in  the  bituminous  coal  mining  comm- 
unities in  West  Virginia.  Washington:  GPO,  1923.  77p. 
(Children's  Bureau  Publication  117). 

1.532.     MAGNUSSON,  LEIFUR 

Company  housing  in  the  anthracite  region  of  Pennsylvania. 
MLR  10:  1260-69  1920. 

1533.  MAGNUSSON,  LEIFUR 

Company  housing  in  the  bituminous  coal  fields.  MLR  10: 
1045-52  1920. 

1534.  MALONEY,  JOHN 

The  angel  of  Happy  Hollow.  Saturday  Evening  Post  220 
F.  14,  1948  30-31,  97-99. 

Social  work  of  Elizabeth  Collins  in  the  Southern  Appalachian  coal 
fields. 

1535.  MARJA,  FERN 

Forgotten  children:  the  West  Virginia  Story.  Title  of  a 
series  of  six  articles  appearing  in  the  New  York  Post  F  22 
to  F  28,  1960. 

Report  on  human  misery  in  the  coal  fields  of  southern  West  Vir- 
ginia. 

1536.  MARKHAM,  EDWIN 

The  hoe-man  in  the  making:  little  slaves  of  the  coal  mines. 
Cosmopolitan  42:  20-28  1906. 

1537.  MARTIN,  JOHN  B. 

Crisis  in  coaltown.  Saturday  Evening  Post  S  18,  1954  24-5. 
"The  case  history  of  dying  West  Frankfort,  Illinois." 

171 


1538.  MARTIN,  JOHN  B. 

Life  and  death  in  coaltown.  New  York  Times  Magazine  Ja 
13,  1952  11. 

1539.  MATTHEWS,  ELLEN  N. 

Work  opportunities  and  school  training  for  the  coal  min- 
ers' children.  National  Conference  of  Social  Work.  Pro- 
ceedings 1921:  287-92. 

1540.  MAZZEI,  FRANX  JOSEPH 

A  study  of  the  factors  influencing  job  satisfaction  among 
factory  workers  of  Clarksburg,  West  Virginia,  and  coal 
miners  of  Morgantown,  West  Virginia.  Thesis.  West  Vir- 
ginia University.  1953. 

1541.  MILLER,  NORA 

Girl  in  the  rural  family.  Chapel  Hill:  University  of  North 
Carolina  Press,  1935.  108p. 

Chapter  4:  the  soft  coal  mine  family. 

1542.  miners'  story 
Independent  54:  1407-10  1902. 

The  life  story  of  a  Pennsylvania  miner  who  started  work  at  the 
age  of  twelve. 

1543.  MORRIS,  HOMER  L. 

The  plight  of  the  bituminous  coal  miner.  Philadelphia: 
University  of  Pennsylvania  Press,  1934.  253p. 

Study  is  centered  chiefly  in  the  coal  fields  of  Kentucky  and  West 
Virginia. 

1544.  MORRIS,  THOMAS  JOHN 

The  coal  camp;  a  pattern  of  limited  community  life. 
Thesis.  West  Virginia  University.  1950.  93p. 

1545.  MURPHY,  R.  E. 

A  Southern  West  Virginia  mining  community.  Economic 
Geography  9:  51-59  1933. 

1546.  MYERS,  JAMES 

Rehabilitation  in  the  coal  fields.  Christian  Century  49: 
1053-55  1932. 

Activity  of  the  Quakers  in  a  northern  West  Virginia  coal  field. 


172 


1547.  NELLIS,  LEE 

What  does  energy  development  mean  for  Wyoming?  Hu- 
man Organization  33:  229-38  1974. 

A  look  at  the  impact  on  Hanna,  Wyoming,   a  small   town,  of  rapid 
growth  due  to  new  mining  operations. 

1548.  NELSON,  H.  L. 

Life  in  the  coal  villages.  Harpers  Weekly  32:  4.58  1888. 
Reply  to  the  above:  Colliery  Engineer  8:  252-53  1887/88. 

1549.  NEUBERT,  ANN 

We  belong  in  these  hills.  Ladies  Home  journal  Jl  1961  88- 
91. 

Account  of  the  way  of  life  of  the  families  of  unemployed  coal  min- 
ers. The  Neuberts  live  in  Fayette  County,  West  Virginia. 

1550.  NICHOLS,  FRANCIS  H. 

Children  of  the  coal  shadows.  McClures  20:  435-44  1902/3. 
Child  labor  in  the  anthracite  coal  fields. 

1551.  NOON,  W.  H. 

The  coal  camp  bootlegger.  West  Virginia  Coal  Mining  In- 
stitute. Proceedings  1921  78-80. 

The  problems  created  by  the  bootleggers  who  cater  "to  the  thirst 
and  conviviality"  of  the  mine  camps. 

1552.  NOONAN,  J.  ROBERT 

Analysis  of  contingencies  in  the  Appalachian  coalfields. 
Community  Mental  Health  Journal  12:  99-105  1976. 

Prosperity,  indeed  survival,  of  those  living  in  the  coal  fields  has  de- 
pended on  conditions  over  which  they  have  no  control.  Author  sug- 
gests ways  to  help  overcome  the  passivity  which  results. 

1552a.     NOONAN,  J.  ROBERT 

The  mystique  of  coal  mining.  Appalachian  Notes  4:  17-23 
1976 

Study  of  the  motivation  of  miners. 
1553.     NORTON,  HELEN  G. 

Feudalism  in  West  Virginia.  Nation  13:  154-5  1931. 
"Life  in  West  Virginia  coal  camps  is  unbelievably  feudalistic." 


173 


1554.  NUTTALL,  JOHN 

Trees  above  with  coal  below.  San  Diego,  Calif.:  Neyenesch 
Printers,  1961.  202p. 

The  author's  personal  reminiscences  of  life  in  the  timber  and  coal 
lands  of  Fayette  County,  W.  Va.  in  the  late  19th  and  early  20th 
centuries. 

1555.  OBENAUER,  MARIE  L. 

Living  conditions  among  coal  workers  of  the  United  States. 
Ann.  Amer.  Acad.  Ill:  12-23  1924. 

1556.  OBENAUER,  MARIE  L. 

Who  are  the  coal  mine  workers?  North  American  Review 
219:  609-15  1924. 

1557.  OWEN,  C.  E. 

Successful  centralization  of  township  schools.  Coal  Age 
Ap  1, 1916  601-4. 

Account  of  school  centralization  and  design  of  school  building  in 
mining  area  in  McDowell  County,  West  Virginia. 

1558.  PALANGE,  MARK 

Coal  camp  buys  itself:  David,  Ky.  Mountain  Life  and 
Work  Nov  1975  33-35. 

Residents  of  a  former  coal  camp  formed  the  David  Community 
Development  Corp.  and  bought  their  own  town. 

1559.  PARKER,  EDWARD  W. 

Workmen's  houses  in  the  anthracite  regions.  National  Plan- 
ning Association.  Proceedings  5:  54-66  1916. 

1560.  PARKER,  RUTH  L. 

With  the  Friends  in  the  coal  fields.  Mountain  Life  and 
Work  O  1932  3-10. 

Activities  of  the  American  Friends  Service  Committee  in  relieving 
distress  in  the  coal  fields. 

1561.  PARLOW,  ANITA 

Pikeville,  Kentucky :  Millionaires  and  mobile  homes.  South- 
ern Exposure  Winter  1976  25-30. 

"For  many  residents,  neither  the  planners'  strategies  nor  the  coal 
barons'  success  has  done  much  to  alter  a  life  of  poverty  in  the  midst 
of  plenty." 


174 


1562.  PARSONS,  FLOYD  W. 

A  modem  coal  mining  town.  Engineering  and  Mining 
Journal  82:  830-32  1906. 

The  glories  of  Zeigler,  Illinois  and  the  Ziegler  Coal  Co. 

1563.  peabody's  new  coal  town  in  Illinois 
Coal  Age  5:  133-34  1914. 

Account  of  Kincaid,  Illinois. 

1564.  PEARCE,  JOHN  E. 

The  superfluous  people  of  Hazard,  Kentucky.  Reporter  Ja 
3,  1963.  33-35. 

Coal  miners  are,  and  will  probably  remain,  superfluous. 

1565.  PERRY,  HUEY 

They'll  cut  off  your  project.  New  York:  Praeger,  1972. 
256p. 

Author  tells  of  his  experience  as  director  of  a  "War  on  Poverty" 
project  in  Mingo  County,  West  Virginia. 

1566.  PETERSON,  BILL 

Coal  town  revisited;  an  Appalachian  notebook.  Chicago: 
Regnery,  1972.  230p. 

"Life  in  coaltown  is  much  the  same  as  Kennedy  and  those  who  fol- 
lowed him  in  1960  saw  it."  A  journalist  searches  to  determine  why 
the  United  Mine  Workers  Union  and  "the  War  on  Poverty"  failed 
to  save  Appalachia. 

1567.  POLSKOV,  WALTER  N. 

Sufficient  unto  himself  is  the  coal  digger.  Labor  and  Na- 
tion My/Je  1947  28-29. 

An  attempt  to  explain  "Why  the  miners  behave  the  way  they  do". 

1568.  QUARLES,  MARY  A. 

A  comparison  of  some  aspects  of  family  life  between  two 
areas  of  Leslie  County,  Kentucky.  Thesis.  University  of 
Kentucky.  1952. 

1569.  RASKLN,  A.  H. 

How  miners  live.  American  Mercury  64:  421-27  1947. 

A  generally  dismal  picture  of  life  in  the  Pennsylvania  and  West  Vir- 
ginia coal  fields. 


175 


1570.  RATLIFF,  PAUL 

Yesterday's  coal  town.  Mountain  Life  &  Work  Winter  1960 
20-23. 

A  "photo-essay"  depicting  conditions  in  a  declining  mine  village. 

1571.  REYNOLDS,  JAMES  E. 

Anxiety  in  coal  miners.  Thesis.  West  Virginia  University. 
1959.  78p. 

"Some  relevant  characteristics  of  miners  whose  conditions  were 
diagnosed  as  'Anxiety  Reaction'  in  McDowell  County,  West  Virginia 
during  the  years  1955  through  1957." 

1572.  RICH,  MARK 

Some  churches  of  coal  mining  communities  of  West  Vir- 
ginia. New  York.  1951  62p. 

Survey  sponsored  by  the  West  Virginia  Council  of  Churches  and 
the  Committee  for  Cooperative  Field  Research. 

1573.  RICHARDSON,  F.  L.  W. 

Community  resettlement  in  a  depressed  coal  region.  Ap- 
plied Anthropology  Pt.  I  1:  O  D  1941  24-53;  Pt.  II  1:  3 
Ap/Je  1942  32-61;  Pt.  Ill  7:  4  1948  1-27. 

1574.  RIDENOUR,  GEORGE  L. 

The  American  coal  miner  and  the  social  problem.  Thesis. 
Southern  Baptist  Theological  Seminary.  1927. 

1575.  RORERTS,  PETER 

Anthracite  coal  communities;  a  study  of  the  demography, 
the  social,  educational  and  moral  life  of  the  anthracite  re- 
gions. New  York:  Macmillan,  1904.  387p. 

1576.  RORINSON,  M.  B. 

Among  the  coal  miners.  Missionary  Review  25:  835-39 
1902. 

Illinois  setting. 

1577.  RODEN,  B.  F. 

The  commissary:  its  indispensability  and  purposes.  Coal 
Age  4:  240-42  1913. 

1578.  ROGERS,  JACK 

I  remember  that  mining  town.  West  Virginia  Review  15: 
203-5  1938. 

Vivid  description  of  life  in  a  West  Virginia  mine  camp  during  the 
author's  boyhood. 


176 


1579.  ROOD,  HENRY  E. 

A  Pennsylvania  colliery  village.  Century  Magazine  55: 
809-21  1897/98. 

1580.  ROOSEVELT,  THEODORE 

Coal  miner  at  home.  Outlook  96:  899-908  1910. 

Account  of  the  author's  short  trip  to  the  Scranton  area.  TR  paints 
a  generally  cheerful  picture. 

1581.  ROSS,  M.  H. 

The  Appalachian  coal  miner:  his  way  of  living,  working 
and  relating  to  others.  New  York  Academy  of  Science.  An- 
nals 200:  184-96  1972. 

1582.  ROSS,  M.  H. 

Life  style  of  the  coal  miner;  America's  original  hard  hat. 
Appalachia  Medicine  Apr  1971  5-11. 

A  concise  resume  of  social,  psychological  and  economic  problems  as- 
sociated with  the  coal  miner.  Provides  a  list  of  factors  which  attract 
men  to  this  seemingly  unattractive  occupation. 

1583.  ROSS,  MALCOLM  H. 

Machine  Age  in  the  hills.  New  York:  Macmillan,  1933. 
248p. 

"The  effects  of  technology  ...  in  the  coal  fields  of  Kentucky  and 
West  Virginia."  A  classic  report. 

1584.  ROSS,  MALCOLM  H. 

Permanent  part-time.  Survey  Graphic  266-68  1933. 
Activity  of  the  Quakers  in  the  West  Virginia  mine  fields. 

1585.  ROY,  ANDREW 

Characteristics  of  miners.  Ohio  Mining  Journal  2:  88-92 
1883/84. 

Miners  are  made  "quarrelsome  and  fault-finding"  by  "the  pernicious 
influence  of  breathing  bad  air." 

1586.  RYAN,  FREDERICK 

The  rehabilitation  of  Oklahoma  coal  mining  communities. 
Norman:  University  of  Oklahoma  Press,  1935.  120p. 

1587.  THE  SALOON  EVIL  IN  THE  MINING  INDUSTRY 

Coal  Age  12:  1008-9  1917. 


177 


1588.  SHANNON,  IRWIN  V. 

Southeastern  Ohio  in  depression  and  war;  the  disintegra- 
tion of  an  area.  Columbus:  Ohio  State  University.  1943. 
54p.  (Bureau  of  Educational  Research  Monograph  24). 

1589.  SHAW,  IRA  D. 

Welfare  work  among  miners.  Coal  Age  4:  21-22  1913. 

1590.  SHEPHERD,  WILLIAM  G. 

Big  black  spot.  Colliers  S  19,  1931  12-13. 

Account  of  conditions  in  the  West  Virginia  coal  fields,  with  special 
emphasis  on  the  company  store. 

1591.  SHURICK,  A.  T. 

Colliery  dwelling  construction.  Coal  Age  38-41,  211-14, 
1911/12. 

Discussion  of  proper  homes  for  miners  and  mine  officials.  Plans  and 
illustrations  are  included. 

1592.  SIMPSON,  ALEXANDER  G. 

The  life  of  a  miner  in  two  hemispheres.  New  York:  Abby 
Press,  1903.  300p. 

Includes  sections  on  the  author's  experience  as  a  mine  official  in 
Illinois  and  Alabama. 

1593.  SMITH,  RICHARD  C. 

Human  crisis  in  the  kingdom  of  coal.  New  York:  Friend- 
ship Press,  1952.  113p. 

Examines  the  plight  of  the  coal  miner  in  both  Europe  and  America. 
Author  was  for  some  years  director  of  the  Mountaineer  Mining  Mis- 
sion in  Morgantown.  West  Virginia. 

1594.  SOCIOLOGICAL  CONDITIONS  IN  WEST  VIRGINIA 

Coal  Age  2:  733-34  1912. 

1595.  SOCIOLOGICAL  WORK   ACCOMPLISHED  BY   THE   CONSOLIDATION 
COAL  COMPANY 

Coal  Age  15:  54-58  1919. 

Account  of  social  services  provided  by  the  Company  to  its  miners- 
nursing  care,  education,  recreation,  etc. 

1596.  SPAHR,  CHARLES  B. 

The  coal  miners  of  Pennsylvania.  Outlook  62:  805-12  1899. 
Account  of  economic  and  social  conditions  in  the  anthracite  fields. 


178 


1597.  STEELMAN,  JAMES 

The  English  Language  in  the  coal  mining  regions.  Coal 
Age  6:  834-36  1914. 

The  problc.ni  <>i  teaching  English  to  foreign  bom  miners. 

1598.  STELLMAN,  DON 

Being  in  the  right  place  at  the  right  time.  Mountain  Re- 
view Sept.  1974  30-34. 

"Last  year  11  lawyers  from  eastern  Kentucky  received  a  total  of 
more  than  S3. 8  million  for  representing  disabled  coal  miners  who 
were  fighting  for  black  lung  benefits.  .  .  ." 

1599.  STILLMAN,  DON 

Company  stores  thrive.  Mountain  Life  ami  Work  Dec  1975 
36-44. 

Reprinted  from  the  "UMWA  Journal,"  the  article  describes  the  con- 
tinuing existence  and  modem  practices  of  the  company  store. 

1600.  STOCKTON,  RICHARD 

Underground  in  Illinois;  how  coal  miners  live,  work  and 
struggle  for  unity.  Chicago:  National  Research  League, 
1935?.  32p. 

1601.  STORE  CHECKS  VS.  THRIFT 

Coal  Age  8:  619  1915. 

Editorial  on  the  role  of  the  company  store.  It  triggered  a  number  of 
letters  on  the  subject  on  pp.  812-13,  852-54,  895-97. 

1602.  STRONG,  EDNA  R. 

A  sociological  analysis  of  ecology,  structure  and  processes 
in  a  Virginia  coal  mining  community.  Thesis.  Louisiana 
State  University.  1943. 

1603.  SWADOS,  HARVEY 

The  miners:  men  without  work.  Dissent  6:  389-401  1959. 
Account  of  life  in  the  coal  fields  of  western  Pennsylvania. 

1604.  SWEET,  PATRICIA  A. 

The  effects  of  living  in  an  isolated  mining  camp  on  the 
learning  ability  of  poor  and  non-poor  students  in  a  second 
grade  class  in  Keokee  Elementary  School,  Keokee,  Vir- 
ginia. Thesis.  East  Tennessee  State  University,  1970.  45p. 

1605.  SWIFT,  BERT,  ROBERT  DECKER  AND  MIKE  MCKEOWN 

Mental  health  in  Appalachia:  an  emerging  problem.  Ap- 
palachia  Oct/Nov  1975  36-44. 


179 


Mental  health  problems  will  increase  "as  the  drive  for  energy  dis- 
rupts community  structures,  changes  the  character  of  population 
groups  and  alters  prevailing  patterns  of  culture." 

1606.  TAYLOR,  WARREN  C. 

Father  Ligutti's  homestead.  Christian  Century  56:  56-8  Ja 
11, 1939. 

Account  of  efforts  among  coal  miners  in  the  Granger,  Iowa  area  to 
combine  small  farming  with  mining. 

1607.  TIPPETT,  THOMAS 

Horse  Shoe  Bottoms.  New  York:  Harpers,  1935.  298p. 

Account  of  mining  conditions  and  labor  relations  in  the  Illinois 
coal  fields.  1870's  and  1880's. 

1608.  TOWSON,  CHARLES  R. 

Replacing  the  saloon  in  mining  communities.  Coal  Age  8: 
264  1915. 

With  the  YMCA. 

1609.  u.  s.  children's  bureau 

Child  labor  and  the  welfare  of  children  in  the  anthracite 
coal  mining  district.  Washington:  GPO,  1922.  94p.  (Bureau 
Publication  106). 

1610.  u.  s.  women's  bureau 

Home  environment  and  employment  opportunities  of  wo- 
men in  coal-mine  workers'  families.  Washington:  GPO, 
1925.  61p.  (Women's  Bureau.  Bulletin  45). 

1611.  VAN  METER,  LA  RUE 

Social  organization  of  an  Illinois  coal-mining  community. 
Thesis.  University  of  Illinois.  1932. 

1612.  VENSLAUSKAS,  STANLEY  C. 

Emigration  from  the  Schuylkill  County,  Pennsylvania  coal 
fields,  1930-1943.  Thesis.  University  of  Pennsylvania.  1944. 

1613.  VECSEY,  GEORGE 

Day  in  the  life  of  a  coal  miner.  Business  and  Society  Re- 
view 10:  65-70  Summer  1974. 

1614.  VECSEY,  GEORGE 

One  sunset  a  week:  the  story  of  a  coal  miner.  New  York: 
Saturday  Review  Press,  1974,  247p. 

Account  of  the  life  and  views  of  southwestern  Virginia  coal  miner. 
The  miner  and  his  family  are  viewed  by  much  of  the  community  as 
being  radicals. 

180 


1615.  WALKER,  \VI1.\1  \ 

Distress  in  a  southern  Illinois  county.  Social  Sen  ice  Re- 
view 5:  558-81  1931. 

Account  of  misery  in  Franklin  County,  Illinois  caused  by  the  sharp 
decline  in  coal  mine  employment. 

1616.  WANCE,  WILLIAM  AND  RICHARD  BUTLER 

Effect  of  industrial  changes  on  occupational  "inheritance" 
in  four  Pennsylvania  communities.  Social  Forces  27:  158- 
62  1948. 

Study  of  occupational  inheritance  in  mining  families  in  bituminous 
coal  communities  hard  hit  by  technological  change. 

1617.  WARBURTON,  AMBER  A. 

Guidance  in  a  rural-industrial  community;  Harlan  County, 
a  Kentucky  coal  mining  district,  plans  with  and  for  its  boys 
and  girls.  Washington:  National  Educational  Association, 
1954.  249p. 

1618.  WATTS,  A.  C. 

Utah  Fuel  Co.'s  Somerset  Mines  prosper  under  prohibi- 
tion. Coal  Age  11:  796-98  1917. 

The  company's  chief  engineer  claims  a  vast  improvement  in  condi- 
tions since  the  saloon  was  turned  into  a  social  club  ( dry ) . 

1619.  WELLER,  JACK 

Yesterday's  people.  Lexington:  University  of  Kentucky 
Press,  1965.  163p. 

Account  of  the  life  style  of  rural  people  in  a  Southern  Appalachian 
coal  mining  area  (Boone  County,  West  Virginia).  The  book  has  be- 
come a  classic. 

1620.  WETZEL,  JOHN  A. 

Game  of  black  diamonds.  Outlook  126:  593-97  1920. 
General  discussion  of  the  industry,  especially  life  of  the  miners. 

1621.  WHITE,  J.  H. 

Houses  for  mining  towns.  Washington:  GPO,  1914.  64p. 
(U.S.  Bureau  of  Mines.  Bulletin  87). 

Treats  of  plans  for  and  arrangement  of  mining  towns. 

1622.  WILLARD,  LUCIUS 

Some  adjuncts  to  efficiency  in  coal  mining.  Coal  Age  Ap 
22,  1916  719-21. 

Account  of  social  improvements,  including  a  club  house  for  miners, 
in  Roslyn,  Washington. 


181 


1622a.  WILLIAMS,  BRUCE  T. 

Underground  bituminous  coal  miners  of  Cambria  County, 
Pennsylvania;  an  anthropological  study.  Dissertation.  Uni- 
versity of  Pittsburgh,  1976.  253p. 

1623.  WILLIAMS,  DORCAS  A. 

Food  habits  of  the  pupils  in  Monongahela  &  Dunbar 
(West  Virginia)  High  School  whose  parents  are  engaged 
in  coal  mining.  Thesis.  West  Virginia  University.  1952. 

1624.  WILLIAMS,  L.  M. 

Transformation  of  a  coal  mining  town.  Mining  Congress 
Journal  Ag  1943.  37-40. 

Describes  the  improvement  of  Wheelwright,  Kentucky  as  the  result 
of  a  community  improvement  program  of  the  Inland  Steel  Co. 

1625.  WILLIAMS,  STANLEY  B. 

Disorganization  and  delinquency  in  three  coal  communi- 
ties. Thesis.  West  Virginia  University.  1954.  64p. 

1626.  WILLIS,  BEVERLY  A. 

Socioeconomic  problems  facing  industry  include  inad- 
equate housing.  Coal  Mining  and  Processing  Je  1976  62-66. 

The  new  generation  of  miners  demands  vastly  better  housing  than 
the  traditional  coal  camp. 

1627.  WILSON,  HELEN 

Child  labor  and  the  welfare  of  children  in  an  anthracite 
coal  mining  district.  Washington:  GPO,  1922.  94p.  (Child- 
ren's Bureau.  Publication  106). 

Shenandoah  area  of  Pennsylvania. 

1628.  WILSON,  JOHN  M. 

The  dark  and  the  damp.  New  York:  Dutton,  1951.  256p. 

Autobiography.  Includes  experiences  of  the  author  in  the  coal  mines 
of  Indiana. 

1629.  WOODBRIDGE,  DWIGHT 

Sanitation  at  mining  villages  in  the  Birmingham  district, 
Alabama.  Washington:  GPO,  1913.  27p.  (Bureau  of  Mines 
Technical  Paper  33 ) . 

1630.  ZIMMERMAN,  H.  O. 

Modernization  of  living  conditions  in  a  coal  mining  town. 
Kentucky  Mining  Institute.  Proceedings  1:  23-30.  1940. 

The  town  of  Wheelwright,  Kentucky. 

182 


1631.     ZIMOLZAK,  CHESTER  E. 

Social,  economic  and  environmental  degradation:  a  study 
of  mining  economy  interrelationships.  Pennsylvania  Aca- 
demy of  Science.  Proceedings  47:  19-23  1973. 

"The  decline  in  the  human  environment  of  an  area  dependent  on 
coal  milling  is  linked  to  the  mining-induced  decline  of  the  physical 
environment  in  a  complex  series  of  interrelationships".  Study  was 
conducted  in  Monongalia  County,  West  Virginia. 


183 


Jiumpvdalm. 


1632.  ACUFF,  REECE 

The  coal  rail  rate  structure  and  fourth  section  relief. 
Thesis.  University  of  Tennessee.  1953. 

1633.  ADELMAN,  M.  A. 

American  coal  in  Western  Europe.  Journal  of  Industrial 
Economics  14:  199-211 1966. 

The  principle  obstacle  to  the  use  of  more  American  coal  in  Europe 
is  "a  very  high  railroad  freight  rate  in  the  U.  S.,  discriminatory 
against  exports". 

1634.  AMERICAN    RAILWAY    ASSOCIATION.    CONFERENCE   COMMITTEE 
WITH  UNITED  STATES  COAL  COMMISSION 

Report.  Washington,  1923.  104p. 

1635.  AMERICAN    RAILWAY    ASSOCIATION.    SPECIAL    COMMITTEE    ON 
NATIONAL  DEFENSE 

Bituminous  coal  in  the  United  States;  plan  for  the  distri- 
bution of  bituminous  coal  in  the  United  States  to  secure 
the  minimum  of  rail  transportation.  Washington:  GPO, 
1918.  67p. 

1636.  ASSOCIATION  OF  AMERICAN  RAILROADS.  RAILROAD  COMMITTEE 
FOR  THE  STUDY  OF  TRANSPORTATION 

Bituminous  coal  and  lignite.  Washington,  1946.  135p. 

1637.  ASSOCIATION  OF  AMERICAN  RAILROADS.  RAILROAD  COMMITTEE 
FOR  THE  STUDY  OF  TRANSPORTATION 

Report  on  anthracite  and  bituminous  coal.  Washington, 
1947.  97p. 

1638.  AUDE,  T.  C.  AND  OTHERS 

Slurry-pipeline  systems  for  coal,  other  solids  come  of  age. 
Oil  &  Gas  Journal  Jl  21,  1975  66-72. 

In  many  situations,  slurry  pipelines  offer  lower  costs  than  new  lines 
or  truck  transport  over  existing  roads. 


184 


1639.  BALLERT,  ALBERT  G. 

The  coal  trade  of  the  Great  Lakes  and  the  Port  of  Toledo. 
Geographical  Review  38:  194-205  1948. 

1640.  BALLERT,  ALBERT  G. 

The  Great  Lakes  coal  trade;  present  and  future.  Economic 
Geography  29:  48-59  1953. 

1641.  BANKS   (R.  L.  )   AND  ASSOCIATES 

Market  and  transportation  factors  affecting  future  export 
of  United  States  coal  to  Ontario  and  Quebec.  Washington, 
1969.  1  vol.  v.  p. 

1642.  BARTLETT,  J.  H. 

Transport  of  coal  in  the  Ohio  and  the  lower  Mississippi. 
Institute  of  Civil  Engineers.  Proceedings  134:  334-51  1898. 

1643.  BEMENT,  ALBURTO 

Shipping  mines  and  coal  railroads  of  Illinois  and  Indiana. 
Chicago,  1903.  54p. 

"Issued  with  the  compliments  of  the  Peabody  Coal  Company." 

1644.  BLISS,  J.  A. 

What  is  the  role  of  competition  in  transporting  utility  fuel. 
Railway  Age  N  12, 1962  36-7. 

1645.  BOGEN,  JULES  I. 

The  anthracite  railroads;  a  study  in  American  railroad  en- 
terprise. New  York:  Ronald  Press,  1927.  281p. 

1646.  BOONE,  JAMES  W. 

The  econometric  forecasting  of  national  rail  car  require- 
ments for  bituminous  coal,  Dissertation.  Pennsylvania  State 
University,  1970.  160p. 

The  availability  of  sufficient  rail  cars  has  been  a  continuing  pro- 
blem in  rail  transport  in  general  and  coal  transport  in  particular. 
The  author  attempts  to  create  a  general  forecasting  model  which 
could  be  applied  to  determine  quarterly  carload  requirements  for 
the  bituminous  coal  industry. 

1647.  CAMPBELL,  THOMAS  C. 

The  bituminous  coal  freight-rate  structure;  an  economic 
appraisal.  Morgantown:  West  Virginia  University,  1954. 
47p.  (Its  Business  and  Economics  Studies  3:  3). 


185 


1647a.  CAMPBELL,  THOMAS  C.  AND  SIDNEY  KATELL 

Railroad  volume  freight  rates:  evolution  and  analysis  ICC 
Practioners  Journal  Jan/Feb  1977  146-61. 

Experimentation  with  freight  rates  is  required.  Rates  designed  on  a 
single-car  basis  are  no  longer  appropriate. 

1648.  CAMPBELL,  THOMAS  C. 

Transporting  western  coal:  unit  train  or  slurry  pipeline. 
Logistics  and  Transportation  Review  11:  147-52  1975. 

"The  energy  crisis  and  increasing  output  from  the  Western  coal 
mines  call  for  more  study  on  low-cost  long  distance  transportation." 

1649.  CARLSON,  FRED  A.  AND  FRANK  SEAWALL 

Coal  traffic  on  the  Ohio  River  system.  Columbus:  Ohio 
State  University,  1962.  49p.  ( Ohio  State  University.  Bureau 
of  Business  Research.  Monograph  107). 

1650.  CARUSO,  JOHN  A. 

The  Coal  &  Coke  Railway  Company  of  West  Virginia. 
West  Virginia  History  11:  62-69  1949. 

1651.  CHAMBERLAIN,  J.  W. 

Coal  shipping  on  the  Great  Lakes.  Coal  Age  4:  188-91, 
222-26,  268-70,  298-300,  1913. 

1652.  CHESAPEAKE  AND  OHIO  RAILROAD  COMPANY 

Notes  on  the  coal  trade  of  the  Chespeake  &  Ohio  Railroad 
in  its  bearing  upon  the  commercial  interests  of  Richmond, 
Virginia.  Richmond:  Baughman,  1878.  12p. 

1653.  CLARK,  PAUL  R. 

Transportation  economics  of  coal  resources  of  northern 
slope  coal  fields,  Alaska.  Thesis.  University  of  Alaska, 
1973.  163p. 

1654.  COAL— ITS  COST  AND  SUPPLY 

Scientific  American  7:  153  1862. 

"Coal  which  is  sold  at  the  mines  in  Pennsylvania  for  $1.50  per  ton, 
is  sold  for  no  less  than  $5.50  in  New  York."  A  plea  for  better  and 
cheaper  transportation. 

1655.  A  COAL  PIPE  LINE 

Black  Diamond  17:  213  1896. 

Report  of  an  experiment  near  Pittsburgh.  "The  much  discussed  pro- 
ject of  pumping  the  coal  or  coal  dust  to  the  sea  coast  from  the 
mines  has,  it  is  claimed,  been  demonstrated  a  success." 


186 


1656.  COAL  ROAD  FIFTY  YEARS  AGO 

Colliery  Engineer  8:  163  1888. 

Brief  account  of  the  Danville  &  Pottsville  R.  R. 

1657.  COAL  SHIPPING  ON  THE  GREAT  LAKES 

Coal  Age  4:  374-76,  408-11,  449-51,  531-33  1913. 

1658.  COLEMAN,  ELIZABETH  D. 

Forerunner  of  Virginia's  first  railway.  Virginia  Cavalcade 
Winter  1954  4-7. 

Account  of  the  development  (1828)  and  operation  of  a  thirteen- 
mile  tramway  which  connected  the  James  River  and  coal  mines  in 
Chesterfield  County. 

1659.  CREDITOR,  MORRIS 

Rail-river-rail  transportation  of  coal  today  and  days  ahead. 
West  Virginia  Coal  Mining  Institute.  Proceedings  1953 
93-100. 

y  1660.     CUVELLIER,  I.  C. 

Coal  shipping  on  the  Great  Lakes.  Coal  Age  4:   338-42 
1913. 

1661.  DAHL,  H.  D.  AND  D.  L.  MC  CAIN 

Continuous  underground  slurry  transport  of  coal.  Mining 
Congress  Journal  My  1974  30-34. 

1662.  DAWSON,  j.  w. 

Change  of  railroad  rates  in  West  Virginia.  Coal  Age  8: 
973-75  1915. 

Writer  sees  a  conspiracy  of  the  Pennsylvania  R.  R.  and  the  Pitts- 
burgh Coal  Co.  against  the  West  Virginia  operators. 

1663.  FIRST  COAL  RAILROAD 

Coal  1:  303  1882. 

Chesterfield  Railroad  Company  (Virginia,  1828). 

1664.  FOSTER,  JOHN  W. 

Mineral  wealth  and  railroad  development.  New  York, 
1872.  60p. 

Series  of  letters  dealing  largely  with  the  development  of  the  Indiana 
coal  fields. 


187 


1665.  GLOVER,  THOMAS  O.  AND  OTHERS 

Unit  train  transportation  of  coal:  technology  and  descrip- 
tion of  nine  representative  operations.  Wasnington:  GPO, 
1970.  109p.  (U.S.  Bureau  of  Mines.  Information  Circular 

8444). 

1666.  GREENBRIER  COAL  AND  COKE  CO.   VS.   NORFOLK  AND  WESTERN 
RAILWAY  CO. 

Coal  &  Coke  Jl  1,  1905  7-10. 

Discussion  and  text  of  judical  decision  concerning  discrimination 
on  the  part  of  a  railroad  in  the  distribution  of  coal  cars. 

1667.  GREENE,  JOSEPH  A. 

History  of  the  rate  differentials  on  bituminous  coal  be- 
tween southwestern  Virginia  and  competing  coal  fields  to 
the  southeastern  and  Carolina  territories.  Thesis  (M.A.). 
•  University  of  Virginia.  1943.  187p. 

1668.  GREINER,  JOHN  E. 

Coal  docks  on  the  Great  Lakes;  report  of  an  investigation 
made  for  the  Baltimore  &  Ohio  Railroad  Company.  Balti- 
more, 1914.  317p. 

1669.  GUTHEIM,  A.  G. 

The  transportation  problem  in  the  bituminous  coal  indus- 
try. American  Economic  Association.  Papers  &  Proceedings 
11:  94-105  1921. 

1670.  HARRISON,  FAIRFAX 

Hearings  before  a  subcommittee  of  the  Committee  on  Na- 
val Affairs,  United  States  Senate.  .  .  Statement  of  Fairfax 
Harrison  on  behalf  of  Southern  Railway  Company,  July  27, 
1914.  [Washington,  1941].  49p. 

1671.  HARTMAN,  R.  A.  AND  J.  R.  REED 

Feasibility  study  of  the  vertical  transport  of  coal  by  pipe- 
line. University  Park:  Pennsylvania  State  University,  1973. 
95p.  ( Mineral  Industries  Experiment  Station.  SR-97 ) . 

1672.  HEMPHILL,  WILLIAM  E. 

Three-horse  team.  Virginia  Cavalcade  Autumn  1953  8-9. 

Account  of  two-tongued  wagon  used  to  transport  coal  in  Norfolk 
about  1915. 

1673.  HOLMES  LESLIE  A. 

Pre-War  truck  movement  of  coal  from  Illinois  mines.  Jour- 
nal of  Geography  42:  333-38  1943. 


188 


1674.  HUDSON,  JAMES  F. 

The  anthracite  coal  pool.  North  American  Review  144:  43- 

54  1887. 

A  denunciation  of  the  railroads  for  the  attempt  to  control  the  price 
of  coal. 

1675.  INDIANA  COAL  ASSOCIATION 

Report  of  coal  production  by  rail  shipping  mines  in  the 
state  of  Indiana,  during  calendar  years  1917  to  1953,  class- 
ified by  counties,  railroads,  veins  of  coal,  and  type  of  op- 
eration. Terre  Haute,  1954.  n.p. 

1676.  JOHNSTON,  RICHARD  M. 

Coal  car  distribution  and  handling  in  the  Pocahontas  reg- 
ion. Thesis.  University  of  Pennsylvania.  1959. 

1677.  JONES,  CHESTER  L. 

The  anthracite-tidewater  canals.  Ann.  Amer.  Acad.  31: 
102-16  1908. 

1678.  JONES,  CHESTER  L. 

The  economic  history  of  the  anthracite-tidewater  canals. 
Philadelphia:  University  of  Pennsylvania,  1908.  181p. 
( University  of  Pennsylvania.  Series  in  Political  Economy  & 
Public  Law  No.  22). 

1679.  JONES,  ELIOT 

The  commodity  clause  legislation  and  the  anthracite  rail- 
roads. Quarterly  Journal  of  Economics  27:  579-615  1913. 

1680.  JOSLIN,  FALCON 

Government  construction  of  railroads  and  leasing  of  coal 
lands.  American  Mining  Congress.  Proceedings  15:  167- 
84  1912. 

Attack  on  government  policies  in  Alaska. 

1681.  KEITH,  HERBERT 

Cheap  coal;  or  the  Boston  &  Northwestern,  Massachusetts 
Central  and  Poughkeepsie  railroads.  Boston:  Rand,  1877. 
21p. 

1682.  KEITH,  JEAN  E. 

The  role  of  the  Louisville  and  Nashville  Roalroad  in  the 
early  development  of  Alabama  coal  and  iron.  Business  His- 
tory Society.  Bulletin  26:  165-74  1952. 


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1683.  KING,  L.  AND  OTHERS 

Optimal  transportation  patterns  of  coal  in  the  Great  Lakes 
region.  Economic  Geography  47:  401-13  1971. 

1684.  king  coal's  highway 
Harper  64:  163-77  1882. 

Account  c-f  the  water  transportation  of  coal  from  the  Pittsburgh  area 
to  New  Orleans. 

1685.  LAMBIE,  JOSEPH  T. 

From  mine  to  market;  the  history  of  coal  transportation  on 
the  Norfolk  and  Western  Railroad.  New  York:  New  York 
University,  1954.  380p. 

A  work  of  the  first  importance.  Vital  for  an  understanding  of  the 
history  of  the  great  coal  fields  of  southern  West  Virginia. 

1686.  LARWOOD,  GARY  M.  AND  DAVID  C.  BENSON 

Coal  transportation  practices  and  equipment  requirements 
to  1985.  Washington:  GPO,  1976.  90p.  (U.S.  Bureau  of 
Mines.  Information  Circular  8706). 

Contains  61-item  bibliography,  pp.  54-57. 

1687.  LAUCK,  W.  J. 

Freight  rates  on  anthracite  coal,  1914-1920.  Washington, 
1920.  12p. 

1688.  LAUCK,  W.  J. 

Operating  and  financial  performance  of  anthracite  rail- 
roads. Washington,  1920.  29p. 

1689.  LOWERY,  WILLIAM 

Comparison  of  earnings  between  coal  carrying  and  non- 
coal  carrying  railroads.  Thesis.  West  Virginia  University. 
1950.  174p. 

1690.  MAC  AVOY,  PAUL  W.  AND  JAMES  SLOSS 

Regulation  of  transport  innovation:  the  ICC  and  unit  coal 
trains  to  the  east  coast.  New  York:  Random  House.  1967. 
143p. 

1691.  MC  DOWELL,  IRA  L. 

The  Lake  cargo  coal  rate  controversy.  Thesis.  West  Vir- 
ginia University.  1932. 


190 


1692.  MANSFIELD,  HARVEY  C. 

The  Lake  cargo  coal  rate  controversy;  a  study  in  govern- 
mental adjustment  of  a  sectional  dispute.  New  York.  Col- 
umbia, 1932.  273p.  (Columbia  Studies  in  History,  Econo- 
mics and  Public  Law  373 ) . 

1693.  MARSHALL,  L.  C. 

The  commodities  clause  [of  the  Hepburn  Act].  Journal  of 
Political  Economy  17:  448-60  1909. 

Vl694.     MORAN,  E.  L. 

Coal  traffic  of  the  Great  Lakes.  Journal  of  Geography  15: 
150-59  1917. 

1695.  MORROW,  J.  D.  A. 

Transportation  factor  in  the  price  of  coal.  Academy  of  Poli- 
tical Science.  Proceedings  10:  116-27  1922. 

1696.  MOYER,  REED 

Requirement  contracts  and  energy  transportation  develop- 
ments in  coal.  Southern  Economic  Journal  31:  331-341 
1965. 

An  examination  of  the  economic  and  anti-trust  aspects  of  contracts 
providing  that  the  buyer  purchase  all  his  requirements  of  coal  from 
the  seller. 

1697.  MUTSCHLER,  P.  H.  AND  OTHERS 

Comparative  transportation  costs  of  supplying  low-sulfur 
fuels  to  midwestern  and  eastern  domestic  energy  markets. 
Washington:  GPO,  1973.  54p.  (U.S.  Bureau  of  Mines.  In- 
formation Circular  8614 ) . 

1698.  NEW    JERSEY.    LEGISLATURE.    SENATE.    COMMITTEE    ON    HIGH- 
WAYS, TRANSPORTATION  AND  PUBLIC  UTILITIES 

Public  hearing  on  Assembly  bill  675  (coal  slurry  pipeline 
bill)  held  September  26,  1962.  Trenton,  1962.  55p.  proc. 

1699.  NEW  YORK.  LEGISLATURE.  ASSEMBLY.  RAILROADS  COMMITTEE 

Report  relative  to  the  coal  combination.  (Albany),  1878. 
lOOp.  (Assembly  Doc.  128). 

1700.  NEW  YORK   (  STATE  )  .  PUBLIC  WORKS  DEPT. 

The  New  York  State  canals;  the  canal  as  a  carrier  of  coal. 
Albany,  1918.  15p. 

1701.  NEWCOMB,  HARRY  T. 

The  anthracite  carrying  railroads.  Review  of  Revietvs  26: 
66-69  1902. 

191 


1702.  NORFOLK  AND  WESTERN  TURNS  COAL  TO  GOLD 

Business  Week  N  18,  1950  112-16. 

1703.  PAGE,  WILLIAM  N. 

West  Virginia  coal.  Engineering  &  Mining  Journal  81:  67- 
68  1906. 

Stresses  the  importance  of  transportation  in  the  southern  coal  fields. 

1704.  PARKER,  W.  J. 

The  great  coal  schooners  of  New  England,  1870-1909.  My- 
stic, Conn.,  1948.  135p.  (Publication  of  the  Marine  Histori- 
cal Association  2:  6). 

1705.  PATTON,  NORMAN  F. 

The  economics  of  the  distribution  of  anthracite.  AIME. 
Transactions  119:  405-17  1936. 

1706.  PHILADELPHIA  AND  READING  RAILROAD  COMPANY 

Argument  of  Franklin  B.  Gowen,  esq.  before  the  joint 
committee  of  the  Legislature  of  Pennsylvania,  appointed  to 
inquire  into  the  affairs  of  the  Philadelphia  and  Reading 
Coal  and  Iron  Company  .  .  .  Philadelphia:  Helfenstein, 
Lewis  &  Greene,  1875.  114p. 

1707.  PITTSBURGH.  CHAMBER  OF  COMMERCE 

Unjust  and  discriminatory  freight  rates  of  Pittsburgh  dis- 
trict coal.  Columbus,  Ohio:  Heer  Printing  Co.,  1911.  44p. 

1708.  POWE,  GEORGE  R. 

Economics  of  using  western  coal  in  Appalachian  markets. 
Mining  Congress  Journal  Je  1974  20-23. 

By  efficient  use  of  unit  trains  and  barges,  Burlington  Northern  can 
deliver  coal  from  Montana  and  Wyoming  to  powerplants  in  Appala- 
chia  at  competitive  prices. 

1709.  POWELL,  H.  BENJAMIN 

Coal  and  Pennsylvania's  transportation  policy,  1825-1828. 
Pemisylvania  History  38:  134-151  1971. 

The  development  of  the  coal  regions  by  the  construction  of  canals 
was  an  important  factor  in  Pennsylvania's  transportation  policy. 

1710.  RAILROAD  VS.  THE  COAL  INTEREST 

Black  Diamond  5:  170  1889/90. 

1711.  REITELL,  CHARLES 

Railway  rates  on  bituminous  and  anthracite  coal.  Ann. 
Amer.  Acad.  Ill:  155-164  1924. 


192 


1712.  ROPIEQUET,  R.  W. 

Coal  freight  rates-relativity  and  uniformity.  American 
Mining  Congress.  Proceedings  19:  250-60  1916. 

1713.  ROTHFUS,  ROBERT  R. 

Coal  trains  north:  the  Rochester  and  Pittsburgh  Railroad 
Company.  Western  Pennsylvania  Historical  Magazine  54: 
264-73  1971. 

Rochester  and  Pittsburgh  was  one  of  several  railroads  competing  for 
the  coal  trade  from  western  Pennsylvania  to  the  Great  Lakes  during 
the  1880's. 

1714.  ST.  JOHN,  ISAAC  M. 

Notes  on  the  coal  trade  of  the  Chesapeake  and  Ohio  Rail- 
road in  its  bearing  upon  the  commercial  interest  of  Rich- 
mond, Va.  n.p.,  1878.  12p. 

1715.  SCAMEHORN,  HOWARD  L. 

Transportation  and  coal:  the  development  of  the  coal  min- 
ing industry  in  Illinois,  1860-1890.  Thesis.  University  of 
Illinois.  1952. 

1716.  SCRANTON,  BOARD  OF  TRADE 

Report  of  the  transportation  committee  of  the  Scrantort 
Board  of  Trade  on  the  cheaper  transportation  of  the  small- 
er sizes  of  anthracite  coal,  and  the  value  of  culm  or  anth- 
racite waste  as  a  steam  producer.  Scranton,  1889.  24p. 

1717.  SHURICK,  A. 

An  analysis  of  the  coal  car  situation.  Coal  Age  4:  452-55 
1913. 

1717a.  SLURRY   TRANSPORT  ASSOCIATION 

Slurry  transportation  bibliography.  Washington,  1977.  41p. 

1718.  TAYLOR,  GLENN  R. 

Transportation  of  Kentucky  coal  by  water.  Kentucky  Min- 
ing Institute.  Proceedings  1956/57  10-21. 

1719  TEXAS  EASTERN  TRANSMISSION  CORPORATION 

Coal  pipelines;  a  handbook  of  facts  on  a  new  industry. 
Houston,  1962.  20p. 

1720  toexc.es,  albert  l.  and  frank  a.  JONES 

Truck  vs.  rail  haulage  in  bituminous  coal  strip  mines. 
Washington:  GPO,  1938.  54p.  (U.S.  Bureau  of  Mines.  Re- 
port of  Investigations  3416). 


193 


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1721.  TRANSPORTATION  FOR  COAL 

Coal  Age  Jl  1974. 

The  July  1974  issue  is  devoted  to  transportation.  All  aspects  are 
covered— from  overland  belt  conveyors  to  railroads. 

1722.  U.   S.  CONGRESS.   HOUSE.   COMMITTEE  ON  INTERSTATE  AND  FOR- 

EIGN COMMERCE 

The  alleged  combination  of  the  Philadelphia  and  Reading 
Railroad  Company  and  other  railroad  and  canal  companies 
and  producers  of  coal.  Washington:  GPO.  1892.  261p. 
(52nd  Cong.,  2nd  Sess.  House.  Report  2278). 

1723.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  SENATE.  COMMITTEE  ON  COMMERCE 

Coal  slurry  pipeline.  Washington:  GPO,  1962.  246p. 

Hearings  on  S.  3044;  "a  bill  to  amend  the  Interstate  Commerce  Act 
to  grant  to  any  carrier  of  coal  by  pipeline  .  .  .  the  right  of  eminent 
domain." 

1724.  U.  S.   CONGRESS.   SENATE.  COMMITTEE  ON  INTERIOR  AND  INSU- 
LAR AFFAIRS.  SUBCOMMITTEE  ON  MINERALS,  AND  FUELS 

Coal  slurry  pipelines.  Washington:  GPO,  1974.  242p. 

1725.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  SENATE.  COMMITTEE  ON  NAVAL  AFFAIRS 

Transportation  of  coal.  Washington:  GPO,  1915.  901p. 

"To  investigate  the  natural  and  strategic  advantages  of  Charleston, 
South  Carolina,  as  compared  with  Norfolk  and  other  Chesapeake 
Bay  ports,  as  a  permanent  point  for  coal  distribution." 

1726.  U.  S.  FEDERAL  TRADE  COMMISSION 

Anthracite  and  bituminous  coal.  Washington:  GPO,  19.17. 
420p.  (65th  Cong.,  1st  Sess.  Senate.  Document  50). 

"A  report  and  recommendations  on  the  anthracite  and  bituminous 
coal  situation  and  the  relation  of  rail-and-water  transportation  to 
the  present  fuel  problem." 

1727.  U.  S.  INTERSTATE  COMMERCE  COMMISSION 

Alleged  unlawful  rates  and  practices  in  the  transportation 
of  coal  and  mine  supplies  by  the  Atchison,  Topeka  and 
Santa  Fe  Railway  Company.  Washington:  GPO,  1905. 
183p.  (59th  Cong.,  1st  Sess.  Senate.  Document  180). 

1728.  U.  S.  INTERSTATE  COMMERCE  COMMISSION 

Investigation  of  railroad  freight  rate  structure:  coal.  Wash- 
ington: GPO,  1975.  71-409. 

Ex  Parte  No.  270  (Sub-No.  4).  Decided  Dec.  3,  1974. 


194 


1 


1729.  U.  S.  LNTERSTATE  COMMERCE  COMMISSION 

Letter  from  the  Interstate  Commerce  Commission  submit- 
ting report  of  investigation  in  the  matter  of  the  relation  of 
common  carrier  subject  to  the  act  to  regulate  commerce 
to  coal  and  oil  and  the  transportation  thereof.  Washington: 
GPO,  1914.  (63d  Cong.,  2d  Sess.  House.  Document  No. 
1124). 

1730.  U.  S.  INTERSTATE  COMMERCE  COMMISSION 

Railroad  discrimination  and  monopolies  in  coal  and  oil. 
Washington:  GPO,  1909.  21p.  (61st  Cong.,  1st  Sess.  Senate. 
Document  39 ) . 

1731.  U.  S.  INTERSTATE  COMMERCE  COMMISSION 

Report  of  investigation  by  Interstate  Commerce  Commis- 
sion into  railroad  discriminations  and  monopolies  in  coal 
and  oil.  Washington:  GPO,  1908.  23p.  (60th  Cong.,  1st 
Sess.  Senate.  Document  450). 

1732.  U.  S.  RAILROAD  ADMINISTRATION 

Cars  for  coal  shipments.  Washington:  GPO,  1919.  8p.  (66th 
Cong.,  1st  Sess.  Senate.  Document  73). 

1733.  U.  S.  RAILROAD  ADMINISTRATION 

Distribution  of  coal  and  coke.  Washington:  GPO,  1920. 
16p.  (66th  Cong.,  2nd  Sess.  Senate.  Document  235). 

1734.  U.    S.    TRANSPORTATION   INVESTIGATION   AND   RESEARCH    BOARD 

The  economics  of  coal  traffic  flow.  Washington:  GPO, 
1945.  103p.  (79th  Cong.,  1st  Sess.  Senate.  Document  82). 

1735.  VOSKUIL,  WALTER  H. 

Bituminous  coal  movements  in  the  United  States.  Geo- 
graphical Review  32:  117-27  1942. 

1735a.  WALKER,  JAMES  R. 

Coal  slurry  pipelines  and  national  transportation  policy:  a 
critical  review.  Logistics  and  Transportation  Review  12: 
261-71  1976. 

1736.  WARNER,  LARKTN 

The  economics  of  transportation  of  Ohio  coal.  Disser- 
tation. University  of  Indiana.  1960. 

1737.  WARNER,  LARKIN 

Railroad  rates  and  the  growth  of  coal  trucking  in  Ohio. 
Land  Economics  38:  231-39  1962. 


195 


1738.  wasp,  e.  j. 

Progress  with  coal  slurry  pipelines.  Mining  Congress  Jour- 
nal Apr  1976  27-32. 

1739.  WASP,  E.  J.  AND  T.  L.  THOMPSON 

Slurry  pipelines,  energy  movers  of  the  future.  Oil  and  Gas 
Journal  Dec.  24,  1973  44-50. 

1740.  what's  ahead  for  unit  trains 
Railway  Age  Ap  20,  1964  16-20. 

1741.  WILLIAMS,  WILLIAM  H. 

Anthracite  development  and  railroad  progress.  American 
Irish  Historical  Society.  Journal  22:  86-96  1923. 

Account  of  the  early  development  of  transportation  in  the  Pennsyl- 
vania anthracite  area. 

1742.  YERKES,  S.  L. 

Transportation  as  a  factor  in  irregularity  of  coal  mine  op- 
eration. Coal  Age  17:  439-42  1920. 

Author  advocates  a  national  railroad  car  pool. 


196 


Gw&uuwd  RegufoiiaK 


Material  dealing  with  the  government  regulation  of  surface  min- 
ing is  to  be  found  in  the  section  on  surface  mining. 

1743.  BAGGE,  CARL  E. 

Coal  and  clean  air  law:  a  case  for  reconciliation.  Ecology 
Law  Quarterly  4:  479-93  1974/75. 

1744.  BAKER,  RALPH  H. 

The  National  Bituminous  Coal  Commission:  Administra- 
tion of  the  Bituminous  Coal  Act,  1937-1941.  Baltimore: 
Johns  Hopkins,  1941.  356p.  (Johns  Hopkins  University. 
Studies  in  Historical  and  Political  Science  59:  3). 

1745.  BALSLEY,  HOWARD  L. 

A  political-economic  solution  to  the  coal  problem.  Western 
Political  Quarterly  3:  620-28  1950. 

Excess  production  could  be  controlled  by  the  proper  use  of  govern- 
ment power— especially  taxation. 

1746.  BITUMINOUS    COAL    CONSERVATION    ACT   ( GUFFEY    ACT)   HELD 
UNCONSTITUTIONAL 

MLR  43:  68-74  1936. 

1747.  CLYDE,  EDWARD  W. 

Coal  mining,  development  and  processing— the  associated 
water  problems.  Rocky  Mountain  Mineral  Law  Institute 
21:  163-97  1975. 

Expansion  of  coal  mining  in  the  West  will  increase  the  competition 
for  water.  Author  examines  the  legal  problems  involved. 

1748.  CODE  FOR  COAL 

Fortune  O  1933  56-63 

Effect  of  the  NRA  on  the  coal  industry  in  general  and  the  Pitts- 
burgh Coal  Co.  in  particular. 


197 


1749.  COLEMAN,  MC  ALISTER 

How  to  run  coal.  Nation  164:  242-45  1947. 
Advocates  a  federal  coal  agency. 

1750.  COMMITTEE  ON  PUBLIC  ADMINISTRATION  CASES 

The  consumer's  counsel  and  the  National  Bituminous  Coal 
Commission.  Washington:  Committee  on  Public  Adminis- 
tration Cases,  1949.  87p. 

1751.  CONAWAY,  ORRIN  B. 

Coal  mining:  new  efforts  in  an  old  field.  Ann  Amer.  Acad. 
400:  95-102  1972. 

Account  of  the  various  state  and  federal  approaches  to  the  regula- 
tion of  coal  mining.  The  Federal  Coal  Mine  Health  and  Safety  Act 
of  1969  represents  a  major  step  by  the  federal  government  in  as- 
suming responsibility  for  regulation. 

1752.  CONNER,  ELI 

What  is  to  become  of  the  anthracite  coal  industry.  Coal 
Age  5:  912-17  1914. 

If  the  railroads  must  part  with  their  coal  holdings,  it  is  suggested 
that  the  industry  be  governed  by  a  board  of  commissioners. 

1753.  DEMPSEY,  STANLEY 

Forest  Service  regulations  concerning  the  effect  of  mining 
operations  on  surface  resources.  Natural  Resources  Lawyer 
8:  481-510  1975. 

1754.  DEVINE,  EDWARD  T. 

The  outlook  for  a  permanent  solution  of  the  coal  problem 
in  the  United  States.  Academy  of  Political  Science.  Pro- 
ceedings 10:  727-42  1924. 

More  government  regulation  is  required  if  the  industry  is  not  to 
destroy  itself. 

1755.  DICK,  CHARLES 

Relation  of  the  federal  government  to  mining.  American 
Mining  Congress.  Proceedings  11  pt.  2:  18-37  1908. 

1756.  EAVENSON,  HOWARD  N. 

Regulation  of  the  coal  industry.  AIME.  Transactions  119: 
380-9  1936. 

1757.  ENERGY  &  ENVIRONMENTAL  ANALYSIS,  INC. 

Laws  and  regulations  affecting  coal.  Washington,  1976. 
v.  p. 


198 


Prepared  for  the  Office  of  Minerals  Policy  and  Research  Analysis, 
U.  S.  Department  of  the  Interior. 

1758.  FORBES,  J.  J.  AND  OTHERS 

Federal  coal  mine  inspection-a  decade  of  progress.  Wash- 
ington: GPO,  1951.  47p.  (U.  S.  Bureau  of  Mines.  Informa- 
tion Circular  7625). 

1759.  GANDY,  HARRY  L. 

A  proposal  that  the  coal  industry  be  let  alone.  Quarterly 
Journal  of  Economics  39:  484-88  1925. 

A  reply  to  "A  proposal  for  regulation  of  the  coal  industry"  by  John 
E.  Orchard. 

1760.  GARFIELD,  JAMES  R. 

The  federal  government  in  its  relation  to  the  mining  indus- 
try. American  Mining  Congress.  Proceedings  11  pt.  2:  88- 
97  1908. 

1761.  GARNSEY,  CYRUS  AND  OTHERS 

How  prices  of  bituminous  coal  were  fixed  by  the  Fuel  Ad- 
ministration. Coal  Age  14:  685-89,  736-39  1918. 

1762.  GARNSEY,  CYRUS  AND  OTHERS 

Methods  of  fixing  prices  of  bituminous  coal  adopted  by 
The  U.  S.  Fuel  Administration.  AIME.  Transactions  61: 
346-70  1918. 

1763.  GERMAN,  RALPH  H. 

The  Pennsylvania  Bituminous  Coal  Mine  Act  of  1961. 
Pennsylvania  Bar  Assoc.  Quarterly  33:  229-33  1962. 

1764.  GOLDENWEISER,  E.  A. 

Report  of  the  Bituminous  Coal  Commission.  American  Ec- 
onomic Review  10:  401-7  1920. 

A  commentary  on  the  findings  of  the  Commission. 

1765.  GREEN,  EDWARD  M.  AND  WILLIAM  A.  GERSHUNY 

Job  transfer-a  unique  feature  of  Coal  Mine  Health  and 
Safety.  Natural  Resources  Lawyer  5:  23-33  1972. 

1766.  GUFFEY  COAL  CASE 

Harvard  Law  Review  59:  664-74  1946. 

1767.  HALL,  DANIEL 

Montana  coal:  the  Alamo  of  interstate  commerce.  North 
Dakota  Law  Review  51:  439-56  1974/75. 


199 


"In  the  face  of  determined  efforts  by  Montana  to  subject  the  inter- 
state commerce  in  coal  fuel  to  local  interests  in  mine  control,  Con- 
gress has  not  come  to  the  rescue  of  the  besiged  coal  industry". 

1768.  HARDESTY,  DAVID  C. 

Case  study  of  legislative  implementation:  the  Federal  Coal 
Mine  Health  and  Safety  Act  of  1969.  Harvard  Journal  on 
Legislation  10:  99-137  1972/73. 

1769.  HARRISON,  GEORGE 

Duties  of  the  federal  and  state  governments  in  relation  to 
the  mining  industry.  American  Mining  Congress.  Proceed- 
ings 11  pt.  2:  57-65  1908. 

1770.  HOLLAND,  CHARLES  T. 

Current  and  proposed  regulations  and  legislation  on  wa- 
ter pollution  concerning  the  Appalachian  Coal  Industry. 
Morgantown:  West  Virginia  University  Coal  Research 
Bureau,  1969.  25p.  (Technical  report  42). 

1771.  HUNT,  EDWARD  E. 

The  recommendations  of  the  United  States  Coal  Commis- 
sion. Ann.  Amer.  Acad.  Ill:  249-55  1924. 

Author  was  Secretary  of  the  Commission. 
J       1772.     HUNT,  EDWARD  E. 

What  the  coal  commission  found;  an  authoritative  sum- 
mary by  the  staff.  Baltimore:  Williams  Wilkins,  1925.  4l6p. 

1773.  INTER-UNIVERSITY  CASE  PROGRAM 

The  Consumers'  Counsel  and  the  National  Bituminous 
Coal  Commission,  1937-1938.  Rev.  Ed.  Washington,  1950. 
120p. 

1774.  JOHNSEN,  JULIA  E. 

Government  regulation  of  the  coal  industry.  New  York:  H. 
W.  Wilson,  1926.  144p. 

1775.  JOHNSEN,  JULIA  E. 

Selected  articles  on  government  ownership  of  coal  mines. 
New  York:  H.  W.  Wilson,  1923.  392p. 

1776.  JOHNSON,  JAMES  P. 

Drafting  the  NRA  Code  of  Fair  Competition  for  the  bitu- 
minous coal  industry.  Journal  of  American  History  53: 
521-41  1966/67. 

Account  of  the  forces  at  work,  the  personalities,  compromises  etc. 
involved  in  drafting  the  Code. 

200 


1777.  JOHNSON,  VIRGINIA  B. 

Economic  aspects  of  national  regulation  of  the  bituminous 
coal  industry,  1933-43.  Thesis.  West  Virginia  University. 
1950. 

1778.  LESHY,  JOHN  D.  AND  TERRY  R.  LASH 

A  black  mark:  failure  of  the  federal  coal-leasing  policy. 
Environment  Dec  1975  6-13. 

Corporate  profits,  rather  than  the  national  interest,  have  played  far 
too  great  a  role  in  the  federal  policy  on  the  leasing  of  western  coal 
lands. 

1779.  LEWIS,  WILLIAM  D. 

Coal  price  regulation  and  the  constitution.  Ann.  Amer. 
Acad.  Ill:  292-304  1924. 

1780.  LOVING,  RUSH 

How  Kennecott  got  hooked  with  Catch-22.  Fortune  Sept 
1971  99-101. 

Discussion  of  the  ruling  that  Kennecott  must  divest  itself  of  Pea- 
body  Coal  Co. 

1781.  MC  ADAM,  DUNLAP  J. 

Coal,  government  ownership  or  control;  government  own- 
ership of  navy  coal  land  and  control  of  the  coal  industry. 
New  York,  1921.  188p. 

1782.  MAGUTRE,  JOHN 

Early  Pennsylvania  coal  mine  legislation.  Schuylkill  Coun- 
ty Historical  Seciety.  Publication  4:  337-40  1914. 

1783.  MASSAY,  GLENN  F. 

Legislators,  lobbyists  and  loopholes:  coal  mining  legisla- 
tion in  West  Virginia  1875-1901.  West  Virginia  History  32: 
135-70  1971. 

1784.  MILLER,  ARNOLD 

UMWA  recommendations  for  black  lung  amendments.  La- 
bor Law  Journal  26:  199-206  1975. 

1785.  MILLER,  E.  WILLARD 

Penn  Township— an  example  of  local  government  control 
of  strip  mining  in  Pennsylvania.  Economic  Geography  28: 
256-60  1952. 

1786.  MULLAN,  JOSEPH  W. 

The  coal  industry  and  the  clean  air  problem.  Natural  Re- 
sources Lawyer  3:  96-102  1970. 

201 


1787.  NATIONAL  ACADEMY  OF  PUBLIC  ADMINISTRATION 

The  coordination  of  federal  and  state  coal  mine  health  and 
safety  programs  with  special  reference  to  the  Federal  Coal 
Mine  Health  and  Safety  Act  of  1969.  Washington.  1971. 

1788.  NEW  YORK  PUBLIC  LIBRARY 

Nationalization  of  coal  mines;  a  list  of  references.  New 
York,  1920.  lip. 

1789.  ORCHARD,  JOHN  E. 

The  coal  situation  and  the  coal  parliament:  a  rejoinder. 
Quarterly  Journal  of  Economics  39:  644-51  1925. 

1790.  ORCHARD,  JOHN  E. 

A  proposal  for  regulation  of  the  coal  industry.  Quarterly 
Journal  of  Economics  39:  196-240  1925. 

1791.  PAUL,  j.  w. 

State  mine  inspection  in  coal  mining  states.  American  Min- 
ing Congress.  Proceedings  12:  239-57  1909. 

A  state-by-state  survey. 

1792.  PRATT,  JOHN  B. 

Federal  control  of  coal  mines  an  economic  fallacy.  Wash- 
ington, 1923.  31p. 


1793.     ROBERTS,  JAMES  A.  AND  SCOTT  H.  MABRY 

Bituminous  Coal  Conservation  Act 
ington  Law  Review  4:  244-57  1936. 


Bituminous  Coal  Conservation  Act  of  1935.  George  Wash- 


1794.  ROGERS,  WILLIAM  H. 

Comment  on  the  coal  lease  forfeiture  decision:  the  hypo- 
thetical case  of  United  States  v.  Peabody  Coal  Co.  Natural 
Resources  Journal  15:  257-63  1975. 

Author  feels  that  the  public  interest  would  have  been  served  by  the 
cancellation  of  Peabody's  Western  coal  leases  obtained  before  1973. 

1795.  ROSTOW,  EUGENE 

Bituminous  coal  and  public  interest.  Yale  Law  Review  50: 
543-94  1941. 

An  analysis  of  the  history  of  the  Bituminous  Coal  Act  of  1937, 
"which  has  failed,  and  in  the  nature  of  the  coal  industry,  had  to 
fall." 

1796.  ROY,  ANDREW 

A  brief  history  of  mining  legislation  in  the  State  of  Ohio. 
Ohio  Mining  Journal  O  1888  21-25. 

202 


/ 


1797.  ROY,  ANDREW  AND  JOHN  POLLACK 

Report  of  Messrs.  Roy  and  Pollack,,  Miners'  Committee  to 
Columbus,  to  urge  the  passage  by  the  Legislature  of  the 
Miners'  Bill,  for  the  ventilation  and  inspection  of  coal  min- 
es. Cincinnati,  1872.  22p. 

1798.  RYAN,  JOHN  A. 

Anthracite  and  ethics.  Catholic  World  122:  297-306  1925. 

"The  fundamental  needs  of  the  industry  are  unified  operation  and 
pooling  of  expenses  of  production,  preferably  under  public  owner- 
ship and  direction." 

1799.  SIMONDS,  JEROME  H. 

Acquisition  of  rights  to  prospect  for  and  mine  coal  from 
tribal  and  allocated  Indian  lands.  Rocky  Mountain  Mineral 
Law  Institute  21:  125-62  1975. 

1800.  SIMPSON,  FLOYD  R. 

Price  regulation  and  the  public  utility  concept:  the  Sun- 
shine Anthracite  Coal  Case.  Land  Economics  17:  378-79 
1941. 

1801.  SUTHERLAND,  HOWARD 

Government  controls  of  the  coal  industry;  speech  delivered 
before  the  Natural  Resources  Section  of  the  Chamber  of 
Commerce  of  the  United  States,  at  Washington,  D.  C, 
May  16,  1922.  Washington:  GPO,  1922.  8p. 

1802.  THOMPSON,  CAROL  L. 

Should  the  coal  mines  be  nationalized.  Forum  112:  285- 
95  1949. 


1803.  TRACHTENBERG,   ALEXANDER 

The  history  of  legislation  for  the  protection  of  coal  miners 
in  Pennsylvania,  1824-1915.  New  York:  International  Pub- 
lishers, 1942.  239p. 

1804.  TRISKO,  RALPH  L. 

Bituminous  coal  industry  of  the  United  States,  with  spec- 
ial reference  to  Federal  regulations.  Thesis.  Georgetown 
University.  1943. 

1805.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  HOUSE 

Bituminous  Coal  Act  of  1936,  report  submitted  by  Mr. 
Doughton  from  the  Committee  on  Ways  and  Means. 
Washington:  GPO,  1936.  25p.  (74th  Cong.,  2d  Sess.  House. 
Report  2832). 


203 


1806.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  HOUSE 

Bituminous  coal  conservation  bill  of  1935.  Report  with  ma- 
jority and  minority  views.  Washington:  GPO,  1935.  61p. 
(74th  Cong.,  1st  Sess.  House.  Report  1800). 

1807.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  HOUSE 

Coal  Investigation  Agency,  report  submitted  by  Mr.  Bland 
of  Indiana,  from  the  Committee  on  Labor,  to  accompany 
H.  R.  11022.  Washington:  GPO,  1922.  7p.  (67th  Cong., 
2d  Sess.  House.  Report  984). 

1808.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  HOUSE 

Extension  of  the  Coal  Act.  Report  submitted  by  Mr.  Bo- 
land,  from  the  Committee  on  Ways  and  Means,  Washing- 
ton: GPO,  1941.  28p.  (77th  Cong.,  1st  Sess.  House.  Report. 

324). 

1809.  U.    S.   CONGRESS.   HOUSE.   COMMITTEE  ON   INTERIOR  AND  INSU- 
LAR AFFAIRS 

Federal  Coal  leasing.  Washington:  GPO,  1975.  169p. 

1810.  U.   S.   CONGRESS.   HOUSE.   COMMITTEE  ON   INTERIOR  AND  INSU- 
LAR AFFAIRS.  SUBCOMMITTEE  ON  MINES  AND  MINING 

Prohibition  of  railroad  leasing  of  federal  coal  lands.  Wash- 
ington: GPO,  1976.  143p. 

1811.  U.    S.   CONGRESS.   HOUSE.   COMMITTEE  ON   INTERIOR  AND  INSU- 
LAR AFFAIRS.  SUBCOMMITTEE  ON  PUBLIC  LANDS 

Public  land  coal  leasing  policy.  Use  of  off-road  vehicles. 
Washington:  GPO,  1973.  78p. 

1812.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  HOUSE.  COMMITTEE  ON  WAYS  AND  MEANS 

Extension  of  Bituminous  Coal  Act  of  1937,  hearings,  78th 
Congress,  1st  Session,  on  H.  R.  356,  H.  R.  1454,  and  H.  R. 
2296,  bills  to  amend  bituminous  coal  act,  as  amended,  June 
21-July  5,  1943.  Washington:  GPO,  1943.  974p. 

1813.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  SENATE 

Constitutionality  of  Bituminous  Coal  Conservation  Act  of 
1935,  argument  of  Honorable  John  Dickinson,  Assistant  At- 
torney General  of  the  United  States  before  the  Supreme 
Court  of  the  United  States  in  behalf  of  the  government  of- 
ficer defendants  in  the  case  of  Carter  v.  Carter  Coal  Co., 
Helvering,  Et  Al,  March  12,  1936,  in  support  of  the  con- 
stitutionality of  the  Bituminous  Coal  Conservation  Act  of 
1935.  Washington:  GPO,  1936.  42p.  74th  Cong.,  2d  Sess. 
Senate.  Doc.  197. 


204 


1814.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  SENATE 

Extension  of  the  Bituminous  Coal  Act  of  1937.  Beport  sub- 
mitted by  Mr.  Bone,  from  the  Committee  on  Interstate 
Commerce.  Washington:  GPO,  1941.  4p.  (77th  Cong.,  1st 
Sess.  Senate.  Beport  169). 

1815.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  SENATE.  COMMITTEE  ON  EDUCATION  AND 
LABOR 

Begulate  interstate  and  foreign  commerce  of  coal;  report 
to  accompany  S.  4177  (To  regulate  interstate  and  foreign 
commerce  in  coal  and  to  promote  general  welfare  depen- 
dent on  use  of  coal).  Washington:  GPO,  1926.  8p.  (69th 
Cong.,  1st  Sess.  Senate.  Beport  812). 

1816.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  SENATE.  COMMITTEE  ON  INTERIOR  AND  INSU- 
LAR AFFAIRS.  SUBCOMMITTEE  ON  MINERALS,  MATERIALS,  AND 
FUELS 

Federal  coal  leasing  amendments  act  of  1975.  Washington: 
GPO,  1975.  680p. 

1817.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  SENATE.  COMMITTEE  ON  INTERSTATE  COM- 
MERCE 

Bituminous  coal  commission.  Hearings  ...  on  S.  4490,  a  bill 
to  regulate  interstate  and  foreign  commerce  in  bituminous 
coal,  provide  for  consolidations,  mergers,  and  cooperative 
marketing;  regulate  the  fuel  supply  of  interstate  carriers; 
require  the  licensing  of  corporations  producing  and  ship- 
ping coal  in  interstate  commerce;  and  to  create  a  bitumin- 
ous coal  commission,  and  for  other  purposes.  Washington: 
GPO,  1929.  352p. 

1818.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  SENATE.  COMMITTEE  ON  INTERSTATE  COM- 
MERCE 

Extension  of  Bituminous  Coal  Act  of  1937.  Hearings  .  .  . 
on  S.  J.  Bes.  22,  S.  J.  Bes.  32,  H.  J.  Bes.  101  and  H.  B.  4146, 
joint  resolutions  and  an  act  to  extend  the  provisions  of  the 
Bituminous  Coal  Act  of  1937  for  a  period  of  two  years,  and 
for  other  purposes.  April  2  and  3,  1941.  Washington:  GPO, 
1941.  106p. 

1819.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  SENATE.  COMMITTEE  ON  INTERSTATE  COM- 
MERCE 

Stabilization  of  the  bituminous  coal  mining  industry. 
Washington:  GPO,  1935.  624p. 

Hearings  on  S.  1417,  the  bill  to  establish  a  National  Bituminous 
Coal  Commission. 


205 


\ 


1820.  U.    S.    CONGRESS.    SENATE.    COMMITTEE    ON    INTERSTATE    COM- 
MERCE 

Price  regulation  of  coal  and  other  commodities.  Washing- 
ton: GPO,  1917.  398p. 

1821.  U.    S.    CONGRESS.    SENATE.    COMMITTEE    ON    INTERSTATE    COM- 
MERCE 

To  regulate  interstate  commerce  in  bituminous  coal,  hear- 
ings before  subcommittee,  75th  Congress,  1st  Session,  on 
S.  1,  Mar  9,  1937.  Washington:  GPO,  1937.  260p. 

1822.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  SENATE.  COMMITTEE  ON  MINES  AND  MINING 

Hearings  on  S.  2935;  a  bill  "to  regulate  interstate  and  for- 
eign commerce  in  bituminous  coal  .  .  .  and  to  create  a  Bit- 
uminous Coal  Commission."  Washington:  GPO,  1932. 
1351p. 

1823.  U.  S.  DEPARTMENT  OF  THE  INTERIOR 

Regulations  governing  coal  land  leases  in  the  Territory  of 
Alaska  .  .  .  with  information  regarding  coal  lands.  Wash- 
ington: GPO,  1916.  86p. 

1824.  U.  S.  LIBRARY  OF  CONGRESS.  CONGRESSIONAL  RESEARCH  SERVICE 

Resolved:  that  the  Federal  Government  should  control  the 
supply  and  utilization  of  energy  in  the  United  States. 
Washington:  GPO,  1973.  477p. 

"A  collection  of  excerpts  and  bibliography  relating  to  the  intercolleg- 
iate debate  topic,  1973-74." 

1825.  WEST  VIRGINIA.  MINING  COMMISSION 

Report  of  the  Mining  Commission  appointed  by  the  Gov- 
ernor to  revise  the  mining  laws  of  the  state.  Charleston: 
Tribune  Printing  Co.,  1907.  77p. 

Published  also  in  West  Virginia.  Public  Documents.  1905-1906  v3. 
Deals  largely  with  mine  safety. 

1826.  WHEELER,  EDWARD  K.  AND  JOHN  W.  SNOW 

Proposals  for  administrative  action  under  the  Federal  Coal 
Mine  Health  and  Safety  Act  of  1969.  Natural  Resources 
Lawyer  3:  248-65  1970. 

1827.  WESTFIELD,  JAMES  AND  OTHERS 

Administration  of  the  Federal  Coal  Mine  Safety  Act,  1952- 
61.  Washington:  GPO,  1962.  56p.  (U.  S.  Bureau  of  Mines. 
Information  Circular  8133 ) . 


206 


1828.     ZIEGLER,  MARTIN 

Social  legislation  for  the  protection  of  coal  miners  in  Penn- 
sylvania. Thesis.  Penn  State  College.  1947. 


207 


twbiwwdd  Z\ktsk 


Material  dealing  with  the  environmental  effects  of  surface  mining 
is  to  be  found  in  the  section  on  surface  mining. 

1829.  AABONSON,  TERRI 

Problems  underfoot:  environmental  effects  of  underground 
mining  and  of  mineral  processing.  Environment  Nov  1970 
16-29. 

1830.  APPALACHIAN  REGIONAL  COMMISSSION 

Acid  mine  drainage  in  Appalachia.  Washington,  1969. 
126p. 

A  useful  overview  of  the  problem,  written  for  the  layman.  More  de- 
tailed and  technical  information  is  to  be  found  in  the  six-volume 
appendix. 

1831.  BAGGE,  CARL  E. 

Coal  and  the  environment.  Public  Utilities  Fortnightly 
Sept.  2,  1971  79-84. 

1832.  BERKOWITZ,  DAVID  A.  AND  ARTHUR  M.  SQUIRES 

Power  generation  and  environmental  change.  Cambridge: 
MIT  Press,  1971.  440p. 

1833.  BETHELL,  THOMAS  N.  AND  DAVITT  MCATEER 

The  Pittston  mentality:  manslaughter  on  Buffalo  Creek. 
Huntington,  W.  Va.,  Appalachian  Movement  Press,  1972. 
26p. 

Account  of  the  Buffalo  Creek  flood  disaster  and  the  actions  of  the 
Pittston  Coal  Company  in  permitting  the  conditions  that  caused  it. 

1834.  BIESECKER,  J.  E.  AND  J.  R.  GEORGE 

Stream  quality  in  Appalachia  as  related  to  coal  mine  drain- 
age. Washington:  U.  S.  Geological  Survey.  Circular  526, 
1966.  27p. 


208 


1835.  BIKERMAN,  JACOB  J. 

Treatment  of  acid  mine  drainage.  Washington:  GPO,  1971. 
88p. 

1836.  BLAKELY,  J.  WES 

Coal's  ultimate  problem  can  be  an  opportunity.  Coal  Min- 
ing &  Processing  Ag  1976  42-45. 

The  "ultimate  problem"  is  the  increasing  amount  of  slurry-like 
wastes  being  produced. 

1837.  BODLE,  WILLIAM  W.  AND  K.  C.  VYAS 

Clean  fuels  from  coal.  Oil  &  Gas  Journal  Ag  26,  1974  73-88. 

1838.  BUFFALO  CREEK 

Mountain  Life  and  Work  Mr  1972  3-8. 

1839.  BUFFALO  CREEK:    MORE  EVIDENCE  AGAINST  PITTSTON 

Mountain  Life  and  Work  Ag  1972  30-36. 

Summarizes  the  findings  of  the  citizen's  commission  to  investigate 
the  Buffalo  Creek  disaster  and  includes  an  open  letter  to  the  stock- 
holders of  the  Pittston  Co. 

1840.  CAUDILL,  HARRY  M. 

Buffalo  Creek  aftermath.  Saturday  Review  Ag  26,  1972 
16-17. 

Criticizes  the  "apparent  consensus  .  .  that  nothing  either  extensive 
or  costly  shall  be  undertaken  to  prevent  future  disaster." 

1841.  crnzENs'  commission  to  investigate  the  buffalo  creek 

DISASTER 

Disaster  on  Buffalo  Creek  1972;  report.  Charleston,  W.  Va. 

1972.  30p. 

1842.  COAL  PRODUCERS  COMMITTEE  FOR  SMOKE  ABATEMENT 

Smoke  and  air  pollution,  a  study.  Cincinnati,  Ohio.  195?  4 
vols. 

1843.  COALGATE,  JERRY  L.  AND  OTHERS 

Gob  pile  stabilization,  reclamation,  and  utilization.  Mor- 
gantown:  West  Virginia  University,  Coal  Research  Bureau, 

1973.  127p. 

1843a.  COALGATE,  JERRY  L. 

Literature  survey— coal  associated  wastes.  Morgantown: 
West  Virginia  University,  1973.  140p.  ( Coal  Research  Bur- 
eau. Report  115). 

Covers  the  period  1900  -  1972. 

209 


1844.  COCHRAN,  WILLIAM 

Mine  subsidence— extent  and  cost  of  control  in  a  selected 
area.  Washington:  GPO,  1971.  32p.  (U.  S.  Bureau  of 
Mines.  Information  Circular  8507). 

The  selected  area  was  in  western  Pennsylvania. 

1845.  CONSOLIDATION  COAL  COMPANY 

Coal,  Consol  and  the  environment;  a  special  report  of  Con- 
solidation Coal  Company.  Pittsburgh,  1971?  36p. 

Achievements  and  research  in  environmental  reclamation  and  pollu- 
tion control  by  a  large  coal  company.  Well  illustrated. 

1846.  DANIELSON,  V.  A.  AND  D.  H.  WHITE 

Waste  disposal  costs  at  two  coal  mines  in  Kentucky  and 
Alabama.  Washington:  GPO,  1969.  28p.  (U.  S.  Bureau  of 
Mines.  Information  Circular  8406). 

1847.  DA  VIES,  WILLIAM  E.  AND  OTHERS 

West  Virginia's  Buffalo  Creek  flood.  Washington:  GPO, 
1972.  32p.  (U.  S.  Geological  Survey.  Circular  667). 

1848.  DEE,  NORBERT 

Financing  abatement  of  mine  drainage  pollution:  case 
study  Appalachia.  Water  Resources  Bulletin  8:  473-82 
1972. 

1849.  DOERR,  ARTHUR  H. 

Coal  mining  and  changing  land  patterns  in  Oklahoma. 
Land  Economics  38:  51-56  1962. 

1850.  DOYLE,  F.  J.  AND  OTHERS 

Investigation  of  mining  related  pollution  reduction  activi- 
ties and  economic  incentives  in  the  Monongahela  River 
Basin.  Beaver,  Pa.:  Baker  Inc.,  1975.  v.p. 

"This  study  provides  information  on  feasible  economic  incentives 
which  will  encourage  the  private  sector  and  others  to  undertake  en- 
vironmental improvement  activities  on  abandoned  and  active  mines 
in  the  Monongahela  River  Basin." 

1850a.  DOYLE,  WILLIAM  S. 

Deep  coal  mining:  waste  disposal  technology.  Park  Ridge, 
N.  J.:  Noyes  Data  Corp.,  1976.  392p. 

1851.  ENVIRONMENTAL  RESEARCH  AND  APPLICATIONS,  INC. 

Concentrated  mine  drainage  disposal  into  sewage  treament 
systems;  the  disposal  of  acid  brines  from  acid  mine  drain- 
age in  municipal  wastewater  treatment.  Washington,  1971. 
76p. 

210 


J 


1852.  GEER,  MAX  RICHARD 

Disposal  of  solid  wastes  from  coal  mining  in  Washington, 
Oregon,  and  Montana.  Washington:  GPO,  1969.  39p.  (U.  S. 
Bureau  of  Mines.  Information  Circular  8430). 

1853.  GRURE,  WALTER  E.  AND  OTHERS 

Mine  spoil  potentials  for  water  quality  and  controlled  ero- 
sion. Washington:  U.  S.  Environmental  Protection  Agency, 
1971.  206p. 

1854.  HALLIBURTON  COMPANY 

New  mine  sealing  techniques  for  water  pollution  abate- 
ment. Washington:  GPO,  1970.  163p.  (Water  Pollution 
Control  Series). 

1855.  HEBLEY,  HENRY  F. 

Stream  pollution  by  coal  mine  wastes.  Mining  Engineer- 
ing 5:  404-12  1953. 

1856.  HERNDON,  LYLE  K. 

Acid  mine  drainage  from  West  Virginia  coal  mines.  Thesis. 
West  Virginia  University,  1934.  124p. 

1857.  HUDSON,  HUGH  H. 

Water  for  Wyoming  coal.  Water  Spectrum  7(1)  41-46 
1975. 

Water  requirements  of  an  expanded  coal  industry  will  be  great, 
and  it  is  uncertain  if  they  can  be  met  at  acceptable  economic,  en- 
vironmental and  social  costs. 

1858.  IMPACTS    OF    MINE    DRAINAGE    POLLUTION    ON    LOCATION    OF 
MANUFACTURING  INDUSTRY  IN  APPALACHIA 

New  York:  Fantus  Co.,  1969.  25p.  and  appendices. 

Appears  as  Appendix  D  of  "Acid  Mine  Drainage  in  Appalachia,  A 
Report  by  the  Appalachian  Regional  Commission." 

1859.  KATZ,  MAX 

Biological  and  ecological  effects  of  acid  mine  drainage 
with  particular  emphasis  to  the  waters  of  the  Appalachian 
Region.  Washington:  Appalachian  Regional  Commission, 
1969.  65p. 

Appears  as  Appendix  F  to  "Acid  Mine  Drainage  in  Appalachiha,  A 
Report  by  the  Appalachian  Regional  Commission." 

1860.  KINNEY,   EDWARD  C. 

Extent  of  acid  mine  pollution  in  the  United  States  affect- 
ing fish  and  wildlife.  Washington:  GPO,  1964.  27p.  (U.  S. 
Fish  and  Wildlife  Service.  Fish  and  Wildlife  Circular  191). 


211 


1861.  KOLBASH,  RONALD  L. 

A  study  of  Appalachia's  coal  mining  communities  and  as- 
sociated environmental  problems.  Dissertation.  Michigan 
State  University,  1975.  88p. 

1862.  KREBS,  GDIARD 

Technological  and  social  impact  assessment  of  resource  ex- 
traction: the  case  of  coal.  Environment  and  Behavior  7: 
307-29  1975. 

1863.  LARKIN,  R.  P.  AND  OTHERS 

Anthracite  refuse  pollution  and  socio-economic  planning  in 
northeastern  Pennsylvania.  University  Park:  Pennsylvania 
State  University,  1972.  80p.  (Mineral  Industrial  Experi- 
ment Station.  SR-90). 

1864.  LAUCK,  REX 

Miners  clobbered  again:  disaster  hits  Buffalo  Creek  Hol- 
low. United  Mine  Workers  Journal  Mar  15,  1972  2-6. 

1865.  LORENZ,  WALTER  C. 

Progress  in  controlling  acid  mine  water;  a  literature  re- 
view. Washington:  GPO,  1962.  40p.  (U.  S.  Bureau  of 
Mines.  Information  Circular  8080.) 

1866.  MAC  CARTNEY,  JOHN  C.  AND  RALPH  H.  WHAITE 

Pennsylvania  anthracite  refuse:  a  survey  of  solid  waste 
from  mining  preparation.  Washington:  GPO.  1969.  77p. 
(U.  S.  Bureau  of  Mines.  Information  Circular  8409). 

1867.  MINE  DRAINAGE  POLLUTION  AND  RECREATION  IN  APPALACHIA. 

Washington:  R.  R.  Nathan,  1969.  114p. 

Appears  as  Appendix  E  of  "Acid  Mine  Drainage  in  Appalachia,  A 
Report  by  the  Appalachian  Regional  Commission." 

1867a.  MINEAR,  ROGER  A.  AND  OTHERS 

Environmental  aspects  of  coal  production  in  the  Appala- 
chian Region.  Knoxville:  University  of  Tennessee  Environ- 
ment Center,  1976.  93p. 

A  progress  report  covering  the  period  June  1,  1975— May  31,  1976. 

1868.  MONNETT,  OSBORN  AND  OTHERS 

Smoke-abatement  investigations  at  Salt  Lake  City,  Utah. 
Washington:  GPO,  1926.  98p.  (U.  S.  Bureau  of  Mines. 
Bulletin  254). 


212 


1869.  MONONCAHELA  RIVER  MINE  DRAINAGE  REMEDIAL  PROJECT 

Handbook  of  pollution  control  costs  in  mine  drainage 
management.  Washington:  U.  S.  Federal  Water  Pollution 
Control  Administration,  1966.  54p. 

1870.  NUGENT,  TOM 

Death  at  Buffalo  Creek:  the  1972  West  Virginia  flood  dis- 
aster. New  York:  W.  W.  Norton,  1973.  191p. 

1871.  o'fiRIEN,  WILLIAM  S. 

Treatment  of  acid  mine  drainage.  Dissertation.  West  Vir- 
ginia University.  1972.  370p. 

1872.  PRICE,  TOM 

Who  killed  Buffalo  Creek?  Rolling  Stone  Jan  3,  1974,  28- 

1873.  RORERTS,  FT  J, is  W. 

A  history  of  land  subsidence  and  its  consequences  caused 
by  the  mining  of  anthracite  coal  in  Luzerne  County, 
Pennsylvania.  Ph.D.  New  York  University.  1948. 

1874.  SCHLICK,  DONALD  P. 

Federal  interest  in  coal  mine  waste  disposal.  Washington, 
1975.  15p.  (Mining  Enforcement  and  Safety  Administra- 
tion. Information  Report  1023). 

1875.  SCHLOTTMANN,  ALAN  M. 

Environmental  regulation  and  the  allocation  of  coal:  a  re- 
gional analysis.  Dissertation.  Washington  University,  1975. 

1876.  SKELLY  &  LOY 

Coal  mine  drainage  in  the  Susquehanna  River  Basin.  Har- 
risburg,  Pa.,  1973.  297p. 

Records  the  severity  and  causes  of  coal  mine  drainage  in  the  area 
proposes  abatement  measures,  and  examines  the  costs  of  those 
measures. 

1877.  SMITH,  RONALD  W. 

Acid  mine  pollution  effects  on  lake  biology.  Washington: 
U.  S.  Environmental  Protection  Agency,  1971,  132p.  (Wa- 
ter pollution  control  research  series). 

Includes  a  most  useful  bibliography. 


213 


1878.     SPICER,  T.  s. 

Pennsylvania  anthracite  refuse;  a  summary  of  a  literature 
survey  on  utilization  and  disposal.  University  Park: 
Pennsylvania  State  University,  1971.  43p.  (Mineral  Indus- 
tries Experiment  Station.  SD-79). 

1879.  STERN,  GERALD  M. 

Buffalo  Creek  disaster.  New  York:  Random  House,  1976. 
274p. 

"The  story  of  the  survivor's  unprecedented  lawsuit." 

1880.  STUDY  COMMITTEE  TO  ASSESS  THE  FEASIBILITY  OF  RETURNING 
UNDERGROUND  COAL  MINE  WASTES  TO  THE  MINED-OUT  AREAS 

Underground  disposal  of  coal  mine  wastes.  Washington, 
D.  C:  National  Academy  of  Sciences,  1975.  172p. 

1881.  TENNESSEE  VALLEY   AUTHORITY.   OFFICE  OF   HEALTH  AND  EN- 
VIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 

Policies  relating  to  sources  of  coal  used  by  Tennessee  Val- 
ley Authority  for  electric  power  generation.  Final  environ- 
mental impact  statement,  December  6,  1971.  Chattanooga, 
Tenn.,  1972. 

1882.  TOWNS  RUILT  OVER  A  FURNACE 

Business  Week  My  4,  1963  98-100. 

Towns  in  eastern  Pennsylvania  are  being  endangered  from  fires 
burning  in  old  coal  mines. 

1883.  TRUAX-TRAER  COAL  CO. 

Control  of  mine  drainage  from  coal  mine  mineral  wastes. 
Washington:  GPO,  1971. 

1884.  U.  S.  ARMY.  CORPS  OF  ENGINEERS 

Buffalo  Creek  (W.  Va.)  disaster,  1972.  Prepared  for  the 
Subcommittee  on  Labor  of  the  Committee  on  Labor  and 
Public  Welfare,  United  States  Senate.  Washington,  U.  S. 
Govt.  Print  Off.,  1972-,  pt.  1-. 

Documents  and  statements  concerning  the  circumstances  surround- 
ing the  flood  disaster. 

1884a.  U.  S.  COMPTROLLER  GENERAL 

Federal  and  state  efforts  to  control  water  pollution  caused 
by  acid  drainage  from  mines.  Washington:  GPO,  1973. 
61p. 


214 


1885.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  HOUSE.  COMMITTEE  ON  GOVERNMENT  OPERA- 
TIONS. CONSERVATION  AND  NATURAL  RESOURCES  SUBCOM- 
MITTEE 

Adverse  effects  of  coal  mining  on  Federal  reservoir  pro- 
jects. Washington,  1973.  634p. 

1886.  U.  S.  FEDERAL  WATER  POLLUTION  CONTROL  ADMINISTRATION 

Stream  pollution  by  coal  mine  drainage  in  Appalachia. 
Cincinnati,  1969.  261p. 

Appears  as  Attachment  A  to  Appendix  C  of  "Acid  Mine  Drainage  in 
Appalachia,  A  Report  by  the  Appalachian  Regional  Commission." 

1887.  U.  S.  OFFICE  OF  COAL  RESEARCH 

Clean   energy   from   coal   technology.  Washington:  GPO, 
1973.  43p. 

1888.  VICTOR,  RICHARD  H. 

Environmental  politics  of  the  coal  industry.  Dissertation. 
University  of  Pittsburgh,  1975.  482p. 

1889.  WAHLER  AND  ASSOCIATES 

Reconnaissance  survey  report  of  coal  mine  refuse  dumps 
and  impoundments.  Palo  Alto,  1974,  6  vols. 

Covers  the  states  of  Alabama,  Kentucky,  Ohio,  Pennsylvania,  Vir- 
ginia and  West  Virginia. 

1890.  WALTON,  MARY 

After  the  flood;  a  continuing  lesson  in  corporate  insensiti- 
vity.  Harpers  Magazine  Mr  1973  78-85. 

The  Buffalo  Creek  disaster. 

1891.  WATER  RESOURCES  SCIENTIFIC  INFORMATION  CENTER 

Acid  mine  water:  a  bibliography.  Washington:  U.  S.  De- 
partment of  the  Interior,  1975.  564p. 

1892.  WEST  VIRGINIA.  GOVERNOR'S  AD  HOC  COMMISSION  OF  INQUIRY 

The  Buffalo  Creek  flood  disaster;  official  report  and  add- 
enda. Charleston,  W,  Va.,  1973  2v. 

« 

1893.  WEST  VTRGINIA  UNIVERSITY.  COAL  RESEARCH  BUREAU 

Underground  coal  mining  methods  to  abate  water  pollu- 
tion; a  state  of  the  art  literature  review.  Environmental 
Protection  Agency.  Washington:  GPO,  1970.  50p. 


215 


1894.  WHITMAN,  IRA  L.  AND  OTHERS 

Impact  of  mine-drainage  pollution  on  industrial  water 
users  in  Appalachia.  Columbus:  Battelle  Memorial  Insti- 
tute, 1969.  166p. 

Appears  as  Appendix  A  to  "Acid  Mine  Drainage  m  Appalachia,  A 
Report  by  the  Appalachian  Regional  Commission." 

1895.  WILLIAMS,  FRANK  E. 

Some  effects  of  culm  in  the  Schuylkill  River.  Geographical 
Society  of  Philadelphia.  Bulletin  27:  273-81  1929. 

Waste  (culm)  from  anthracite  mining  had  become  a  serious  pollu- 
tion problem  by  the  1920's. 


216 


Sttuftoee  RUittifg 


Strip  mining  is  old  as  a  practice  but  new  as  a  problem.  Stripping 
attracted  little  public  attention  until  well  after  World  War  II.  How- 
ever, by  1960  tbe  vast  increase  in  the  amount  of  land  being  strip- 
ped and  the  obvious  damage  to  the  ecology  made  stripping  a  major 
public  issue.  Well  over  a  thousand  books,  articles  and  reports  have 
appeared.  These  range  from  the  highly  technical  to  the  polemical. 
An  effort  has  been  made  here  to  list  the  more  significant  and  in- 
teresting titles.  Those  who  wish  additional  information  should  ex- 
amine the  several  specialized  bibliographies  (items  1912,  1965, 
1986,  2058,  2128A). 

1896.  ABDNOR,  JOSEPH  S. 

Industry  and  the  environment:  mined  land  reclamation. 
Mining  Congress  Journal  Ja  1969  60-64. 

Author  holds  that  the  regulation  of  strip  mining  should  be  left  to 
state  and  local  officials;  it  should  not  become  a  responsibility  of 
the  federal  government. 

1897.  ALEXANDER,  ROY 

Television  commercials  help  defeat  surface  mine  abolition 
push  in  West  Virginia.  Coal  Age  June  1971  82-85. 

President  of  N.  Y.  public  relations  firm  recounts  methods  used  to 
defeat  efforts  to  abolish  surface  mining. 

1898.  ANDERSON,  DAVID  H. 

Strip  mining  on  reservation  lands.  Montana  Jmw  Review 
35:  209-226  1974. 

A  review  of  policy  and  practice. 
1898a.  ANDREUZZI,  FRANK  C. 

Reclaiming  strip-mined  land  for  recreational  use  in  Lacka- 
wanna County,  Pa.  Washington:  GPO,  1976,  21p.  (U.S. 
Bureau  of  Mines.  Information  Circular  8718). 

1899.  ASHTON,  ROBERT 

Progress  comes  to  Black  Mesa.  National  Parks  &  Conserva- 
tion Magazine  Sept  1971  4-9. 


217 


* 


"Black  Mesa  is  irreplaceable  to  the  Navaho  and  Hopi  Indians  who 
call  it  home.  To  see  their  way  of  life  and  their  land  lost  to  our 
thirst  for  electric  power  would  be  tragic  indeed." 

1900.  ATWOOD,  GENEVIEVE 

Strip-mining  of  western  coal.  Scientific  American  Dec. 
1975  23-29. 

A  relatively  few  strip  mines  in  the  west  can  produce  great  amounts 
of  coal.  Adequate  reclamation  adds  little  to  the  price  of  coal. 

1901.  AUSTIN,  RICHARD  C.  AND  PETER  BORELLI 

The  strip  mining  of  America.  New  York:  Sierra  Club, 
1971.  109p. 

"The  report  is  written  for  the  nonprofessional  with  the  belief  that 
his  understanding  of  the  extent  and  severity  of  this  problem  will 
lead  toward  corrective  action." 

1902.  AVERITT,  PAUL 

Stripping  coal  resources  of  the  United  States— January  1, 
1970.  Washington:  GPO,  1970.  34p.  (USGS  Bulletin  1322). 

"A  review  and  analysis  by  States  of  data  available  on  the  stripping 
—coal  potential  of  the  United  States.  Supersedes  Bulletin  1252-C." 

1903.  BAILEY,  KENNETH  R. 

Development  of  surface  mine  legislation.  West  Virginia 
History  30:  525-29  1969. 

Author  traces  the  development  of  legislation  regulating  strip  mining 
in  West  Virginia. 

1904.  BALZER,  J.  L. 

Venture  into  reclamation.  Mining  Congress  Journal  Jan 
1975  24-29. 

Account  of  the  reclamation  program  of  the  Utah  International  Inc. 
which  operates  the  large  Navajo  mine  in  New  Mexico. 

1905.  BARNES,  P. 

Stripping  the  prairies:  mining  the  coal  because  it  is  there. 
New  Republic  Mr  24,  1973  19-21. 

1906.  BEESON,  A.  C. 

Regulation  of  strip  or  open  cut  coal  operations.  West  Vir- 
ginia Coal  Mining  Institute.  Proceedings  1946:  9-24. 

"The  regrading  of  spoil  areas  is  the  rock  on  which  most  of  the 
stripping  legislation  has  split.  Public  opinion  generally  is  in  favor 
and  the  mining  interests  violently  opposed  to  it  with  much  propa- 
ganda of  various  kinds  put  out. '  Deals  largely  with  conditions  in 
West  Virginia. 


218 


1907.     BERISKORD,  FRANK  D. 

The  strip  mining  of  bituminous  coal.  MBA  Thesis.  Uni- 
versity of  Pennsylvania  (Wharton  School).  1948. 

|   1908.    berstein,  p.  j. 

UMW  and  strip  mining:  the  curse  of  coal.  Nation  217: 
168-72  1973. 

Discussion  of  the  UMWA's  position  on  strip  mining. 

1909.  BERRY,  WENDELL 

Strip  mining  morality;  the  landscaping  of  hell.  Nation  Ta 
24,  1966  96-100. 

The  Kentucky  poet  sums  up  the  devastation  of  the  land  by  the 
coal  companies  and  suggests  corrective  measures. 

1910.  BIG  MUSKIE:  KING  OF  THE  GIANTS 

Coal  Age  Dec  1969  50-61. 

Account  of  the  "World's  largest  dragline"  and  its  use  at  the  Central 
Ohio  Coal  Co.'s  operation  near  Cumberland,  Ohio.  The  bucket  cap- 
acity is  220  cu.  yds. 

1911.  BINDER,  DENTS 

A  novel  approach  to  reasonable  regulation  of  strip  mining. 
University  of  Pittsburgh  Law  Review  34:  339-74  1972/73. 

1912.  BITUMINOUS  COAL  RESEARCH,  INC. 

Reclamation  of  coal-mined  land:  a  bibliography  with  ab- 
stracts. Monroeville,  Pa.,  1975.  188p. 

Comprehensive,  well-annotated  bibliography. 

1913.  BLACK  MESA  PLAN:   ENERGY  TODAY,  BETTER  LAND  TOMORROW 

Coal  Age  Mr  1971  78-82. 

"Good  reclamation  procedures  and  concern  for  the  environment  rat- 
ed top  consideration  in  Peabody  Coal's  plans  for  the  development 
of  the  Black  Mesa  coal  reserves. ' 

1914.  BLAKELY,  J.  WES  AND  RICHARD  H.  MASON 

City  of  20,000  is  possible  on  former  strip  mine  site.  Coal 
Mining  and  Processing  Sept  1973  47-51. 

Reclamation  efforts  will  result  in  much-needed  level  land  in  the  up- 
per Kanawha  Valley,  W.  Va. 

1915.  BLAKELY,  J.  WES 

New  cities  for  Appalachia-will  they  be  denied?  Coal  Min- 
ing and  Processing  Jan  1974  49-54. 


219 


More  level  land  is  required  for  growth  of  cities  and  general  econ- 
omic development  in  Appalachia.  In  many  areas,  "The  extraction  of 
coal  through  surface  mining  is  the  only  economically  feasible  way 
the  region  would  ever  secure  such  level  land." 

1916.  BLAKELY,  J.  WES 

Surface  mining  in  Appalachia.  Coal  Mining  &  Processing 
Je  1974  36-39. 

Describes  mining  methods  of  three  eastern  Ky.  firms  which  "illus- 
trate how  coal  can  be  successfully  taken  in  this  region.  .  .,  and  the 
land  returned  to  far  more  useful  purposes  than  it  was  in  its  ori- 
ginal state." 

1917.  BLAKELY,  J.  WES 

The  Western  scene.  Coal  Mining  &  Processing  Je  1974  40- 
45. 

"Out  where  the  West  is  still  to  be  won,  things  are  pretty  hectic: 
Indians  wheel  and  deal,  drill  rigs  are  at  a  premium,  and  the  envir- 
onmentalists resemble  a  Patton  armored  division". 

1918.  BOCCARDY,  JOSEPH  A. 

Effects  of  surface  mining  on  fish  and  wildlife  in  Appala- 
chia. Washington:  GPO,  1968.  20p.  (U.  S.  Bureau  of  Sport 
Fisheries  and  Wildlife.  Resource  Publication  65). 

1919.  BOETTNER,  JOHN  L.  AND  OTHERS 

Strip  mining,  can  it  be  legally  abolished  by  an  act  of  con- 
gress? Charleston,  W.  Va.:  Appalachian  Research  and  De- 
fense Fund,  Inc.,  1971.  29p.  ( ARDF  Public  Interest  Report 

No.  1-A). 

1920.  BOSSELMAN,  FRED  P. 

The  control  of  surface  mining:  an  exercise  in  creative  fed- 
eralism. Natural  Resources  Journal  9:  136-65  1969. 

Pressure  for  the  regulation  of  surface  mining  has  been  felt  at  all 
levels  of  government.  "The  resulting  contest,  in  which  federal,  state 
and  local  authorities  each  vie  for  position  while  the  conservation 
groups  and  affected  industries  push  and  shove  from  the  sidelines, 
is  an  interesting  test  of  federalism  to  produce  regulatory  systems 
at  three  levels  of  government  which  neither  duplicate  each  other 
nor  leave  gaping  holes." 

1921.  BOTTOMLEY,  J.  A. 

History  and  development  of  strip  mining  in  Illinois.  Illin- 
ois Mining  Institute.  Proceedings  52:  90-100  1944. 

"Coal  stripping  began  in  the  Danville  area  in  1866." 


220 


1922.  BOVENIZER,  ROBERT  V.  AND  JAMES  G.  AULT 

Surface  mining  of  coal.  Mining  Congress  Journal  Feb  1967 
138-42. 

Includes  a  useful  history  of  the  stripping  activities  of  the  Hanna 
Coal  Co.,  a  division  of  Consolidation  Coal  Co. 

1923.  BOWDEN,  KENNETH  L.  AND  RICHARD  L.  MEIER 

Should  we  design  new  "Badlands?"  Laiulsrape  Architec- 
ture 51:  224-29  1961. 

Stripped  land  could  be  made  into  attractive  recreational  areas.  Ra- 
ther than  restoring  stripping  land  to  its  natural  state,  authors  sug- 
gest that  such  lands  be  made  into  recreational  areas  I  creating 
new  "badlands,"  especially  in  the  "topographically  monotonous" 
Midwest. 

1924.  BRANSCOME,  JAMES 

Destroy  to  save?  Environment  Sept  1975  6-11. 

"Obsession  with  cheap  electrical  power  has  led  (TVA)  to  destroy 
the  land  by  promoting  massive  strip-mining." 

1925.  BRANSCOME,  JAMES 

Paradise  lost.  Southern  Exposure  Summer/Fall  1973  20-41. 

Exposes  the  role  of  Peabody  Coal  Co.  and  TVA  in  the  strip  mining 
of  Appalachia  with  the  cooperation  of  governmental  institutions. 

1926.  BRANSON,  BRANLEY  A. 

Stripping  the  Appalachians.  Natural  History  Nov  1974  52- 
61. 

Assessment  of  the  ecological  effects  of  strip  mining.  Strong  anti- 
strip  mining  position  taken. 

1927.  BREDEWEG,  HARRY  W. 

Showplace  of  exploitation.  Engage/Social  Action  Te  1974 
28-33. 

Account  of  a  meeting  on  strip  mining  held  at  Clinch  Valley  College, 
Wise,  Va. 

1928.  BRESLIN,  JOHN  J.  AND  RICHARD  J.  ANDERSON 

Observations  on  the  surface  mining  of  coal.  Columbus: 
Battelle  Memorial  Institute,  1974.  94p. 

Observations  on  the  technical  problems  of  mining  and  reclamation 
by  a  team  of  experts.  Sixteen  stripping  operations  in  the  U.  S.  and 
three  in  Germany  were  visited. 

1929.  BRISTOW,  J.  W. 

Land  reclamation  by  Illinois  coal  strippers.  Coal  Mine 
Modernization  Yearbook  1948:  285-90. 


221 


Author  opposes  government  regulation  on  the  grounds  that  "too  of- 
ten such  laws  stifle  the  incentive  and  imagination  of  operators  to 
the  point  where  they  are  content  to  comply  with  the  minimum  of 
the  statute  requirements  rather  than  explore  the  possibilities 
of  more  profitable  land  uses." 

1930.  BROCK,  SAMUEL  M. 

Auger  mining  for  coal  in  southern  West  Virginia:  costs  and 
benefits.  Morgantown:  West  Virginia  University,  1972.  9p. 
(Appalachian  Center,  Office  of  Research  and  Develop- 
ment. Supplement  to  Research  Series  1 ) . 

1931.  BROCK,  SAMUEL  M. 

Benefit-cost  analysis  of  surface  coal  mining.  Mining  Engi- 
neering My  1969  75-77. 

1932.  BROCK,  SAMUEL  M.  AND  DAVID  B.  BROOKS 

The  Myles  Job  Mine,  a  study  of  benefits  and  costs  of  sur- 
face mining  for  coal  in  northern  West  Virginia.  Morgan- 
town:  West  Virginia  University.  1968.  61p.  (Appalachian 
Center,  Office  of  Research  and  Development.  Research 
Series  1). 

1933.  BROM,  THOMAS 

The  southwest:  America's  new  Appalachia.  Ramparts  Nov 
1974  19-20. 

1934.  BROOKS,  DAVID  B. 

The  impact  of  surface  mine  regulation  on  the  coal  indus- 
try; the  case  of  Kentucky.  In  American  Institute  of  Mining, 
Metallurgical  and  Petroleum  Engineers.  Council  of  Eco- 
nomics. Proceedings  1969:  65-92. 

An  examination  of  strip  mining  regulations  within  the  state  and  an 
analysis  of  the  costs  incurred  by  reclamation  efforts. 

1935.  BROOKS,  DAVID  B. 

Strip  mine  reclamation  and  economic  analysis.  Natural  Re- 
sources Journal  6:  13-44  1966. 

"The  three  goals  of  national  productivity,  quality  of  the  environ- 
ment, and  local  employment  together  represent  a  rationale  for  pub- 
lic policy  on  strip  and  auger  mining."  Data  are  insufficient  for 
intelligent  formulation  of  policy,  and  a  major  effort  must  be  made 
to  collect  same. 

1936.  BROWN,  ROBERT  E. 

Regulation  of  surface  mining  reclamation  in  Wyoming. 
Land  &  Water  Law  Review  9:  99-125  1974. 


222 


1937.  BURROICI IS.  WILBUR  G. 

Coal  stripping  in  the  United  States.  Coal  Industry  2:  1-5, 
56-61,  107-10,  143-46,  177-82,  322-28,  494-98  1919. 

A  scries  of  articles  which  give  a  comprehensive  picture  of  the  prac- 
tices and  problems  of  the  coal  stripping  industry  at  the  close  of 
World  War  I.  Keclamation  is  not  mentioned. 

1938.  CALLAHAN,  JOHN  C.  AND  JACQUELINE  G.  CALLAHAN 

Effects  of  strip  mining  and  technological  change  on  com- 
munities and  natural  resources  in  Indiana's  coal  mining  re- 
gion. Purdue  University.  Agricultural  Experiment  Station. 
Research  Bulletin  871,  1971.  43p. 

1939.  CAMPBELL,  ROBERT  S.  AND  OWEN  T.  LIND 

Water  quality  and  aging  of  strip-mine  lakes.  Water  Pollu- 
tion Control  Federation.  Journal  41:  1943-55  1969. 

"This  paper  proposes  that  most  strip-mine  lakes  easily  may  be  class- 
ified into  one  of  two  successional  stages-acid  or  alkaline.  Many 
strip-mine  lakes  are  at  first  acid  and  with  time  become  alkaline." 

1940.  CARDI,  VINCENT 

Strip  mining  and  the  1971  West  Virginia  Surface  Mining 
and  Reclamation  Act.  West  Virginia  Law  Review  75:  319- 
69  1973. 

1941.  CARLSON,  CLARENCE  G.  AND  WILSON  M.  LAIRD 

Study  of  the  spoil  banks  associated  with  lignite  strip  min- 
ing in  North  Dakota.  Grand  Forks:  North  Dakota  Geolog- 
ical Survey,  1964.  28p.  (Its  Miscellaneous  Series  24). 

1942.  CAUDILL,  HARRY  M. 

Farming  and  mining:  there  is  no  land  to  spare.  Atlantic 
Sept  1973  85-90. 

Eloquent  description  of  the  ills  of  strip  mining  and  the  limits  of 
recamation. 

1943.  CAUDILL,  HARRY  M. 

My  land  is  dying.  New  York:  Dutton,  1971,  144p. 

Much  of  Appalachia  is  already  dying  from  the  effects  of  strip  min- 
ing and  other  states  are  threatened.  The  book  is  dedicated  to  "those 
unborn  millions  who  must  someday  inherit  America's  spoil  banks." 

1944.  CAUDILL,  HARRY  M. 

Offense  against  America.  Audubon  Magazine  68:  356-59 
1966. 

An  impassioned  protest  against  destruction  of  the  landscape  in  the 
Southern  Appalachians  by  the  coal  industry. 


223 


1945.  CAUDILL,  HARRY  M. 

The  rape  of  the  Appalachians.  Atlantic  Ap  1962  37-42. 

A  sharp  attack  on  the  strip  mining  industry  and  the  TV  A  for  "the 
savage  destruction  of  the  mountain  region  by  the  strip  miners." 

1946.  CAUDILL,  HARRY  M. 

Strip  mining:  partnership  in  greed.  American  Forest  My 
1973  16-19. 

1947.  CEDARSTROM,  D.  J. 

Hydrologic  efforts  of  strip  mining  west  of  Appalachia. 
Mining  Congress  Journal  Mr  1971  46-50. 

"West  of  Appalachia,  strip-mined  land  can  be  managed  to  diminish 
floods,  increase  low  flow  and  become  a  significant  source  of  water." 

1948.  CENTER  FOR  SCIENCE  IN  THE  PURLIC  INTEREST 

Enforcement  of  strip  mining  laws  in  three  Appalachian 
states.  Washington,  1975.  lOOp. 

Study  of  the  enforcement  of  laws  and  regulations  regarding  strip 
mining  in  Kentucky,  West  Virginia  and  Pennsylvania. 

1949.  CHARMRURY,  H.  R. 

Strip  mining-a  necessary  evil?  State  Government  47:  209- 
13  1974. 

1950.  CHASE,  NINA  R. 

A  benefit-cost  analysis  of  Ohio's  reclaimed  coal  strip-lands. 
Thesis.  Ohio  State  University.  1967.  119p. 

1951.  CHIRONIS,  NICHOLS  P. 

West  Virginia  haulback  method  ...  a  modern  way  of  sur- 
face mining.  Coal  Age  Jan  1974  66-68. 

Account  of  the  Grafton  Coal  Co.'s  experience  with  the  haulback 
(block)  method  of  stripping. 

1952.  CLYDE,  EDWARD  W. 

Legal  problems  imposed  by  requirements  of  restoration 
and  beautification  of  mining  properties.  Rocky  Mountain 
Mineral  Law  Institute  13:  187-231  1967. 

1953.  COAL  STRIPPING,  RUSH  RUN,  OHIO 

Coal  Age  Ja  22,  1916  161-62. 

"The  coal  stripping  absolutely  destroys  the  land  for  farming  pur- 
poses. .  .  It  is  hard  to  imagine  what  further  use  could  be  made  of 
such  land." 


224 


/ 


1954.  CX>\  WV  \Y,  I  AMES 

Last  of  the  West:  hell,  strip  it.  Atlantic  Sept  1973  91-4+. 

"Stripping  eastern  Montana  and  the  surrounding  country  amounts 
to  the  destruction  of  what's  left  of  the  West." 

1955.  CONNER,  ELI  T. 

Anthracite  and  bituminous  mining.  Coal  Age  Oct  21,  1911 
42-45. 

Author  states  that  the  first  stripping  "on  an  extensive  scale  was  un- 
dertaken by  Aric  Pardee,  at  his  Hollywood  colliery,  near  Hazleton, 
Penn.,  in  1881.  This  work  was  commenced  by  the  late  Capt.  Wil- 
liam I.  Conner,  my  father,  who  introduced  (the  first  steam  shovel 
used  for  this  purpose  in  the  anthracite  field." 

1956.  CONTROVERSY   OVER   PROPOSED   U.    S.   REGULATION   OF    SURFACE 
MINING  OF  COAL 

Congressional  Digest  53:  131-60  1974. 
This  issue  is  devoted  to  an  examination  of  the  controversy. 


1957.  CORNFORTH,  CAROL 

Treated  waste  water  solids  fertilize  strip-mined  lands.  Coal 
Mining  &  Processing  Mr  1972  36-41. 

The  Metropolitan  Sanitary  District  of  Greater  Chicago  is  using  its 
"liquid  fertilizer"  to  reclaim  an  initial  7,000  acres  of  strip  mined 
land  in  Fulton  County,  Illinois. 

1958.  CORNFORTH,  CAROL 

Surface  mining  of  the  future.  Coal  Mining  &  Processing  Ja 
1974  75-90. 

"If  the  industry  is  not  all  but  abolished  under  federal  legislation,  a 
fantastic,  exciting  future  is  ahead  for  surface  mining,  particularly  in 
the  West". 

1959.  COST  ANALYSIS  OF  MODEL  MINES  FOR  STRIP  MINING  OF  COAL 
IN  THE  UNITED  STATES 

Washington:  GPO,  1972.  116p.  (U.S.  Bureau  of  Mines.  In- 
formation Circular  8535 ) . 

"This  Bureau  of  Mines  study  develops  the  basic  costs  of  producing 
coal  and  lignite  from  stripping  operations  hypothetically  located  in 
the  bituminous,  subbituminous,  and  lignite  fields  of  the  United 
States." 

1960.  COUNCIL  OF  STATE  GOVERNMENTS 

Surface  mining;  extent  and  economic  importance,  impact 
on  natural  resources  and  proposals  for  reclamation  of  min- 
ed land.  Chicago,  1964.  (Its  RM  369). 


225 


y 


1961.  CRAIG,  BOY 

Cloud  on  the  desert.  Environment  Jl/Ag  1971  20-35. 

Account  of  the  damage  to  the  environment  caused  by  power  plants, 
burning  strip-mined  coal,  in  the  Four  Corners  area  of  the  South- 
west. 

1962.  CRANE,  W.  R. 

Coal  stripping  by  steam  shovel  in  Kansas.  Engineering  & 
Mining  Journal  74:  615-17  1902. 

1963.  CULVER,  HAROLD  E. 

Preliminary  report  on  coal  stripping  possibilities  in  Illinois. 
Illinois  Geological  Survey.  Cooperative  Mining  Series.  Bul- 
letin 28.  1925.  61p. 

1964.  CYRNAK,  ANTHONY  W. 

Effect  of  regulation  on  external  diseconomies:  surface  min- 
ing in  northern  West  Virginia,  1960-1970.  Ph.  D.  West  Vir- 
ginia University.  1972.  262p. 

1965.  DALSTED,  NORMAN  L.  AND  F.  L.  LEISTRITZ 

Selected  bibliography  on  coal-energy  development  of  part- 
icular interest  to  the  Western  states.  Fargo:  North  Dakota 
Agricultural  Experiment  Station,  1974.  82p.  (Agricultural 
economics  miscellaneous  report,  no.  16). 

Very  useful.  Emphasis  is  on  surface  mining  and  the  problems  asso- 
ciated therewith. 

1966.  DANA,  SAMUEL  T. 

Stearns  case;  an  analysis.  American  Forest  S  1955  18-19. 

Important  decision  in  which  the  Stearns  Coal  &  Lumber  Co.  was 
denied  right  to  strip  in  the  Cumberland  National  Forest. 

1967.  DEASY,  GEORGE  F.  AND  PHYLLIS  R.  GRIESS 

Coal  strip  pits  in  the  northern  Appalachian  landscape. 
Journal  of  Geography  58:  72-81  1959. 

Description  of  strip  mining  pits-size,  shape,  etc.,-and  their  adjoining 
landscape. 

1968.  DEASY,  GEORGE  F.  AND  PHYLLIS  R.  GRIESS 

Terrain  damages  resulting  from  bituminous  coal  stripping 
in  Pennsylvania.  Pennsylvania  Academy  of  Science.  Pro- 
ceedings 34:  124-30  1960. 

1969.  DICKMAN,  IRVING 

The  strip-mine  reclamation  program  in  Ohio.  Ohio  Journal 
of  Science  64:  165-68  1964. 

226 


1970.  DIETRICH,  CHARLES  C. 

Mined  land  reclamation  in  the  western  United  States. 
Rocky  Mountain  Mineral  Law  Institute  16:  143-205  1971. 

1971.  Dl.NKEL,  R.  M.  AND  LEE  GUERNSEY 

An  economic  appraisal  of  reclamation  practices  on  a  strip 
coal  mine  site  in  Greene  County,  Indiana.  Indiana  Aca- 
demy of  Science.  Proceedings  78:  355-62  1968. 

1972.  DONLEY,  ROBERT  T. 

Some  observations  on  the  law  of  the  strip-mining  of  coal. 
Rocky  Mountain  Mineral  Law  Institute  11:  123-68  1966. 

1973.  DOYLE,  WILLIAM  S. 

Strip  mining  of  coal;  environmental  solutions.  Park 
Ridge,  N.  J.:  Noyes  Data  Corp.,  1976.  352p. 

"Based  on  19  government  reports  issued  from  1967  through  1974". 

1974.  DREESE,  GEORGE  R.  AND  HAROLD  L.  BRYANT 

Cost  and  effects  of  a  water  quality  program  for  a  small 
stripping  company-southeastern  Ohio.  Water  Resources 
Bulletin  8:  320-27  1972. 

"The  conclusions  of  this  study  were  that  the  small  company  could 
not  unilaterally  implement  mine  drainage  programs  because  the 
added  costs  would  seriously  worsen  its  already  precarious  financial 
position."  This  paper  summarizes  a  larger  study  by  the  same  au- 
thors: Cost  and  effects  of  a  water  quality  program  tor  a  small  strip 
mining  company.  Alexandria,  Va.:  U.  S.  Army  Engineers  Institute 
for  Water  Resources,  1971.  150p.  (IWR  Report  71-7). 

1975.  DRUM,  E.  C. 

Coal  mining  by  stripping  method.  Coal  Industry  1:  68-69 
1918. 

1976.  DUGGAN,  CARROLL  AND  OTHERS 

Evaluation  of  municipal  compost  for  strip  mine  reclama- 
tion. Compost  Science  My/Je  1973  4-8. 

"Four  years  of  tests  by  the  Tennessee  Valley  Authority  prove  the 
effectiveness  of  composted  municipal  wastes  in  producing  vegeta- 
tive cover  on  coal  strip  mine  sites'  . 


1977.     DUNLAP,  LOUISE  C. 

Analysis  of  the  legislative  history  of  the  Surface  Mining 
Control  and  Reclamation  Act  of  1975.  Rocky  Mountain 
Mineral  Law  Institute  21:  11-58  1975. 


227 


1978.  EDGERTON,  B.  R.  AND  OTHERS 

Revegetating  bituminous  strip  mine  spoils  with  municipal 
wastewater.  Compost  Science  Jl/Ag  1975  20-25. 

Experiments  indicate  that  the  use  of  treated  municipal  wastes  can 
facilitate  revegetation. 

1979.  EVANS,  ROBERT  J.  AND  JOHN  R.  BITLER 

Coal  surface  mining  reclamation  costs:  Appalachian  and 
Midwestern  coal  supply  districts.  Washington:  GPO,  1975. 
50p.  (U.  S.  Bureau  of  Mines.  Information  Circular  8695). 

1980.  EVANS,  WILLIAM  B.  AND  ROBERT  L.  PETERSON 

Decision  at  Colstrip.  Pacific  Northwest  Quarterly  61:  129- 
36  1970. 

Account  of  strip-mining  operation  at  Colstrip,  Montana  maintained 
by  the  Northern  Pacific  Railroad  in  the  early  1920's. 

1981.  EVANS,  WILLIAM  B. 

Public  response  to  strip  mining  in  Montana,  1920's  to 
1973.  Montana  Business  Quarterly  Summer  1973  16-20. 

"A  historian  documents  the  lack  of  public  response  to  strip  mining 
in  Montana  for  half  a  century". 

1982.  FALTERMAYER,  EDMUND 

Clearing  the  way  for  the  new  age  of  coal.  Fortune  My 
1974  214-19+. 

"In  short,  we  can  have  it  both  ways-both  the  fuel  and  the  mending 
of  the  land". 

1983.  FELDMAN,  JULIAN 

The  development  of  a  regulatory  policy  for  the  coal  strip- 
ping industry  in  Ohio.  Thesis.  Ohio  State  University.  1950. 

1984.  FOREMAN,  W.  E. 

Impact  of  higher  ecological  costs  on  surface  mining. 
Blacksburg,  1974.  170p. 

Research  conducted  by  VPI's  Division  of  Minerals  Engineering  for 
the  U.  S.  Bureau  of  Mines. 

1985.  FRANKLIN,  BEN  A. 

What  price  coal?  New  York  Times  Magazine  Sept  29, 1974. 
26-7+. 

Report  on  the  move  to  strip  mine  North  Dakota's  vast  lignite  re- 
serves. 


228 


1986.  FRAWLEY,  MARGARET  L. 

Surface  mined  areas:  control  and  reclamation  of  environ- 
mental damage,  a  bibliography.  Washington:  U.  S.  Depart- 
ment of  the  Interior.  Office  of  Library  Services,  1971.  63p. 
(Bibliography  Series  27). 

Contains  387  references  published  from  1960  through  June  1970 
concerning  "soil  shifts,  chemical  modification  and  water  pollution 
resulting  from  surface  mining,  and  the  restoration  of  mined  areas 
for  use  and  beauty." 

1987.  GASH,  STEPHEN  L.  AND  J.  CARL  BASS 

Age,  growth  and  population  structures  of  fishes  from  acid 
and  alkaline  strip-mine  lakes  in  southeast  Kansas.  Kansas 
Academy  of  Science.  Transactions  76:  39-50  1973. 

1988.  GATES,  LATHROP  M. 

Strip  mine  reclamation  regulation.  Missouri  Law  Review 
39:  429-46  1974. 

Account  of  the  development  and  current  status  of  the  regulation  of 
strip  mining  in  Missouri. 

1989.  GEYER,  WAYNE  A. 

Timber  growth  on  graded  and  ungraded  strip-mine  spoil 
banks  in  southeast  Kansas.  Kansas  Academy  of  Science. 
Transactions  74:  318-24  1972. 

1990.  GOLDBERG,  EVERETT  F.  AND  GARRETT  POWER 

Legal  problems  of  coal  mine  reclamation.  Washington: 
GPO,  1972.  236p.  (U.  S.  Environmental  Protection  Agency. 
Water  Pollution  Control  Research  Series ) . 

"A  study  in  Maryland,  Ohio,  Pennsylvania  and  West  Virginia." 

1991.  GOLDSTEIN,  MORRIS  AND  ROBERT  S.  SMITH 

Land  reclamation  requirements  and  their  estimated  effects 
on  the  coal  industry.  Journal  of  Environmental  Economics 
and  Management  2:  135-49  1975. 

1992.  GORDON,  SUZANNE 

Black  Mesa:  the  angel  of  death.  New  York:  John  Day, 
1973.  113p. 

Account  of  the  damage  done  both  to  the  environment  and  to  the 
life  style  of  the  Hopi  Indians  by  strip  mining  in  the  Black  Mesa 
area  of  Arizona. 

1993.  GRAHAM,  HERMAN  D. 

Economics  of  strip  coal  mining,  with  special  reference  to 
Knox  and  Fulton  counties,  Illinois,  Dissertation.  Univer- 
sity of  Illinois.  1948. 


229 


Appeared  also  as  Bulletin  66  of  the  Bureau  of  Economic  and  Busi- 
ness Research  of  the  University  of  Illinois. 

1994.  GREEN,  JERRY  E. 

The  problem  of  reclamation  of  derelict  land  after  coal 
strip  mining  in  Appalachia.  Southeastern  Geographer  Apr 
1969  36-47. 

1995.  GREENBURG,  WILLIAM 

Chewing  it  up  at  200  tons  a  bite.  Technology  Review  Feb 
1973  46-55. 

"The  destructive  use  of  strip  mining  is  blatant  in  Appalachia  and 
becoming  so  in  the  West". 


1996.  GROFF,  SIDNEY  L. 

Voluntary  mined-land  reclamation  in  Montana.  Mining 
Congress  Journal  Oct  1969  45-50. 

"The  Montana  statute  requiring  reclamation  of  surface-mined  coal 
lands  omits  over-all  specifications.  Individual  voluntary  state-ap- 
proved contracts  contain  specific  requirements  and  stipulations 
relative  to  reclamation." 

1997.  GROWTH  OF  STRIP  COAL  MINING  AND  ITS  EFFECT  ON  LABOR 

MLR  33:  85-89  1931. 

1998.  GUERNSEY,  LEE 

Land  use  changes  caused  by  a  quarter  century  of  strip  coal 
mining  in  Indiana.  Indiana  Academy  of  Science.  Proceed- 
ings 69:  200-209  1959. 

1999.  GUERNSEY,  LEE 

Reclamation  of  strip  mined  land  in  western  Kentucky. 
Journal  of  Geography  59:  5-11  1960. 

2000.  GUERNSEY,  LEE 

Settlement  changes  caused  by  strip  coal  mining  in  Indiana. 
Indiana  Academy  of  Science.  Proceedings  70:  158-64  1960. 

2001.  GUERNSEY,  LEE 

Strip  coal  mine  reclamation  problems  in  Indiana.  Indiana 
Academy  of  Science.  Proceedings  74:  255-58  1964. 

2002.  GUERNSEY,  JAMES  L. 

A  study  of  the  agriculture  and  rural  settlement  pattern  of 
Vigo  County,  Indiana,  with  emphasis  on  the  impact  of 
strip  coal  mining.  Dissertation.  Northwestern.  1953. 

230 


2003.  GWYNN,  THOMAS  A. 

Mined  land  reclamation  in  Montana.  Natural  Resources 
Lawyer  7:  27-32  1974. 

2004.  HAAS,  ALBERT 

Switching  to  coal  is  buying  trouble.  Business  and  Society 
Review  Winter  1974/75  52-57. 

The  social  costs  of  massive  stripping  operations  in  the  West  are  ex- 
cessive and  unnecessary. 

2005.  HAGEN,  BRUCE 

North  Dakota's  surface  mining  and  reclamation  law.  North 
Dakota  Law  Review  50:  437-57  1973/74. 


V  2006. 


y 


HALF  CENTURY  OF  STRIPPING  .   .   .  AND  THE  NEXT  TEN  YEARS 

Coal  Age  Oct  1961  180-87. 
A  useful  history  of  the  industry. 


2007.  HANNAH,  H.  W.  AND  B.  VANDERVLIET 

Effects  of  strip  mining  on  agricultural  areas  in  Illinois  and 
suggested  remedial  measures.  Land  Economics  15:  296-311 
1939. 

2008.  HILL,  JACK  K. 

Social  and  economic  implications  of  strip  mining  in  Harri- 
son County.  Thesis.  Ohio  State  University.  1965. 

Harrison  County,  Ohio. 

2009.  HOFFMAN,  GLENN  J.  AND  OTHERS 

Annotated  bibliography  on  slope  stability  of  strip  mine 
spoil  banks.  Ohio  Agricultural  Experiment  Station.  Re- 
search Circular  130,  1964.  92p. 

Worldwide  coverage.  Entries  are  listed  alphabetically  by  author.  An 
excellent  subject  index  is  provided. 

2010.  HOLLISTER,  G. 

Future  of  federal  programs  in  strip  mining  and  restoration. 
Soil  Conservation  Society  of  America.  Proceedings  1962 
87-91. 

2011.  HOLMES,  GRANT 

Early  coal  stripping  full  of  heartbreak.  Coal  Age  My  29,  Te 
5,  1924  797-800,  835-39. 

The  coal  stripping  industry  is  said  to  have  been  "born"  in  Dan- 
ville. Illinois.  The  author  was  a  pioneer  in  the  early  strip  mining  in- 
dustry. 

231 


2012.  HOWARD,  HERBERT  A. 

Are  landowners  underpaid  or  overpaid  for  surface  mining 
mineral  rights?  American  Journal  of  Economics  and  Soc- 
iology 30:  413-20  1971. 

An  analysis  of  the  situation  in  eastern  Kentucky. 

2013.  HOWARD,  HERBERT  A. 

External  diseconomies  of  bituminous  coal  surface  mining; 
a  case  study  of  eastern  Kentucky,  1960-1967.  Dissertation. 
Indiana  University,  1969.  223p. 

A  study  of  the  Kentucky  Reclamation  Laws  and  their  enforcement. 

2014.  HOWARD,  HERBERT  A. 

A  measurement  of  the  external  diseconomies  associated 
with  bituminous  coal  surface  mining,  Eastern  Kentucky, 
1962-1967.  Natural  Resources  Journal  11:  76-101  1971. 

2015.  HUTNIK,  RUSSELL  J.  AND  GRANT  DAVIS 

Ecology  and  reclamation  of  devastated  land.  New  York: 
Gordon  and  Breach,  1973.  2  vols. 

The  proceedings  of  the  International  Symposium  on  Ecology  and 
Revegetation  of  Drastically  Distrubed  Areas  held  at  University 
Park,  Pennsylvania. 

2016.  ILLINOIS  COAL  STRIPPERS  ASSOCIATION 

The  open  cut  coal  mining  industry  of  Illinois.  Chicago, 
1939.  37p. 

2017.  ILLINOIS.  STRIP  MINE  INVESTIGATION  COMMISSION 

Report  of  Strip  Mine  Investigation  Commission  to  the 
sixty-third  General  Assembly  of  Illinois.  Chicago:  Illinois 
Coal  Strippers  Association,  1943.  40p. 


2018.  IMHOFF,  EDGAR  A.  AND  OTHERS 

Guide  to  state  programs  for  the  reclamation  of  surface 
mined  coal.  Washington:  GPO,  1976.  33p.  (USGS  Circu- 
lar 731). 

2019.  IMPLIED  RIGHT  TO  STRIP  MINE  COAL 

West  Virginia  Law  Revtiew  58:  174-84  1956. 

2020.  INDIANA  COAL  PRODUCERS  ASSOCIATION 

The  story  of  open  cut  coal  mining  in  Indiana.  Terre  Haute, 
1940?  26p. 


232 


2021.  JOHNSON,  LINDA 

Egypt  Valley.  Mountain  Life  and  Work  Jan  1973  15-18. 

Account  of  the  conflict  between  residents  of  Belmont  Co.,  Ohio  and 
the  Hanna  Coal  Company. 

2022.  JONES,  PAUL  M. 

Strip  coal  mining  in  Western  Kentucky.  Kentucky  Mining 
Institute.  Proceedings  4:  39-46  1943/44. 

2023.  JONES,  w.  G. 

The  new  forest.  Boalsburg,  Pa.:  Offset  Centre,  1970.  58p. 

"In  central  Pennsylvania  a  new  and  interesting  forest  is  coming  in- 
to being  on  the  reclaimed  but  supposedly  barren  lands  once  strip- 
ped for  bituminous  coal." 

2024.  JOSEPHY,  ALVIN  M. 

Agony  of  the  northern  plains.  Audubon  Jl  1973  68-101. 

Excellent  article  describing  the  development  of  massive  stripping 
operations  in  the  northern  plain  states  ( Montana,  Wyoming,  Colo- 
rado and  the  Dakotas).  Well  illustrated. 

2025.  JOSEPHY,  ALVIN  M. 

Murder  of  the  southwest.  Aububon  Magazine  Jl  1971  50- 
67. 

Account  of  the  damage  to  the  land  as  well  as  to  the  Indian  way  of 
life  by  massive  strip  mining  in  the  southwest. 

2026.  KELLER,  ALVIN  G. 

Bituminous  coal  strip  mines;  some  financial  considerations. 
Pittsburgh:  Mellon  National  Bank  &  Trust  Company,  1951. 
150p. 

2027.  KENTFIELD,  CALVIN 

New  Showdown  in  the  West.  New  York  Times  Magazine 
Ja  28,  1973  12+. 

The  concern  of  local  residents  over  how  a  large  strip  mining  indus- 
try would  change  the  land  and  life  style  of  the  West. 

2028.  KENTUCKY.  LEGISLATIVE  RESEARCH  COMMISSION 

Strip  mining;  a  1954  Kentucky  Legislative  Problem.  Frank- 
fort. 1954.  15p.  (Legislative  Research  Commission  Infor- 
mation Bulletin  No.  10). 

2029.  KENTUCKY  STRIP  MINING  AND  RECLAMATION  COMMISSION 

Strip  mining  in  Kentucky.  Frankfort,  1965.  56p. 
A  useful  survey  that  includes  a  history  of  strip  mining. 


233 


2030.  KIESSLING,  O. 

The  economics  of  strip  coal  mining.  Washington:  GPO, 
1931.  32p.  (Bureau  of  Mines.  Economic  Paper  11). 

2031.  KNEELAND,  FRANK  H. 

Large  stripping  operation.  Coal  Age  Sept.  25,  1915  497- 
501. 

Account  of  stripping  operation  in  the  anthracite  region  of  Pennsyl- 
vania. "Ten  steam  shovels  and  35  locomotives  are  employed  at  this 
operation." 

2032.  KOENIG,  ROBERT 

Economics  and  techniques  of  strip  coal  mining.  Cororado 
School  of  Mines.  Quarterly  45,  2B  (1950)  27-39. 

2033.  KREBS  GIRARD 

Technological  and  social  impact  assessment  of  resource  ex- 
traction: the  case  of  coal.  Environment  and  Behavior  7: 
307-29  1975. 

Special  attention  is  given  to  the  problems  created  by  strip  mining  in 
eastern  Ohio. 

2033a.  LANDY,  MARC  K. 

The  politics  of  environmental  reform:  controlling  Ken- 
tucky strip  mining.  Washington:  Resources  for  the  Future, 
1976.  400p. 

2034.  LARSEN,  THOMAS  A. 

Federal  regulation  of  strip  mining.  Environmental  Affairs 
2:  533-61  1972/73. 

2035.  LEIBENGUTH,  C. 

Strip  mining;  covering  the  scars.  Science  Digest  Dec  1974 
70-76. 

2035a.  LIGHT,  ED 

The  effects  of  modern  strip  mining  on  water  resources. 
Charleston,  W.  Va.:  Campaign  Clean  Water,  1975.  18p. 

2036.  L1MSTROM,  G.  A. 

Forestation  of  strip-mined  land  in  the  central  states.  Wash- 
ington: GOP,  1960.  74p.  (USDA.  Agricultural  Handbook 
166). 

2037.  LIMSTROM,  G.  A.  AND  G.  H.  DEITSCHMAN 

Reclaiming  Illinois  strip  coal  lands  by  forest  planting.  Illi- 
nois Agricultural  Experiment  Station.  Bulletin  547:  201- 
501951. 

234 


"Sweet  gum  was  outstandingly  promising  for  the  stripped  lands  in 
Southern  Illinois." 

2038.  LIMSTROM,  G.  A. 

Revegetation  of  Ohio's  strip-mined  land.  Ohio  Journal  of 
Science  64:  112-19  1964. 

2039.  LORING,  ROBERT  D. 

The  growth  of  strip  coal  mining  in  Indiana.  Indiana  Aca- 
demy of  Science.  Proceedings  61:  184-86  1951. 

"This  paper  will  trace  and  attempt  to  account  for  the  growth  of 
the  strip  coal  mining  industry  in  Indiana  from  the  year  1914  up  to, 
and  including,  the  year  1949." 

2040.  LORING,  ROBERT  D. 

Strip  coal  mining  areas  of  southwestern  Indiana:  their  dis- 
tribution, growth  and  restoration.  Thesis.  Indiana  Univer- 
sity. 1948. 

2041.  MC  CULLOUGH,  DAVID  G. 

The  lonely  war  of  a  good  angry  man.  American  Heritage 
Dec  1969  97-113. 

Account  of  Harry  M.  Caudill's  continuing  crusade  against  the  rav- 
ages of  strip  mining. 

2042.  MACKEY,  TERRENCE  AND  JAMES  A.  HARDEE 

Regulation  of  open  cut  mining  in  Wyoming.  Land  &  Water 
Law  Review  5:  449-65  1970. 

2041a.  MC  GINLEY,  PATRICK  C. 

Prohibition  of  surface  mining  in  West  Virginia.  West  Vir- 
ginia Law  Review  78:  445-74  1976. 

Analysis  of  some  of  the  provisions  of  the  West  Virginia  Surface 
Mining  and  Reclamation  Act  of  1971. 

2043.  MANEVAL,  DAVID  R. 

Abandoned  mine  areas  can  be  valuable  assets.  Coal  Min- 
ing &  Processing  Ag  1976  52-56. 

Stripping  areas  can  be  turned  into  valuable  sites  for  industrial 
parks,  airports,  schools  etc. 

2044.  MANEVAL,  DAVID  R. 

Coal  mining  vs.  environment:  a  reconciliation  in  Pennsy- 
lvania. Appalachia  Feb/Mr  1972  10-40. 

An  interesting  account  of  Pennsylvania's  increasingly  successful  ef- 
forts to  "reconcile  coal  mining  and  environment.' 

235 


2045.  MAY,  MORTON  AND  ROBERT  LANG 

Reclamation  of  strip  mine  spoil  banks  in  Wyoming.  Lara- 
mie: Wyoming  Agricultural  Experiment  Station,  1971.  32p. 
( Its  Research  Journal  51 ) . 

2046.  MEDVICK,  CHARLES 

The  Indiana  coal  industry  surface  mining  reclamation  pro- 
gram. Indiana  Academy  of  Science.  Proceedings  80:  346- 
50  1970. 

"The  Indiana  coal  mining  industry  operates  the  oldest  continuous 
surface  mining  revegetation  program  in  the  country." 

2047.  METNERS,  ROBERT  G. 

Strip  mining  legislation.  Natural  Resources  Journal  3:  442- 
49  1964. 

2048.  MERRITT,  STEPHEN  E. 

Cimarron  strip.  Coal  Age  Jan  1972  78-83. 

Account  of  the  Cimarron  Coal  Co.,  a  major  stripping  operation  near 
Madisonville.  Ky. 

2049.  MERZ,  ROBERT 

Character  and  extent  of  land  stripped  for  coal  in  Kentucky. 
Kentucky  Agricultural  Experiment  Station.  Circular  66. 
1949.  27p. 

2050.  MILLER,  E.  WILLARD 

Strip  mining  and  land  utilization  in  western  Pennsylvania. 
Scientific  Monthly  69:  94-103  1949. 

2051.  MINTZ,  ROBERT  E. 

Strip  mining:  a  policy  evaluation.  Ecology  Law  Quarterly 
5:  461-529  1976. 

2052.  MONTGOMERY,  HUGH  B. 

Conscientious  coal  stripping.  Coal  Age  Jl  1962  84-88. 

Account  of  operation  "directed  to  broad  land-use  benefits  to  the 
communities  in  the  area  and  the  economy  in  general." 

2053.  MORTON,  ROGERS  C. 

Strip  mining  reform— some  political  and  economic  ideas. 
Environmental  Affairs  2:  294-302  1972/73. 

2054.  MOUNTAIN  COMMUNITY  UNION 

You  can't  put  it  back;  a  West  Virginia  guide  to  strip  mine 
opposition.  Fairmont,  W.  Va.  1976.  79p. 

236 


2055.  MUCKELSTON,  SANDRA 

Strip  mining  reclamation  requirements  in  Montana— a 
critique.  Montana  Law  Review  32:  65-79  1971. 

"Regulation  of  the  reclamation  process  must  be  strengthened  before 
acreage  disturbed  by  strip-mining  coal  and  other  minerals  and  fuels 
reaches  insurmountable  proportions." 

2056.  MUNN,  ROBERT  F. 

The  development  of  strip  mining  in  Southern  Appalachia. 
Appalachian  Journal  3:  87-93  1975. 

Strip  mining  was,  with  few  exceptions,  of  little  importance  in  the 
Southern  Appalachian  area  until  World  War  II. 

2057.  MUNN,  ROBERT  F. 

The  first  fifty  years  of  strip  mining  in  West  Virginia,  1916- 
1965.  West  Virginia  History  35:  66-74  1973. 

2058.  MUNN,  ROBERT  F. 

Strip  mining:  an  annotated  bibliography.  Morgantown: 
West  Virginia  University  Library,  1973,  HOp. 

2059.  MUTMANSKY,  JAN  M. 

Analysis  of  effects  of  legislation  upon  reserves  and  profits 
in  contour  surface  mining.  Coal  Age  Sept  1974  104-8. 

2060.  MYERS,  LEROY  O. 

Bituminous  coal  stripping  in  Pennsylvania.  Western 
Pennsylvania  Historical  Magazine  29:  35-52  1946. 

2061.  NASH,  HARRY  D. 

Effects  of  strip  mining  on  the  microbiology  of  a  stream 
free  from  domestic  pollution.  Dissertation.  University  of 
Kentucky.  1969.  lllp. 

2062.  NEPHEW,  E.  A.  AND  R.  L.  SPORE 

Costs  of  coal  surface  mining  and  reclamation  in  Appala- 
chia. Oak  Ridge,  Tenn.,  Oak  Ridge  National  Laboratory, 
1976.  45p. 

2063.  OTTO,  H.  H. 

Stripping  in  the  anthracite  region.  AIME.  Transactions  94: 
181-89  1931. 

2064.  PACKER,  PAUL  E. 

Rehabilitation  potentials  and  limitations  of  surface-mined 
lands  in  the  northern  Great  Plains.  Ogden,  Utah:  Inter- 
mountain  Forest  &  Range  Experiment  Station,  1974.  44p. 
(USDA  Forest  Service.  General  Technical  Report  INT- 
14).  237 


2065.  PAONE,  JAMES  AND  OTHERS 

Land  utilization  and  reclamation  in  the  mining  industry, 
1930-71.  Washington:  GPO,  1974.  61p.  (U.  S.  Bureau  of 
Mines.  Information  Circular  8642). 

2066.  PARSONS,  FLOYD  W. 

Coal  mining  by  open  stripping  in  Pennsylvania.  Engineer- 
ing &  Mining  Journal  81:  1239-40  1906. 

2067.  PARSONS,  JOHN  D. 

Factors  influencing  excessive  flows  of  coal  strip-mining  ef- 
fluents. Illinois  Academy  of  Science.  Transactions  49:  25- 
33  1956. 

2068.  PENNSYLVANIA.  DEPT.  OF  MINES  AND  MINERAL  INDUSTRIES 

Operation  Scarlift,  the  after  effects  of  over  100  years  of 
coal  mining  in  Pennsylvania  and  current  programs  to  com- 
bat them.  Harrisburg,  1967  12p. 

Text  and  photographs  emphasizing  the  need  for  immediate  reclama- 
tion of  lands  despoiled  by  strip  mining. 

2069.  PERSSE,  FRANKLIN  H. 

Strip-mining  techniques  to  minimize  environmental  dam- 
age in  the  Upper  Missouri  River  Basin  states.  Washing- 
ton: GPO,  1975.  53p.  (U.  S.  Bureau  of  Mines.  Information 
Circular  8685). 

2070.  PFLEIDER,  EUGENE  P. 

Surface  mining.  New  York:  American  Institute  of  Mining, 
Metallurgical,  and  Petroleum  Engineers,  1968.  1061p. 

Written  for  the  professional  and  covering  all  aspects  of  surface 
mining. 

2071.  PITTSBURGH.      UNIVERSITY.     GRADUATE     CENTER     FOR     PUBLIC 
WORKS  ADMINISTRATION 

Effects  of  strip  mining  upon  navigable  waters  and  their 
tributaries:  discussion  and  selected  bibliography.  Pitts- 
burgh, 1972.  94p. 

2072.  PLASS,  WILLIAM  T. 

Revegetating  surface-mined  land.  Mining  Congress  Journal 
Apr  1974  53-59. 

Purposes  of  article  is  to  "review  some  of  the  important  advances  in 
revegetation  techniques  that  may  have  national  or  regional  appli- 
cations". 

238 


2073.  POLLARD,  BENJAMIN  C. 

Strippable  lignite  reserve  of  North  Dakota.  Washing- 
ton: GPO,  1972.  37p.  (U.  S.  Bureau  of  Mines.  Information 

Circular  8537). 

Covers  "location,  tonnage,  and  characteristics  of  lignite  and  over- 
burden." 

2073a.  POTKIN,  ALLEN  J. 

Media  access  for  environmentalists:  breaking  the  stripmine 
information  monopoly.  Thesis.  West  Virginia  University. 
1972.  87p. 

2074.  PREATE,  ERNEST  D. 

A  new  law  for  an  old  problem.  Appalachia  Feb/Mr  1972 
41-53. 

Account  of  the  background  and  operation  of  Pennsylvania's  Surface 
Mining  Conservation  and  Reclamation  Act  of  1971. 

2075.  PRIEST,  WHAYNE  C.  JR. 

Reclamation  of  strip  mine  spoils.  Kentucky  Law  Journal 
50:  524-66  1962. 

"The  purpose  of  this  article  is  to  explain  various  legal  methods  and 
devices  which  Kentucky  and  other  states  have  used  or  could  use  to 
ensure  that  all  spoil  banks  will  be  reclaimed". 

2076.  PUNDARI,  N.  B. 

Going  into  the  West's  coal  fields.  Coal  Age  May  1974  120- 
25. 

"A  checklist  of  key  items  to  be  considered  for  new  surface  mines". 

2077.  RAY,  JOHN  R. 

Attitudes  toward  strip  mining  in  Ohio.  East  Lakes  Geo- 
grapher 8:  13-24  1973. 

"The  study  revealed  an  overall  negative  attitude  toward  stripping 
in  the  sample  population  and  no  significant  regional  variation  in  at- 
tidues  in  this  Donulation  toward  the  concent." 


in  the  sample  population  and  no  significant 
tidues  in  this  population  toward  the  concept 


2078.  RAY,  JOHN  R. 

Strip  mining  in  Ohio:  a  comparison  of  measured  human 
attitudes  and  stated  opinion.  In  Extraction  of  Minerals  and 
Energy:  Today's  Dilemma,  edited  by  R.  A.  Deju,  pp.  235- 
49. 

2079.  RECLAIMING  LAND  FOR  PROFIT 

Coal  Age  Oct  1963  94-101. 

Account  of  the  extensive  and  successive  reclamation  projects  of  the 
Ayrshire  Co.  in  Indiana,  Illinois  and  Kentucky. 

239 


2080.  REDDY,  NALLANU  N.  AND  CHARLES  J  BUEHLER 

Strip  mine  regulation  and  reclamation:  an  attitude  survey. 
Arizona  Review  Mar  1974  1-5. 

Based  on  a  survey  of  several  counties  in  W.  Va..  Pa.,  and  N.  Y., 
authors  found  that  the  public  "is  not  in  favor  of  a  total  ban  but  of 
enforcing  regulation." 

2081.  REGIONAL  CONFERENCE  ON  RECLAMATION  OF  SURFACE-MINED 
LAND  FOR  OUTDOOR  RECREATION 

Kent,  Ohio:  Kent  State  University,  1973.  124p. 

2082.  REGULATION  OF  STRIP  MINING  IN  ALABAMA 

Alabama  Law  Review  23:  423-88  1970/71. 

Analysis  of  the  1969  Alabama  Surface  Mining  Act  and  the  events 
leading  to  its  passage. 

2083.  REHABILITATION  POTENTIAL  OF  WESTERN  COAL  LANDS 

Cambridge:  Ballinger  Publishing  Co.,  1974.  198p. 

A  report  to  the  Energy  Policy  Project  of  the  Ford  Foundation.  This 
represents  the  most  comprehensive  study  of  the  problem  to  date. 

2084.  REITZE,  ARNOLD  W. 

Old  King  Coal  and  the  merry  rapists  of  Appalachia.  Case 
Western  Reserve  Law  Review  22:  650-737  1971. 

"The  subject  of  this  article  is  the  nature,  scope,  and  effectiveness 
of  the  laws  regulating  the  surface  mining  industry." 

2085.  RENKEY,  LESLIE  E. 

Local  zoning  of  strip  mining.  Kentucky  Law  journal  57: 
738-58  1968/69. 

Kentucky  strip  mine  laws  do  not  distinguish  between  the  relatively 
level  western  fields  and  the  steeply  pitched  eastern  fields.  Author 
favors  zoning  ordinances  enacted  by  focal  government  units  to  help 
regulate  stripping. 

2086.  RILEY,  CHARLES  V. 

The  ecology  of  water  areas  associated  with  coal  strip-min- 
ed lands  in  Ohio.  Ohio  Journal  of  Science  60:  106-21  1960. 

2087.  RILEY,  CHARLES  V. 

Revegetation  and  management  of  critical  sites  for  wildlife. 
North  American  Wildlife  Conference.  Transactions  28: 
269-83  1963. 

Reclaimed  strip  lands  can  be  made  more  productive  for  wildlige 
without  great  cost.  Research  was  conducted  in  eastern  and  south- 
eastern Ohio  during  the  period  1951-1962. 

240 


2088.  ROGERS,  NELSON  F. 

Strip-mined  lands  of  the  Western  Interior  Coal  Province. 
Missouri  Agricultural  Experiment  Station.  Research  Bulle- 
tin 475,  1951.  55p. 

The  Western  Interior  Coal  Province  includes  parts  of  Arkansas, 
Oklahoma,  Kansas,  Missouri  and  Iowa. 

2089.  RUDD,  R.  D. 

The  Red  Ember  mine.  Journal  of  Geography  59:  11-15 
1960. 

Account  of  large  strip  mine  in  west-central  Illinois  in  operation 
since  1935. 

2090.  SAWYER,  L.  E. 

Reclamation  and  conservation  of  stripped-over  lands.  Min- 
ing Congress  Journal  Jl  1946  26-36. 

"Before  regulatory  laws  are  enacted,  the  industry  should  be  given 
an  opportunity  to  reclaim  the  land  by  its  own  method  through  its 
own  organization." 

2091.  SCANLON,  DAVID  H.  AND  OTHERS 

Evaluation  of  municipal  compost  for  strip  mine  reclama- 
tion. Compost  Science  May/Je  1973  4-8. 

"Four  years  of  tests  by  the  TVA  prove  the  effectiveness  of  com- 
posted municipal  wastes  in  producing  vegetative  cover  on  coal  strip 
mine  sites". 

2092.  SCHLOTTMANN,  ALAN  AND  RORERT  L.   SPORE 

Economic  impacts  of  surface  mine  reclamation.  Land 
Economics  52:  265-76  1976. 

2093.  SCHNEIDER,  DAVID  A. 

Strip  mining  in  Kentucky.  Kentucky  Law  Journal  59:  652- 
72  1970/71. 

The  broad  form  deed  "continues  to  be  a  license  to  destroy,  and 
elected  officials  still  serve  the  vested  interests  of  the  coal  owners 
rather  than  the  good  of  the  people". 

2094.  SCOREE,  BARRY 

Strip-pit  mining  in  Kansas.  Coal  Age  4:  606-8  1913. 

2095.  SEGERBERG,  OSBORN 

Power  corrupts.  Esquire    Mr  1972  138-42. 

"But  the  question  before  the  TVA  is,  must  cheap  electric  power 
corrupt  absolutely."  TVA's  need  for  coal  has  led  to  the  strip  mining 
of  large  areas  in  Kentucky. 


241 


2096.  SETTZ,  WESLEY  D. 

Analysis  of  strip-mining  and  local  taxation  practices,  Illin- 
ois Agricultural  Economics  12:  23-30  1972. 

Stripping  has  generally  reduced  the  value  of  the  land  and  thus  the 
local  tax  revenues.  Author  discusses  methods  of  insuring  that  this 
does  not  continue.  s 

2097.  SHAFFNER,  M.  N. 

Bituminous  coal  strip  mining  in  Pennsylvania.  Pennsyl- 
yania  DePt-  of  Internal  Affairs.  Monthly  Bulletin  Ja  1947 

2098.  SHERWOOD,  R.  H. 

Development  of  strip  mining.  Mining  Congress  Journal  N 


1945  31-34. 

A  brief  history. 


2099. 


, 


SHOEMAKER,  JOHN  W.  AND  OTHERS 

Strippable  low-surfur  coal  reserves  of  the  San  Juan  Basin 
in  New  Mexico  and  Colorado.  Socorro:  New  Mexico  Bur- 
eau of  Mines  and  Mineral  Resources,  1971.  189r>  (Its 
Memoir  25). 

2100.  SHOTTS,  REYNOLDS  Q. 

Some  problems  of  estimating  strippable  coal  reserves  of 
Alabama.  Alabama  Academy  of  Science  Journal  42:  102-17 
IctYJ.. 

2101.  SIEHL,  GEORGE  H. 

The  issues  related  to  surface  mining;  a  summary  review 
with  selected  readings.  Washington:  GPO,  1971.  255p. 


2102.  SIEMS,  GEORGE  H. 

The  strip  mining  of  bituminous  coal  in  West  Virginia;  an 
analysis  of  past  and  present  conditions.  Thesis  (M.B.A.), 
University  of  Pennsylvania,  1949.  137p. 

2103.  SINKS,  ALFRED  H. 

Battle  of  the  spoil  banks.  Harper  192:  432-38  1946. 
Account  of  the  conflicts  caused  by  strip  mining  in  Ohio. 

2104.  SITTERLEY,  J.  H. 

Future  land  use  in  the  Appalachian  Plateau  and  its  rela- 
tion to  strip-mine  reclamation.  Ohio  Journal  of  Science  64- 
106-11  1964. 


242 


2105.  SMITH,  JOSEPH  B.  AND  OTHERS 

Strippable  coal  reserves  of  Wyoming;  location,  tonnage, 
and  characteristics  of  coal  and  overburden.  Washington: 
GPO,  1972.  51p.  (U.  S.  Bureau  of  Mines.  Information  Cir- 
cular 8538). 

"Total  strippable  reserves  of  23  billion  tons  were  estimated  in  seven 
major  coal  areas." 

2106.  SOPPER,  WILLIAM  E.  AND  OTHERS 

Reclamation  of  a  burned  anthracite  refuse  bank  with  mun- 
icipal sludge.  Compost  Science  Mr/Ap  1976  12-19. 

Account  of  successful  experiment  near  Scranton,  Pa. 

2107.  SOPPER,  WILLIAM  E. 

Revegetation  of  strip  mine  spoil  banks  through  irrigation 
with  municipal  sewage  effluent  and  sludge.  Compost 
Science  Nov/Dec  1970  6-11. 

"Preliminary  results  after  two  years  of  research  indicate  that  mun- 
icipal waste  waters  might  be  used  to  reclaim  and  revegetate  many 
of  the  barren  bituminous  strip-mined  spoil  banks  existing  through- 
out the  Appalachian  region  and  restore  then  to  a  more  esthetic  and 
productive  state." 

2108.  SPAULDING,  WTLLARD  M.   AND  R.  D.  OGDEN 

Effects  of  surface  mining  on  the  fish  and  wildlife  resources 
of  the  United  States.  Washington:  GPO,  1968.  51p.  (U.  S. 
Bureau  of  Sport  Fisheries  and  Wildlife.  Resource  Publica- 
tion 68). 

2109.  SPELTZ,  CHARLES  N. 

Strippable  coal  resources  of  Colorado.  Washington:  GPO, 
1976.  70p.  (U.  S.  Bureau  of  Mines.  Information  Circular 

8713). 

2110.  SPENCER,  K.  A. 

Strip  coal  mining  in  the  Southwest.  Mining  &  Metallurgy 
12:  147-48  1931. 

2111.  SPORE,  ROBERT  L. 

The  economic  problem  of  coal  surface  mining.  Environ- 
mental Affairs  2:  685-93  1972/73. 

2112.  STACHURA,  JOHN  A. 

Solving  safety  problems  related  to  surface  coal  mining. 
Mining  Congress  Journal  Je  1976  75-79. 

Account  of  program  established  by  Amax  Coal. 


243 


V 


2113.  STACKS,  JOHN  F. 

Stripping.  San  Francisco:  Sierra  Club,  1972.  140p. 

"A  Sierra  Club  Battlebook."  Introduction  by  Harry  M.  Caudill.  A 
very  useful  work. 

2114.  STANFORD  RESEARCH  INSTITUTE 

Study  of  surface  coal  mining  in  West  Virginia.  Menlo 
Park,  Calif.,  1972.  631p. 

Prepared  for  the  West  Virginia  Legislature.  A  detailed  study  of  the 
costs  and  benefits  of  surface  mining  in  West  Virginia. 

2115.  STEAM-SHOVEL  COAL  STRIPPING  IN  THE  DANVILLE  DISTRICT 

Coal  Age  Mr  11.  1916  448-52. 

Interesting  account  of  the  methods  of  operation,  wages,  prices,  etc., 
of  the  place  and  period. 

2116.  STEWART,  CHARLES  L. 

Strategy  in  protecting  the  public's  interest  in  land:  with 
special  reference  to  strip  mining.  Land  Economics  15:  312- 
16  1939. 

^    2117.     STOEX,  H.  H. 

Steam-shovel  mining  of  bituminous  coal.  American  Insti- 
tute of  Mining  Engineers.  Transactions  57:  514-49  1917. 

One  of  the  first  extensive  treatments  of  the  subject. 

2118.  STRIP  MINING  BUILDS  FOR  ACCELERATED  GROWTH 

Coal  Age  Ag  1966  113-36. 

Includes  a  useful  illustrated  history  of  the  development  of  equip- 
ment used  in  surface  mining. 

2119.  STRIP  MINING  FIGHT  GOES  NATIONAL 

Mountain  Life  &  Work  Je/Jl  1972  18-27. 

Report  on  the  strip  mine  legislation  presently  before  congress  and 
the  spreading  controversy  over  strip  mining. 

2120.  STRIP  MINING,  THE  TOTAL  BENEFIT  INDUSTRY 

Coal  Age  Apr  1966  93-116. 

The  strip  mining  industry  has  provided  communities  in  strip  min- 
ing areas  with  new  recreational  facilities,  improved  water  supplies 
and  many  economic  benefits. 

2121.  STRIPPING  FOR  COAL  MINES 

Coal  1:  120-21  1882. 

Account  of  stripping  operation  in  the  Hazelton,  Pennsylvania  area. 

244 


2122.  SURFACE    MINED   LAND   IN    THE   MIDWEST:    A    REGIONAL    PERS- 
PECTIVE FOR  RECLAMATION  PLANNING 

Argonne,  Illinois:  Argonne  National  Laboratory,  1975.  v.p. 

A  detailed  report  on  the  problems  and  prospects  of  the  reclamation 
of  surface  mined  land. 

2123.  SURFACE  MINING  ISSUE:   A  REASONED  RESPONSE 

Coal  Age  Mr  1971  92-102. 

Discussion  of  the  surface  mining  issue  in  West  Virginia.  With  one 
exception,  articles  favor  surface  mining. 

2124.  SYMPOSIUM    ON   REVEGETATION   AND   ECONOMIC   USE   OF    SUR- 
FACE-MINED LAND  AND  MINE  REFUSE 

Morgantown:  West  Virginia  University  School  of  Mines, 
1972.  59p. 

The  proceeding  of  a  symposium  held  December  2-4,  1971. 

2125.  TENNESSEE.  DEPT.  OF  CONSERVATION  AND  COMMERCE 

Conditions  resulting  from  strip  mining  for  coal  in  Tenn- 
essee. Nashville,  1960.  13p. 

2126.  TENNESSEE  VALLEY  AUTHORITY.   OFFICE  OF  HEALTH  &  ENVIR- 
ONMENTAL SCIENCE 

Policies  relating  to  sources  of  coal  used  by  the  Tennessee 
Valley  Authority  for  electric  power  generation.  Chatta- 
nooga, 1971  v.p. 

2127.  TOENGES,  ALBERT  L. 

Reclamation  of  stripped  coal  land.  Washington:  GPO, 
1939.  lip.  (U.  S.  Bureau  of  Mines.  Report  of  Investigations 
3440). 

A  useful  overview  of  both  the  problems  and  possible  solutions  be- 
fore World  War  II. 

2128.  TOMKINS,   CALVIN 

The  seventeen-year  locusts.  New  Yorker  Je  10,  1972  125- 
30. 

"Of  all  the  ingenious  methods  by  which  industrial  man  has  contriv- 
ed to  foul  his  own  nest,  nothing  quite  approaches  in  dramatic  ef- 
fect the  sheer  devastation  of  strip  mining."  An  essay-review  of 
CaudiU's  "My  Land  Is  Dying." 

2128a.  TOMKINS,  DOROTHY  L. 

Strip  mining  for  coal.  Berkeley:  University  of  California, 
Institute  for  Government  Studies,  1973.  86p. 

A  bibliography  with  emphasis  on  environmental  and  public  policy 
aspects. 

245 


2129.  TOOLE,  K.  ROSS 

The  rape  of  the  great  plains.  Boston:  Little  Brown,  1976. 
271p. 

An  attack  on  the  efforts  of  coal  companies  to  strip  mine  great  areas 
in  the  Northwest. 

2130.  TREACY,  JOHN 

Measuring  externalities  of  strip  coal  mining  via  property 
tax  assessments.  In  Extraction  of  Mineral  and  Energy:  To- 
day's Dilemma,  edited  by  R.  A.  Deju,  pp.  251-61. 

2131.  TRUAX,  CHESTER  N. 

Water  storage  potential  of  surface  mined  coal  lands.  Min- 
ing Congress  Journal  Nov  1965  40+. 

Cast  overburdens  resulting  from  coal  mining  operations  act  as  re- 
servoirs for  ground  water. 

2132.  TUNG,  HON-SHOUNG 

Impacts  of  contour  coal  mining  on  streamflow.  Disserta- 
tion. University  of  Tennessee.  1975.  138p. 

"A  case  study  of  the  New  River  Watershed,  Tennessee." 

2133.  TURNER,  SCOTT 

Mining  bituminous  coal  by  stripping  methods.  Washing- 
ton: GPO,  1930.  23p.  (U.  S.  Bureau  of  Mines.  Information 
Circular  6383). 

A  useful  state-of-the-art  article.  It  is  one  of  the  first  important  pub- 
lications on  stripping  by  the  U.  S.  Bureau  of  Mines. 

2134.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  HOUSE.  COMMITTEE  ON  INTERIOR  AND  INSULAR 
AFFAIRS 

Surface  Mining  Control  and  Reclamation  Act  of  1976. 
Washington:  GPO,  1976.  161p. 

A  report  "together  with  additional,  dissenting  and  separate  views  to 
accompany  H.  R.  9725". 

2135.  U.  S.  CONGRESS  HOUSE.  COMMITTEE  ON  INTERIOR  AND  INSULAR 
AFFAIRS.   SUBCOMMITTEE  ON  ENERGY  AND  ENVIRONMENT 

Surface  mining  veto  justification  briefing.  Washington: 
GPO,  1975.  342p. 

Hearing  on  the  President's  veto  of  H.  R.  25. 

2136.  U.   S.   CONGRESS.   HOUSE.   COMMITTEE  ON   INTERIOR  AND  INSU- 
LAR AFFAIRS.  SUBCOMMITTEE  ON  MINES  AND  MINING 

Regulation  of  strip  mining.  Washington:  GPO,  1972.  890p. 

246 


Contains  statements  of  position  by  individuals  and  organizations  on 
all  aspects  of  strip  mining.  Much  useful  statistical  information  is 
also  included. 

2137.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  SENATE.  COMMITTEE  ON  INTERIOR  AND  INSU- 
LAR AFFAIRS. 

The  issues  relating  to  surface  mining.  Washington:  GPO, 
1971.  255p. 

"A  summary  review,  with  selected  readings."  This  compilation 
should  be  very  useful  in  public  and  school  libraries. 

2138.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  SENATE.  COMMITTEE  ON  INTERIOR  AND  INSU- 
LAR AFFArRS 

Surface  mining  briefing.  Washington:  GPO,  1975.  232p. 

Testimony  concerning  the  bill  introduced  by  Senator  Jackson  ( S.  7J 
cited  as  the  "Surface  Mining  Control  and  Reclamation  Act  of  1975' . 
Text  of  the  bill  is  included. 

2139.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  SENATE.  COMMITTEE  ON  INTERIOR  AND  INSU- 
LAR AFFAIRS 

Surface  mining  reclamation.  Washington:  GPO.  1968. 
375p. 

An  extremely  useful  document.  Includes  statements  and  communica- 
tions from  all  sides,  as  well  as  important  statistical  information. 

2140.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  SENATE.  COMMITTEE  ON  INTERIOR  AND  INSU- 
LAR AFFAD3S.  SUBCOMMITTEE  ON  MINERIALS,  MATERIAL,  AND 
FUELS  , 

Surface  Mining.  Washington:  GPO,  1972.  1173p.  (Issued 
in  three  parts ) . 

Hearings  "Pursuant  to  S.  Res.  45  A  National  Fuels  and  Energy  Po- 
licy Study." 

2141.  U.  S.  DEPARTMENT  OF  AGRICULTURE 

Restoring  surface-mined  land.  Washington:  GPO,  1973. 
14p. 

2142.  U.  S.  DEPARTMENT  OF  THE  INTERIOR 

Study  of  strip  and  surface  mining  in  Appalachia,  an  inter- 
im report  to  the  Appalachian  Regional  Commission.  Wash- 
ington, 1966.  78p. 

Emphasis  is  on  reclamation. 

2143.  U.  S.  DEPARTMENT  OF  THE  INTERIOR 

Surface  mining  and  our  environment.  Washington,  1967. 

124p. 

A  well-illustrated  book  which  includes  useful  statistical  information. 

247 


2144.  U.  S.  DEPARTMENT  OF  THE  INTERIOR.  RUREAU  OF  LAND  MAN- 
AGEMENT 

Final  environmental  impact  statement,  proposed  federal 
coal  leasing  program.  Washington:  GPO,  1975.  v.p. 

2144a.  U.  S.  ENVIRONMENTAL  PROTECTION  AGENCY 

Surface  coal  mining  in  the  northern  great  plains  of  the 
western  United  States.  Washington,  1976.  146p. 

"An  introduction  and  inventory  utilizing  aerial  photography  collect- 
ed in  1974-75." 

2145.  WALL,  M.  K. 

Some  environmental  aspects  of  strip  mining  in  North 
Dakota.  Grand  Forks:  North  Dakota  Geological  Survey, 
1973.  121p.  (Education  Series  5). 

2146.  WALLACE,  TOM 

Stearns  case;  coal  mining  in  Cumberland  National  Forest. 
American  Forest  Ap  1955  24-27. 

Request  of  a  coal  company  to  conduct  stripping  operations  in  the 
Cumberland  National  Forest  caused  great  controversy. 

2147.  WALTER,  GEORGE  H. 

Agriculture  and  strip  coal  mining.  Agricultural  Economics 
Research  Ja  1949  24-29. 

2148.  WARRINER.  J.  B. 

Anthracite  stripping.  AIME.  Transactions  57:  159-97  1917. 

2149.  WELLS,  JANE  F. 

Study  of  thought  relating  to  strip  mining  in  the  Common- 
wealth of  Kentucky.  Dissertation.  Indiana  University, 
1973.  156p. 

A  study  of  the  attitudes  of  both  opponents  and  proponents  of  strip 
mining. 

2150.  WIENER,  FREDERICK  B. 

Economic  interest:  rise  and  fall  of  a  slogan.  Taxes  37:  777- 
802  1959. 

Study  of  the  depletion  allowance  permitted  the  coal  stripper.  The 
pertinent  court  decisions  are  cited. 

2151.  WILKINSON,  JOSEPH  F. 

Good  management  and  a  52-ft.  seam  make  Decker  top  pro- 
ducer for  1975.  Coal  Age  Ag  1976  87-90. 

The  Decker  Coal  Company's  surface  mine  in  southern  Montana  pro- 
duced over  9  million  tons  in  1975,  more  than  any  other  U.  S.  mine. 

248 


2152.  WILLIAMS,  ROGER  M. 

TVA  and  the  strippers.  World  Je  19,  1973  20-25+. 

"Once  the  symbol  of  a  pioneering  effort  on  behalf  of  the  'common 
man,'  TVA  is  today  under  sharp  attack  for  its  support  of  strip- 
mining  in  Appalachia." 

2153.  WILSON,  II.  A.  AND  DAVID  A.  ZUBERER 

Some  microbiological  factors  associated  with  surface-mine 
reclamation.  Morgantown:  West  Virginia  Agricultural  Ex- 
periment Station,  1976.  19p.  (Bulletin  645T). 

2154.  WITHROW,  MICHAEL  V. 

Broad  form  deed— obstacle  to  peaceful  co-existence  be- 
tween mineral  and  surface  owners.  Kentucky  Law  Journal 
60:  742-56  1971/72. 

2155.  YANIK,  GLENN  G.  AND  OTHERS 

Enforcement  of  strip  mining  laws  in  three  Appalachian 
states:  Kentucky,  West  Virginia  and  Pennsylvania.  Wash- 
ington: Center  for  Science  in  the  Public  Interest,  1975. 
HOp. 

2156.  YEAGER,  LEE  E. 

Wildlife  management  of  coal  stripped  lands.  North  Ameri- 
can Wildlife  Conference  Transactions  5:  348-53  1940. 


•  249 


Safety 


2157.  ANDREWS,  JOHN  B. 

Needless  hazards  in  the  coal  industry.  Ann.  Amer.  Acad. 
Ill:  24-31  1924. 

Government  regulation  is  required  to  force  operators  to  abide  by 
reasonable  safety  standards. 

2158.  ANDREWS,  W.  H.  AND  C.  L.  CHRISTENSON 

Some  economic  factors  affecting  safety  in  underground 
bituminous  coal  mines.  Southern  Economic  Journal  40: 
364-76  1973/74. 

Reply  with  rejoinder  by  T.  S.  Witt  and  others  42:  306-10  1975. 

2159.  ARNOW,  HARIETTE,  S. 

No  rats  in  the  mines.  Nation  213:  401-4  1971. 

A  pessimistic  look  at  the  willingness  of  the  Bureau  of  Mines  and 
mine  owners  to  emphasize  safety. 

2160.  CHRISTENSON,  C.  L.  AND  W.  H.  ANDREWS 

Coal  mine  injury  rates  in  two  eras  of  federal  control.  Jour- 
nal of  Economic  Issues  7:  61-82  1973. 

"The  goal  of  this  article  is  to  examine  injury  data  for  bituminous 
coal  mines  over  approximately  the  past  three  decades  and  to  see 
what  tendencies  may  have  been  at  work  during  that  time". 

2161.  COCHRANE,  JOHN  L. 

Conservation  of  human  life  in  the  coal  fields  of  Pennsyl- 
vania. Geographical  Society  of  Philadelphia.  Bulletin  10: 
82-95  1912. 

The  accident  rate  in  Pennsylvania  coal  mines  is  far  higher  than 
necessary,  and  much  higher  than  in  Europe. 

2162.  CURRIE,  ROBERT  D. 

Safety  in  Pennsylvania  coal  mines.  Thesis.  Penn  State  Col- 
lege. 1930. 

250 


2163.  c:i  inn.  ERNEST  A. 

Causes  and  prevention  of  transportation  accidents  in  bitu- 
minous coal  mini's.  Washington:  GPO,  1971.  107p.  (U.  S. 
Bureau  of  Mines.  Information  Circular  8506). 

2164.  DAVENPORT,  S.  J. 

Bibliography  of  Bureau  of  Mines  publications  dealing  with 
health  and  safety  in  the  mineral  and  allied  industries, 
1910-46.  Washington:  U.  S.  Bureau  of  Mines,  1948.  154p. 
( Technical  Paper  705 ) . 

list  of  1,684  items;  subject  and  author  indexes. 

2165.  DAVENPORT,  S.  J.  AND  G.  MORGIS 

Physiological  aspects  of  electrical  accidents  in  the  coalmin- 
ing industry.  Washington:  U.  S.  Bureau  of  Mines.  1951. 
19p.  (Information  Circular  7620). 

2166.  DIETTO,  FRANK  J. 

Study  of  the  federal  government's  attempts  to  promote 
safety  in  the  bituminous  coal  mines  of  the  United  States. 
Thesis.  Southern  Illinois  University,  1952.  96p. 


;. 


2167.     DOUGHERTY,  JOHN  J. 

A  study  of  fatal  roof  fall  accidents  in  bituminous  coal 
mines.  Thesis  (M.  S.)  West  Virginia  University,  1971.  79p. 


2168.  DRURY,  DORIS 

The  accident  records  in  coal  mines  of  the  United  States. 
Bloomington,  Indiana  University,  1964.  159p. 

"A  study  of  the  literature  with  comparisons  of  the  records  in  other 
coal-producing  countries". 

2169.  DRURY,  DORIS 

A  study  of  the  literature  on  accidents  in  coal  mines  of  the 
United  States  with  comparisons  of  the  records  in  other 
coal-producing  countries.  Dissertation.  Indiana  Univer- 
sity, 1965.  404p. 

A  thorough  examination  of  types  of  coal  mine  accidents  and  their 
causes,  as  well  as  an  analysis  of  statistical  methods  used  in  record- 
ing accidents.  Extensive  bibliography  which  includes  all  pertinent 
publications  issued  by  the  U.  S.  Bureau  of  Mines. 

2170.  EAVENSON,  HOWARD  N. 

Safetv  methods  and  organization  of  United  States  Coal 
and  Coke  Co.  AIME.  Transactions  51:  319-64  1915. 

In  the  company's  McDowell  County.  West  Virginia  mines. 

251 


2171.  FRANKLIN,   BEN    A. 

The  scandal  of  death  and  injury  in  the  mines.  NY  Times 
Magazine  Mr  30,  1969.  25-7+. 

2172.  GRAEBNER,  WILLIAM 

The  coal-mine  operators  and  safety:  a  study  of  business 
reform  in  the  progressive  period.  Labor  History  14:  483- 
505  1973. 

2173.  GRAEBNER,  WILLIAM 

Coal  mining  safety:  national  solutions  in  the  progressive 
period.  Dissertation.  University  of  Illinois,  1970.  321p. 

Federal  coal  mining  safety  legislation  was  never  a  possibility  in  the 
progressive  period.  Instead,  miners,  operators  and  inspectors  advo- 
cated uniform  state  legislation.  Uniformity  and  the  Bureau  of  Mines 
were  attempts  to  impose  order  on  chaos  without  submitting  to  the 
risks  of  government  regulation,  and  they  were  symbolic  of  progres- 
sivism:  varied,  divided  and  essentially  conservative. 

2174.  GRAEBNER,  WILLIAM 

Coal  mining  safety  in  the  progressive  period.  Lexington: 
University  Press  of  Kentucky,  1976.  244p. 

The  best  work  for  the  period  covered. 

2175.  HALL,  CLARENCE  AND  WALTER  O.  SNELLING 

The  waste  of  life  in  American  coal  mining.  Engineering 
Magazine  34:  721-34  1907/08. 

2176.  HARRINGTON,  DANIEL  AND  W.  J.  FENE 

Are  new  hazards  being  introduced  in  coal  mines  faster 
than  existing  hazards  are  eliminated.  Washington:  GPO, 
1940.  lip.  (U.  S.  Bureau  of  Mines.  Information  Circular 
7140). 

2177.  HARRINGTON,  DANIEL 

Effects  of  mechanization  of  the  coal  mining  industry  upon 
the  frequency  and  severity  of  accidents,  with  discussion. 
U.  S.  Bureau  of  Labor  Statistics.  Bulletin  536:  183-93 
1931. 

2178.  HARRINGTON,  DANIEL 

Safety  in  the  mining  industry.  Colorado  School  of  Mines. 
Quarterly  45  No.  2B  (1950)  173-279. 

A  useful  review  of  the  history  of  the  efforts  to  increase  mine  safety. 
Includes  a  discussion  of  the  major  problems  involved. 


252 


2179.  HOLLAND,  CHARLES  T.  AND  JOSEPH  W.  LEONARD 

Research,  education  and  mine  personnel  safety  in  West 
Virginia.  Morgantown:  West  Virginia  University.  School 
of  Mines,  1969.  12p. 

A  brief  analysis  of  conditions  in  West  Virginia  from  1885  to  1967. 

2180.  HOLMES,  J.  A. 

Government  measures  to  increase  mine  safety.  Ann.  Amer 
Acad.  38:  112-14  1911. 

2181.  HOWARD,  HERBERT  A. 

Public  policy  and  accidents.  Growth  and  Change  Oct  1971 
42-5.  6 

A  study  of  safety  in  eastern  Kentucky  coal  mines. 

2182.  KENT,  W.  H. 

Analysis  of  Appalachian  state  coal  mine  health  and  safety 
and  workmen's  compensation  programs:  recommendations 
for  improvement.  State  College,  Pa.,  1973.  119p. 

2183.  KODROWSKY,  WILLIAM  C. 

Safety  sampling  applied  to  coal  mining.  Thesis.  West  Vir- 
ginia University,  1960.  56p. 

2184.  LAUCK,  WILLIAM  J. 

Occupational  hazards  of  anthracite  miners.  Washington 
1920.  24p.  6      ' 

2185.  LAWSOxN,  WILLIAM  F.  AND  OTHERS 

Roof  fall  accidents  in  West  Virginia  coal  mines.  Morgan- 
town:  West  Virginia  University.  Coal  Research  Bureau, 
1970.  12p.  (Technical  Report  56). 

'  2186.     MC  ATEER,  JAMES  D. 

Coal  mine  health  and  safety;  the  case  of  West  Virginia 
New  York,  Praeger  Publishers,  1973.  267p. 

Author  concludes  that  management  has  little  interest  in  safety  and 
uill  spend  money  in  this  area  only  if  forced  to  do  so. 

2187.     MC  ATEER,  JAMES  D. 

You  can't  buy  safety  at  the  company  store.  Washington 
Monthly  Nov  1972  7-18. 

Many  countries  have  far  better  mine  safety  records  than  the  U  S 
I  his  is  largely  because  the  U.  S.  mining  industry  gives  safety  a 
low  priority.  7 


253 


2188.  MACHISAK,  JOHN  C.  AND  OTHERS 

Injury  experience  in  coal  mining,  1960.  Washington:  GPO, 
1962.  76p.  (U.  S.  Bureau  of  Mines.  Information  Circular 

8141). 

"Analysis  of  mine  safety  factors,  related  employment,  and  produc- 
tion data." 

2189.  MINE  SAFETY:   AN  UNRESOLVED  ISSUE 

Appalachia  Feb.  1969  1-9. 

2190.  MORSE,  KENNETH  M. 

Dust  control  practices  in  the  bituminous  coal  mining  in- 
dustry. American  Industrial  Hygiene  Association  Journal 
31:  160-69  1970. 

2191.  MOYER,  FORREST  T.  AND  MARY  B.  MC  NATR 

Injury  experience  in  coal  mining,  1968.  Washington:  GPO, 
1972.  107p.  (U.  S.  Bureau  of  Mines.  Information  Circular 

8556). 

2192.  MOYER,  FORREST  T.  AND  MARY  B.  MC  NAIR 

Injury  experience  in  coal  mining,  1967.  Washington:  GPO, 
1972.  112p.  (U.  S.  Bureau  of  Mines.  Information  Circular 

8555). 

2193.  NATIONAL  ACADEMY  OF  ENGINEERING 

Mine  rescue  and  survival.  Washington,  1970.  81p. 

The  final  report  of  the  Academy's  Committee  on  Mine  Rescue  and 
Survival  Techniques. 

2194.  PALOMBA,  CATHERINE  A.  AND  RONALD  J.  ALTHOUSE 

West  Virginia  miners  view  safety.  Labor  Law  Journal  26: 
139-45  1975. 

Study  of  the  attitudes  of  132  miners  concerning  various  aspects  of 
mine  safety. 

2195.  PALOMBA,  NEIL  AND  OTHERS 

Some  economic  factors  affecting  safety  in  underground 
bituminous  coal  mines:  comment.  Southern  Economic 
Journal  42:  306-8  1975. 

Comment  on  the  article  by  W.  H.  Andrews  and  C.  L.  Christenson 
in  the  Southern  Economic  Journal  40:  364-76  1974. 

2195a.  REYES  ASSOCIATES,  INC. 

Impact  study  of  mine  safety  foreman  training  for  a  selected 
site.  Washington,  1975.  130p. 


254 


"Examination  of  relationship  between  training  in  safety  of  mine 
foreman  and  accident  Frequency  rate  in  exploratory  sample  of  five 
selected  eoal  mines." 

2196.     SCHLICK,  DONALD  P. 

Mine  emergency  operations  of  the  Mining  Enforcement 
and  Safety  Administration.  Washington,  1975.  61p.  (Min- 
ing Enforcement  and  Safety  Administration.  Information 
Report  1011). 

MESA  has  established  an  organization  which  can  respond  quickly 
to  emergencies. 

2197.  SELTZER,  BOB 

Overkill.  A  report  on  mine  safety  and  health.  Coal  Patrol 
Jan  24,  1972.  2-8. 

2198.  SOLOMON,  H.  J. 

Psychological  aspects  of  accident  prevention.  Washington: 
GPO,  1948.  lOp.  (U.  S.  Bureau  of  Mines.  Information  Cir- 
cular 7460). 

2199.  STOEX,  H.  H. 

First  aid  movement  in  the  anthracite  region  of  Pennsyl- 
vania. Engineering  Magazine  37:  321-36  1909. 

2200.  U.  S.  BUREAU  OF  MINES 

Coal  mine  illumination.  Washington:  GPO,  1976.  82p.  (U. 
S.  Bureau  of  Mines.  Information  Circular  8709). 

2201.  U.  S.  BUREAU  OF  MINES 

Coal  mine  safety  inspection  manual  for  surface  coal  mines 
and  surface  work  areas  of  underground  coal  mines.  Wash- 
ington: GPO,  1971.  92p. 

2202.  u.  s.  children's  bureau 

Occupational  hazards  to  young  workers.  Report  No.  3:  The 
coal-mining  industry.  Washington:  GPO,  1942.  55p.  (Its 
Publication  275). 

2203.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  HOUSE.  COMMITTEE  ON  EDUCATION  AND  LABOR 

Amendments  to  Federal  Coal  Mine  Safety  Act.  Washing- 
ton: GPO,  1964.  419p. 

2204.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  HOUSE.  COMMITTEE  ON  EDUCATION  AND  LABOR 

Coal  mine  health  and  safety.  Hearings.  Washington:  GPO, 
1969.  lOOp. 

255 


2205.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  HOUSE.  COMMITTEE  ON  EDUCATION  AND  LABOR 

Coal  mine  safety.  Hearings  before  a  subcommittee  of  the 
Committee  on  Education  and  Labor.  Washington:  GPO, 
1952.  491p. 

2206.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  HOUSE.  COMMITTEE  ON  EDUCATION  AND  LABOR 

Legislative  history:  Federal  Coal  Mine  Health  and  Safety 
Act.  Washington:  GPO,  1970.  1151p. 

A  compilation  of  legislative  action  on  the  various  versions  of  the 
bills.  Includes  a  useful  section-by-section  analysis  of  the  final  act. 

2207.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  HOUSE.  COMMITTEE  ON  EDUCATION  AND  LABOR 

To  amend  the  Federal  Coal  Mine  Safety  Act.  Hearings  be- 
fore the  Select  Subcommittee  on  Labor  of  the  Committee 
on  Education  and  Labor,  House  of  Representatives,  Eigh- 
ty-seventh Congress,  First  Session,  on  H.  R.  4237  and  var- 
ious bills.  Washington:  GPO,  1961.  114p. 

2208.  U.    S.   CONGRESS.   HOUSE.   COMMITTEE   ON   EDUCATION   AND  LA- 
BOR. GENERAL  SUBCOMMITTEE  ON  LABOR 

Coal  mine  health  and  safety.  Hearings,  Washington: 
GPO,  1969.  658p. 

2209.  U.   S.   CONGRESS.   HOUSE.   COMMITTEE  ON   EDUCATION   AND  LA- 
BOR. GENERAL  SUBCOMMITTEE  ON  LABOR 

To  amend  the  Federal  Coal  Mine  Health  and  Safety  Act 
of  1969;  Hearings.  Washington:  GPO,  1971.  341p. 

2210.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  HOUSE.  COMMITTEE  ON  GOVERNMENT  OPERA- 
TIONS 

Enforcement  of  federal  mine  health  and  safety  laws.  Wash- 
ington: GPO,  1973.  1229p. 

2211.  U.   S.  CONGRESS.   HOUSE.   COMMITTEE  ON   MINES  AND  MINING 

Inspections  and  investigations  in  coal  mines.  Washington: 
GPO,  1940.  566p. 

Hearings  on  S.  2420;  a  bill  "relating  to  certain  inspections  and  in- 
vestigations in  coal  mines  for  the  purpose  of  obtaining  information 
relating  to  health  and  safety  conditions,  accidents,  and  occupational 
diseases  therein,  and  for  other  purposes." 

2212.  U.   S.    CONGRESS.    SENATE.   COMMITTEE  ON   LABOR   AND   PUBLIC 
WELFARE.  SUBCOMMITTEE  ON  LABOR 

Coal  mine  health  and  safety.  Hearings.  First  session,  on  S. 
355,  and  other.  Washington:  GPO.  1969.  5  vols. 


256 


2213.  U.    S.   CONGRESS.    SENATE.    COMMITTEE  ON    LABOR   AND   PUBLIC 
WELFARE.  SUBCOMMITTEE  ON  LAROR 

Legislative  History  of  the  Federal  Coal  Mine  Health  and 
Safety  Act  of  1969.  Washington:  GPO,  1975.  2  vols. 

2214.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  SENATE.  COMMITTEE  ON  MINES  AND  MINING 

Inspections  and  investigations  in  coal  mines.  Washington: 
GPO,  1939.  151p. 

2215.  VAN  DE  WATER,  FREDERICK 

Eliminating  mine  slaughter.  Worlds  Work  My  1929  74-79. 

2216.  WILSON,  H.  M.  AND  A.  H.  FAY 

First  National  Mine  Safety  Demonstration,  Pittsburgh, 
Pennsylvania,  October  30  and  31,  1911.  Washington:  GPO, 
1912.  75p.  (U.  S.  Bureau  of  Mines.  Bulletin  44). 


257 


l/liim  V'tAwlm 


The  "literature  of  disasters"  is  both  old  and  voluminous.  As  might 
be  imagined,  much  of  the  writing  is  sensational  in  nature.  A  mine 
disaster  is  the  journalist's  dream,  combining  as  it  does  horror,  drama 
and  pathos.  An  attempt  has  been  made  here  to  include  the  best 
available  accounts  of  the  major  disasters. 

2217.  ABONSON,  BERNIE 

Hyden:  the  hearings.  Mountain  Life  and  Work  Jan  1971 

2-5+. 

Account  of  the  U.  S.  Bureau  of  Mines  hearings  held  following  an 
explosion  which  killed  38  miners  at  Hyden,  Ky. 

2218.  BACON,  S. 

Disaster  at  Hurricane  Creek.  Popular  Mechanics  Oct  1971 

85-9+. 

Description  of  the  explosion  at  the  Finley  mine  at  Hyden,  Ky. 

2219.  BALLOU,  E. 

An  account  of  the  coal  bank  disaster  at  Blue  Rock,  Ohio. 
[6th  ed.]  Malta,  Ohio,  1856.  32p. 

2220.  BEACH,  H.  D.  AND  R.  A.  LUCAS 

Individual  and  group  behavior  in  a  coal  mine  disaster. 
Washington:  National  Academy  of  Sciences,  1960.  160p. 
( Its  publication  834;  also  Disaster  Study  No.  13 ) . 

"This  monograph  examines  individual  and  group  behavior  in  a  coal 
mine  disaster  that  killed  75  miners  and  trapped  19  more  under- 
ground from  6%  to  8%  days." 

2221.  BETHELL,  THOMAS  N. 

The  Hurricane  Creek  Massacre;  an  inquiry  into  the  cir- 
cumstances surrounding  the  deaths  of  thirty-eight  men  in 
a  coal  mine  explosion.  New  York:  Harper  &  Row,  1972. 
145p. 


258 


y 


j 


"Hurricane  Creek  was  an  institutional  massacre,  a  tragedy  that  was 
the  direct  and  inevitable  end  product  of  a  policy  dictated  by  bureau- 
cratic incompetence  and  political  expediency."  The  explosion  oc- 
curred iu  I'inlc  \  Coal  Company's  mines  no.  15  and  16  on  Hurricane 
Creek  in  Leslie  Co.,  Ky.,  on  Dec.  20,  1970. 

2222.  BONOSKY,  PHILLIP 

Anatomy  of  a  mine  disaster.  Mainstream  Je  1963  8-29. 

Account  of  the  disaster  and  the  following  investigations  at  the  Ro- 
bena  mine,  near  Union  town.  Pennsylvania. 

2223.  BOYER,  R.  F. 

Coal  mine  disasters:  frequency  by  month.  Science  144: 
1447-49  1964. 

2224.  BUCKLEY,  THOMAS 

Inquest  on  a  premature  burial.  Esquire  66:  75-81+  Je 
1966. 

The  story  of  two  miners,  rescued  after  being  trapped  underground 
for  14  days  in  a  Pennsylvania  anthracite  mine. 

2225.  BRAMWELL,  J.  H.  AND  OTHERS 

The  Pocahontas  mine  explosion.  AIME.  Transactions  13: 
237-49  1884/85. 

The  first  great  disaster  in  the  newly-opened  smokeless  coal  fields  of 
Virginia/West  Virginia. 

2226.  CHAMBERLLN,  ROLLIN  T. 

Notes  on  explosive  mine  gases  and  dusts,  with  special  re- 
ference to  explosions  in  the  Monongah,  Darr  and  Naomi 
coal  mines.  Washington:  GPO,  1909.  67p.  (U.  S.  Geologi- 
cal Survey.  Bulletin  383). 

2227.  CHANCE,  H.   M. 

An  analysis  of  the  casualties  in  the  anthracite  coal  mines, 
from  1871-1880.  AIME.  Transactions  10:  67-77  1881/82. 

2228.  CLUTE,  F.  P. 

The  Dayton  Mine  explosion.  Engineering  Association  of 
the  South.  Publication  7:  29-41  1896. 

In  Rhea  County,  Tennessee. 

2229.  CORRICAX,  JAMES  J. 

Death  stalks  anthracite's  "buried  valley."  Pennsylvania  De- 
partment of  Internal  Affairs.  Monthly  Bulletin  N  1951  5- 
10. 

Account  of  mining  accidents  in  Luzerne  County,  Pennsylvania. 

259 


2230.  DARR  MINE  DISASTER 

Mines  &  Minerals  28:  377-82  1907/8. 

2231.  DEATH  TOOK  NO  HOLIDAY  AT  FOURMILE  DISASTER 

In  Kentucky  Winter  1949  41-42. 

Account  of  the  mine  explosion  in  Bell  County,  Kentucky,  Dec.  26, 
1945. 

2232.  DILLON,  LACY  A. 

They  died  in  darkness.  Parsons,  W.  Va.:  McClain  Printing 
Co.,  1976.  280p. 

Account  of  the  major  mine  disasters  in  West  Virginia  from  1886  to 
1968. 

2233.  DISASTER  AT  RAVENSDALE,  WASHINGTON 

Coal  Age  Mr  11,  1916  459-62. 

Account  of  explosion  at  the  Ravensdale  mine  in  King  County,  Wash- 
ington which  killed  31  men. 

2234.  DONNELLY,  CLARENCE  S. 

Notable  mine  disasters  of  Fayette  County,  West  Virginia. 
Oak  Hill,  1951.  33p. 

2234a.  erikson,  kai  t. 

Everything  in  its  path.  New  York:  Simon  &  Shuster,  1977. 
284p. 

Excellent  account  of  the  Buffalo  Creek  disaster  and  its  effects  on 
the  inhabitants  of  the  area. 

2235.  explosion  near  kempton,  w.  va. 
Coal  Age  Mr.  18,  1916  498-99. 

Account  of  explosion  in  mine  near  the  Maryland-West  Virginia  bor- 
der. Sixteen  men  were  killed. 

2236.  FAIRMONT  COAL  CO.   ( FAIRMONT,  WEST  VIRGINIA) 

The  explosion  at  Monongah  mines.  Fairmont,  West  Vir- 
ginia, 1908.  43p.  (Its  Bulletin  No.  11). 

2237.  FAY,  A.  H. 

Coal  mine  fatalities  in  the  United  States  1870-1914.  Wash- 
ington: GPO,  1916.  370p.  (U.  S.  Bureau  of  Mines.  Bul- 
letin 115). 

Gives  fatal  accidents  described  in  reports  by  state  mine  inspectors 
by  state,  cause  and  year. 


260 


V 


2238.  HALL,  R.  D. 

The  explosion  at  Eccles,  West  Virginia.  Coal  Age  5:  846- 
50  1914. 

2239.  HOFFMAN,  PHIL 

The  Lost  Creek  disaster.  Palimpsest  26:  21-27  1945. 
Account  of  the  mine  explosion  near  Oskalossa,  Iowa.  Ja  24,  1902. 

2240.  HUMPHRY,  HIRAM  B. 

Historical  summary  of  coal  mine  explosions  in  the  United 
States,  1810-1958.  Washington:  GPO,  1960.  280p.  (U.  S. 
Bureau  of  Mines.  Bulletin  586). 

A  basic  work  in  the  field.  Appeared  first  as  Information  Circular 
7900  in  1959. 

2241.  ILLINOIS.  BUREAU  OF  LABOR  STATISTICS 

Report  on  the  Cherry  mine  disaster.  Springfield:  Illinois 
State  Journal  Co.,  1910.  90p. 

2242.  KALISCH,  PHILIP  A. 

Death  down  below:  coal  mine  disasters  in  three  Illinois 
counties,  1904-1962.  Illinois  State  Historical  Society.  Jour- 
nal 65:  5-21  1972. 

Account  of  mine  disasters  and  the  resulting  efforts  to  improve  safety 
conditions  in  southern  Illinois  mines. 

2243.  KANSAS  MINE  DISASTER 

Colliery  Engineer  9:  76-77  1888/89. 

Account  of  the  explosion  at  Frontenac.  Kansas  which  killed  45. 

2244.  KEEN  AN,  CHARLES  M. 

Historical  documentation  of  major  coal-mine  disasters  in 
the  United  States  not  classified  as  explosions  of  gas  or  dust, 
1846-1962.  Washington:  GPO,  1963.  90p.  (U.  S.  Bureau  of 
Mines  Bulletin  616). 

2245.  KISSELL,  F.  N. 

Coal  mine  explosions:  seasonal  trends.  Science  179:  891-2 
1973. 

Builds  on  previous  investigations  and  concludes  that  dust  explosions 
are  influenced  by  seasonal  factors,  while  gas  explosions  are  not. 

2246.  LUCAS,  REX  A. 

Men  in  crisis;  a  study  of  a  mine  disaster.  New  York:  Basic 
Books,  1969.  335p. 

Based  on  a  dissertation  accepted  by  Columbia  University,  1967. 

261 


2247.  LUCAS,  REX  A. 

Social  behavior  under  conditions  of  extreme  stress :  a  study 
of  miners  entrapped  by  a  coal  mine  disaster.  Dissertation. 
Columbia  University,  1967.  511p. 

Study  of  18  men  trapped  in  an  underground  mine  for  approximately 
a  week.  Details  of  their  social  and  psychological  reactions  to  the 
situation.  Republished  in  slightly  revised  form  as  "men  in  crisis". 

2248.  MAGUIRE,  DON 

Scofield  (Utah)  mine  disaster.  Mines  &  Minerals  20:  485- 
86  1899/1900. 

2249.  MARTIN,  JOHN  B. 

The  blast  in  Centralia  No.  5;  a  mine  disaster  no  one  stop- 
ped. Harpers  196  Mr.  1948  193-220. 

2250.  MINE  EXPLOSION  AT  ROY  ALTON,  ILLINOIS 

Coal  Age  6:  753-57  1914. 

2251.  MISSOURI.  BUREAU  OF  LABOR  STATISTICS 

Special  report  to  the  governor  of  an  investigation.  .  .  of  the 
coal  mine  explosion  at  Rich  Hill,  Missouri,  March  29,  1888. 
St.  Louis:  Daly  Printing  Co.,  1888.  63p. 

2252.  MONONGAH  MINES  RELIEF  COMMITTEE 

History  of  the  Monongah  mines  relief  fund  in  aid  of  suf- 
fers from  the  Monongah  mine  explosion,  Monongah,  West 
Virginia,  December  6,  1907.  Fairmont,  West  Virginia,  1910. 
187p. 

2253.  PACKER,  MEL 

Blacksville;  nine  more  Consol  miners  dead.  Mountain  Life 
and  Work  Ag  1972  12-23. 

Indictment  of  Consolidated  Coal  Company  for  its  mine  safety  re- 
cords. 

2254.  PAGE,  WILLIAM  N. 

The  explosion  at  the  Red  Ash  Colliery,  Fayette  County, 
West  Virginia.  AIME.  Transactions  30:  854-63  1900. 

2255.  PARSONS,   FLOYD   W. 

Disaster  at  Monongah  coal  mines  Nos.  6  and  8.  Engineer- 
ing and  Mining  Journal  84:  1121-23  1907. 

2256.  PAUL,  JAMES  w. 

Red  Ash  (West  Virginia)  mine  disaster.  Mines  &  Minerals 
20:  537-39  1899/1900. 

262 


2257.  PHEE,  CATHERINE  A. 

The  Centralia  mine  disaster  of  1947.  Dissertation.  Saint 
Louis  University,  1971.  305p. 

2258.  POWELL,  ALLAN  K. 

Tragedy  at  Seofield.  Utah  Historical  Quarterly  41:  182-94 
1973. 

Two  hundred  were  killed  in  a  mine  explosion  in  Carbon  County, 
Utah  on  May  1,  1900. 

2259.  RICE,  GEORGE  S. 

Rescue  work  at  Layland  explosion.  Coal  Age  7:  508-9  1915. 

See  also  pp.  633-34,  645  and  index  of  v7.  A  great  dispute  about 
methods  of  rescue  and  who  should  get  the  credit  developed.  Lay- 
land  is  in  the  New  River  field  of  West  Virginia. 

2260.  ROY,  ANDREW 

The  Pocahontas  explosion.  Ohio  Mining  Journal  3:  3  1885. 

Account  of  the  disaster  in  Tazewell  County,  Virginia,  March  13, 
1884. 

2261.  SCOTIA  AFTERMATH 

Mountain  Life  and  Work  My  1976  3-36. 

The  bulk  of  this,  the  preceding  and  following  issues  are  devoted  to 
various  aspects  of  the  Scotia  disaster  in  Letcher  County,  Kentucky. 

2262.  STEVENS,  ELIZABETH 

Death  in  the  mines.  Newleader  Feb  1,  1965  12-15. 

Report  of  a  visit  to  the  Clinchfield  Coal  Company's  mine  at  Dola, 
W.  Va.  Two  years  after  the  1963  disaster  in  which  22  men  died. 

2263.  STOEK,  H.  H. 

Monongah  mine  disaster.  Mines  &  Minerals  28:  277-80 
1907/8. 

2264.  THE  TWIN  SHAFT  DISASTER 

Colliery  Engineer  17:  17-20  1896/97. 
Account  of  disaster  at  Pittston,  Pennsylvania. 

2265.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  HOUSE.  COMMITTEE  ON  EDUCATION  AND  LABOR 

Welfare  of  miners.  Hearing  before  the  subcommittee  of 
the  Committee  on  Education  and  Welfare.  Washington: 
GPO,  1947.  167p. 

Includes  reports  of  the  committee  appointed  by  Gov.  Green  (Illi- 
nois) to  investigate  the  Centralia  Mine  disaster. 


263 


2266.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.   SENATE.  COMMITTEE  ON  INTERIOR  AND  INSU- 
LAR AFFAIRS 

Investigation  of  mine  explosion  at  Centralia,  Illinois. 
Washington:  GPO,  1947.  470p. 

2266a.  u.  s.  congress,  senate,  committee  on  labor  and  public 

WELFARE 

Scotia  mine  disaster.  Washington;  GPO,  1976.  279p. 

2267.  U.  S.  DEPT.  OF  INTERIOR.  OFFICE  OF  HEARINGS  AND  APPEALS 

Interim  report  on  the  Blacksville  Mine  Disaster  of  July  22, 
1972.  Arlington,  Va.,  1973.  12p. 

2268.  WEEDFALL,  ROBERT  O. 

Climate,  weather  and  coal  mine  explosions,  with  a  meteor- 
ological review  of  the  Farmington  disasters.  Morgantown: 
West  Virginia  University,  1970.  9p.  (Engineering  Experi- 
ment Station.  Report  15). 

2269.  WEST  VIRGINIA.  LEGISLATURE 

Report  of  hearings.  .  .  to  investigate  the  cause  of  mine  ex- 
plosions within  the  state  and  to  recommend  remedial  leg- 
islation relating  thereto,  together  with  preliminary  and 
final  reports.  Charleston:  Tribune  Printing  Co.,  1909. 
835p. 

2270.  WIECK,  EDWARD  A. 

Gambling  with  miners'  lives.  New  Republic  42:  205-8  1925 
(a  reply  &  rejoinder  43:  265-6,  44:  48). 

2271.  WIECK,  EDWARD  A. 

Preventing  fatal  explosions  in  coal  mines;  a  study  of  recent 
major  disasters  in  the  U.  S.  as  accompaniments  of  tech- 
nological change.  New  York:  Russel  Sage  Foundation, 
1942.  156p. 


264 


Racial  aid  tti/wt  Giaupft 


2272.  ALABAMA  MINING  CAMP 

Independent  63:  790-91  1907. 

Negroes  do  about  fifty  percent  of  the  unskilled  labor.  Many  miners 
are  ex-convicts,  and  the  camps  are  centers  of  vice  and  crime. 

2273.  ALLEN,  GERALD  E. 

The  Negro  coal  miner  in  the  Pittsburgh  district.  Thesis. 
University  of  Pittsburgh.  1927. 

2274.  ASSOCIATION  FOR  THE  WELFARE  OF  NEGROES  IN  ALABAMA 

Appeal  to  the  Colored  Mine  Workers  of  Alabama.  Ensley, 
1920?  4p. 

Negro  miners  are  urged  to  support  the  UM WA  strike. 

2275.  BAILEY,  KENNETH  R. 

A  judicious  mixture:  Negroes  and  immigrants  in  the  West 
Virginia  mines,  1880-1917.  West  Virginia  History  34:  141- 
61  1973. 

Account  of  the  development  of  the  labor  force  for  the  West  Virginia 
coal  industry. 

2276.  BARNUM,  DAROLD  T. 

The  Negro  in  bituminous  coal  mining.  Philadelphia:  Uni- 
versity of  Pennsylvania,  Wharton  School  of  Finance  and 
Commerce,  Industrial  Research  Unit,  1969.  130p.  (Racial 
policies  of  American  Industry,  No.  14). 

2277.  BRAINERD,  ALFRED 

Colored    mining    labor.    AIME.    Transactions    14:    78-80 

1885/86. 

2278.  COMMONS,  JOHN  R. 

Slavs  in  the  bituminous  coal  mines  of  Illinois.  Charities 
13:  227-29  1904. 


265 


2279.  DWYER,  KENNETH  J. 

Immigrant  labor  in  the  bituminous  coal  industry.  Thesis. 
New  York  University.  1957. 

2280.  GREENE,  VICTOR  R. 

Attitude  of  Slavic  communities  to  the  unionization  of  the 
anthracite  industry  before  1903.  Ph.  D.  University  of 
Pennsylvania.  1963. 

2281.  GREENE,  VICTOR  R. 

The  Poles  and  anthracite  unions  in  Pennsylvania.  Polish 
American  Studies  22:  10-18  1965. 

Author  maintains  that,  contrary  to  some  views,  the  Polish  immi- 
grants behaved  with  "unanimity,  tenacity,  and  strength"  in  support 
of  union  demands  for  better  pay  and  working  conditions. 

2282.  GREENE,  VICTOR  R. 

The  Slavic  community  on  strike;  immigrant  labor  in  Penn- 
sylvania anthracite.  Notre  Dame.  University  of  Notre 
Dame  Press,  1968.  260p. 

2283.  GREENE,  VICTOR  R. 

A  study  of  Slavs,  strikes,  and  unions:  the  anthracite  strike 
of  1897.  Pennsylvania  History  31:  199-215  1964. 

Slavic  groups  tended  to  be  strongly  pro-union  during  the  period  of 
the  1897  strike. 

2284.  GUTMAN,  HERBERT  G. 

"The  Negro  and  the  United  Mine  Workers  of  America."  In 
Work,  Culture  and  Society  in  Industrializing  America,  pp. 
120-208.  By  Herbert  G.  Gutman.  New  York:  Knopf,  1976. 

"The  career  and  letters  of  Richard  L.  Davis  and  something  of  their 
meaning:  1890-1900." 

2285.  GUTMAN,  HERBERT  G. 

Reconstruction  in  Ohio:  Negroes  in  the  Hocking  Valley 
coal  mines  in  1873  and  1874.  Labor  History  3:  243-64 
1962. 

2286.  HANDLING  THE  NEGRO  MINER  IN  THE  SOUTH 

Coal  Age  5:  875  1914. 

"This  class  of  labor  is  naturally  shiftless." 

2287.  HARRIS,  A.  L. 

The  Negro  in  the  coal  mining  industry.  Opportunity  F  1926 
45-48. 

266 


2288.  LADY  MIXER  DIGS  HER  JOB 

Ebony  Oct  1974  116-118. 

Young  black  woman  is  employed  as  a  miner  near  Johnstown,  Pa. 

2289.  LAING,  JAMES  T. 

Negro  miner  in  West  Virginia.  Social  Forces  14:  416-22 
1936. 

2290.  LAING,  JAMES  T. 

Social  status  among  migrant  Negroes.  Social  Forces  16: 
562-68  1938. 

Deals  with  Negro  coal  miners  in  West  Virginia. 

2291.  MATHEWS,  P.  L. 

The  Mexican  as  a  coal  miner.  Coal  Age  12:  312-15  1917. 

Author  doubts  that  the  importation  of  Mexican  miners  on  any  large 
scale  would  be  an  answer  to  the  labor  shortage. 

2292.  MTNARD,  RALPH  D. 

Race  relationships  in  the  Pocahontas  Coal  Field.  Journal 
of  Social  Issues.  8:  29-44  1952. 

Study  centered  "in  that  part  of  the  coal  field  included  in  McDowell 
County,  West  Virginia." 

2293.  NORTHRUP,  HERBERT  R. 

The  Negro  and  the  United  States  Mine  Workers  of  Amer- 
ica. Southern  Economic  Journal  9:  313-26  1943. 

2294.  NYDEN,  PAUL 

Black  coal  miners  in  the  United  States.  New  York:  Ameri- 
can Institute  for  Marxist  Studies,  1974.  74p.  (Occasional 
Paper  No.  15,  AIMS). 

Deal  largely  with  the  Southern  Appalachian  coal  fields. 

2295.  ROBERTS,  PETER 

Slavs  in  anthracite  coal  communities.  Charities  13:  215-22 
1904. 

2295a.  simmons,  c.  w.  and  others 

Negro  coal  miners  in  West  Virginia,  1875-1925.  Midwest 
Journal  Spring  1954  60-69. 

2296.  STRAW,  RICHARD  A. 

The  collapse  of  biracial  unionism:  the  Alabama  coal  strike 
of  1908.  Alabama  Historical  Quarterly  Summer  1975  92- 
114. 

267 


2297.  SURFACE,  GEORGE  T. 

The  Negro  mine  laborer:  central  Appalachian  coal  field. 
Ann.  Amer.  Acad.  33:  338-52  1909. 

2298.  U.  S.  IMMIGRATION  COMMISSION 

Immigrants  in  industries.  Washington:  GPO,  1911. 

Part  1  (2  volumes)  is  devoted  to  bituminous  coal  mining;  Part  19 
includes  a  section  on  Anthracite  coal  mining. 

2299.  WALKER,  WILLIAM  S. 

Occupational  aspirations  of  Negro  family  members  in  a 
coal  mining  community.  Thesis.  New  York  University. 
1950. 

2300.  WARNE,  FRANK  J. 

The  Slav  invasion  and  the  mine  workers;  a  study  in  immi- 
gration. Philadelphia:  Lippincott,  1904.  211p. 


268 


ToMm 


2301.  ADAMS,  JAMES  TAYLOR 

Death  in  the  dark:  a  collection  of  factual  ballads  of  Amer- 
ican mine  disasters.  Big  Laurel,  Virginia:  Adams-Mullins 
Press,  1941.  119p. 

2302.  ANSLEY,  FRAN  AND  SUE  THRASHER 

The  ballad  of  Barney  Graham.  Southern  Exposure  4:  136- 
42  1976. 

Graham  was  killed  during  the  mine  wars  in  East  Tennessee  during 
the  1930s. 

2303.  ANSLEY,  FRAN  AND  OTHERS 

"Little  David  Blues";  an  interview  with  Tom  Lowry. 
Southern  Exposure  Winter  1974  137-43. 

Interview  with  the  author  of  a  song  based  on  the  strikes  of  1932 
in  the  Cumberland  Plateau. 

2304.  DICKENS,  HAZEL 

Songs:  Mannington  Mine  Disaster  and  black  lung.  Moun- 
tain Life  and  Work  Apr  1971  10-13. 

2305.  DOMICO,  JIM 

Mine  accidents.  West  Virginia  Folklore  11:  38-44  1961. 
The  folklore  of  mine  accidents. 

2306.  FAMOUS  LAHOR  SONGS  FROM  APPALACHIA 

Huntington,  W.  Va.:  Appalachian  Movement  Press,  1970. 
2v. 

2307.  GREEN,  ARCHIE 

The  Carter  Family's  "Coal  Miner's  Blues."  Southern  Folk- 
lore Quarterly  25:  226-37  1961. 

2308.  GREEN,  ARCHIE 

The  death  of  Mother  Jones.  Labor  History  1:  68-80  1960. 
269 


Account  of  the  song  "Death  of  Mother  Jones",  first  recorded  by 
Gene  Autry  in  1931. 

2309.  GREEN,  ARCHIE 

A  discography  of  American  coal  miners'  songs.  Labor  His- 
tory 2:  101-115  1961. 

2310.  GREEN,  ARCHIE 

George  Korson  and  industrial  folklore.  Keystone  Folklore 
Quarterly  16:  53-63  1971. 

Account  and  evaluation  of  Korson's  efforts  to  collect  the  folklore  of 
the  anthracite  industry. 

2311.  GREEN,  ARCHIE 

Only  a  miner.  Urbana:  University  of  Illinois  Press,  1972. 
504p. 

"Studies  in  recorded  coal-mining  songs".  By  far  the  most  compre- 
hensive and  useful  work  in  the  field. 

2312.  GREEN,  ARCHIE 

Recorded  American  coal  mining  songs.  Dissertation.  Uni- 
versity of  Pennsylvania,  1969.  522p. 

2313.  HAMILTON,  REX 

Stories  of  the  mine.  West  Virginia  Folklore  11:  44-49  1961. 
Devoted  largely  to  the  folklore  of  mine  accidents. 

2314.  HAND,  WAYLAND  D. 

George  Korson  and  the  study  of  American  mining  lore. 
Keystone  Folklore  Quarterly  16:  65-68  1971. 

2315.  KORSON,  GEORGE 

Anatomy  of  a  coal  mine.  Keystone  Folklore  8:  49-50  1963. 

"Traditionally  miners  describe  various  parts  of  a  mine  in  terms  of 
the  structure  of  the  human  body." 

2316.  KORSON,  GEORGE 

Anthracite  miners  as  bards  and  minstrels.  American  Speech 
10:  260-68  1935. 

2317.  KORSON,  GEORGE 

Black  land;  the  way  of  life  in  the  coal  fields.  Evanston, 
Illinois:  Row,  Peterson,  1941.  72p. 

A  popularly- written  account  of  life  in  the  coal  fields.  Centered  lar- 
gely in  West  Virginia. 


270 


2318.  KORSON,  GEORGE 

Black  rock:  mining  folklore  of  the  Pennsylvania  Dutch. 
Baltimore:  Johns  Hopkins,  1960.  453p. 

2319.  KORSON,  GEORGE 

Coal  dust  on  the  fiddle;  songs  and  stories  of  the  bitumi- 
nous industry.  Philadelphia:  University  of  Pennsylvania 
Press,  1943.  46%. 

2320.  KORSON,  GEORGE 

Minstrels  of  the  mine  patch;  songs  and  stories  of  the  an- 
thracite industry.  Philadelphia:  University  of  Pennsylvania 
Press,  1938.  332p. 

2321.  KORSON,  GEORGE 

Pennslvania  songs  and  legends.  Philadelphia:  University  of 
Pennsylvania  Press,  1949.  474p. 

Pp.  354-400  devoted  to  coal  miners. 

2322.  KORSON,  GEORGE 

Songs  and  ballads  of  the  anthracite  miners  a  seam  of  folk- 
lore which  once  ran  through  life  in  the  hard  coal  fields  of 
of  Pennsylvania.  New  York:  Hitchcock,  1927.  196p. 

2323.  LOPUSHANSKY,  JOSEPH  AND  MICHAEL 

Mining  town  terms.  American  Speech  4:  368-74  1929. 
Terms  common  in  the  mining  areas  near  Pittsburgh,  Pennsylvania. 

2324.  MUSICK,  RUTH  ANN 

More  stories  of  the  mines.  West  Virginia  Folklore  10:  18- 
36  1960. 

2325.  MUSICK,  RUTH  ANN 

Stories  about  mines.  West  Virginia  Folklore  8:  54-68  1958. 

2326.  SMITH,  GRACE  P. 

The  miner's  chant.  California  Folklore  Quarterly  2:  221-23 
1943. 

A  mine  ballad  from  Iowa. 

2327.  TWO  TALES  FROM  BLOODY  HARLAN 

Appalachian  Journal  Spring  1973  139-42. 

2328.  WESTOVER,  J.  HUTSON 

Highland  language  of  the  Cumberland  coal  country. 
Mountain  Life  and  Work  Fall  1960  18-21. 

271 


Heaftft 


This  section  is  intended  as  a  guide  to  rather  than  a  compre- 
hensive bibliography  of  the  health  problems  of  the  coal  industry. 
An  attempt  has  been  made  to  include  the  major  studies,  articles  with 
especially  useful  bibliographies  and  very  early  reports.  A  complete 
bibliography  of  such  medical  problems  as  respiratory  diseases  is 
beyond  the  scope  of  this  work.  The  literature  in  the  area  is  volumi- 
nous, international  in  nature  and  accessible  through  the  medical  in- 
dexing services. 

2329.  ANDERSON,  WILLIAM  H.  AND  WILLIAM  F.  SCHMIDT 

Evaluation  of  disability  in  coal  miners  with  chronic  pul- 
monary disease.  JAMA  171:  145-150  1959. 

2330.  BAIER,  E.  J.  AND  R.  DIAKUN 

Pneumoconiosis  study  in  Central  Pennsylvania  coal  mines. 
II.  Environmental  Phase.  Journal  of  Occupational  Medi- 
cine 3:  507-521  1961. 

2331.  BENTTVEGNA,  JOSEPH  J. 

A  study  of  vocational  rehabilitation  experiences  of  bitu- 
minous coal  miners  with  pneumoconiosis.  Dissertation. 
University  of  Pittsburgh.  1974.  HOp. 

Study  of  166  Central  Pa.  miners  with  pneumoconiosis  points  up 
the  view  of  miners  that  rehabilitation  is  a  threat  rather  than  a  help. 
"Most  never  advanced  past  the  preliminary  stage  of  medical  diag- 
nosis." 

2332.  BRTTNELL,  JIM 

The  Buffalo  Creek  flood:  a  demonstration  health  program 
responds  to  an  emergency.  Appalachia  Jl/Ag  1972  1-7. 

2333.  BROWN,  MURRAY  C. 

Pneumoconiosis  in  bituminous  coal  miners.  Mining  Con- 
gress Journal  Ag.  1965  44-48. 

Results  of  a  2M  year  medical  survey  of  nearly  4000  miners. 

2334.  BUREAU  OF  COOPERATIVE  MEDICINE 

Medical  care  in  selected  areas  of  the  Appalachian  bitu- 
minous coal  fields.  New  York:  The  Bureau,  1939.  55p. 

272 


2335.  CALAR1E,  EDWIN   P. 

A  literature  survey  of  the  effects  and  controls  of  pneu- 
moconiosis, with  emphasis  on  coal  workers  pneumoconi- 
osis. Thesis.  West  Virginia  University.  1970.  75p. 

"Two  decades  of  investigations  have  passed  which,  in  the  main 
have  done  little  more  than  confirm  the  results  and  conclusions  of 
earlier  studies." 

2336.  CARTER,  RICHARD 

"Scandal  in  the  coal  fields."  In  The  Doctor  Business,  pp. 
174-97.  By  Richard  Carter.  New  York:  Doubleday,  1958. 

Local  physicians  provided  a  generally  low  level  of  medical  care  to 
miners  and  resisted  efforts  by  the  UMWA's  Welfare  and  Retire- 
ment Fund  to  improve  the  situation. 

2337.  CLAGUE,  EWAN 

Determining  the  eligibility  for  black  lung  compensation. 
Monthly  Labor  Review  Mr  1974  25-30. 

2338.  COLE,  LEWIS  G.  AND  WILLIAM  G.  COLE 

Pneumoconiosis  (silicosis);  the  story  of  dusty  lungs.  New 
York:  John  B.  Pierce  Foundation,  1940.  vp. 

One  of  the  most  significant  of  the  early  studies. 

2339.  COLES,  ROBERT  AND  HARRY  HUGE 

Black  lung:  mining  as  a  way  of  death.  New  Republic  Ja 
25,  1969  17-21. 

2340.  COLLIS,  EDGAR  L. 

The  coal  miner;  his  health,  diseases  and  general  welfare. 
Journal  of  Industrial  Hygiene  7:  221-243  1925. 

General  survey  of  physical  and  psychological  disorders  of  miners. 
Comparisons  of  conditions  in  U.  S.,  Britain  and  Europe. 

2341.  COSTELLO,  J.  AND  OTHERS 

Mortality  from  heart  disease  in  coal  miners.  Chest  67: 
417-21  1975. 

2342.  COSTELLO,  J.  AND  OTHERS 

Mortality  from  lung  cancer  in  U.  S.  coal  miners.  American 
Journal  of  Public  Health  64:  222-24  1974. 

A  study  of  Appalachian  coal  miners  revealed  a  "low  standard  mor- 
tality rate  for  lung  cancer." 


273 


2343.  DOYLE,  H.  N.  AND  T.  H.  NOEHBEN 

Pulmonary  fibrosis  in  soft  coal  miners:  an  annotated  bib- 
liography on  the  entity  recently  described  as  soft  coal 
pneumoconiosis.  Washington:  GPO,  1954.  59p.  (Public 
Health  Service  Publication  352  &  Public  Health  Biblio- 
graphy Series  11). 

2344.  DRAPER,  WARREN  F. 

A  hospital  network  for  coal  miners  and  their  families.  West 
Virginia  Medical  Journal  56:  70-73  Feb  1960. 

Description  of  some  of  the  medical  problems  encountered  in  the 
West  Virginia-Tennessee-Kentucky  coal  fields. 

2345.  DRAPER,  WARREN  F. 

Problems  encountered  in  operation  of  United  Mine  Work- 
ers of  America  welfare  and  retirement  fund.  Pennsylvania 
Medical  Journal  58:  1334-1339  1955. 

2346.  DRAPER,  WARREN  F. 

UMWA  Welfare  and  Retirement  Fund  medical  care  pro- 
gram. American  Journal  of  Public  Health  43:  757-62  1953. 

2347.  DRAPER,  WARREN  F. 

Voluntary  health  insurance  on  national  scene:  United  Mine 
Workers  health  program.  American  Journal  of  Public 
Health  40:  595-601  1950. 

A  brief  survey  of  the  health  problems  existing  when  the  UMWA's 
Welfare  and  Retirement  Fund  went  into  effect  ( 1948 )  and  the 
plans  and  progress  evolving  from  the  Fund's  program 

2348.  ENTERLINE,  PHILIP  E. 

Mortality  rates  among  coal  miners.  American  Journal  of 
Public  Health  54:  758-68  1964. 

"Death  rates  for  miners  are  nearly  twice  for  all  working  men  in  the 
United  States." 

2349.  ENTERLINE,  P.  E. 

A  review  of  mortality  data  for  American  coal  miners.  New 
York  Academy  of  Science.  Annals  200:  260-72  1972. 

2350.  ERICKSON,  KAI  T. 

Loss  of  commnnalitv  at  Rn^lc-  Creek.  American  Journal 
of  Psychiatry  133:  302-305  1976. 

Before  the  disaster,  "the  people  of  Buffalo  Creek  were  accustomed 
to  placing  their  individual  energies  and  resources  at  the  disposal 
of  the  larger  collectivity  ...  but  afterward  they  were  "empty  of 
feeling,  devoid  of  affection,  and  lacking  .  .  .  confidence.  .  .  . 


274 


2351.  FALK  LESLIE  A. 

Group  health  plans  in  coal  mining  communities.  Journal  of 
Health  &  Human  Behavior  4:  4-13  1963. 

2352.  FALK,  LESLIE  A.  AND  OTHERS 

Stroke  among  a  coal  mining  population.  Johns  Hopkins 
Medical  Journal  120:  380-392  1967. 

2353.  FERRIS,  B.  G.,  JR.  AND  N.  R.  FRANK 

Pulmonary  function  in  coal  miners.  Journal  of  Occupation- 
al Medicine  4:  274-281  1962. 

2354.  FIELD,  LEWIS  AND  OTHERS 

Observations  on  the  relation  of  psychological  factors  to 
psychiatric  illness  among  coal  miners.  International  Jour- 
nal of  Social  Psychiatry  3:  133-45  1957. 

The  authors  are  staff  members  of  the  Bluefield,  (West  Virginia) 
Mental  Health  Center.  Discussion  of  the  "trapped,  hopeless  life  sit- 
uation" of  the  miner. 

2355.  FLINN,  R.  H.  AND  OTHERS 

Soft  coal  miners  health  and  working  environment.  Wash- 
ington: GPO,  1941.  118p.  (Public  Health  Bulletin  270). 

2356.  GAGE,  E.  LYLE 

Mining  community  health.  West  Virginia  Coal  Mining  In- 
stitute. Proceedings  1947  76-86. 

Discussion  of  medical  service  in  the  coal  area  of  southern  West 
Virginia. 

2357.  HAELIG,  ARTHUR  W. 

A  primer  of  miners'  lung  diseases.  Appalachia  Medicine 
Sept.  1969  6-9. 

A  listing  of  miners'  lung  diseases  and  an  analysis  of  difficulties  en- 
countered in  estimating  the  degree  of  disability  by  the  use  of  x-ray. 

2358.  HAYHURST,  E.  R. 

Health  hazards  and  mortality  statistics  of  soft  coal  mining 
in  Illinois  and  Ohio.  Journal  of  Industrial  Hygiene  1:  360- 
67  1919. 

2359.  HESS,  ARTHUR  E. 

Coal  workers'  pneumoconiosis  disability  benefits.  Journal 
of  Occupational  Medicine  12:  466-470  1970. 


275 


2360.  HIGGINS,  IAN  T. 

Chronic  respiratory  disease  in  mining  communities.  New 
York  Academy  of  Science.  Annals  200:  197-210  1972. 

Communities  studied  were  in  West  Virginia,  England  and  Wales. 

2361.  HIGGINS,  IAN  T.  AND  OTHERS 

Coronary  disease  in  mining  communities  in  Marion  Coun- 
ty, West  Virginia.  Journal  of  Chronic  Diseases  22:  165-179 
1969. 

Study  of  men  aged  20-69  in  three  mining  towns  failed  to  show  any 
difference  in  coronary  disease  prevalence  between  miners,  ex-miners 
and  non-miners. 

2362.  HOTCHKISS,  s.  c. 

Occupational  diseases  in  the  mining  industry.  American 
Labor  Legislation  Review  2:  131-39  1912. 

2363.  HYATT,  R.  E.  AND  OTHERS 

Respiratory  disease  in  southern  West  Virginia  coal  mines. 
American  Review  of  Respiratory  Diseases  89:  387-401 
1964. 

Study  of  the  relationship  between  respiratory  diseases  and  the  num- 
ber of  years  spent  in  mines. 

2363a.  judktns,  bennett  m. 

The  Black  Lung  Association:  a  case  study  of  a  modern 
social  movement.  Dissertation.  University  of  Tennessee, 
1975.  372p. 

2364.  KERR,  LORIN  E. 

Black  lung.  Washington:  UMWA,  1970.  36p. 

Brief  discussion  of  the  disease  by  the  director  of  the  UMWs  De- 
partment Occupational  Health. 

2365.  KERR,  LORIN  E. 

Coal  workers  and  pneumoconiosis.  Archives  of  Environ- 
mental Health  16:  579-585  1968. 

Maintains  that  coal  workers'  pneumoconiosis  is  a  preventable  dis- 
ease which  adequate  control  measures  could  eliminate. 

2366.  KERR,  LORIN  E. 

Coal  workers'  pneumoconiosis.  Industrial  Medicine  &  Sur- 
gery 25:  355-62  1956. 

Includes  an  extensive  review  of  the  literature. 


276 


2367.  KERR,  LORES'  E. 

Coal  workers'  pneumoconiosis  in  an  affluent  society.  Pub- 
lic Health  Reports  85:  847-752  1970. 

2368.  KERR,  LORIN  E. 

The  UMWA  looks  at  coal  workers'  pneumoconiosis.  Jour- 
nal of  Occupational  Medicine  12:  359-63  1970. 

2369.  KEY,  MARCUS  M.  AND  OTHERS 

Pulmonary  reactions  to  coal  dust;  a  review  of  U.  S.  exper- 
ience. New  York:  Academic  Press,  1971,  215p. 

Chapters  include  useful  lists  of  references. 

2370.  LAINHART,  WILLIAM  S.  AND  OTHERS 

Pneumoconiosis  in  Appalachian  bituminous  coal  miners. 
Cincinnati:  U.  S.  Public  Health  Service,  1969.  (U.  S.  Pub- 
lic Health  Service  Publication  no.  2000). 

Reports  the  findings  of  a  1963-65  prevalence  study  which  "revealed 
that  coal  workers'  pneumoconiosis  is  a  serious  widespread  problem 
in  Appalachia." 

2371.  LAPP,  N.  LEROY 

History  and  epidemiology  of  coalworkers'  pneumoconiosis. 
Virginia  Medical  Monthly  96:  709-711  1969. 

2372.  LEO  KRAMER,  INC. 

The  health  impaired  miner  under  black  lung  legislation. 
New  York:  Praeger,  1973.  130p. 

2373.  LEVINE,  MILTON  D.  AND  MURRAY  B.  HUNTER 

Clinical  study  of  pneumoconiosis  of  coal  workers  in  Ohio 
River  Valley.  JAMA  163:  1-4  1957. 

2374.  LIEBEN,  JAN  AND  OTHERS 

Pneumoconiosis  study  in  central  Pennsylvania  coal  mines. 
I.  Medical  phase.  Journal  of  Occupational  Medicine  3: 
493-506  1961. 

2375.  LOCKSHIN,   M.  D.   AND  OTHERS 

Rheumatism  in  mining  communities  in  Marion  County, 
West  Virginia.  American  Journal  of  Epidemiology  90:  17- 
29  1969. 

A  study  of  men  aged  20-69  in  five  towns  showed  "no  striking  dif- 
ferences in  the  prevalence  of  arthritis  of  the  hands,  wrists,  or  cervi- 
cal spine  between  non-miners  and  miners,  and  ex-miners." 


277 


2376.  MARTIN,  JOSEPH  E. 

Breathless  coal  workers  as  seen  at  the  Golden  Clinic.  AM  A 
Archives  of  Industrial  Health  15:  494-98  1947. 

2377.  MARTIN,  JOSEPH  E. 

Coal  miners'  pneumoconiosis.  American  Journal  of  Public 
Health  44:  581-91  1954. 

2378.  MASSIE,  WILLIAM  A. 

Medical  services  for  rural  areas.  Cambridge:  Harvard, 
1957  68p. 

Results  of  a  study  by  the  Tennessee  Medical  Foundation  of  an  area 
in  Tennessee  and  Kentucky  with  a  population  of  6,000,  mostly  coal 
miners  and  their  families. 

2379.  MEDICAL-HOSPITAL    PROBLEMS   IN   BITUMINOUS   COAL   MINING 
AREA 

JAMA  151:  407-412  Ja  1953. 

Reports  of  survey  teams  studying  medical  and  hospital  facilities  in 
Kentucky,  Tennessee  and  West  Virginia  mining  areas. 

2380.  MERIWETHER,  F.  V. 

Sanitary  survey  of  the  coal  mines  of  Alabama.  Washing- 
ton: GPO,  1926.  20p.  (U.  S.  Bureau  of  Mines.  Report  of 
Investigations  2746 ) . 

2381.  MILLER,  ARNOLD 

Wages  of  neglect:  death  and  disease  in  the  American 
workplace.  American  Journal  of  Public  Health  65:  1217-20 
1975. 

Plea  by  the  President  of  the  UMWA  for  improved  standards  of  oc- 
cupational health  and  safety. 

2382.  MILLER,  HAROLD  W. 

Characteristics  of  mining  and  non-mining  psychiatric  pa- 
tients. Thesis.  West  Virginia  University.  1960.  71p. 

2383.  MILLER,  IV A  A. 

Child  health  in  mining  camp  and  village.  Mountain  Life 
&  Work  8:  5-8  Ja  1933. 

2384.  MILLER,  LEE  H. 

Disability  appraisal  of  miners.  Dissertation.  University  of 
Cincinnati.  1954. 


278 


2385.  MORGAN,  WILLIAM  K.  C. 

Coal  workers'  pneumoconiosis.  American  Industrial  Hy- 
giene Association  Journal  32:  29-34  1971. 

General  discussion  of  the  disease  and  comparisons  between  situa- 
tion in  Britain  and  the  U.  S. 

2386.  MORGAN,  WILLIAM  K.  C. 

Coalworkers'  pneumoconiosis:  the  clinical  features.  Vir- 
ginia Medical  Monthly  96:  712-716  1969. 

"The  attitude  of  the  medical  profession  in  the  U.  S.  to  the  problem 
of  coalworkers  pneumoconiosis  has  been,  and  still  is,  ^characterized 
by  obscurantism  and  a  persistent  refusal  to  face  facts." 

2387.  MORGAN,  WILLIAM  K.  C.  AND  OTHERS 

Comparison  of  the  prevalence  of  coal  workers  pneumoco- 
niosis and  respiratory  impairment  in  Pennsylvania  bitumin- 
ous and  anthracite  miners.  New  York  Academy  of  Science. 
Annals  200:  252-59  1972. 

2388.  MORGAN,  WILLIAM  K.  C.  AND  ANTHONY  SEATON 

Occupational  lung  diseases.  Philadelphia:  Saunders,  1975. 
391p. 

2389.  MORTALITY  RATES  OF  COAL  MINERS 

U.  S.  Bureau  of  Labor.  Bulletin  616:  771-74  1936. 

2390.  NATIONAL  CONFERENCE  ON  MEDICINE  AND  THE  FEDERAL  COAL 
MINE  HEALTH  AND  SAFETY  ACT  OF  1969. 

Papers  and  proceedings.  Washington,  1970.  342n 

2391.  NATIONAL  RESEARCH  COUNCIL.   COMMITTEE  ON  MINERAL  RE- 
SOURCES AND  THE  ENVIRONMENT 

Coal  workers'  pneumoconiosis— medical  consideration, 
some  social  implications.  Washington:  National  Academy 
of  Sciences,  1976.  149p. 

Report  of  a  conference  involving  leading  authorities  in  the  field. 
At  head  of  tide:  Mineral  resources  and  the  environment,  supplemen- 
tary report. 

2392.  NEWMAN,  C.  JANET 

Children  of  disaster:  clinical  observations  at  Buffalo 
Creek.  American  Journal  of  Psychiatry  133:  306-312  1976. 

"Most  of  the  221  children  who  were  survivor-plaintiffs  of  the  Buf- 
falo Creek  disaster  were  emotionally  impaired  by  their  experiences." 
Article  focuses  on  children  under  12. 

2393.  OHIO.  STATE  DEPARTMENT  OF  HEALTH 

Health  of  Ohio  coal  miners.  Columbus,  1919.  24p. 
279 


2394.  PENCHANSKY,  ROY  AND  OTHERS 

"Medical  practice  in  a  group  setting:  the  Russellton  exper- 
ience." In  Health  Services  Administration:  Policy  Cases 
and  the  Case  Method,  pp.  182-218.  Edited  by  Roy  Pen- 
chansky.  Cambridge:  Harvard  University  Press,  1968. 

The  Russellton  Medical  Group  was  established  in  1952  with  the 
support  of  the  UMWA  Welfare  and  Retirement  Fund.  Russellton  is 
located  in  a  mining  area  approximately  25  miles  from  Pittsburgh. 

2395.  PENDERGAST,  JOHN  J.  AND  TITUS  A.  COX 

Meeting  mandatory  federal  health  standards  under  diffi- 
cult dust  control  conditions.  Washington,  1976.  28p.  (U.  S. 
Mining  Enforcement  and  Safety  Administration.  Informa- 
tion Report  1032). 

2396.  PENDERGRASS,  EUGENE  P.  AND  OTHERS 

Historical  perspectives  of  coal  workers  pneumoconiosis  in 
the  United  States.  New  York  Academy  of  Science  Annals 
200:  835-54  1972. 

2397.  PENDERGRASS,  EUGENE  P. 

Some  consideration  of  coal  workers'  pneumoconiosis. 
Archives  of  Environmental  Health  20:  545-550  1970. 

Brief  general  description  of  the  disease,  its  symptoms  and  diagnosis. 

2398.  POHLMANN,  KENNETH  E. 

Rehabilitation  of  severely  disabled:  UMWA  Welfare  and 
Retirement  Fund  experience.  American  Journal  of  Public 
Health  43:  445-451  1953. 

A  report  detailing  specific  results  of  a  program  of  rehabiliation  of 
the  severely  disabled  coal  miner. 

2399.  RANGELL,  LEO 

Discussion  of  the  Buffalo  Creek  disaster:  the  course  of 
psychic  trauma.  American  Journal  of  Psychiatry  133:  313- 
316  1976. 

Describes  the  phases  of  trauma  experienced  by  the  survivors  and 
assesses  the  future  effects  of  this  trauma. 

2400.  RASMUSSEN,  DONALD  L. 

Breathlessness  in  southern  Appalachian  coal  miners.  Ap- 
palachia  Medicine  Sept  1969  10-12. 

Studies  of  more  than  4,000  bituminous  coal  miners  in  the  laboratory 
lead  us  to  conclude  that  disabling  pulmonary  insufficiency  is  com- 
mon among  bituminous  coal  miners. 


280 


2401.  RASMUSSEN,  DONALD  L.  AND  C.  W.  NELSON 

Respiratory  function  in  southern  Appalachian  coal  miners. 
American  Review  of  Respiratory  Diseases  103:  240-248 
1971. 

2402.  RASMUSSEN,  JEANNE  M. 

On  the  outside  lookin'  in.  Mountain  Life  &  Work  Sept 
1969  6-9+. 

Describes  and  decries  the  arbitrary  nature  of  health  and  survivor 
insurance  and  benefit  funds  available  to  coal  miners. 

2403.  RAYMOND,  R.  W. 

The  hygiene  of  mines.  Transactions  of  the  American  In- 
stitute of  Mining  Engineers  8:  97-120  1879. 

2404.  ROGAN,  JOHN  M. 

Medicine  in  the  mining  industries.  London:  Heinemann, 
1972.  397p. 

Author,  the  Chief  Medical  Officer  of  the  British  National  Coal 
Board,  deals  not  only  with  disease  entities  but  also  such  matters  as 
dust  control,  accident  prevention  and  rehabilitation. 

2405.  ROSEN,  GEORGE 

The  history  of  miners'  diseases,  a  medical  and  social  inter- 
pretation. New  York:  Schuman,  1943.  490p. 

The  history  of  miners'  health  from  earliest  times  through  the  19th 
century.  Beferences  are  primarily  to  British  and  European  mines, 
and  include  metal  mining  as  well. 

2406.  ROY,  ANDREW 

Miners'  hospitals.  Ohio  Mining  Journal  F  1889  23-27. 

Author  suggests  establishment  of  state-supported  hospitals  in  the 
mining  regions.  Beport  of  Committee  on  Miners'  Hospitals  appears 
N  1890  29-31. 

2407.  SAFFORD,  BERYL  M. 

"Changing  a  community's  pattern  of  medical  care:  the 
Russellton  experience."  In  Health  Services  Administration: 
Policy  Cases  and  the  Case  Method,  pp.  219-59.  Edited  by 
Roy  Penchansky.  Cambridge:  Harvard  University  Press, 
1968. 

Account  of  the  impact  of  the  Bussellton  Medical  Group  in  a  coal 
mining  area  near  Pittsburgh.  The  Group  was  established  in  1952 
under  the  auspices  of  the  UMWA  Welfare  and  Betirement  Fund. 


281 


2408.  SEMINAR  ON  COAL.  WORKERS'  PNEUMOCONIOSIS  FOR  REHABILI- 
TATION PERSONNEL  FROM  REGIONS  III  AND  IV,  JOHNSTOWN,  PA., 
1971. 

The  vocational  rehabilitation  of  coal  workers  with  black 
lung  disease.  Johnstown,  Pa.,  1971.  138p. 

2409.  STACY,  CHARLES  B. 

Medical  service  in  coal  fields.  Industrial  Medicine  18:  253- 
256  1949. 

Pineville,  Kentucky  mine  surgeon  discusses  aspects  of  serving  a 
mining  community  and  advantages  of  a  contract  or  pre-paid  medi- 
cal plan. 

2410.  STEELE,  H.  E. 

Negro  and  White  miners  under  Alabama's  pneumoconio- 
sis law.  Industrial  Medicine  &  Surgery  31:  383-91  1962. 

2411.  STOECKLE,  J.  D.  AND  OTHERS 

Respiratory  disease  in  U.  S.  soft  coal  miners.  Journal  of 
Chronic  Diseases  15:  887-905  1962. 

2412.  SYMPOSIUM  ON  COAL  MINERS'  PNEUMOCONIOSIS 

Elkins,  W.  Va.,  1952.  95p. 

This  symposium,  held  under  the  auspices  of  the  Golden  Clinic,  was 
the  first  medical  meeting  in  the  U.  S.  devoted  solely  to  the  sub- 
ject. It  brought  the  more  advanced  British  findings  to  the  attention 
of  American  practitioners. 

2413.  SYMPOSIUM  ON  RESPIRABLE  COAL  MINE  DUST 

Washington:  GPO,  1970.  297p.  (U.  S.  Bureau  of  Mines. 
Information  Circular  8458 ) . 

Proceedings  were  held  Nov.  3-4,  1969  in  Washington.  Compiled  by 
Richard  M.  Gooding. 

2414.  TABERSHAW,  IRVING  R. 

The  health  of  the  coal  miner:  an  expendable  resource? 
Journal  of  Occupational  Medicine  12:  453-57  1970. 

2415.  TAUBENHAUS,  MARJORIE  AND  ROY  PENCHANSKY 

"The  medical  care  program  of  the  United  Mine  Workers 
Welfare  and  Retirement  Fund."  In  Health  Services  Ad- 
ministration: Policy  Cases  and  the  Case  Method,  pp.  149- 
81.  Edited  by  Roy  Penchansky.  Cambridge:  Harvard  Uni- 
versity Press,  1968. 

2416.  TELEKY,  LUDWIG 

History  of  factory  and  mine  hygiene.  New  York:  Colum- 
bia, 1948.  342p. 

282 


2417.  TITCHENER,  JAMES  L.  AND  FREDERIC  T.  KAPP 

Family  and  character  change  at  Buffalo  Creek.  American 
Journal  of  Psychiatry  133:  295-99  1976. 

"Traumatic  neuotic  reactions  were  found  in  80%  of  the  survivors.  .  . 
these  had  persisted  for  the  two  years  since  the  flood,  and  a  de- 
finite symptom  complex  labeled  the  "Buffalo  Creek  syndrome"  was 
pervasive." 

2418.  UMWS  CHAIN  OF  TEN  HOSPITALS 

Architectural  Forum  Nov  1956  109-17. 

Well-illustrated  description  of  the  UMW  hospitals  in  Appalachia. 
Another  account  appeared  in  the  August  1953  issue  of  the  same 
journal  under  the  title  "A  hospital  chain  250  miles  long". 

2419.  U.  S.  BUREAU  OF  MINES 

Coal  mine  health  seminar.  Washington:  GPO,  1972.  44p. 
(U.  S.  Bureau  of  Mines.  Information  Circular  8568). 

A  joint  staff  conference  of  the  Bureau  of  Mines  and  the  National 
Institute  for  Occupational  Safety  and  Health.  Compiled  by  M.  K. 
Hutchison. 

2420.  U.  S.  COAL  MINE  ADMINISTRATION 

A  medical  survey  of  the  bituminous  coal  industry.  Wash- 
ington: GPO,  1947.  244p. 

A  work  of  the  first  importance.  Survey  was  conducted  by  a  U.  S. 
Navy  medical  team  headed  by  Admiral  Joel  T.  Boone.  The  report 
fully  and  frankly  describes  the  wretched  health  and  living  condi- 
tions in  the  coal  fields.  It  did  much  to  move  public  opinion  to  the 
miner's  side  and  led  directly  to  the  ettablishment  of  the  UMWA 
Health  and  Retiremtnt  Funds. 

2421.  U.   S.   CONGRESS.   HOUSE.   COMMITTEE  ON   EDUCATION   AND  LA- 
BOR. GENERAL  SUBCOMMITTEE  ON  LABOR 

Black  lung  benefits.  Hearings.  Washington:  GPO,  1971. 
174p. 

2422.  U.   S.   CONGRESS.    HOUSE.   COMMITTEE  ON    EDUCATION   AND   LA- 
BOR. GENERAL  SUBCOMMITTEE  ON  LABOR 

Black  lung  benefits  eligibility  (oversight).  Hearing.  Wash- 
ington: GPO,  1973.  172p. 

2423.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  HOUSE.  COMMITTEE  ON  EDUCATION  AND  LABOR. 
SUBCOMMITTEE  ON  LABOR  STANDARDS 

Black  lung  benefits  reform  act  of  1975.  Washington-  GPO 
1975.  238p. 

Hearings  which  include  testimony  by  individuals  representing  in- 
surance companies,  medical  research  groups,  the  National  Coal  As- 
sociation, etc. 


283 


2424.  U.   S.    CONGRESS.    SENATE.    COMMITTEE  ON   LABOR  AND   PUBLIC 
WELFARE 

Black  lung  benefits  reform  act.  1976.  Washington:  GPO, 
1976.  819p. 

2425.  U.    S.   CONGRESS.    SENATE.    COMMITTEE  ON   LABOR   AND   PUBLIC 
WELFARE.  SUBCOMMITTEE  ON  LABOR 

Black   lung   legislation,    1971-72.    Hearings.    Washington: 
GPO,  1972.  680p. 

2426.  U.  S.  PUBLIC  HEALTH  SERVICE 

Anthraco-silicosis  among  hard  coal  miners.  Washington: 
GPO,  1935.  114p.  (Public  Health  Bulletin  221). 

2427.  WHITE,  J.  H. 

Sanitation  in  mining  towns.  Coal  Age  4:  59-61  1913. 

2428.  WIESEL,  CARL  AND  MALCOLM  ARNY 

Psychiatric  study  of  coal  miners  in  eastern  Kentucky  area. 
American  Journal  of  Psychiatry  108:  617-24  1952. 

2429.  wilkerson,  w.  v. 

Co-operative  community  medical  service.  West  Virginia 
Coal  Mining  Institute.  Proceedings  1947  70-75. 

A   defense   of   the    contract   medical   service   in   the   coal    areas    of 
southern  West  Virginia. 

2430.  WILLIAMS,  PIERCE 

The  purchase  of  medical  care  through  fixed  periodic  pay- 
ment. New  York:  National  Bureau  of  Economic  Research, 
1932.  308p. 

Chapters  five  through  eight  deal  specifically  with  the  coal  industry. 

2431.  WILSON,  ISABELLA  C. 

Sickness  and  medical  care  among  a  rural  bituminous  coal- 
mining population  of  Arkansas.  Fayetteville:  University  of 
Arkansas.  1940.  44p.  (Agricultural  Experiment  Station 
Bulletin  394). 

2432.  ZAHORSKI,  WITOLD  W. 

Coal  workers'  pneumoconiosis.  Hanover:  University  Press 
of  New  England,  1974.  108p. 

A  summary  of  the  "state  of  the  art".  Extensive  bibliographies  fol- 
low each  chapter. 


284 


Gvmal  Deddtpttue  Accwwfo 
o|  Coa£  Regiww  and  Ftc£dd 


2433.  ALLEN,  JOSEPH  H. 

Coals  and  cokes  of  eastern  Kentucky.  AIME.  Transactions 
21:  53-60  1892/93. 

2434.  ALLEN,  JOSEPH  H. 

Western  Kentucky  coals  and  cokes.  AIME.  Transactions 
16:  581-93  1887/88. 

2435.  ANDREWS,  EBENEZER  B. 

The  lower  Sunday  Creek  Valley  (Ohio),  its  coal  and  iron 
ores;  its  shipping  and  manufacturing  facilities.  With  a  view 
of  the  markets  for  the  Hocking  coals.  Columbus:  Ohio 
State  Journal.  1875.  67p. 

2436.  ASHBURNER,  CHARLES  A. 

The  anthracite  coal  beds  of  Pennsylvania.  AIME.  Trans- 
actions 11:  136-59  1882/83. 

2437.  ASHBURNER,  CHARLES'A. 

Brazos  coal  field,  Texas.  AIME.  Transactions  9:  495-506 
1880-81. 

2438.  ASHBURNER,  CHARLES.  A. 

Brief  description  of  the  anthracite  coal  fields  of  Pennsyl- 
vania. Philadelphia,  1884.  32p. 

"Paper  read  before  the  Engineers'  Club  of  Philadelphia." 

2439.  ASHBURNER,  CHARLES  A. 

Coal  production  in  Utah,  1886.  AIME.  Transactions  16: 
.356-59  1887/88. 

.      2440.     ASHBURNER,  CHARLES  A. 

The  development  and  statistics  of  the  Alabama  coal  fields 
for  1887.  AIME.  Transactions  17:  206-226  1888/89. 


285 


2441.  ASHLEY,  GEORGE  H. 

The  eastern  interior  coal  field.  In  USGS.  22nd  Annual  Re- 
port pt.  3  pp.  265-305  1902. 

2442.  ASHLEY,  GEORGE  H. 

Rhode  Island  coal.  Washington.  1915.  62p.  (USGS  Bul- 
letin 615). 

2443.  BACHE,  FRANKLIN 

Arkansas-Indian  Territory  coal  fields.  Engintering  &  Min- 
ing Journal  76:  390-92  1903. 

2444.  BAIN,  H.  F. 

The  western  interior  coal  field.  In  USGS.  22nd  Annual  Re- 
port pt.  3  pp.  333-66  1902. 

2445.  BARLOW,  JAMES  A. 

Coal  and  coal  mining  in  West  Virginia.  Morgantown:  West 
Virginia  Geological  Survey,  1974.  63p.  ( W.  Va.  Geological 
Survey.  Coal-Geology  Bulletin  no.  2). 

A  general  account  intended  for  the  layman.  Includes  information 
ranging  from  the  geology  of  coal  to  production  statistics. 

2446.  BARNES,  FARRELL  F. 

Coal  resources  of  Alaska.  Washington:  GPO,  1967.  36p. 
(USGS  Bulletin  1242B). 

2447.  BAUER,  FREDERICK  L. 

Earning  in  bituminous  coal  mines,  November  1962.  MLR 
86:  1153-56  1963. 

2448.  BELL,  ISAAC  L. 

Notes  on  a  visit  to  coal  and  iron  mines  and  iron  works  in 
the  United  States.  Newcastle-on-Tyne,  1875.  66p. 

2449.  BEMENT,  A. 

Illinois  coal:  a  non-technical  account  of  its  occurrence,  pro- 
duction and  preparation.  Urbana,  1929.  112p.  (Illinois 
Geological  Survey.  Bulletin  56 ) . 

2450.  BOTT,  MATTHIAS  W. 

Some  aspects  of  the  coal  mining  industry  in  Monongalia 
County,  West  Virginia.  Thesis.  West  Virginia  University. 
1949. 

2451.  BRADY,  S.  DUNLAP 

A  new  West  Virginia  coal  field.  Mining  Congress  Journal 
Mr  1944  24-28. 

286 


2452.     BREWER,  W.  M. 

The  Coosa  coal  field  in  Alabama.  Engineering  &  Mining 
Journal  56:  7-8  1893. 

.     2453.     BRINSMADE.  R.  B. 

Mining  coal  at  Morgan  town.  West  Virginia.  Engineering 
&  Mining  Journal  92:  414-16  1911. 

2454.     BROOKS,  ALFRED  H. 

The  coal  resources  of  Alaska.  In  USGS.  22nd  Annual  Re- 
port pt.  3  pp.  515-71  1902. 

2455      BROOKS,  ALFRED  H. 

Geography  in  the  development  of  Alaska  coal  deposits.  As- 
sociation of  American  Geographers.  Annals  1:  85-94  1911. 

2456.  BROOKS,  ALFRED  H. 

The  outlook  for  coal  mining  in  Alaska.  AIME.  Trans- 
actions 26:  489-507  1905. 

2457.  BROWN,  GEORGE  M. 

The  McAlester  coal  field  in  Oklahoma.  Coal  Age  4:  153- 
55  1913. 

2458.  BROWN,  ROBERT 

On  the  geographical  distribution  and  physical  character- 
istics of  the  coal  fields  of  the  north  Pacific  coast.  Edin- 
burgh Geological  Society.  Transactions  1:  305-25  1870. 

2459.  BUCK,  STUART  M. 

Coal  mining  in  the  Kanawha  Valley  of  West  Virginia.  In 
Mineral  Resources  of  the  United  States,  1883-84.  Washing- 
ton: GPO,  1885.  pp.  131-43. 

2460.  BURKE,  J.  w. 

Mobile-the  great  coal  port  of  the  future:  the  coal  fields  of 
Alabama  and  the  Great  Warrior  Basin,  n.p.,  [1885].  32p. 

2461.  BURROUGHS,  WILBUR  G. 

The  geography  of  the  western  Kentucky  coal  field.  Frank- 
fort: Kentucky  Geological  Survey,  1924.  211p. 

2462.  BUSH,  B.  F. 

The  coal  fields  of  Missouri.  AIME.  Transactions  25:  903- 
17  1904. 


287 


2463.  CAMPBELL,  M.  R.  AND  K.  W.  KEMBALL 

The  Deep  River  coal  field  of  North  Carolina.  Chapel  Hill, 
1923.  95p.  ( North  Carolina  Geological  &  Economic  Survey 

No.  33). 

2464.  CARDIFF  COAL  AND  IRON  COMPANY   ( CARDIFF,  TENN.  ) 

The  town  of  Cardiff,  and  lands  and  mines  of  the  company 
in  Roane,  Cumberland  and  Morgan  counties.  Boston,  1890. 
23p. 

2465.  CARMIN,  ROBERT  M. 

Coal  mining  industry  of  Guernsey  County,  Ohio.  Econ- 
omic Geography  19:  292-300  1943. 

2466.  CHANCE,  HENRY  M. 

Report  on  an  exploration  of  the  coal  fields  of  North  Car- 
olina. Raleigh:  P.  M.  Hale,  1885.  66p. 

2467.  CLAGHORN,  CLARENCE  R. 

Notes  on  the  Bernice  anthracite  coal  basin,  Sullivan  Coun- 
ty, Pennsylvania.  AIME.  Transactions  17:  606-16  1888/89. 

2468.  CLEARFIELD   (  PENNSYLVANIA  )   COAL  REGION 

Black  Diamond  6:  60-61  1890/91. 

Includes  an  account  of  the  coal  companies  active  in  the  area. 

2469.  COAL  MINES  OF  UTAH  AND  WYOMING 

Coal  2:  19-20  1883. 

2470.  COLLIER,  ARTHUR  J. 

The  Arkansas  coal  field.  Washington:  GPO,  1907.  158p. 
(USGS.  Bulletin  326). 

2471.  COLLIER,  ARTHUR  J. 

Coal  resources  of  the  Yukon.  Washington:  GPO,  1903.  71p. 
(USGS.  Bulletin  218). 

2472.  COLLIER,  ARTHUR  J. 

Geology  and  coal  resources  of  the  Cape  Lisburn  region, 
Alaska.  Washington:  GPO,  1906.  54p.  (USGS.  Bulletin 
278). 

2473.  COLTON,  HENRY 

The  Upper  Measure  coal  field  of  Tennessee.  AIME.  Trans- 
actions 14:  292-305  1885/86. 


288 


2474.  CRANE,  W.  R. 

Coal  mining  in  Arkansas.  Engineering  &  Mining  Journal 
80:  774-77  1905. 

2475.  CRANE,  W.  R. 

Coal  mining  in  the  Indian  Territory.  Engineering  &  Min- 
ing Journal  81:  658-60  1906. 

2476.  CRANE,  W.  R. 

Coal   mining   in   the   Indian   Territory— the  southwestern 
field.  Engineering  &  Mining  Journal  76:  577-81  1903. 

2477.  CRANE,  w.  R. 

Coal  resources  of  Alaska.  American  Mining  Congress.  Pro- 
ceedings 16:  192-205  1913. 

2478.  CRANE,  W.  R. 

The  Kansas  coal  mines  of  the  Mississippi  Valley.  Engineer- 
ing &  Mining  Journal  74:  514-16  1902. 

2479.  CRANE,  W.  R. 

Kansas  coal  mining.  Engineering   &   Mining  Journal  72: 
748-52  1901. 

2480.  CRANE,  W.  R. 

The  Pratt  coal  mines  in  Alabama.  Engineering  &  Mining 
Journal  79:  177-80  1905. 

2481.  DALSTED,  NORMAN  L.  AND  F.  L.  LFJSTRITZ 

North  Dakota  coal  resources  and  development  potential 
North  Dakota  Farm  Research  Jl/Ag  1974  3-11. 

2482.  DILWORTH,  J.  B. 

The    Black    Mountain    coal    district,    Kentucky.    AIME. 
Transactions  43:  129-56  1912. 

2483.  d'invilliers,  e.  v. 

Report  on  the  property  of  the  Coal  River  Land  Company 
(Logan  &  Boone  counties,  West  Virginia),  n.p.,  1910.  20p. 

Includes  information  on  mining  costs,  markets,  etc. 

2484.  DOERR,   ARTHUR 

Coal   mining  and  changing  land  patterns  in   Oklahoma. 
Land  Economics.  38:  51-56  1962. 


289 


2485.  DOERR,  ARTHUR 

Coal  mining  and  landscape  modification  in  Oklahoma. 
Norman:  University  of  Oklahoma.  1961.  48p.  (Oklahoma 
Geological  Survey.  Circular  54). 

2486.  DOERR,  ARTHUR 

Geography  of  the  coal  industry  of  Williamson  and  Grank- 
lin  counties,  Illinois.  Thesis.  Indiana  University.  1948. 

2487.  DOERR,  ARTHUR  AND  LEE  GUERNSEY 

Man  as  a  geomorphological  agent:  the  example  of  coal 
mining.  Association  of  American  Geographers.  Annals  46: 
197-210  1956. 

Account  of  the  effects  of  coal  mining  on  the  physical  landscape. 

2488.  DOERR,  ARTHUR 

Williamson  and  Franklin  counties:  coal  counties  of  south- 
ern Illinois.  Journal  of  Geography  49:  193-200  1950. 

2489.  EASTON,  H.  D. 

The  cannel  coal  fields  in  Kentucky.  Coal  Age  2:  454-56 
1912. 

2490.  EDWARDS,  WILLIAM  S. 

Coal  and  coke  in  West  Virginia.  Cincinnati:  R.  Clarke, 
1892.  162p. 

Covers  the  southern  West  Virginia  fields  only. 

2491.  EVANS,  GEORGE  W. 

Alaskan  coal  fields.  AIME.  Transactions  66:  286-98  1921. 

2492.  EVANS,  GEORGE  W. 

Coal  mining  problems  in  the  State  of  Washington.  Wash- 
ington: GPO,  1924.  19p.  (U.  S.  Bureau  of  Mines.  Bulletin 
190). 

2493.  FENNEMAN,  N.  M.  AND  HOYT  S.  GALE 

The  Yampa  coal  field,  Routt  County,  Colorado.  Washing- 
ton: GPO,  1906.  96p.  (USGS.  Bulletin  297). 

2494.  FISHER,  WALTER  L. 

Alaska  coal  problems.  Washington:  GPO,  1912.  (U.  S.  Bur- 
eau of  Mines.  Bulletin  36). 

2495.  FLORANCE,  J.  E. 

Alaskan  coal  fields;  their  possibilities  and  their  plight. 
Engineering  Magazine  46:  881-90  1913/14. 

290 


2496.  FOWLER,  GEORGE  L. 

Coals  and  coal  mining  methods  of  the  Pocahontas  field. 
Engineering  Magazine  27:  217-32  1904. 

2497.  FULTON,  JOHN 

Coal  mining  in  the  Connellsville  coke  region  of  Pennsyl- 
vania. AIME.  Transactions  13:  330-41  1884/85. 

2498.  GALE,  HOYT  S. 

Coal  fields  of  northeastern  Utah.  Washington:  GPO, 
1910.  265p.  (USGS.  Bulletin  265). 

2499.  GASPER,  DONALD 

A  geographic  analysis  of  bituminous  coal  mining  in  Jeffer- 
son County,  Pennsylvania.  Thesis.  Penn  State  College. 
1951. 

2500.  GIBSON,  A.  M. 

The  coal  measures  of  Blount  Mountain  ( Alabama ) .  Mont- 
gomery: Brown  Printing  Co.,  1893.  80p.  (Alabama  Geo- 
logical Survey.  Special  Report  No.  5). 

"More  coal  had  been  developed  in  one  season  by  the  Geological 
Survey  than  had  been  done  by  all  preceding  prospectors." 

2501.  GIBSON,  A.  M. 

The  Coosa  coal  field  (Alabama).  Montgomery:  Roemer 
Printing  Co.,  1895,  143p.  (Alabama  Geological  Survey. 
Special  Report  No.  7). 

"The  Geological  Survey  is,  at  this  time,  the  only  agency  at  work 
for  the  development  of  this  coal  field." 

2502.  GLENN,  L.  C. 

Coal  resources  of  the  south.  Southern  Commercial  Con- 
gress. Proceedings  1908  256-65. 

2503.  GOODYEAR,  WATSON  A. 

Coal  mines  of  the  western  coast  of  the  United  States.  San 
Francisco:  A.  L.  Bancroft,  1877.  153p. 

2504.  GREEN,  STEPHEN  H. 

Coal  and  coal  mining  in  Washington.  Olympia,  1947.  41p. 
(Washington.  Dept.  of  Conservation  &  Development.  Divi- 
sion of  Mines  &  Geology.  Report  of  Investigations  4R ) . 

2505.  GRIESS,  P.  R.  AND  G.  F.  DEASY 

Some  regional  differences  in  the  decline  of  Pennsylvania's 
anthracite  industry  and  their  implications  in  area  develop- 
ment. Pennsylvania  Academy  of  Science.  Proceedings  36: 
247-54  1962. 

291 


2506.  GRIFFITH,  W.  T. 

Big  Sandy  coal  fields,  Kentucky.  Engineering  &  Mining 
Journal  92:  508-10  1911. 

2507.  HALE,  PETER  M. 

In  the  coal  and  iron  counties  of  North  Carolina.  Raleigh, 
1883.  425p. 

2508.  HALL,  R.  D. 

The  Fairmont,  West  Virginia  coal  region.  Coal  Age  1:  138- 
43  1911/12. 

2509.  HALL,  R.  D. 

Georges  Creek  coalfield,  Maryland.  Coal  Age  1:  10-14 
1911/12. 

2510.  HANES,  J.  E.  AND  FLOYD  W.  PARSONS 

Coal  mining  in  Colorado.  Engineering  &  Mining  Journal 
82:  793-95  1906. 

J     2511.     HAUGHT,  OSCAR  L. 

Coal  and  coal  mining  in  West  Virginia.  Morgantown: 
West  Virginia  Geological  and  Economic  Survey,  1964. 
38p. 

/'        2512.     HAYES,  CHARLES  W. 

The  coal  fields  of  the  United  States.  Jn  USGS.  22nd  An- 
nual Report  pt.  3:  7-24  1902. 

2513.  HAYES,  CHARLES  W. 

The  Southern  Appalachian  coal  field.  In  USGS.  22nd  An- 
nual Report  pt.  227-63  1902. 

2514.  HEWITT,  G.  C. 

The  northwestern  Colorado  coal  region.  AIME.  Trans- 
actions 17:  375-80  1888/89. 

2515.  HILL,  F.  A. 

Coal  mining  in  Washington.  AIME.  Transactions  61:  371- 
74  1918. 

2516.  HODGE,  JAMES  M. 

The  Big  Stone  Gap  coal  field.  AIME.  Transactions  21:  922- 
38  1892/93. 

2517.  HOLMES,  CHARLES 

Coal  mining  in  Michigan.  Mines  &  Minerals  20:  59-62 
1899/1900.  292, 


2518.  HOSEA,  R.   M. 

Anthracite  coal  mining  in  Colorado.  Engineering  &  Mining 
Journal  82:  399-401  1906. 

2519.  HOTCHKISS,  JEDEDIAH 

Report  on  the  property  of  the  Cabin  Creek  and  Coal  River 
Land  Association.  Staunton,  Virginia,  1866,  8p. 

2520.  HUGHES,  GEORGE  W. 

Report  of  an  examination  of  the  coal  measures,  including 
the  iron  ore  deposits,  belonging  to  the  Maryland  Mining 
Company,  in  Allegany  County;  and  a  survey  for  railroad 
from  the  mines  to  the  Chesapeake  and  Ohio  Canal,  at 
Cumberland  .  .  .  Together  with  the  memorial  to  the  Legis- 
lature of  Maryland,  and  other  documents.  Washington: 
National  Intelligencer  Office,  1836.  78p. 

2521.  HUNT,  T.  S. 

Coal  and  iron  in  Alabama.  Coal  2:  66-68  1883. 

2522.  HUNT,  T.  s. 

Coal  and  iron  in  southern  Ohio.  Boston:  Cassino,  1881. 
152p. 

2523.  HUNT,  T.  s. 

Coal  and  iron  of  southern  Ohio  considered  with  relation  to 
the  Hocking  Valley  coal  field  .  .  .  followed  by  a  view  of 
the  coal  trade  of  the  West.  Salem,  Massachusetts:  Natur- 
alist's Agency,  1874.  78p. 

2524.  JACKSON  COUNTY,  OHIO  COAL  FIELD 

Black  Diamond  6:  17-18  1890/91. 

2525.  JARRETT,  F.  G. 

Coal  mining  in  Carbonado,  Washington.  Coal  Age  14:  308- 
12  1918. 

2526.  JOHNSON,  JASPER 

The  Wilmington,  Illinois  coal  field.  AIME.  Transactions 
3:  188-202  1874/75. 

2527.  JOHNSON,   WALTER  J. 

The  coal  industry  in  northern  Wyoming  and  the  State  of 
Montana.  Mining  Engineering  5:  1262-71  1953. 


293 


V 


2528.  KEIGHLEY,  F.  C. 

The  Connellsville  Coke  region.  Engineering,  Magazine  20: 
17-40  1901. 

2529.  KILLEBREW,  JOSEPH 

Iron  and  coal  of  Tennessee.  Nashville,  1881.  220p. 

2530.  KILLEBREW,  JOSEPH 

Special  report  on  the  coalfield  of  Little  Sequatchee,  with 
a  general  description  of  the  Cumberland  table-land.  Nash- 
ville, 1876.  40p. 

2531.  KIMBALL,  JAMES  P. 

The  Quemahoning  coalfields  of  Somerset  County,  Pennsyl- 
vania. AIME.  Transactions  12:  468-96  1883/84. 

2532.  KOENIG,  GEORGE  A.  AND  OTHERS 

Expert  reports  on  the  mineral  properties  of  the  East  Ten- 
nessee Land  Company.  New  York:  South  Publishing  Co., 
1891.  44p. 

2533.  KUHN,  H.  A. 

The  Pittsburgh  coal  fields  in  Western  Pennsylvania.  AIME. 
Transactions  50:  640-57  1914. 

2534.  LANE,  ALFRED  C. 

Coal  in  lower  Michigan.  Saginaw,  1899.  36p. 

2535.  LANE,  ALFRED  C. 

The  northern  interior  coal  fields.  In  USGS.  22nd  Annual 
Report  pt.  3  pp  307-31  1902. 

2536.  LEWIS,  ROBERT  S. 

The  Book  Cliffs  coal  field,  Utah.  AIME.  Transactions  50: 
658-78  1914. 

Includes  account  of  companies  active  in  the  field. 

2537.  LUTHER,  EDWARD  T. 

The  Coal  industry  of  Tennessee.  Nashville:  State  Depart- 
ment of  Conservation  &  Commerce.  Division  of  Geology, 
1960.  58p.  (Its  Information  Circular  No.  10). 

2538.  LUTHER,  EDWARD  T. 

The  coal  reserves  of  Tennessee.  Nashville:  State  Depart- 
ment of  Conservation  and  Commerce.  Division  of  Geo- 
logy. 1959.  294p.  (Its  Bulletin  63). 

294 


J 


j 


2539.  MC  CALLEY,  HENRY 

Coal  measures  of  the  Plateau  Region  of  Alabama;  includ- 
ing a  report  on  the  coal  measures  of  Blount  County,  by 
A.  M.  Gibson.  Montgomery:  Smith,  Alfred  &  Co.,  1891. 
238p.  (Alabama  Geological  Survey.  Special  Report  No.  3). 

2540.  MC  CALLEY,  HENRY 

The  Warrior  coal  field  (Alabama).  Montgomery:  Bartlett 
&  Co.,  1886.  571p.  (Alabama  Geological  Survey.  Special 
Report  No.  1 ) . 

2541.  MAC  FARLANE,  JAMES 

The  coal  regions  of  America;  their  topography,  geology  and 
development.  New  York:  Appleton,  1873.  679p. 

2542.  MAC  FARLANE,  GRAHAM 

The  eastern  coal  regions  of  Kentucky.  AIME.  Transactions 
25:  518-32  1895. 

2543.  m'killop,  james 

Coal  and  American  coal  mining.  Airdrie:  Baird  &  Hamil- 
ton, 1876.  91p. 

"The  result  of  observations  made  by  me  during  a  visit  to  America  in 
1869." 

2544.  MARTIN,  G.  C. 

A  reconnaissance  of  the  Matanuska  coal  field,  Alaska. 
Washington:  GPO,  1906.  36p.  (USGS.  Bulletin  289). 

2545.  MAURY,  MATTHEW  F. 

The  resources  of  the  coal  field  of  the  Upper  Kanawha, 
with  a  sketch  of  the  iron  belt  of  Virginia,  setting  forth 
some  of  the  markets  and  means  of  development.  Baltimore: 
Sherwood.  1873.  44p. 

2546.  MAURY,  RICHARD  L. 

Report  on  the  lands  on  the  Old  Dominion  Coal  Company, 
and  the  Kanawha  Coal  Company,  in  the  Kanawha  Valley, 
W.  V.  Richmond:  Clemmitt  &  Jones,  1872.  24p. 

2547.  MELL,  P.  H. 

The  coal  and  iron  interests  of  Alabama.  Coal  1:  389-91 
1882. 

2548.  MILLER,  B.  L. 

The  tertiary  coal  fields  of  the  Rio  Grande.  Coal  Age  4: 
260-63  1913. 


295 


2549.  MILLER,  E.  WILLARD 

Connellsville  beehive  coke  region,   a  declining  mineral 
economy.  Economic  Geography  29:  144-58  1953. 

2550.  MURPHY,  RAYMOND  AND  MARION 

Anthracite  region  of  Pennsylvania.  Economic  Geography 
14:  338-48  1938. 

2551.  NELSON,  WILBUR  A. 

The  southern  Tennessee  coal  field.  Nashville:  Tennessee. 
Division  of  Geology,  1925.  239p.  (Its  Bulletin  33-A). 

2552.  NORTHERN  WEST  VIRGINIA  COAL  OPERATORS  ASSOCIATION 

The  coal  industry  of  the  State  of  West  Virginia.  Fairmont, 
W.  Va.,  1923.  64p. 

2553.  NORTON,  R.  HENRY 

Notes  on  coal  mining  in  Oregon.  AIME.  Transactions  19: 
23-28  1890/91. 

2554.  OHIO.  MINING  COMMISSION,   1871 

Report.  Columbus:  Nevins  &  Myers.  1872.  199p. 

2554a.  OLiN,  h.  l. 

Coal  mining  in  Iowa.  Des  Moines:  State  Mining  Board, 
1965.  96p. 

2555.  PARSONS,  FLOYD  W. 

The  coal  mines  of  southern  Wyoming.  Engineering  &  Min- 
ing Journal  85:  118-20  1908. 

2556.  PARSONS,  FLOYD  W. 

Coal  mining  in  southern  West  Virginia.  Engineering  and 
Mining  Journal  84:  881-85  1907. 

2557.  PARSONS,  FLOYD  W. 

Coal  mining  in  the  Fairmont  Field,  West  Virginia.  Engi- 
neering &  Mining  Journal  82:  1018-20,  1070-74  1906. 

2558.  PARSONS,  FLOYD  W. 

The  coal  mining  situation  in  northern  Wyoming.  Engineer- 
ing and  Mining  Journal  84:  930-35  1907. 

2559.  PARSONS,  FLOYD  W. 

Mining  coal  on  the  Virginian  Railroad.  Coal  Age  1:  1089- 
43  1911/12. 


296 


2560.  PARSONS,  FLOYD  W. 

Mining  in  the  George's  Creek  coal  field.  Engineering  & 
Mining  Journal  82:  687-91  1906. 

2561.  PARSONS,  FLOYD  W. 

Montana's  great  coal  fields  and  its  collieries.  Engineering 
and  Mining  Journal  84:  978-81  1907. 

2562.  PAYNE,  HENRY  M. 

Future  of  the  Williamson  and  the  Tug  River  coal  field. 
Illustrated  Monthly  West  Virginian  Ag  1908  45-49. 

2563.  PAYNE,  HENRY  M. 

Mining  coal  in  Texas.  Engineering  &  Mining  Journal  91: 
626-27  1911. 

2564.  PECK,  W.  R.  AND  R.  J.  SAMPSON 

The  Harlan  coal  field  in  Kentucky.  Coal  Age  3:  796-800 
1913. 

2565.  peck,  w.  r. 

The  pocket  coal  field  of  Lee  County,  Virginia.  Coal  Age 
5:  761-3  1914. 

2566.  PELTIER,  M.  F. 

Coal  mining  in  northern  Wyoming.  Coal  Age  10:  832-34 
1916. 

2567.  PIERCE,  R.  A. 

The  lignite  fields  of  Colorado.  Coal  Age  1:  534-38  1911/12. 

2568.  PULTZ,  JOHN  L. 

The  Big  Stone  Gap  coal  field  of  Virginia  and  Kentucky. 
Engineering  Magazine  28:  71-85  1904/5. 

2569.  RAMSEY,  E. 

The  Pratt  mines  of  the  Tennessee  Coal,  Iron  and  Railroad 
Company,  Alabama.  AIME.  Transactions  19:  296-313 
1890/91. 

2570.  RANDOLPH,  BEVERLEY  S. 

Seaboard  coal  regions  along  the  Baltimore  &  Ohio  Rail- 
road. Mining  Magazine  11:  229-32  1905. 

The  area  about  Fairmont,  West  Virginia. 


297 


2571.  REYNOLDS,  W.  C. 

Report  on  the  Coal  River  coal  field  (West  Virginia) 
Charleston,  1897.  lip. 

Made  for  the  proposed  Coal  River  Railroad  Co. 

2572.  RICHARDSON,  G.  B. 

Reconnaissance  of  the  Book  Cliffs  coal  field,  between 
Grand  River,  Colorado  and  Sunnyside,  Utah.  Washington: 
GPO,  1909.  54p.  (USGS.  Bulletin  371). 

Pp.  47-51  on  market  and  development. 

2573.  ROBINSON,  NEIL 

The  Kanawha  and  New  River  coal  fields  of  West  Virginia. 
Charleston,  1904.  23p. 

2574.  ROCKWELL,  CLEVELAND 

The  Coos  Bay  coal  fields  ( Oregon ) .  Engineering  &  Mining 
Journal  73:  238-40,  270-71  1902. 

2575.  ROLLER,  ANNE  H. 

Wilkes-Barre:  an  anthracite  town.  Survey  55:  534-38  1926. 

2576.  rowe,  j.  p. 

The  coal  industry  of  Montana.  Engineering  &  Mining 
Journal  85:  1055-58  1908. 

2577.  rowe,  j.  p. 

The  Montana  coal  fields:  their  commercial  value.  Mining 
Magazine  11:  241-50  1905. 

2578.  ROY,  ANDREW 

Coal  mining  in  Ohio.  Ohio  Mining  Journal  2:  3-15  1883/84. 

2579.  ROY,  ANDREW 

The  Thacker  coal  field  of  West  Virginia.  Mines  &  Minerals 
19:  472  1898/99. 

Early  notice  of  the  opening  of  the  Williamson  Field. 
1    2580.     SAWARD,  FREDERICK 

The  coal  mines  of  Pennsylvania.  New  York:  Coal  Trade 
Journal,  1880.  72p. 

Gives  names  and  locations  of  mines,  amount  produced,  names  of 
operators,  etc. 

2581.     SCHAEFER,  CHARLES  B. 

The  coal  fields  of  Saginaw,  Mich.  Saginaw,  1898.  88p. 
298 


2582.  SCOTT,  ADDISON 

Coal  commerce  and  development  in  the  Great  Kanawha 
Valley.  Charleston:  Daily  Gazette,  1891.  9p.. 

A  plea  for  the  development  of  the  Great  Kanawha  River  in  order  to 
speed  the  development  of  the  adjacent  coal  fields. 

2583.  SHAW,  A.  H. 

The  Arkansas  semi-anthracite  field.  Coal  Age  2:   486-88 
.    1912. 

2584.  SHEAFER,  PETER  W. 

Report  on  Cahaba  Coal  Company's  lands,  Shelby,  Ala- 
bama. Pottsville,  Pa.  1880.  14p. 

2585.  SHERIDAN,  J.  E. 

The  coal  mines  and  plant  of  the  Stag  Canon  Fuel  Co., 
Dawson,  N.  M.  AIME.  Transactions  40:  354-81  1909. 

2586.  SHURICK,  A.  T. 

The  Diamondville  coal  field,  Wyoming.  Engineering  & 
Mining  Journal  85:  118-20  1908. 

2587.  SHURICK,  A.  T. 

The  Federal  Vallev  field  in  Ohio.  Coal  Age  1:  1236-38 
1911/12. 

2588.  SIMMONS,  JESSE 

The  Cambria  coal  fields  in  Wyoming.  Coal  Age  1:  766- 
68  1911/12. 

2589.  SIMMONS,  JESSE 

The  Sheridan,  Wyoming  coal  field.  Coal  Age  1:  866-68, 
932-34,  1911/12. 

2590.  SMITH,  GEORGE  O. 

The  coal  fields  of  the  Pacific  coast.  In  USGS.  22nd  Annual 
Report  pt.  3  pp  473-513  1902. 

2591.  SMITH,  THOMAS  G. 

Report  on  the  mineral  lands  and  resources  of  the  Alabama 
&  Chattanooga  Railroad  Company.  Troy,  New  vork:  Young 
&  Blake,  1871.  47p. 

2592.  SNOW  SHOE  COAL  FIELD 

Coal  1:  366  1882. 

Glowing  account  of  the  economic  future  of  the  area  ( Centre  Coun- 
ty, Pennsylvania). 

299 


2593.  SQUIRE,  JOSEPH 

The  Cahaba  coal  field  (Alabama).  Montgomery:  Brown 
Printing  Co.,  1890.  189p.  (Alabama  Geological  Survey. 
Special  Report  No.  2). 

2594.  STEBINGER,  EUGENE 

The  coal  fields  of  Montana.  AIME.  Transactions  46:  889- 
919  1913. 

2595.  STEEL,  ALVIN  A. 

Coal  mining  in  Arkansas.  Little  Rock:  Democrat  Printing, 
1910.  632p. 

Covers  all  aspects  of  the  industry,  both  economic  and  technical. 

2596.  STOEK,  H.  H. 

The  Pennsylvania  anthracite  coal  field.  In  USGS.  22nd  An- 
nual Report  pt.  3  pp  55-117  1902. 

2597.  STONE,  RALPH  W. 

Coal  resources  of  the  Russell  Fork  Basin  in  Kentucky  and 
Virginia.  Washington:  GPO,  1908.  127p.  (USGS.  Bulletin 

348). 

2598.  STORRS,  ARTHUR  H. 

The  anthracite  coal  fields  of  Pennsylvania.  Mining  Maga- 
zine 11:  211-21  1905. 

2599.  STORRS,  L.  s. 

The  Rocky  Mountain  coal  field.  In  USGS.  22nd  Annual  Re- 
port pt.  3  pp  415-71  1902. 

2600.  STOW,  AUDLEY  H. 

Mining  in  the  Pocahontas  field.  Coal  Age  3:  594-600  1913. 

2601.  TAFF,  JOSEPH  A. 

The  southwestern  coal  field.  In  USGS.  22nd  Annual  Re- 
port pt.  3  pp  367-413  1902. 

2602.  TENNESSEE.  BUREAU  OF  AGRICULTURE,  STATISTICS  AND  MINES 

Coal.  Report  of  Henry  E.  Colton  .  .  .  Nashville:  A.  B. 
Taval,  1883.  128p. 

2603.  TENNESSEE  COAL,  IRON  AND  RAILROAD  CO. 

Descriptions  of  plants  and  mines,  with  illustrations.  Birm- 
ingham, Alabama.  1900.  174p. 


300 


2604.  TENNESSEE  ENERGY  OFFICE 

Coal  in  Tennessee.  Nashville,  1975.  127p. 

2605.  THREE    DAYS    AMONG   THE   COAJL    MINES   OF   JACKSON    COUNTY, 
OHIO 

Black  Diamond  N  1,  1888  203-5. 

2606.  TOENGES,  ALBERT  L. 

Coal  development  in  Alaska.  Mining  Engineering.  1:  361- 
64  1949. 

2607.  TRINIDAD,  COLORADO:   THE  CENTER  OF  THE  LAS  ANIMAS  COAL 
FIELD 

Black  Diamond  Mr  1888  7-10. 

2608.  TWO  COUNTIES  MINE  COAL  THE  HARD  WAY 

Business  Week  S  12,  1953  90-94. 

Description  of  the  small  non-union  mines  in  Leslie  and  Clay  coun- 
ties Kentucky. 

2609.  VAUGHAN,  THOMAS  W. 

Reconnaissance  on  the  Rio  Grande  coal  fields  of  Texas. 
Washington:  GPO,  1900.  lOOp.  (USGS.  Bulletin  164). 

2610.  WATTS,  ALFRED  C. 

Coal  mining  in  Carbon  County,  Utah.  Coal  Age  3:  400-4 
1913. 

2611.  WEEKS,  JOSEPH  D. 

The  Elk  Garden  and  Upper  Potomac  coal  fields  of  West 
Virginia.  AIME.  Transactions  24:  351-64  1894. 

2612.  WELLMAN,  WALTER 

Fairmont  coal  region,  a  treatise;  by  Walter  Wellman  .  .  . 
[Chicago,  1902].  48p. 

Reprint  from  Chicago  Record-Herald. 

2613.  WETHERILL,  J.   PRICE 

An  outline  of  anthracite  coal  mining  in  Schuylkill  County, 
Pennsylvania.  AIME.  Transaction  5:  402-22  1876/77. 

2614.  WHITE,  DAVID  AND  OTHERS 

The  Northern  Appalachian  coal  field.  In  USGS.  22nd  An- 
nual Report  pt.  3  pp  119-225  1902. 


301 


2615.     WHITE,  I.  c. 

The  barren  zone  of  the  Northern  Appalachian  coal  field 
and  its  relation  to  Pittsburgh's  industries.  American  Min- 
ing Congress.  Proceedings  11:  166-76  1908. 

"If  this  waste  continues,  some  of  you  in  this  audience  will  see  the 
finish  in  the  northern  Appalachian  field  of  all  cheap  and  easily  won 
coal." 

-    2616.     WHITE,  I.  C.  AND  OTHERS 

The  Pittsburgh  coal  bed.  AIME.  Transactions  74:  481-506 
1926. 

2617.  WHITE,  I.  c. 

The  waste  of  our  fuel  resources.  [Morgantown,  W.  Va., 
1908].  31p. 

2618.  WHITESIDE,  F.  W. 

Central  coal  fields  in  Colorado.  Coal  Age  2:  2-5  1912. 

2619.  WHITESIDE,  F.  W. 

The  Trinidad  district  in  Colorado.  Coal  Age  1:  632-35, 
664-67  1911/12. 

2620.  WHITESIDE,  F.  W. 

The  Yampa  coal  field  of  Colorado.  Coal  Age  11:  654-57 
1917. 

2621.  WOLFE,  MARSHALL  L. 

Coal  mining  in  Bates  County.  Missouri.  Coal  2:  412-13 
1883. 

2622.  WOODWORTH,  JAY  B. 

The  Atlantic  Coast  triassic  coal  field.  In  USGS.  Annual  Re- 
port 22  pt.  3  pp  25-53  1902. 

2623.  YOUNG,  C.  M. 

The  coal  industry  of  Illinois.  AIME.  Transactions  57:  560- 
78  1917. 

2624.  ZIERER,  CLIFFORD  M. 

The  status  of  Scranton's  mining  industry.  Geographical 
Society  of  Philadelphia.  Bulletin  26:  11-28  1928. 


302 


WwceECwtem  and  Addenda 


2625.  ABOVEGROUND  SCHOOL  FOR  UNDERGROUND  WORKERS 

Coal  Age  Sept  1970  80-82. 

Account  of  training  program  for  new  miners  operated  by  Kerr-Mc- 
Gee. 

2626.  AGOR,  JOSEPH 

Bootleg  coal  industry.  American  Mercury  34:  416-21  1935. 
In  the  anthracite  region  of  Pennsylvania. 

2627.  ALDRIDGE,  M.  D. 

Analysis  of  communication  systems  in  coal  mines.  Morgan- 
town:  West  Virginia  University,  1973.  128p. 

2628.  ALFORD,  NEWELL  G. 

Analysis  of  bituminous  coal  mines  suspended  from  1923  to 
1932,  inclusive.  AIME.  Transactions  108:  476-88  1934. 

2629.  ANDROS,  STEPHEN  O. 

Coal  mining  in  Illinois.  Urbana:  University  of  Illinois. 
1915.  250p.  ( Illinois  Coal  Mining  Investigations  .  .  .  Bul- 
letin 13). 

,'2630.  ASHLEY,  GEORGE  H. 

Cannel  coal  in  the  United  States.  Washington:  GPO,  1918. 
127p.  (USGS.  Bulletin  659). 

2631.     AVERITT,  PAUL  AND  LORREDA  LOPEZ 

Bibliography  and  index  of  United  States  Geological  Sur- 
vey publications  relating  to  coal,  1882-1970.  Washington: 
GPO,  1972.  173p.  (USGS  Bulletin  1377). 

A  supplement  covering  the  period  1971-1974  compiled  by  Flora 
Walker  was  issued  as  USGS  Circular  709. 


303 


J 


2632.  AVERITT,  PAUL 

Coal  resources  of  the  United  States.  January  1,  1974. 
Washington:  GPO,  1975.  131p.  (USGS  Bulletin  1412). 

"A  summary  of  information  concerning  the  quantity  and  distribu- 
tion of  coal  in  the  United  States".  Supersedes  Bulletin  1275. 

2633.  BAGGE,  CARL  E. 

Coal,  an  overlooked  energy  source.  Washington:  National 
Coal  Association,  1972.  24p. 

2634.  BAGGE,  CARL  E. 

Coal:  energy  key  to  world  stability.  Vital  Speeches  Jl  1, 
1973  569-74. 

2635.  BAILEY,  CAROL 

Training  for  coal  miners  in  cooperation  with  the  public 
schools  of  Tennessee.  Thesis.  University  of  Tennessee. 
1952. 

2636.  BASS,  N.  WOOD  AND  OTHERS 

Standards  for  the  classification  of  public  coal  lands.  Wash- 
ington: GPO,  1970.  lOp.  (USGS  Circular  633 ) . 

2637.  BEEBE,  GILBERT  W. 

Differential  fertility  by  color  for  coal  miners  in  Logan 
County,  West  Virginia.  Milbank  Memorial  Fund  Quarterly 
19:  189-95  1941. 

2638.  BEMENT,  ALBURTO 

The  Peabody  atlas.  Shipping  mines  and  coal  railroads  in 
the  central  commercial  district  of  the  United  States.  Chi- 
cago: Peabody  Coal  Co.,  1906.  149p. 

2639.  BENDALL,  JOHN  W. 

A  study  of  the  Minnesota  multiphasic  personality  inven- 
tory and  its  use  in  identification  of  acceptable  mine  fore- 
men. Thesis.  West  Virginia  University.  1955. 

2640.  BOBICK,  THOMAS  G.  AND  DENNIS  A.  GIARDINO 

The  noise  environment  of  the  underground  coal  mine. 
Washington,  1976.  26p.  (U.  S.  Mining  Enforcement  and 
Safety  Administration.  Information  Report  1034). 

2641.  BOOTLEG  MINING  OF  ANTHRACITE 

MLR  45:  1323-26  1937. 


304 


2 


2642.  BORSODI,  WILLIAM 

Coal  advertising;  a  collection  of  selling  phrases,  descrip- 
tions and  illustrated  advertisements.  New  York:  Adverti- 
zers'  Cyclopedia  Company,  1910.  128p. 

2643.  BRITISH  COAL  MINING  PRODUCTIVITY  TEAM 

Coal;  report  of  a  productivity  team  respresenting  the  Brit- 
ish coal  mining  industry  which  visited  the  United  States 
of  America  in  1951.  London:  Anglo-American  Council  on 
Productivity.  1951.  107p. 

2644.  BURNESS,  H.  s. 

Socially  optimal  tax  policy  requirements  for  the  coal  in- 
dustry. Lexington:  University  of  Kentucky,  1975.  48p. 

2645.  CALDWELL,   WALTER 

Coal  company  scrip.  Fayetteville,  W.  Va.  1969.  81p. 

Contains  an  alphabetical  listing  of  coal  companies  which  issued 
scrip. 

2646.  CANADA.     COMMISSION     ON     CONSERVATION.     COMMITTEE     ON 
MINERALS 

Conservation  of  coal  in  Canada,  with  notes  on  the  prin- 
cipal coal  mines,  by  W.  J.  Dick.  Tororto:  Bryant  Press, 
1914.  212p. 

2647.  CANADA.  DEPARTMENT  OF  LABOUR 

Combines  Investigation  Act.  Investigation  into  an  alleged 
combined  in  the  importation  and  distribution  of  British 
anthracite  coal  in  Canada.  Ottawa,  1936.  223p. 

2648.  CANADA.  ROYAL  COMMISSION  ON  COAL 

Report  of  the  Royal  commission  on  coal,  1946.  Ottawa:  E. 
Clou  tier,  1947.  663p. 

2649.  CANADA.  ROYAL  COMMISSION  ON  COAL 

Report.  Ottawa,  1960.  127p. 

2650.  CANADA.     STATISTICS    CANADA.     MANUFACTURING    &    PRIMARY 
INDUSTRIES  DIVISION 

Coal  mines.  Mines  de  charbon.  Ottawa  1970. 

Continues  "Coal  Mining  Industry,"  issued  by  the  Bureau  of  Statis- 
tics. The  source  of  official  statistics  on  the  Canadian  coal  industry. 

2651.  CANNEL  COAL  COMES  INTO  USE  AS  A  SUBSTITUTE  FUEL 

Pennsylvania  Dept.  of  Internal  Affairs.  Monthly  Bulletin 
F  1943  9-11. 

305 


2652.  CASEY,  KATHRYN  P. 

Bituminous  coal  handbook;  Bituminous  coal  act  of  1937, 
rules  of  practice  and  procedure,  rules  and  regulations  for 
registration,  marketing  rules  and  regulations,  comptroller 
general's  decisions,  general  orders  and  schedules  of  dis- 
counts, statements,  opinions  and  rulings.  Albany:  M.  Ben- 
der &  Co.,  1942.  423p. 

2653.  CASSANO,  JAMES 

Mechanization  of  western  coal  mines.  Colorado  School  of 
Mines.  Quarterly  45  No.  2B  (1950)  13-25. 

2654.  CHANCE,  HENRY   M. 

The  available  tonnage  of  the  bituminous  coal  fields  of 
Pennsylvania.  AIME.  Transactions  10:  144-62  1881/82. 

2655.  CHICAGO  COAL  BOARD 

Black  Diamond  6:  760  1890/91. 

Account  of  formation. 

2656.  CLEGG,  HERMAN  D. 

The  evaluation  of  a  psychological  test  battery  as  a  selective 
device  for  foremen  in  the  mining  industry.  Thesis.  West 
Virginia  University.  1962. 

2657.  COAL  TRADE  ASSOCIATION  OF  INDIANA 

Coal  production  in  Indiana  by  rail-shipping  mines,  1926- 

1950,  classified  by  railroads,  showing  individual  mine  pro- 
duction, vein  of  coal,  and  type  of  operation.  Terre  Haute, 

1951.  37p. 

2658.  DADDOW,  SAMUEL  H. 

Coal,  iron  and  oil.  Pottsville  &  Philadelphia,  1866.  808p. 
"A  plain  and  popular  work  on  our  mines  and  mineral  resources". 

2659.  DA  VIES,  MATTHEW  J. 

The  care  of  mine  mules.  Coal  Age  1:  1021-22  1911/12. 

2660.  DEASY,  GEORGE  F.  AND  PHYLLIS  R.  GRIESS 

Geographical  significance  of  recent  changes  in  mining  in 
the  bituminous  coal  fields  of  Pennsylvania.  Economic 
Geography  33:  283-98  1957. 

2661.  DEJU,  RAUL  A. 

Extraction  of  minerals  and  energy:  today's  dilemma.  Ann 
Arbor:  Ann  Arbor  Science  Publishers,  1974.  301p. 

306 


Contains  .1  number  of  useful  articles  on  the  ecological,  economic 
and  social  aspects  of  coal  mining. 

2662.     DERZAV.    RAYMOND 

Hearing  conservation  for  the  mineral  industry.  Washing- 
ton: GPO,  1972.  42p.  (U.  S.  Bureau  of  Mines.  Information 
Circular  8564). 


2663.  DEVTNE,  EDWARD  T. 

Fact-finding  in  the  coal  industry.  Academy  of  Political 
Science.  Proceedings  13:  5-13  1928. 

It  is  in  the  interest  of  the  public  and  the  industry  itself  that  more 
information  be  developed  and  made  available. 

2664.  DISTRIBUTION    AND   USE   OF    BITUMINOUS   COAL   IN   COLUMBUS, 
OHIO 

Columbus:  Ohio  State  University,  1933.  43p.  (OSU.  Bur- 
eau of  Business  Research,  Special  Report  44). 

2665.  DOTSON,  JOHN  A. 

The  public  school  in  the  mining  industry.  Thesis.  Univer- 
sity of  Kentucky.  1931. 

2666.  DOWLING,  DONALDSON  B. 

Coal  fields  and  coal  resources  of  Canada.  Ottawa:  Govern- 
ment Printing  Bureau,  1915.  174p.  (Canada.  Geological 
Survey.  Memoir  59). 

2667.  DRYDEN,  IAN  G. 

Carbonization  and  hydrogenation  of  coal.  New  York:  Uni- 
ted Nations,  1973.  137p. 

2668.  DURRETT,  HAROLD  L. 

A  validation  study  of  a  psychological  test  battery  for  selec- 
tion of  Joy  ripper-type  continuous  miner  operators.  Thesis. 
West  Virginia  University  1960. 

2669.  EDMUNDS,  WILLIAM  E. 

Coal  resources  of  Pennsylvania:  total,  recoverable  and 
strippable.  Harrisburg,  1972.  40p.  (Topographic  and  Geo- 
logic Survey.  Information  Circular  72). 

2670.  EDWARDS,  R.  G.  AND  OTHERS 

Social,  economic,  and  environmental  impacts  of  coal  gasi- 
fication and  liquefaction  plants.  Lexington:  University  of 
Kentucky,  1976.  270p. 

Includes  a  useful  bibliography,  pages  235-65. 

307 


2671.  EGGLESTON,  RICHARD  C. 

Forestry  for  mining  companies.  West  Virginia  Coal  Min- 
ing Institute.  Proceedings  1911  270-88. 

2672.  ELDER,  JAMES  L.  AND  WAYNE  R.  KUBE 

Technology  and  use  of  lignite.  Washington:  GPO,  1966. 
124p.  (U.  S.  Bureau  of  Mines.  Information  Circular  8304). 

The  proceedings  of  one  of  a  series  of  conferences  on  the  utilization 
of  lignite  held  by  the  U.  S.  Bureau  of  Mines  and  the  University  of 
North  Dakota. 

2673.  EMERY,  JAMES  A. 

A  public  policy  for  the  coal  industry.  American  Mining 
Congress.  Proceedings  25:  99-105  1922. 

2674.  ESFANDIARY,  MARY  S. 

Coal  research  organizations;  their  activities  and  publica- 
tions. Washington:  GPO,  1961.  64p.  (U.  S.  Bureau  of  Min- 
es. Information  Circular  8008 ) . 

2675.  FERNOW,  B.  E. 

The  mining  industry  in  its  relation  to  forestry.  AIME. 
Transactions  17:  264-75  1888/89. 

2676.  FEY,  ARTHUR  W.   (CARL  CORLSEN,  PSEUD.) 

Buried  black  treasure;  the  story  of  Pennsylvania  anthracite. 
Bethlehem,  Pennsylvania,  1954.  112p. 

2677.  FLYNN,  ELIZABETH  G. 

Coal  miners  and  the  war.  New  York:  Workers  Library, 
1942.  15p. 

2678.  FORBES,  R.  D. 

Anthracite  region  discovers  its  "surface."  American  Forests 
50:  424-27  1944. 

Development  of  scientific  forestry  in  the  Pennsylvania  anthracite 
region. 

2679.  FORBES,  R.  D. 

Forests  and  jobs  in  the  anthracite  region  of  Pennsylvania. 
Journal  of  Forestry  39:  197-201  1941. 

2680.  foster,  j.  s. 

Taxpayers'  associations;  their  origin  and  how  they  have 
been  operated  in  the  anthracite  coal  region.  Mines  &  Min- 
erals 20:  345-47  1899/1900. 


308 


/ 


2681.  GAUCER,  A.   W. 

Coal  and  research— two  great  national  resources.  Coal  Uti- 
lization D  1952  23-33. 

2682.  GIBBS  AND  HILL,   IXC. 

Development  of  an  overall  economic/environmental  plan 
for  Monongahela  River  Basin.  New  York,  1974.  1  vol.  (Pre- 
pared for  the  Appalachian  Regional  Commission). 

2683.  GILBERT,  OSCAR  E.  AND  W.  E.  SMITH 

Bibliography  of  Alabama  coal.  University:  Geological  Sur- 
vey of  Alabama,  1972.  55p.  ( Circular  77 ) . 

2684.  GILBERTSON,  H.  S. 

Introducing  the  practical  man  to  modern  management. 
Ann.  Amer.  Acad.  119:  115-20  1925. 

Discusses  efforts  to  give  the  mine  foreman  a  broader  "company- 
wide"  viewpoint. 

2685.  GILLESPIE,  MARIE 

Coal  mining  taxes  in  Montana.  Montana  Business  Quar- 
terly. Winter  1974  23-26. 

2686.  GLASS,  GARY  B.  AND  RICHARD  W.  JONES 

Bibliography  of  Wyoming  coal.  Laramie:  Geological  Sur- 
vey of  Wyoming,  1974.  163p. 

2687.  GOODMAN,  GORDON  T.  AND  SHIRLEY  A.  BRAY 

Ecological  aspects  of  the  reclamation  of  derelict  and  dis- 
turbed land.  Norwich:  University  of  East  Anglia,  1975. 
351p. 

Over  500  items  in  this  annotated  bibliography  deals  with  the  effects 
of  coal  mining. 

2688.  GORDON,  RICHARD  L. 

Historical  trends  in  coal  utilization  and  supply.  University 
Park:  Pennsylvania  State  University,  1976.  vp. 

A  report  prepared  for  the  U.  S.  Bureau  of  Mines. 

2689.  GRAVITY  COAL  PIERS  AT  HOBOKEN 

Scientific  American  46:  226-27  1882. 

Contains  a  number  of  illustrations  of  the  methods  used  in  hand- 
ling "the  enormous  traffic  in  coal." 


309 


2690.  GREENE,  HOMER 

Coal  and  the  coal  mines.  Boston:  Houghton  Mifflin,  1889. 
246p. 

On  cover:  The  Riverside  Library  for  Young  People. 

2691.  HAAS,  FRANK 

Conservation  in  West  Virginia.  Coal  Age  2:  872-74  1912. 

The  coal  producers  operate  far  more  efficiently  and  with  less  waste 
than  the  coal  consumers. 

2691a.  HAMILTON,  PATRICK  A.  AND  OTHERS 

The  reserve  base  of  U.  S.  coals  by  sulfur  content:  the  Wes- 
tern states.  Washington:  GPO,  1975.  322p.  (U.S.  Bureau 
of  Mines.  Information  Circular  8693). 

2692.  HAMMOND,  ALLEN  L. 

Coal  research.  Science  Ag  20,  1976  655-67;  Ag  27,  1976 
750-53. 

2693.  HARDY,  CARROLL  F. 

The  position  of  coal— present  and  future.  Kentucky  Mining 
Institute.  Proceedings  11:  46  58  1952/53. 

2694.  HARDING,  G.  E. 

American  coal  production  and  use.  Economic  Geography 
22:  46-53  1946. 

2695.  HAUGHEE,  J.  W. 

The  dog  mines  of  Muskingum  County  (Ohio).  Ohio  Min- 
ing Journal  N  1890  93-95. 

Dogs  were  used  to  haul  coal  in  the  mines. 

2696.  HEDLIN,  MENZIES  &  ASSOCIATES 

Impact  of  the  coal  mining  operations  of  Kaiser  Besources 
Ltd.  on  the  Canadian  economy.  Vancouver:  Kaiser  Besour- 
ces, 1969.  97p. 

2697.  HEINRICH,  OSWALD  J. 

The  industrial  school  for  miners  and  mechanics  at  Drifton, 
Luzerne  County,  Pennsylvania.  AIME.  Transactions  9: 
390-95  1880/81. 

2698.  IIIBBS,  WILLIAM 

The  mining  foreman  and  his  duties.  Ohio  Mining  Journal 
1894  45-54. 


310 


2699.  HILEMAN,  DOUGLAS  H.  AND  OTHERS 

Coal  production  from  the  Uinta  region,  Colorado  and 
Utah:  cost  analysis  for  proposed  underground  mining  op- 
erations. Washington:  GPO,  1970.  44p.  (U.  S.  Bureau  of 
Mines.  Information  Circular  8497). 

2700.  HOGG,  E. 

Care  of  the  mine  mule.  Mines  &  Minerals  26:  149-51 
1905/6. 

2701.  HOLBROOK,  E.  A. 

Research  in  the  coal  mining  industry.  AIME.  Transactions 
63:  747-67  1920. 

2702.  HOLMES,  LESLIE  A. 

Variations  in  coal  tonnage  production  in  Illinois,  1900- 
1940.  Dissertation.  University  of  Illinois.  1942. 

2703.  HOWARD-SMITH,  I.  AND  G.  J.  WERNER 

Coal  conversion  technology.  Park  Ridge,  N.  J.:  Noyes 
Data  Corp.,  1976.  133p. 

2704.  HULL,  ARTHUR  M. 

Practical  plans  for  getting  new  business;  a  book  of  helpful 
hints  for  retail  coal  merchants.  Chicago,  1915.  156p. 

2705.  IMBACH,  THEODORE  F. 

Raising  mushrooms  in  a  coal  mine.  Coal  Age  8:  168-70 
1915. 

2706.  JOHNSON,  ALLEN  J. 

Anthracite  as  a  domestic  fuel.  AIME.  Transactions  108: 
.360-79  1934. 

2707.  JOHNSON,  ARTHUR  F. 

Coal  as  a  source  of  power  for  production  of  aluminum. 
Mining  Engineering  7:  358-63  1955. 

2707a.  jones,  charles  o. 

Clean  air;  the  policies  and  politics  of  pollution  control. 
Pittsburgh:  University  of  Pittsburgh  Press,  1975.  372p. 

2708.  KARASKA,  GERALD  J. 

The  pattern  of  settlements  in  the  southern  and  middle  an- 
thracite regions  of  Pennsylvania.  Dissertation.  Penn  State 
University.  1962.  250p. 

311 


2709.  KARP,  MICHAEL 

Why  is  coal  losing  its  share  of  the  home  heating  market  in 
Philadelphia.  Thesis.  University  of  Pennsylvania.  1960. 

2710.  KEMP,  JAMES  F. 

The  anthracite  situation  and  problem.  New  York,  1903. 
22p.  (Engineering  Company  of  America.  Bulletin  1). 

2711.  KENTUCKY  GEOLOGICAL  SURVEY 

Bibliography  of  coal  in  Kentucky.  Lexington:  Kentucky 
Geological  Survey,  1970.  73p.  (Series  X.  Special  Publica- 
tion 19). 

2712.  KENWORTHY,  WILMER  E. 

First  aid  to  soft  coal— then  a  major  operation.  ML&W  Ap 
1933  1-6. 

2713.  KURE,  WAYNE  R.  AND  JAMES  L.  ELDER 

Technology  and  use  of  lignite.  Washington:  GPO,  1972, 
145p.  (U.  S.  Bureau  of  Mines.  Information  Circular  8543). 

The  proceedings  of  a  conference  "Concerning  utilization  and  tech- 
nology of  Western  coals  and  lignites". 

2714.  LAKE  ERIE  HITUMINOUS  COAL  EXCHANGE 

Cleveland.  [1917].  29p. 

Booklet  gives  objectives,  regulations,  membership,  etc.,  of  the  Ex- 
change. 

2715.  LATHROP,  JOHN  E.  AND  GEORGE  K.  TURNER 

Billions  of  treasure.  McClurtfs  Magazine  34:  339-54  1909- 
10. 

Account  of  the  struggle  for  the  control  of  Alaskan  coal  lands. 
2715a.  LEISTRITZ,  F.  L.  AND  STANLEY  W.  VOELKER 

Coal  resource  ownership:  patters,  problems  and  suggested 
solutions.  Natural  Resources  Journal  15:  643-62  1975. 

2716.  LESHER,  C.  E. 

Is  the  coal  shortage  real  or  imaginary,  Coal  Age  18:  429- 
33  1920. 

2717.  LESLEY,  J.  P. 

Manual  of  coal  and  its  topography.  Philadelphia:  Lippin- 
cott,  1856.  224p. 

"Facts  in  the  geology  of  the  Appalachian  Region  of  the  United 
States  of  North  America." 

312 


2718.  LETCHER,  DUANE  A. 

Identification  and  structural  analysis  of  instructional  pro- 
grams for  the  underground  coal  miner  in  West  Virginia. 
Dissertation.  West  Virginia  University,  1975.  266p. 

2719.  LEzrus,  Walter  g. 

Geographic  aspects  of  coal  cargoes  from  Toledo.  Economic 
Geography  10:  374-81  1934. 

2720.  LONG,  STEPHEN  C. 

Coal  taxation  in  the  western  states:  the  need  for  a  regional 
tax  policy.  Natural  Resources  Journal  16:  415-42  1976. 

2721.  lord,  n.  w. 

Education  of  mining  engineers.  Ohio  Mining  Journal  b:  3 

1888  13-18. 

2722      LORD    N.  w. 

The  Department  of  Mining  of  the  State  University.  Ohio 
Mining  Journal  O  1888  13-17. 

Account  of  mining  education  at  OSU. 

2723.  MAC  CORKLE,  WILLIAM  A. 

Relation  of  West  Virginia  coals  to  the  Panama  Canal;  ad- 
dress before  the  West  Virginia  Coal  Mining  Institute  on 
the  relation  of  West  Virginia  coals  to  the  Panama  Canal. 
Delivered  at  Charleston,  West  Virginia  on  Dec.  8,  1913,  by 
William  A.  MacCorkle,  ex-governor  of  the  state  of  West 
Virginia.  Washington:  GPO,  1914.  16p.  (63rd  Cong.,  2d 
Sess.  Senate.  Document  484). 

2724.  MAC  FARLANE,  GRAHAM 

Notes  on  American  cannel  coal.  AIME.  Transactions  18: 
436-38  1889/90. 

2725.  MC  LEOD,  A.  A. 

The  coal  supply  and  the  Reading  leases.  Forum  13:  544- 
60  1892. 

2726.  MARLEY,  HAROLD  D. 

Coal  burden.  Social  Science  39:  102-6  1964. 

Miners  have  always  been  exploited;  strip  mining  also  exploits  the 
earth. 

2727.  MARSHALL,  J.  J. 

Method  of  mining  in  southern  West  Virginia.  Coal  Age  1: 
302-6  1911/12. 

313 


J 


2728.  MASON,  ARTHUR  J. 

Comments  of  an  ore  engineer  [on  the  bituminous  coal  in- 
dustry]. American  Economic  Association.  Papers  &  Pro- 
ceedings 11:  106-16  1921. 

2728a.  MATSON,  THOMAS  k.  and  dess  h.  white 

The  reserve  base  of  coal  for  underground  mining  in  the 
western  United  States.  Washington:  GPO.  1975.  238p. 
(U.  S.  Bureau  of  Mines.  Information  Circular  8678). 

2729.  METROPOLITAN  PRESS  AND  THE  COAL  COMBINE 

Colliery  Engineer  12:  228  1891/92. 

Editorial  complaint  about  the  "amazing  stupidity"  of  newspapers  in 
dealing  with  coal  news. 

2730.  MILLER,  ARNOLD 

Energy  crisis  as  a  coal  miner  sees  it.  Center  Magazine  Nov 
Dec  1973  35-45. 

2731.  MITCHELL,  JOHN 

Conservation  in  the  coal  industry.  American  Mining  Con- 
gress. Proceedings  11  pt.  2:  185-95  1908. 

2732.  MORROW,  j.  D.  A. 

History  of  the  development  of  underground  machines.  Ill- 
inois Mining  Institute.  Proceedings  70:  62-81  1962. 

2733.  MUMFORD,  JOHN  KIMBERLY 

Anthracite.  New  York:  Industries  Publishing  CO.  1925. 
150p. 

2734.  MUNROE,  HENRY  S. 

A  summer  school  of  practical  mining.  AIME.  Transactions 
9:  664-71  1880/81. 

For  students  at  the  School  of  Mines,  Columbia  University. 

2735.  MURPHY,   RAYMOND  AND  HUGH  E.   SPITTAL 

A  new  production  map  of  the  Appalachian  bituminous  coal 
region.  Association  of  American  Geographers.  Annals  34: 
164-72  1944. 

2736.  MURPHY,  RAYMOND  AND  HUGH  E.  SPITTAL 

Movements  of  the  center  of  coal  mining  in  the  Appalachian 
Plateaus.  Geographical  Review  35:  624-33  1945. 

2737.  NATIONAL  COAL  ASSOCIATION 

The  story  of  bituminous  coal.  Washington,  1937.  23p. 
314 


2738.  NATIONAL  GOAL  POLICY  CONFERENCE 

Coal  today;  a  basic  memorandum  about  America  s  essent- 
ial fuel.  Washington,  [1959].  9p. 

2739.  NATIONAL  COAL  POLICY  CONFERENCE 

Congress  speaks  ...  on  domestic  fuels,  oil  imports,  nation- 
al security.  Washington,  1962.  40p. 

2740  NATIONAL  INDUSTRIAL  CONFERENCE  BOARD 

Foreman  training  in  the  anthracite  industry.  New  York, 
1944.  24p.  (Studies  in  personnel  policy  66). 

2741  NELSON,  JON  P.  AND  GEORGE  R.  NEUMANN 

Labor  productivity  and  the  Coal  Mine  Health  and  Safety 
Act  of  1969.  State  College:  Pennsylvania  State  University, 
1975.  63p. 

2742.  NEWHARD,  I.  C. 

Care  of  mine  mules.  Mines  &  Minerals  28:  56-58  1907/8. 

2743.  NEW  JERSEY.  LEGISLATURE.  COAL  INVESTIGATING  COMMITTEE 

Intermediate  report  to  the  Legislature.  Trenton,  1922.  8p. 

2744.  NEW  PATTERN  FOR  RECRUITING 

Personnel  Journal  48:  293-294  1969. 

Describes  Eastern  Associated  Coal  Corp's  program  of  recruiting. 

2745.  NEW  RIVER  SITUATION 

Coal  &  Coke  My  1,  1904  14-15. 

Attack  on  the  mismanagement  and  inactivity  of  the  operators. 

2746  NEW  RIVER  AND  KANAWHA  OPERATORS  FORM  NEW  COMPANY 

Coal  &  Coke  Ja  11,  1901  13-14. 
The  New  River  &  Kanawha  Coal  Co. 

2747  NEW  YORK  AND  RICHMOND  COAL  COMPANY 

Charter  and  by-laws.  New  York:  Pruden  &  Martin's  Steam 
Print,  1857.  19p. 

2748.     NOLD,  H.  E. 

Uses  of  coal  in  the  ceramic  industry.  AIME.  Transactions 
108:  380-99  1934. 


315 


2749.  NOLDEN,  CAROL 

Coal  R&D  demands  greater  industry  involvement.  Coal 
Mining  &  Processing  Ja  1976  52-56. 

The  coal  industry  should  play  a  greater  role  in  the  expenditure  of 
federal  R&D  funds  for  coal  research. 

2750.  OLIN,  H.  L. 

Some  aspects  of  the  Iowa  coal  problem.  Iowa  Geological 
Survey.  Technical  Paper  2:  3-8  1930. 

Analysis  of  the  decline  of  Iowa  coal  production. 

2751.  OUTLOOK  AND  RESEARCH  POSSIBILITIES  FOR  BITUMINOUS  COAL 

Washington.  1956.  52p.  (U.S.  Bureau  of  Mines.  Informa- 
tion Circular  7754 ) . 

2752.  PARKER,  EDWARD  W. 

Coal  briquetting  in  the  United  States.  AIME.  Transactions 
38:  581-620  1907. 

Appeared   also   in   slightly   different   form    in    Bulletin   316   of   the 
USGS,  pp  460-85. 

2753.  PATTON,  JAMES  L. 

Vocational  education  in  coal  mining.  Kentuclo   Mining  In- 
stitute. Proceedings  6:  9-35  1945/46. 

Selected  high  schools  in  the  coal  regions  should  include  vocational 
training  in  mining. 

2754.  PENSE,  RONALD  A. 

The  Bureau  of  Mines  restoration  work  in  Appalachia.  Ap- 
palachia  Feb  1971  18-20. 

2755.  POLZIN,  PAUL  E. 

Water  use  and  coal  development  in  eastern  Montana.  Mon- 
tana Business  Quarterly  Autumn  1974  5-35. 

2756.  POPE,  GEORGE  S. 

The  purchase  of  coal  by  the  Government  under  specifica- 
tions. Washington:  GPO,  1910.  (USGS.  Bulletin  428). 

2757.  PRESTON,  DENNIS  R. 

Bituminous  coal  mining  vocabulary  of  the  eastern  United 
States.  Dissertation.  University  of  Wisconsin,  1969.  209p. 

2758.  PROPOSAL  FOR  INCORPORATING  THE  BEN  LOMAND  COAL  CO. 

Richmond:  T.  W.  White,  1837.  38p. 


316 


2759.  RAY,  FRANK  A. 

The  Ohio  coal  supply  and  its  exhaustion.  Columbus  1914. 
46p.  (Ohio  State  University.  College  of  Engineering.  Bul- 
letin 12). 

2760.  REITH,  JOHN  W. 

Coal  supply  of  Milwaukee,  Wisconsin.  Journal  of  Geo- 
graphy  48:  71-77  1949. 

2761.  REITH,  JOHN  W. 

The  decline  of  coal  mining  in  the  Danville  district,  Illinois; 
its  causes  and  effects.  Dissertation.  Northwestern  Univer- 
sity. 1950. 

2762.  RESERVE  RASE  OF  RITUMINOUS  COAL  AND  ANTHRACITE  FOR  UN- 
DERGROUND MINING  IN  THE  EASTERN  UNITED  STATES 

Washington:  GPO,  1974.  428p.  (U.  S.  Bureau  of  Mines. 
Information  Circular  8655). 

"The  coal  reserve  base  is  defined  for  coalbeds  having  sufficient 
thickness  for  underground  mining  within  a  depth  range  compatible 
with  economic  recovery". 

2763.  RHODES,  REN 

Appalachian  coal  companies  grow  timber  as  a  crop.  Min* 
ing  Congress  Journal  Ja  1953  27-30. 

2764.  RICE,  GEORGE  S. 

Stabilize  industry,  conserve  coal,  and  protect  miners. 
American  Labor  Legislation  Review  30:  109-13  1940. 

2765.  ROGERS,  h.  o. 

Saving  the  coal  industry.  Survey  Graphic  26:  326-29  1937. 

2766.  ROPIEQUET,  R.  W. 

Difficulties  I  have  met  in  coal  litigation.  American  Mining 
Congress.  Proceedings  19:  354-60  1916. 

Lack  of  organization,  cooperation,  etc.,  within  the  industry. 

2767.  ROTHWELL,  RICHARD 

Coal  production  of  the  .United  States.  AIME.  Transactions 
5:  375-80  1876/77. 

2768.  rowe,  j.  w.  f. 

The  coal  industry  in  Great  Britain  and  the  United  States. 
Economica  (ns)  6:  200-13  1926. 


317 


2769.  RUBENSTEIN,  STANLEY  AND  HAROLD  WOLFSON 

Appalachian  small  mine  industry  rebuilds  damaged  repu- 
tation. Public  Relations  Journal  Oct  1967  54-56. 

Account  of  efforts  of  the  National  Independent  Coal  Operators  As- 
sociation to  improve  the  public  image  of  small  mine  operators. 

2770.  RUTLEDGE,  J.  J. 

Demonstration  coal  mines.  AIME.  Transactions  63:  945- 
52  1920. 

2771.  SCOTT,  JEFFREY 

Coal  lease  assignments.  Natural  Resources  Lawyer  8:  467- 
80  1975. 

2772.  SENSATIONAL  JOURNALISM  AND  THE  COAL  MINING  INTERESTS 

Colliery  Engineer  12:  13  1891/92. 

Editorial  complaint  that  many  papers  "frequently  convey  the  idea 
to  general  readers  that  colliery  owners  and  colliery  officials  are  as  a 
rule  a  set  of  inhuman  fools." 

2773.  SHOWALTER,  W.  J. 

Coal— ally  of  American  industry.  National  Geographic  34 
407-34  1918. 

Useful  as  a  source  of  excellent  contemporary  photographs  of  many 
aspects  of  the  mining  industry. 

2774.  SHURICK,  ADAM 

An  analysis  of  the  Ohio  Mining  Commission's  report.  Coal 
Age  5:  167-70,  196-200  1914. 

2775.  SKINNER,  B.  F. 

A  digest  of  decisions  of  the  Anthracite  Board  of  Concilia- 
tion. Scranton,  Pennsylvania,  1928.  258p. 

2776.  SLOSSON,  EDWIN  E. 

The  coming  of  the  new  coal  age.  Smithsonian  Institution. 
Annual  Report  1927:  243-53. 

"We  stand  at  the  opening  of  a  new  era  in  the  utilization  of  coal." 

2777.  SMITH,  ELDON  D.  AND  OTHERS 

Economic  costs  and  benefits  of  rural  road  improvement 
in  the  eastern  Kentucky  coal  fields.  Lexington,  1973.  27p. 
(Kentucky  Agricultural  Experiment  Station.  Research  Re- 
port 18). 

2779.     SMITH,  SAMUEL  R. 

The  black  trail  of  anthracite.  Kingston,  Pa.,  1907.  114p. 
318 


2780.  SOUTH  DAKOTA.  STATE  PLANNING  BOABD 

South  Dakota  coal.  Brookings,  1936.  47p. 

2781.  SPEARE,  MORRIS  E. 

The  coal  industry.  Cambridge,  Massachusetts:  Bellman, 
1957.  32p.  (Vocational  and  professional  monographs,  No. 
89). 

2782.  STEVENSON,  GEORGE  E. 

Reflections  of  an  anthracite  engineer.  New  York,  1931. 
238p. 

2783.  SEW  ART,  ETHEL  R. 

Mechanization  of  coal  mines  in  West  Virginia.  Thesis. 
University  of  Virginia.  1937. 

2783a.  STINNETT.  LANDY  A.  AND  OTHERS 

Availability  of  potential  coal  supply  through  1985  by  qual- 
ity characteristics.  Washington:  Federal  Energy  Adminis- 
tion,  1976.  v.p. 

2784.  STRATON,  JOHN  W. 

Some  effects  of  mechanization  in  the  bituminous  coal  in- 
dustry. Thesis.  University  of  Pennsylvania.  1949. 

2785.  STROUP,  RICHARD  AND  WALTER  THURMAN 

Will  coal  gasification  come  to  the  northern  great  plains. 
Montana  Business  Quarterly  Winter  1976  33-37. 

2786.  SUTHERLAND,  HOWARD 

The  bituminous  coal  industry;  debate  in  the  Senate  of  the 
United  States,  June  8,  1922.  Washington:  GPO,  1922.  31p. 

2787.  TENNESSEE.   STATE  PLANNING  COMMISSION 

Problems  surrounding  the  distribution  of  convict-mined 
coal  in  Tennessee.  Nashville,  1938.  14p. 

2788.  TETRA  TECH,  INC. 

Energy  from  coal:  a  state  of  the  art  review.  Washington: 
GPO,  1976,  vp. 

2789.  TIDEWATER  COAL  EXCHANGE 

n.p.  [1917].  27p. 

Booklet  gives  objectives,  regulations,  membership,  etc.,  of  the  Ex- 
change. 


319 


2790.  TOOTHMAN,-FRED  R. 

Conveyor  mining  in  West  Virginia.  Thesis.  West  Virginia 
University.  1946.  104p. 

2791.  TRYON,  F.  G. 

Control  statistics  of  coal  production  and  distribution. 
J  AS  A  17:  314-25  1920. 

2792.  TRYON,  F.  G.  AND  OTHERS 

Employment  and  related  statistics  of  mines  and  quarries. 
Philadelphia,  1937.  133p. 

2793.  U.  S.  BUREAU  OF  MINES 

Final  Environmental  [impact]  statement:  surface  subsi- 
dence control  in  mining  regions.  Washington.  1976.  vp. 

2794.  U.  S.  BUREAU  OF  MINES 

Mining  industry  of  the  United  States  of  America.  Washing- 
ton, 1922.  62p. 

2795.  U.  S.  BUREAU  OF  MINES 

Sampling  and  evaluating  respirable  coal  mine  dust:  a  train- 
ing manual.  Washington:  GPO,  1971.  47p.  (U.  S.  Bureau 
of  Mines.  Information  Circular  8503). 

2796.  U.  S.  BUREAU  OF  MINES.  MINERAL  SUPPLY 

Analysis  of  the  availability  of  bituminous  coal  in  the  Ap- 
palachian region.  Conducted  in  cooperation  with  the  Of- 
fice of  Air  Programs,  Environmental  Protection  Agency, 
under  working  fund  agreement.  Pittsburgh,  Pa.,  1971.  72p. 
(Distributed  by  National  Technical  Information  Service, 
Springfield,  Va.  PB-202  363). 

2797.  U.  S.  COMPTROLLER  GENERAL 

Role  of  federal  coal  resources  in  meeting  national  energy 
goals  needs  to  be  determined  and  the  leasing  program  im- 
proved. Washington,  1976.  69p. 

Report  is  critical  of  the  Interior  Department's  handling  of  federal 
coal  resources. 

2798.  U.    S.   CONGRESS.    HOUSE.    COMMITTEE  OF  INTERIOR  AND   INSU- 
LAR AFFAIRS 

Coal.  Hearings  before  the  Special  Subcommittee  on  Coal 
Research,  on  the  establishment  of  a  research  and  develop- 
ment program  for  the  coal  industry.  Washington:  GPO, 
1957.  579p. 


320 


2799.  U.    S.   CONGRESS.    HOUSE.   COMMITTEE  ON   INTERIOR   AND   INSU- 
LAR AFFAIRS 

Coal.  Hearings  before  the  Special  Subcommittee  on  Coal 
Research  pursuant  to  H.  Res.  400,  to  authorize  a  study 
leading  to  the  establishment  of  a  research  and  develop- 
ment program  for  the  coal  industry.  Washington:  GPO, 
1956.  164p. 

2800.  U.   S.   CONGRESS.   HOUSE.   COMMITTEE  ON   INTERIOR   AND   INSU- 
LAR AFFAIRS 

Findings  and  recommendations  of  special  subcommittee  on 
coal  research.  Washington:  GPO,  1957.  91p. 

2801.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  HOUSE.  COMMITTEE  ON  INTERSTATE  AND  FOR- 
EIGN COMMERCE 

The  products  of  the  Ohio  Valley,  especially  coal,  consider- 
ed in  reference  to  the  Nicarauga  Canal;  statement  of  Gov- 
ernor MacCorkel  of  West  Virginia,  May  9,  1896.  n.p.  1896. 
34p. 

2802.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  HOUSE.  COMMITTEE  ON  PUBLIC  LANDS 

Hearings  held  before  the  Committee  on  the  public  lands 
of  the  House  of  Representatives  January  27  and  30,  1911, 
on  H.  R.  32080  "to  provide  for  the  leasing  of  coal  lands  in 
the  district  of  Alaska  and  for  other  purposes."  Washington: 
GPO,  1911.  99p. 

2803.  U.  S.    CONGRESS.    HOUSE.    COMMITTEE    ON    THE    BUDGET.    TASK 
FORCE  ON  PHYSICAL  RESOURCES 

Coal  liquefaction.  Washington:  GPO,  1975.  lOp. 

2804.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  HOUSE.  COMMITTEE  ON  THE  JUDICIARY 

Alaska  coal  contracts.  Washington:  GPO,  1911.  3  vols. 

2805.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  SENATE.  COMMITTEE  ON  INDIAN  AFFAIRS 

Leasing  of  the  segregated  coal  deposits  of  the  Choctaw 
and  Chickasaw  Nations  in  Oklahoma.  Washington:  GPO, 
1942.  lOlp. 

This  is  the  "basic"  hearing  on  this  subject.  There  were  also  hearings 
during  1943  on  S.  314  and  H.  R.  1859.  both  dealing  with  essentially 
the  same  matter. 

2806.  U.   S.   CONGRESS  SENATE.   COMMITTEE  ON   INTERIOR  AND  INSU- 
LAR AFFAIRS 

Alaska  coal  lands.  Washington:  GPO,  1955.  195p. 

Concerns  the  Secretary  of  the  Interior's  "alleged  failure  to  build 
the  Alaska  railroad  spur." 

321 


2807.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  SENATE.  COMMITTEE  ON  INTERIOR  AND  INSU- 
LAR AFFAIRS.  SUBCOMMITTEE  ON  MINERALS,  MATERIALS  AND 
FUELS 

Federal    coal    leasing    program.   Hearings.   Washington: 
GPO,  1974-. 

2808.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  SENATE.  COMMITTEE  ON  THE  DISTRICT  OF  COL- 
UMBIA 

Coal  situation  in  the  District  of  Columbia.  Washington: 
GPO,  1926.  224p. 

2808a.    u.  s.  council  on  wage  and  price  stability 

Study  of  coal  prices.  Washington,  GPO.  1976.  97p. 

2809.  U.  S.  FEDERAL  FUEL  DISTRIBUTOR 

Final  report.  Washington:  GPO,  1923.  51p. 

Final  report  of  Federal  Fuel  Distributor  to  President  of  United 
States,  Sept.  21,  1923. 

2809a.  u.  s.  general  accounting  office 

Federal  coal  research— status  and  problems  to  be  resolved. 
Washington,  1975.  95p. 

2810.  U.  S.  NATIONAL  ARCHIVES 

Preliminary  inventory  of  the  records  of  the  Solid  Fuels  Ad- 
ministration for  War.  (Record  Group  245).  Washington, 
1951.  39p.  (Its  Publication  No.  52-6.  Preliminary  Inventor- 
ies No.  34). 

2811.  URWICK,  CURRIE  LTD. 

The  Nova  Scotia  coal  industry.  Ottawa,  1957.  34p. 

2812.  USE  FOR  OLD  COAL  MINES 

Black  Diamond  16:  819  1896. 

Abandoned  coal  mines  are  ideal  for  raising  mushrooms. 

2813.  THE  VANISHING  IOWA  COAL  MINE 

Annals  of  Iowa  30:  142-43  1949. 

2814.  WADLFJGH,  F.  R. 

Hampton  Roads  coals.  Coal  Age  6:  702-7  1914,  7:  165-69, 
331-34,  375-77  1915. 

Covers  "all  phases  of  marketing  and  shipping  the  different  coals 
handled  at  Hampton  Roads." 


322 


2815.  WARD,  W1LLARD  E.  AND  FRANCIS  E.  EVANS 

Coal— its  importance  to  Alabama.  University:  Geological 
Survey  of  Alabama,  1975.  26p.  (Information  Series  53). 

2816.  WARRINER,  SAMUEL  D. 

The  Anthracite  Board  of  Conciliation.  AIME.  Transactions 
42:  390-402  1911. 

2816a.  WECK,  EGON 

New  Federal  Academy  in  Appalachia.  Appalachia  Dec/Jan 
1976/77  10-19. 

Beckley,  W.  Va.  is  the  site  of  the  National  Mine  Health  and  Safety 
Academy. 

2817.  WHTTLATCH,  ELBERT  E. 

Coal  gasification  in  southeastern  Ohio:  water  supply  and 
demand.  Columbus:  Ohio  State  University,  Water  Re- 
sources Center,  1975.  77p. 

2718.     WILDER,  HENRY  J. 

Agriculture  in  the  coal  regions  of  southwestern  Pennsyl- 
vania. In  U.  S.  Dept.  of  Agriculture.  Yearbook,  1909.  321- 
32. 

2819.  WILFONG,  HARRY  DEAN 

A  cross-validation  study  of  a  mining  foreman  selection  key, 
devised  from  the  Minnesota  Multiphasic  Personality  In- 
ventory. Thesis.  West  Virginia  University.  1957. 

2820.  WILLIAMSON,  H.  A. 

The  relation  of  forestry  to  coal  mining.  West  Virginia  Coal 
Mining  Institute.  Proceedings  1912  302-12. 

2821.  WOLFLE,  LEE  M. 

Radical  third-party  voting  among  coal  miners,  1896-1940. 
Dissertation.    University  of  Michigan,  1976.  261p. 


2822.  WOLKINS,  GEORGE  G. 

The  coal  panic  of  1917-1918.  Massachusetts  Historical  So- 
ciety. Proceedings  65:  582-92  1932/36. 

The  "panic"  was  caused  by  an  extreme  shortage  of  coal  in  New 
England. 

2823.  WYLER,  SAMUEL  S. 

Fundamentals  of  our  coal  problem.  Columbus,  Ohio,  1929. 
40p. 

323 


2824.  YANCIK,  JOSEPH  J. 

Coal  research  and  development.  Mining  Engineering  Feb 
1974  96-98. 

2825.  YOUNG,  LEWIS  H. 

Public  reputation  of  the  mining  industry.  Mining  Congress 
Journal  Ja  1972  37-40. 

"The  public  reputation  of  the  mining  industry  can  be  summed  up 
in  one  terse,  concise  expression:  it's  lousy." 

2826.  ZANOLLI,  s.  w. 

The  coal  miner  in  a  larger  scale,  highly  mechanized,  high- 
ly integrated,  bituminous  coal  mining  plant.  Thesis.  Uni- 
versity of  Pittsburgh.  1948. 

2827.  ZIMMERMAN,  M.  B. 

The  supply  of  coal  in  the  long-run:  the  case  of  Eastern 
deep  coal.  Cambridge:  MIT  Energy  Laboratory,  1975.  82p. 


324 


Subject  &  Aulto*  Owkx 


Aaronson,  Terri  1829 

Abbott,  Grace  1427,  1428 

Abdnor,  Joseph  S.  1896 

Accidents  SEE  Mine  disasters,  safety 

Acid  mine  drainage  SEE  Mine  drain- 
age 

Acuff,  Reece  1632 

Adams,  James  Taylor  2301 

Adams,  John  W.  330 

Adams,  Robert  T.  331 

Adams,  Russell  K.  332 

Adderfer,  Evan  333 

Adelman,  M.A.  1633 

Advertising  SEE  Marketing 

Agor,  Joseph  2626 

Ahrenholz,  Gladys  1429 

Air  pollution  1743,  1786,  1842,  1868, 
2707a 

Alabama  7,  72, 114,  277,  291,  447,  448, 
791,  792,  997,  1299,  1592,  1629, 
1682,  1846,  2082,  2100,  2272,  2274, 
2296,  2380,  2440,  2452,  2460,  2480, 
2500,  2501,  2521,  2539,  2540,  2547, 
2569,  2584,  2593,  2683,  2815 

Alabama  Coal  Commission  791 

Alabama  Coal  Operators  Association 
792 

Alaska  223, 455, 583, 1653, 1680, 1823, 
2446,  2454-56,  2471,  2472,  2477, 
2491,  2494,  2495,  2544,  2606,  2715, 
2802,  2804,  2806 

Albright,  Charles  793 

Aldridge,  M.D.  2627 

Alexander,  Roy  1897 

Alford,  Newell  G.  2628 

Alinsky,  Saul  794,  795 

Allen,  Daniel  796 

Allen,  Gerald  E.  2273 

Allen,  Henry  J.  797 

Allen,  Joseph  H.  2433,  2434 

Allison,  Robert  2 

Allred,  Charles  E.  1430 

Althouse,  Ronald  J.  1431,  2194 

Amax  Coal  Co.  334 

American  Civil  Liberties  Union  798, 
799 


American  Constitutional  Association 
1432 

American  Engineering  Council  335 

American  Institute  of  Mining  and 
Metallurgical  Engineers  3 

American  Institute  of  Mining,  Metal- 
lurgical, and  Petroleum  Engineers 
336 

American  Miners  Association  1406 

American  Railway  Association  1634, 
1635 

Ammons,  Elias  M.  800 

Anderson,  David  H.  1898 

Anderson,  George  J.  801 

Anderson,  L.C.  802 

Anderson,  Richard  J.  1928 

Anderson,  William  H.  2329 

Andreuzzi,  F.C.  1898a 

Andrews,  E.B.  2435 

Andrews,  John  B.  2157 

Andrews,  W.H.  2158,  2160 

Andros,  Stephen  0.  2629 

Angle,  Paul  M.  803 

Ankeny,  Marling  J.  337 

Ansley,  Fran  804,  805,  2302,  2303 

Anson,  Charles  F.  806 

Ansted,  D.T.  4 

Anthracite  3,  5,  6,  15,  18,  21,  27a,  33, 
40,  45,  46,  62,  65,  74,  88,  90,  91,  104, 
109,  110,  126,  127,  136,  144,  150, 
154,  155,  188,  189,  191,  192,  211, 
221,  222,  226,  232,  235,  239,  267, 
271,  272,  273,  292,  298,  338,  345, 
351,  355,  356,  468,  484,  520,  543, 
556,  557,  564,  576,  588,  590,  596, 
602,  614,  615,  616,  624,  633,  646, 
720,  722,  749,  750,  759,  765,  767, 
771,  786,  789,  807-12,  818,  823,  826, 
854,  862,  863,  869,  896,  912,  919, 
928,  929,  938,  939,  972,  1064,  1065, 
1066,  1081,  1083,  1090,  1099,  1100, 
1131,  1139,  1151,  1153,  1170,  1176, 
1188,  1191,  1210,  1211.  1217,  1250, 
1259,  1269,  1289,  1300,  1325,  1328, 
1342,  1352,  1367,  1368,  1380,  1382, 
1384,  1404,  1412,  1424,  1442,  1465, 


325 


1466,  1493,  1524,  1527,  1532,  1575, 
1596,  1609,  1627,  1686,  1688,  1701, 
1705,  1741,  1752,  1798,  1863,  1866, 
1878,  2063,  2106,  2148,  2184,  2227, 
2280,  2316,  2320,  2322,  2436,  2438, 
2505,  2518,  2550,  2596,  2598,  2613, 
2626,  2676,  2680,  2706,  2710,  2733, 
2779 

Anthracite  Board  of  Conciliation 
2775,  2816 

Anthracite  Bureau  of  Information 
807,  808 

Anthracite  Coal  Production  Control 
Plan  338 

Anthracite  Coal  Strike  Commission 
811,  1095,  1145,  1176,  1188,  1259, 
1342 

Anthracite  Operators  811 

Appalachian  Agreement  842,  1241, 
1332,  1333 

Appalachian  Coals,  Inc.  360,  502 

Appalachian  Region  37,  38,  339,  386, 
421,  434,  560,  561,  674,  692,  1204, 
1431,  1433,  1438,  1510,  1517,  1518, 
1529,  1534,  1552,  1581,  1770,  1830, 
1848, 1858, 1859, 1861, 1867, 1867a, 
1886,  1894,  1915,  1916,  1926,  1943, 
1944,  1945,  1947,  1967,  1979,  1994, 
2056,  2062,  2084,  2104,  2142,  2155, 
2182,  2294,  2334,  2344,  2370,  2379, 
2400,  2513,  2614,  2615,  2717,  2735, 
2736,  2754,  2763,  2769,  2796 

Appalachian  Regional  Commission 
1830 

Appalachian  Volunteers  1503 

Appraisal  of  coal  lands  SEE  ALSO 
Taxation  343,  380,  381,  382,  383, 
425,  426,  496 

Aquizap,  Roman  B.  1433 

Arbitration  797,  934,  986,  1063,  1117, 
1118,  1159,  1233,  1304,  1423 

Arble,  Meade  1433a,  1434,  1435 

Archbald,  Hugh  340,  814 

Archer,  C.H.  1436 

Arizona  113,  1899,  1913,  1992,  2025 

Arkansas  1281,  1437,  2431,  2443, 
2470,  2474,  2583,  2595 

Arkansas.  State  Emergency  Relief 
Administration  1437 

Armbrister,  Trevor  815 

Armes,  Ethel  Marie  7 

Arnow,  Hariette  S.  2159 

Amy,  Malcolm  2428 

Aronoff,  Jacob  1288 

Aronson,  Bernie  2217 

Ashburner,  Charles  A.  341,  2436-40 

Ashley,  George  H.  8,  342,  343,  2441, 
2442,  2630 


Ashley,  William  J.  344 

Ashmead,  Dever  C.  345 

Ashton,  Robert  1899 

Ashurr,  S.  H.  352 

Association  for  the  Welfare  of  Neg- 
roes in  Alabama  2274 

Association  of  American  Railroads 
1636,  1637 

Atchison,  Topeka  and  Santa  Fe  Rail- 
way Co.  1727 

Atwood,  Genevieve  1900 

Aude,  T.C.  1638 

Auger  mining  SEE  ALSO  surface 
mining  1930 

Ault,  James  G.  1922 

Aurand,  Ammon  M.  817 

Aurand,  Harold  W.  346,  818,  819,  820 

Austin,  Richard  C.  1901 

Automation  SEE  Mechanization 

Averitt,  Paul  1902,  2631,  2632 

Avril,  Lawrence  P.  347 

Ayer,  Thomas  P.  348 

Ayrshire  Coal  Co.  2079 

Bach,  E.E.  821 

Bache,  Franklin  2443 

Backman,  Jules  350 

Bacon,  S  2218 

Baier,  E.J.  2330 

Bagge,  Carl  E.  1743,  1831,  2633,  2634 

Bailey,  Carol  2635 

Bailey,  Kenneth  R.  822,  1903,  2275 

Bain,  H.F.  2444 

Baker,  Ralph  H.  1744 

Baker,  Ray  S.  823 

Bakerman,  Theodore  351 

Ball,  Richard  A.  1438 

Ballads  SEE  Folklore 

Ballert,  Albert  G.  1639,  1640 

Ballou,  E.  2219 

Balsley,  Howard  L.  1745 

Baltimore  Sun  (Newspaper)  824 

Balzer,  J.L.  1904 

Bancroft,  Thomas  B.  825 

Banks,  (R.L.)  and  Associates  1641 

Bannard,  William  N.  826 

Baratz,  Morton  S.  827 

Barb,  John  Milliken  828 

Barger,  Harold  352 

Barksdale,  S.  9 

Barkus,  Gary  353 

Barlow,  James  A.  2445 

Barnes,  Clarence  E.  1439 

Barnes,  Farrell  F.  2446 

Barnes,  P.  1905 

Barnum,  Darold  T.  2276 

Bartholomew,  Harvey  E.  829 

Bartlett,  J.H.  1642 


326 


Bass.  J.  Carl  1987 

Bass,  N.  Wood  2636 

Bassett,  John  W.  10 

Bastin,  S.L.  11 

Battin,  Joseph  625 

Bauer,  F.L.  2447 

Baumgardner,  Riley  G.  1440 

Bayard,  Charles  J.  831 

Bayles,  J.C.  12 

Beach,  H.D.  2220 

Beachley,  Charles  E.  13 

Beame,  Edmond  M.  832 

Beddow,  W.W.  354 

Beebe,  A.C.  1906 

Bell,  Brenda  804,  805 

Bell,  Isaac  L.  2448 

Bement,  Alburto  1643,  2449.  2638 

Bemis,  Edward  W.  833 

Ben  Lomand  Coal  Co.  2758 

Bendall,  John  W.  2639 

Bennett,  Wallace  R.  14 

Benson,  David  C  1686 

Benson,  H.W.  834 

Bentivegna,  Joseph  J.  2331 

Bentley,  J.G.  1441 

Benzanson,  Anne  451 

Berger  Associates  355 

Berisford,  Frank  D.  1907 

Berkowitz,  David  A.  1832 

Berle,  A.A.  835 

Bernheimer,  F.P.  356 

Bernstein,  Irving  836 

Bernstein,  P.J.  1908 

Berry,  Wendell  1909 

Berthoff,  Rowland  1442 

Berwind-White  Co.  1190 

Beshoar,  Barron  B.  837 

Bethell,  Thomas  N.  838,  839,  1833, 
2221 

Bethell,  Tom  839a 

Beury.  William  1443 

Bezanson,  Anne  357 

Bibliographies  1912,  1965,  1986,  2009, 
2058,  2128a,  2683,  2686,  2687,  2711 

Bielicki,  Richard  J.  358 

Biesecker,  J.E.  1834 

Bikerman,  Jacob  J.  1835 

Billinger  Robert  D.  15,  16 

Bimba,  Anthony  840 
Binder,  Denis  1911 
Binder,  Frederick  M.  18,  19,  20 
Bishop,  Bill  840a 
Bitler,  John  R.  1979 
Bituminous   Coal    Acts    1744,    1746, 
1766,  1793,  1805,  1806,  1808,  1812, 
1813,  1814,  1818 
Bituminous  Coal   Commission   1744, 
1750,  1764,  1773,  1817,  1819,  1822 


Bituminous  Coal  Operators  Associa- 
tion 573,  1189 
Bituminous  Coal  Operators'  Special 

Committee  843-847 
Bituminous  Coal  Research,  Inc.  1912 
Bituminous  Coal  Trade  Association 

454 
Black  lung  SEE  ALSO  Health  407, 

1275,  1598,  1784,  2372,  2421-25 
Black  Lung  Association  2363a 
Black  Mesa  1899,  1913,  1992 
Blakely,  J.  Wes  1836,  1914-17 
Blanchard,  D.E.  21 
Blankenhorn,  Heber  849,  850 
Blankenship,  Rondal  C.  360 
Bliss,  J.A.  1644 
Blizzard,  William  C.  851 
Bloch,  Louis  361,  852 
Bobick,  Thomas  G.  2640 
Boccardy,  Joseph  A.  1918 
Bockus,  C.E.  362 
Bodle,  William  W.  1837 
Boecklin,  Werner  363 
Boettner,  John  L.  1919 
Bogen,  Jules  I.  1645 
Bondurant,  Donald  M.  364 
Bonosky,  Phillip  2222 
Boone,  James  W.  1646 
Boone,  Joel  T.  2420 
"Bootleg"mining"  613,  660 
Booz,  Allen  &  Hamilton,  Inc.  365,  366 
Borne,  Lawrence  R.  22 
Borrelli,  Peter  1901 
Borsodi,  William  2642 
Bosselman,  Fred  P.  1920 
Boston.  Chamber  of  Commerce  367 
Bott,  M.W.  2450 
Bottomley,  J.A.  1921 
Boughton,  Edward  J.  855 
Boulding,  Russell  368 
Bovenizer,  Robert  V.  1922 
Bowden,  Kenneth  L.  1923 
Bowden,  Witt  369,  856,  857 
Bowen,  Eli  23,  24 
Bowman,  Mary  J.  370 
Boyer,  Mary  J.  25 
Boyer,  R.F.  2223 

Boyle,  William  A.  (Tony)  SEE  ALSO 
United  Mine  Workers  of  America 
868,  1098 
Bracker,  Milton  1445 
Bradley,  Alexander  1408 
Bradley,  Joseph  G.  371,  858,  1377 
Brady,  S.D.  2451 
Brainerd,  Alfred  2277 
Bramwell,  J.H.  2225 
Brandt,  L.  1446 

Branscome,   James   859.   860,    1924, 
1925 

327 


Branson,  Branley  A.  1926 

Bratton,  Sam  T.  26 

Bray,  S.A.  2687 

Bredeweg,  Harry  W.  1927 

Breitenstein,  A.J.  505 

Breslin,  John  J.  1928 

Brewer,  W.M.  2452 

Bridges,  Leonard  H.  27 

Brinsmade,  R.B.  2453 

Bristow,  J.W.  1929 

British    Coal    Mining    Productivity 

Team  2643 
Britnell,  Jim  2332 

Broad  form  deed  37a,  76,  2093,  2154 
Brock,  Samuel  M.  1930,  1931 
Broderick,  Grace  N.  372 
Broehl,  Wayne  G.  861 
Brom,  Thomas  1933 
Brooks,  Alfred  H.  2454,  2455,  2456 
Brookside  strike  813,  830,  864,  888, 

916,  937,   940,   1143,   1321,    1348, 

1416,  1420 
Brooks,  David  B.  1932,  1934,  1935 
Brooks,  John  G.  862,  863 
Brophy,  John  865,  866,  867 
Brosky,  A.F.  1447 
Brotherhood  of  Locomotive  engineers 

1113,  1326,  1330 
Brown,  George  M.  2457 
Brown,  Joseph  E.  250 
Brown,  Malcolm  J.  1448 
Brown,  Murray  C.  2333 
Brown,  P.  373 
Brown,  Robert  2458 
Brown,  Robert  E.  1936 
Brown,  Roger  600 
Brown,  Rollo  W.  1449 
Brown,  Stuart  868 
Brown,  W.K.  27a 
Brownell,  Baker  1450 
Bruere,  Robert  W.  869 
Bryant,  Harold  L.  1974 
Bubka,  Tony  870 
Buch,  John  W.  28 
Buchanan,  John  A.  374 
Buchanan  County,  Virginia  61,  404 
Buck,  S.M.  2459 
Buck,  William  J.  29 
Buckley,  Thomas  2224 
Buffalo,  New  York  311,  491 
Buffalo  Creek  (West  Virginia)  1833, 

1838,  1839,  1840,  1841,  1847,  1864, 

1870,  1872,  1879,  1884,  1890,  1892, 

2234a,  2332,  2350,  2392,  2399,  2417 
Buis,  Lois  S.C.  1451 
Bull,  Marcus  30 

Bureau  of  Cooperative  Medicine  2334 
Burke,  J.W.  2460 


Burke,  Stephen  P.  375 
Burlingame,  M.G.  182 
Burness,  H.S.  2644 
Burroughs,  Wilbur  G.  1937,  2461 
Burrows,  John  S.  376 
Bush,  B.F.  2462 
Butler,  Richard  1616 
Byars,  J.C.,  Jr.  871 

C  &  K  Coal  Co.  555 

Calarie,  Edwin  P.  2335 

CaldweU,  Nat  872 

Caldwell,  Walter  2645 

California  107 

Callahan,  Jacqueline  1938 

Callahan,  John  C.  1938 

Campbell,  M.R.  2463 

Campbell,  Robert  S.  1939 

Campbell,  Rolla  D.  377 

Campbell,  Roy  E.  32 

Campbell,  Thomas  C.  378, 1647, 1647a 

1648 
Canada  2646-50,  2666,  2696,  2811 
Canada.  Commission  on  Conservation 

2646 
Canada.  Royal  Commission  on  Coal 

2648,  2649 
Canada.  Statistics  Canada  2650 
Canals  6,  1677,  1678,  1700,  1709 
Cannel  coal  2630,  2651,  2724 
"Captive"  mines  757,  873 
Carbon  County  Historical  Society  33 
Cardi,  Vincent  1940 
Cardiff  Coal  &  Iron  Co.  2464 
Carlson,  Alvar  W.  34 
Carlson,  Clarence  G.  1941 
Carlson,  Fred  A.  1649 
Carmin,  Robert  L.  2465 
Carnes,  Cecil  874 
Carpenter,  Samuel  35 
Carr,  Joe  D.  874a 
Carritt,  G.  875 
Carter,  Charles  F.  876,  877 
Carter,  Edward  W.  379 
Carter,  Richard  2336 
Cartlidge,  Oscar  36 
Caruso,  John  A.  1650 
Cary,  Lorin  L.  878,  879 
Casey,  Kathryn  P.  2652 
Cashman,  Joseph  T.  880 
Cassano,  James  2653 
Cassidy,  Robert  881 
Castner,  Curran  and  Bullitt  31 
Caudill,   Harry   M.   37,    1453,    1454, 

1840,  1942-46,  2041,  2128 
Caudill,  James  K.  37a 
Caudill,  Rebecca  38 
Cederstrom,  D.J.  1947 
Center   for    Science    in   the    Public 


328 


Interest  1948 
Central  Pennsylvania  Coal  Producers' 

Association  883 
Ceramics  2748 
Chadwick,  Robert  A.  39 
Chafin,  Don  283 
Chamberlain,  J.G.  1455.  1456 
Chamberlain,  John  884 
Chamberlain,  Neil  W.  885 
Chamberlin,  Rollin  T.  2226 
Chamberlin,  J.W.  1651 
Chance,  Henry  M.  2466,  2654 
Chandler,  Alfred  D.  40 
Chance,  H.M.  380-83,  2227 
Chaplin,  Herman  W.  886 
Chaplin,  Ronald  L.  384 
Chapman,  Mary  L.  41 
Charlie,  Edwin  G.  385 
Charles  River  Associates  386 
Charmbury,  H.B.  1949 
Charwick,  Douglas  42 
Chase,  Nina  R.  1950 
Chemcial  Industry  466 
Chesapeake  &  Ohio  Railroad  95, 1652, 

1714 
Chesterfield  Railroad  Co.  1663 
Chicago  Coal  Board  2655 
Chicago,  Wilmington  &  Franklin  Coal 

Co.  117 
Child  Labor  1525,  1526,  1527,  1550, 

1609,  1627 
Children  and  youth  SEE  ALSO  child 

labor  1473,  1480,  1498,  1531,  1535, 

1536,  1539,  1541,  1604,  1623,  1625, 

2383 
Childs,  C.G.  43 
Childs,  Marquis  W.  887 
Chironis,  Nicholas  P.  1951 
Christenson,  C.L.  387,  388,  389,  2158, 

2160 
Christiansen,  John  R.  1484 
Christy,  David  44 
Church,  Ruth  1457 
Cimarron  Coal  Co.  2048 
Cincinnati,  Ohio  59 
Cist,  Jacob  45 
Cist,  Zachariah  46 
Claghorn,  Clarence  R.  2467 
Clague,  Ewan  2337 
Clapp,  Thomas  C.  889 
Clark,  J.M.  890 
Clark,  Paul  R.  1653 
Clark,  Stanley  47 
Clark,  Walter  891 
Clayton,  E.E.  390 
Clegg,  Herman  D.  2656 
Cleveland,  Ohio  241,  322 
Clifford,  Albert  J.  48 
Clinchfield  Coal  Co.  401 


Clute,  F.P.  2228 

Clyde.  Edward  W.  1747,  1952 

Coal  and  Coke  Railway  Co.  1650 

Coal  Commission  SEE  U.S.  Coal 
Commission 

Coal  Mine  Health  and  Safety  Act 
SEE  Federal  Coal  Mine  Health  and 
Safety  Act 

Coal  River  Land  Co.  2483,  2519 

Coal  River  Railroad  Co.  2571 

Coal  Trade  Association  of  Indiana 
2657 

Coalgate,  Jerry  L.  1843,  1843a 

Coates,  Harold  W.  59 

Cobb,  William  H.  60 

Cochran,  John  A.  895 

Cochran,  William  1844 

Cochrane,  John  L.  2161 

Cohn,  E.  402,  403 

Coke  100,  269,  316,  535,  2528,  2549 

Cole,  E.L.  896 

Cole,  Lewis  G.  2338 

Cole,  William  G.  2338 

Coleman,  Elizabeth  D.  1658 

Coleman,  James  W.  897,  898 

Coleman,  McAlister  899,  900,  1749 

Coleman,  Ron  61,  404 

Coles,  Robert  1459,  2339 

Collective  bargaining  635,  895,  901, 
952,  953,  959,  991,  1111, 1170, 1212, 
1308 

Collier,  Arthur  J.  2470-72 

Collins,  Elizabeth  1534 

Collis,  Edgar  L.  2340 

Colorado  22,  314,  612,  799,  800,  829, 
831,  835,  837,  855,  857,  894,  901-908, 
915,  918,  924,  925,  950,  954,  992, 
1005,  1019,  1029,  1087, 1125a,  1129, 
1137,  1140,  1207,  1208,  1227,  1246, 
1253,  1294,  1305,  1344,  1346,  1347, 
1350,  1351,  1470,  1501,  2099,  2109, 
2493,  2510,  2514,  2518,  2548,  2567, 
2572,  2599,  2607,  2618-20,  2699 

Colorado  Industrial  Commission  902 

Colorado  Mine  Operators'  Associa- 
tion 903 

Colorado  National  Guard  904 

Colorado.  Special  Board  of  Officers  to 
Inquire  into  the  Armed  Conflict 
905 

Colorado  State  Federation  of  Labor 
906 

Colton,  Henry  2473 

Comanor,  William  S.  405 

Committee  of  Coal  Mine  Managers 
908 

Committee  on  Public  Administration 
Cases  1750 

Commons,  John  R.  2278 


329 


Communism  1209,  1290,  1322,  1371 

Company  stores  75a,  86,  148,  1577, 
1590,  1599,  1601 

Competition  375,  378,  379,  405,  424, 
450,  467,  469,  476,  483,  574,  575, 
577,  587,  590,  602,  606,  641,  694, 
707,  740,  746,  759,  767,  777 

Computers  651 

Conant,  C.B  62 

Conaway,  James  1954 

Conoway,  Orrin  B.  1751 

Cone,  Frederick  L.  407 

Conley,  Phil  63,  64 

ConneUsville,  Pa.  100,  269 

Conroy,  Jack  1460 

Conservation  SEE  ALSO  Environ- 
mental effects  2691,  2731 

Consolidation  Coal  Co.  13,  175,  411, 
487,  1595,  1845,  1922 

Convict  labor  70,  804,  921,  956,  1039, 
1267,  2787 

Coolidge,  William  H.  910 

Conner,  Eli  T.  1752,  1955 

Corbin,  David  911 

Corlsen,  Carl  2676 

CorneU,  Robert  J.  912 

Cornforth,  Carol  1957,  1958 

Coronada  Coal  Company  1152 

Corrigan,  James  J.  65,  2229 

Cort,  John  C.  913 

Cost  of  living  497,  588 

Costello,  E.J.  914 

Costello,  J.  2341,  2342 

Costigan,  Edward  P.  915 

Council  of  State  Governments  1960 

Cowan,  Donald  R.  412 

Cowan,  Paul  916 

Cowley,  Malcolm  1461 

Cox,  Titus  A.  2395 

Craig,  Roy  1961 

Crane,  W.R.  1962,  2474-80 

Crawford,  Bruce  1462 

Crawford,  Charles  B.  917 

Creditor,  Morris  1659 

Creel,  George  918 

Cressey,  Paul  Frederick  1463 

Crews,  Ralph  413 

Crum,  W.L.  414 

Cubby,  Edwin  A.  66,  67 

Culin,  Stewart  919 

Culver,  Harold  E.  1963 

Cummings,  John  920 

Currie,  Robert  D.  2162 

Curth,  Ernest  A.  2163 

Cushing,  George  H.  415 

Cuvellier,  I.C.  1660 

Cyrnak,  Anthony  W.  1964 

Daddow,  Samuel  H.  2658 


Dahl,  H.D.  1661 

Daily    Telegraph.    (Bluefield,    West 

Virginia)  69 
Dalsted,  Norman  L.  1965,  2481 
Dana,  Samuel  T.  1966 
Daniel,  Pete  70,  921 
Danielson,  V.A.  1846 
Danville  and  Pottsville  Railroad  1656 
Dauphin  &  Susquehanna  Coal  Co.  71 
Davenport,  S.J.  2164,  2165 
David,  John  P.  416 
Davies,  Matthew  J.  2659 
Davies,  William  E.  1847 
Davis,  Blaine  A.  417 
Davis,  Franklin  R.  922 
Davis,  Grant  2015 
Davis,  Jerome  923 
Davis,  Richard  L.  2284 
Davis,  W.T.  924,  925 
Dawson,  J.W.  1662 
Day,  David  T.  418 
Dean,  Lois  1464 
Deans,  Parke  P.  419 
Deasy,  George  F.  420,   1967,   1968, 

2505,  2660 
De  Bow,  James  D.  72 
Decker  Coal  Co.  2151, 
Dee,  Norbert  1848 
Deep  River  Mining  &  Transportation 

Co.  153 
Deimel,  Robert  W.  926 
Deitschman,  G.H.  2037 
Deju,  Raul  A.  2661 
DeLauretis,  Frank  T.  1466 
Demand  SEE  Supply  &  demand 
Dempsey,  Stanley  1753 
Dennett,  Tyler  927 
Dennison,  Henry  S.  928 
Densmore,  Raymond  E.  1466a 
Denton,  Alma  1467 
Depletion  515,  518 
Derby,  George  74 
Derzay,  Raymond  2662 
Destler,  Chester  929 
Devine,  Edward  T.  422,  1754,  2663 
Dewees,  Francis  P.  930 
Diakun,  R.  2330 
Dials,  George  E.  423 
Dick,  Charles  1755 
Dick,  W.J.  2646 
Dickens,  Hazel  2304 
Dickman,  Irving  1969 
Diehl,  Richard  A.  424 
Dietrich,  Charles  C.  1970 
Dietto,  Frank  J.  2166 
Dillon,  Lacy  A.  2232 
Dilworth,  John  B.  425,  426,  2482 
Dinkel,  R.M.  1971 
DTnvilliers,  E.V.  2483 


330 


District  of  Columbia  716,  2808 
Dix,  Keith  931-34 
Dixon,  Harry  M.  427 
Dodrill,  Gordon  75a 
Doerr,  Arthur  428,  1849.  2484-88 
Dogs  130,  2695 
Domico,  Jim  2305 
Donley,  Robert  T.  1972 
Donnegan,  John  J.  429 
Donnelly,  Clarence  S.  2234 
Dorland,  Jack  A.  430 
Dos  Passos,  John  935 
Dotson,  John  A.  2665 
Dougherty,  John  J.  2167 
Dowling,  Donaldson  B.  2666 
Downing,  Thomas  F.  1468 

Doyle,  F.J.  1850 

Doyle,  William  S.  1850a,  1973 

Drake,  Charles  H.  1475 

Drake,  Richard  B.  76 

Draper,  Theodore  935a 

Draper,  Warren  F.  2344,  2345,  2346, 

2347 
Dreese,  George  R.  1974 
Drum,  E.C.  1975 
Drum,  Francis  J.  936 
Drummond  Co.  448 
Drury,  Doris  2168,  2169 
Drury,  Horace  B.  431,  432 
Dryden,  Ian  G.  2667 
Duffield,  John  432a 
Duggan,  Carroll  1976 
Duluth  433 
Dunbar,  Anthony  937 
Dunbar,  Fred  C.  434 
Dunham,  James  435 
Dunlap,  Louise  C.  1977 
Dunn,  Stephen  F.  436 
Durand,  E.  Dana  938 
Durand,  Walter  437 
Durrett,  Harold  L.  2668 
Dwyer,  Kenneth  J.  2279 

Eastern  Associated  Coal  Corporation 

439,  2744 
Eastern  Gas  &  Fuel  Associates  133 
Easton,  H.D.  2489 
Eastover  Mining  Co.  SEE  Brookside 

strike 
Eaton,  Amos  78 
Eaton,  Cyrus  872 
Eavenson,    Howard    N.    79-84,    440, 

1469,  1756,  2170 
Eberling,  Ernest  J.  939 
Eckel,  Edwin  C.  438 
Ecology  SEE  Environmental  effects 
Economics  330-790 
Edgerton,  B.R.  1978 


Edmonson,  Nathan  441 
Edmunds,  William  E.  2669 
Education  SEE  ALSO  Training  325, 

1436,  1470,  1557.  1604,  1617.  2665 
Edwards.  Debbie  940 
Edwards.  J.H.  1471 
Edwards,  M.W.A.  442 
Edwards.  R.G.  2670 
Edwards,  William  S.  2490 
Edwardsville,  Pa.  1472 
Eggleston,  Richard  C.  2671 
Elder,  James  L.  2672,  2713 
Electric  power  production  385,  435, 

472,  547,  666,  728,  760,  773,  774, 

1832,  1924 
Ellis,  Mabel  B.  1473 
Elsom,  C.H.  85 
Emery,  James  A.  2673 
Emmet,  Boris  941 
Employment  352,  384,  440,  443 
Energy  &  Environmental  Analysis, 

Inc.  1757 
Enman,  John  A.  86 
Enterline,  Philip  E.  2348,  2349 
Environmental   effects   SEE   ALSO 

Reclamation  1829-1895,  1918,  1926, 

1941,  1968,  1973,  1986,  2145,  2687 
Environmental  Research  and  Appli- 
cations, Inc.  1851 
Equipment  2,  28,  358,  625,  1910,  1962, 

2732 
Erikson,  Kai  T.  2234a,  2350 
Ernst,  Harry  W.  1475 
Esfandiary,  Mary  S.  2674 
Ethnic  groups  SEE  Racial  and  ethnic 

groups 
Evans,  Chris  942 
Evans,  Francis  E.  2815 
Evans,  George  W.  2491,  2492 
Evans,  Robert  J.  1979 
Evans,  William  B.  1980,  1981 
Everest,  Herbert  A.  444 
Everett,  Woodrow  W.  943 
Explosions  SEE  Mine  disasters 
Export  trade  457,  553,  554,  566,  567, 

581,  653,  702,  709,  1633,  1641 

Fairbanks,  W.  L.  89 

Fairmont,  West  Virginia  97,  186,  941, 

1292 
Fairmont  Coal  Co.  2236 
Falk,  Leslie  A.  2351,  2352 
Faltermayer,  Edmund  445,  1982 
Family  1518,  1519,  1568 
Fay,  A.H.  2216,  2237 
Fay,  C.L.  1476 
Feder,  Bernard  944 
Federal  Coal  Mine  Health  and  Safety 

Act  1751,  1765,  1768,  1787,  1826, 


331 


2741 
Federal  Council   of   the   Church   of 

Christ  945,  946 
Federal  Reserve  Bank  of  Cleveland 

446 
Federation    of    Miners    and     Mine 

Laborers  of  West  Virginia  947 
Feldman,  Julian  1983 
Fell,  Jessee  90,  111,  126,  191,  211 
Fene,  W.J.  2176 
Fenneman,  N.M.  2493 
Fenoli,  John  R.  948 
Fernow,  B.E.  2675 
Ferris,  B.G.  2353 
Fetherling,  Dale  949 
Fey,  Arthur  W.  2676 
Field,  Lewis  2354 
Fies,  Milton  H.  447 
Filippelli,  R.L.  949a 
Fink,  Walter  H.  950 
Finley,  Joseph  951 
Finley  Coal  Co.  2221 
Firmstone,  William  91 
Fish  and  wildlife  1860,   1918,   1987, 

2087,  2108,  2156 
Fisher,  Cassius  A.  94 
Fisher,  Howell  95 
Fisher,  James  G.  96 
Fisher,  Stan  448 

Fisher,  Waldo  E.  449-51,  952,  953 
Fisher,  Walter  L.  2494 
Fishman,  Leo  452 
Fishman,  Betty  G.  452 
Fitch,  John  A.  954,  955 
Fitzpatrick,  John  1401 
Fitzpatrick,  John  S.  1477 
Fledderus,  Mary  L.  453 
Fleming,  A.B.  97 
Fleming,  Henry  S.  454 
Flinn,  R.H.  2355 
Florance,  J.E.  2495 
Floyd,  Willie  M.  98 
Flynn,  Elizabeth  G.  2677 
Fohl,  W.E.  456 
Folklore  212,  2301-28 
Foner,  Philip  S.  956 
Forbes,  J.J.  1758 
Forbes,  R.D.  2678,  2679 
Foreman,  W.E.  1984 
Forestry   SEE    ALSO    Reclamation 

2671,  2675,  2678,  2679,  2763,  2820 
Forsythe,  J.R.  458 
Foster,  J.S.  2680 
Foster,  Jack  Richard  957 
Foster,  John  F.  460 
Foster,  John  W.  1664 
Foster,  William  Z.  958 
Foster  Associates,  Inc.  459 
Fowler,  Charles  B.  959 


Fowler,  George  L.  1478,  2496 

Fox,  Harry  D.  960 

Frank,  B.  961 

Frank,  E.R.  961a 

Frank,  N.R.  2353 

Franklin,  Ben  A.  1985,  2171 

Frawley,  Margaret  L.  1986 

Frazier,  Edward  K.  461 

French,  Jack  1479 

Freytag,  R.C.  99 

Frick  Coke  Co.  100,  316 

Friedman,  Morris  963 

Friends,  Society  of  1480,  1481,  1546, 

1560,  1584 
Frisch,  Isadore  101 
Friscia,  August  B.  462 
Fritz,  W.G.  463 
Fuller,  Carol  A.  964 
Fuller,  Justin  464 
Fulton,  John  2497 

Gage,  E.  Lyle  2356 

Gagliardo,  Domenico  965 

Gale,  Hoyt  S.  2493,  2498 

Gallagher,  Mary  B.  966 

Gandy,  Harry  L.  465,  1759 

Gannes,  Harry  967 

Ganyard,  David  W.  466 

Garfield,  James  R.  1760 

Garnsey,  Cyrus  1761,  1762 

Gartin,  Edwin  V.  968 

Gash,  Stephen  L.  1987 

Gasification  336,  460,  536,  541,  621, 
676,  711,  731,  732,  739,  2670,  2703, 
2785 

Gasper,  Donald  2499 

Gates,  Lathrop  M.  1988 

Gauger,  A.W.  2681 

Gay,  Katherine  969,  970 

Gebhart,  John  G.  971 

Geer,  Max  Richard  1852 

General  Policies  Committee  of  An- 
thracite Operators  467,  972,  973, 
974 

George,  Henry  975 

George,  J.R.  1834 

George,  John  E.  976,  977 

George's  Creek  Coal  &  Iron  Co.  102 

Georgia  250,  291 

German,  Ralph  H.  1763 

Germans  1124 

Germer,  Adolph  878,  1089 

Gershuny,  William  A.  1765 

Geyer,  Wayne  A.  1989 

Giardino,  Dennis  A.  2640 

Gibbons,  P.E.  1482 

Gibbs  and  Hill,  Inc.  2682 

Gibson,  A.M.  103,  2500,  2501 

Gilbert,  Oscar  E.  2683 


332 


Gilbertson,  H.S.  2684 
Gilfillan,  Harriet  W.  1483 
Gillenwater,  Mack  H.  103a 
Gillespie,  Marie  2685 
Ginger.  Ray  104,  468 
Girard,  Stephen  135,  310 
Gitlow.  A.L.  469 
Gladden.  James  W.  1484 
Glass,  Gary  B.  2686 
Glasser,  Carie  978 
Gleason,  Arthur  979,  980 
Glenn.  L.C.  105,  2502 
Glover,  Thomas  O.  1665 
Gluck,  Elsie  981 
Goldberg,  Everett  F.  1990 
Goldenweiser,  E.A.  470,  1764 
Goldstein,  Morris  1991 
Goldwasser,  T.  1485 
Gompers,  Samuel  982,  983,  984 
Goodman,  Gordon  T.  2687 
Goodrich,  Carter  1486,  1487,  1488 
Goodyear,  Watson  A.  2503 
Gordon,  Leland  1489 
Gordon,  Richard  L.  471,  472,  2688 
Gordon,  Suzanne  1992 
Gordon,  Zachariah  291 
Government  Regulation    174,    1729, 
1743-1828,  1875,  1896,  1903,  1906, 
1911,  1919,  1920,  1934,  1936,  1940, 
1948,  1952,  1956,  1972,  1977,  1983, 
1988,  1996,  2005,  2034,  2042,  2044, 
3047,  2059,  2074,  2082,  2084,  2085, 
2090,  2134,  2135,  2136,  2138,  2155, 
2157,  2166,  2203-14. 

Gowaskie,  Joseph  M.  984a,  984b 

Gowan,  F.B.  694 

Gradv,  William  H.  473 

Graebner,  William  106,  2172-74 

Grafton  Coal  Co.  1951 

Graham,  Herman  D.  1993 

Grauman,  Lawrence  985 

Gray,  George  986 

Grayson,  Charles  474 

Greeks  208 

Green,  Archie  956,  2307-12 

Green,  Edward  M.  1765 

Green,  Jerry  E.  1994 

Green,  Stephen  H.  2504 

Green,  William  988,  989 

Greenback-Labor  Party  997 

Greenbaum,  Fred  990 

Greenbaum,  Margaret  E.  474a 

Greenburg,  William  1995 

Greene,  Charles  S.  107 

Greene,  Homer  2690 
Greene,  Joseph  A.  1667 
Greene,  Victor  R.  2280,  2281,  2282, 
2283 


Greenslade,  Rush  V.  991 

Greenwood  Slope  Colliery  115 

Gregg,  Robert  108 

Greiner,  John  E.  1668 

Griess,  Phyllis  R.  1465,  1967,  1968, 

2505,  2660 
Grievance    procedures    SEE    ALSO 

arbitration  934 
Griffin,  Gerald  1490 
Griffith,  W.T.  2506 
Griffith,  William  109.  110,  111 
Groff,  Sidney  L.  1996 
Grogan,  Dennis  S.  992 
Groner,  Isaac  N.  993 
Grossman,  Jonathan  994,  995 
Grube,  Walter  E.  1853 
Grundy  County,  Tennessee  181 
Guernsey,  James  L.  2002 
Guernsey,  Lee  1971,  1998-2001,  2487 
Gundlack,  Doris  996 
Gutheim.  A.G.  1669 
Gutman,  Herbert  G.  997-1000,  2284, 

2285 
Guttridge,  Leonard  F.  1137 
Guyandotte  Land  Co.  112 
Guyer,  John  P.  1001 
Gwynn,  Thomas  A.  2003 

Haas,  Albert  2004 

Haas,  Eric  1002 

Haas,  Frank  2691 

Hachman,  Frank  C.  475 

Hack,  John  T.  113 

Hackamack,  Lawrence  C.  1003 

Haelig,  Arthur  W.  2357 

Hagen,  Bruce  2005 

Hager,  Charles  J.  114 

Haggerty,  Thomas  T.  960 

Haines,  Michael  R.  1490a 

Halberstadt,  Baird  115 

Hale,  G.E.  476 

Hale,  Peter  M.  2507 

Hall.  Betty  S.  1004 

Hall,  Bob  1004a 

Hall,  Clarence  2175 

Hall,  Daniel  1767 

Hall,  Helen  1491 

Hall,  R.D.  1492,  2238,  2508,  2509 

Hall,  Robert  E.  477 

Halliburton  Company  1854 

Hambridge,  Jay  1493 

Hamill,  R.H.  1494 

Hamill.  W.S.  89 

Hamilton,  Patrick  A.  2691a 

Hamilton,  Rex  2313 

Hamilton,  Walter  H.  478-81 

Hammond,  Allen  L.  2692 

Hammond,  M.B.  482 

333 


Hand,  Alfred  483 

Hand,  Wayland  D.  2314 

Hanes,  J.E.  2510 

Hanford,  Ben  1005 

Hanna  Coal  Co.  1922,  2021 

Hannah,  H.W.  2007 

Hapgood,  Powers  1006 

Hard,  William  1007,  1008 

Hardee,  James  A.  2042 

Hardesty,  C.  Howard  485 

Hardesty,  David  C.  1768 

Harding,  G.E.  2694 

Hardman,  J.B.S.  1009 

Hardt,  Anton  116 

Hardy,  Carroll  F.  2693 

Harger,  Charles  M.  1010 

Harlan  County,  Kentucky  158,  839a, 
840a,  870,  871,  914,  916,  935,  1011, 
1020,  1143,  1186,  1310,  1311,  1312, 
1315,  1321,  1362,  1371,  1420,  1463, 
1497,  1617,  2327,  2564 

Harless,  James  397 

Harline,  Osmond  L.  486 

Harper,  Larry  1528 

Harrell,  Thomas  W.  1509 

Harrington,  Daniel  2176,  2177,  2178 

Harrington,  George  B.  117 

Harris,  A.L.  2287 

Harris,  Evelyn  118 

Harris,  Fred  1011 

Harris,  George  W.  487 

Harris,  Herbert  1012 

Harris,  Sheldon  H.  1013 

Harrison,  Fairfax  1670 

Harrison,  George  1769 

Harrison,  S.M.  1014 

Harshbarger,  Richard  B.  488 

Hartman,  R.A.  1671 

Hartsock,  D.  Lane  119 

Harvey,  Curtis  E.  488a,  489 

Harvey,  Helen  B.  120 

Harvey,  Katherine  A.  121,  122,  1015 

Haughee,  J.W.  2695 

Haught,  Oscar  L.  2511 

Haupt,  Herman  123 

Hawley,  Ellis  W.  124 

Hayden,  F.V.  125 

Hayes,  Charles  W.  2512,  2513 

Hayhurst,  E.R.  2358 

Haynes,  W.W.  370 

Haynes,  William  H.  490 

Hazard,  Erskine  126.  127 

Health  74,  1629,  2329-2432,  2795 

Hebley,  Henry  F.  1855 
Hecker,  David  B.  1015a 
Hedgepeth,  William  1495 
Hedlin,  Menzies  &  Associates  2696 
Hedstrom,  Eric  L.  491 


Heinrich,  Oswald  J.  128,  26972 

Hemphill,  William  E.  1672 

Henderson,  James  M  492,  493,  494 

Henry,  John  P.  495 

Henry,  Patricia  A.  1016 

Herlihy,  Ann  1017 

Herling,  John  1018 

Hermelin,  Samuel  G.  129 

Herndon,  Lyle  K.  1856 

Herrin  Massacre  803,  845,  943,  1184 

Herrington,  Fred  1019 

Hertsgaard,  T.A.  1516 

Hess,  Arthur  E.  2359 

Hess,  J.W.  193 

Hesse,  Alfred  W.  496 

Hester,  Patrick  1034 

Hevener,  John  W.  1020 

Hewett,  G.C.  2514 

Hewitt,  Abram  S.  1013 

Hibbs,  William  2698 

Hicken,  Victor  1021 

Higgins,  Ian'T.  2360,  2361 

Higgins,  Wallace  W.  130 

Hildebrand,  John  K.  1022 

Hildreth,  S.P.  131 

Hileman,  Douglas  H.  2699 

Hill,  F.A.  2515 

Hill,  Jack  K.  2008 

Hill,  Joseph  1023 

Hinds,  Roy  W.  1024 

Hinrichs,  Albert  F.  1025 

History  1-329 

Hitchcock,  E.  134 

Hodge,  James  M.  2516 

Hodgson,  Bryan  1496 

Hoerr,  J.  1026 

Hoffman,  Betty  Hannah  1497 

Hoffman,  Glenn  J.  2009 

Hoffman,  John  N.  135,  498 

Hoffman,  Phil  2239 

Hogg,  E.  2700 

Holbrook,  E.A.  2701 

Holbrook,  Stewart  H.  1027 

Holland,  Charles  T.  533,  1770,  2179 

Hollandsworth,  Genevieve  1498 

Hollister,  G.  2010 

Holloway,  Richard  B.  1028 

Holm,  Edwin  E.  499 

Holmes,  Charles  1029,  2517 

Holmes,  Grant  2011 

Holmes,  J.A.  2180 

Holmes,  Leslie  A.  1673,  2702 

Holt,  Homer  A.  1030 

Holwerk,  David  1031 

Hooper,  Wallace  D.  500 

Hoover,  Herbert  124 

Horsley,  Albert  1027 

Hosea,  R.M.  2518 


334 


Hospitals  SEE  Health 
Hotchkiss,  Jedediah  2519 
Hotchkiss,  Willard  E.  501,  1032 
Hours  of  work  449,  451,  520,  814,  1185 
Housing  1446,  1458,  1469,  1494,  1499, 
1502.  1506,  1532.  1533.  1559,  1563, 
1591,  1621.  1626 
Howard.  Herbert  A.  2012.  2013.  2014. 

2181 
Howard-Smith,  I.  2703 
Howe.  R.E.  502 
Hubbard,  O.B.  274 
Hudson,  Harriet  D.  1033 
Hudson,  Hugh  H.  1857 
Hudson,  James  F.  1674 
Hudson  Coal  Company  136 
Hudson  Institute  503 
Huebner,  A.F.  1499 
Huge,  Harry  2339 
Hughes,  Francis  W.  1034 
Hughes,  George  W.  2520 
Hughes,  Mary  M.  1035 

Hull,  Authur  M.  2704 

Hume,  Brit  1037 

Humphry,  Hiram  B.  2240 

Hunt,  Edward  E.  1771,  1772 

Hunt,  Thomas  S.  2521-23 

Hunter,  Murray. B.  2373 

Hurst,  Mary  B.  137 

Hurst,  Thomas  E.  504 

Husband,  Joseph  1500 

Huskinson,  Frank  1501 

Hutchinson,  Spencer  505 

Hutchison,  M.K.  2419 

Hutnik,  Russell  J.  2015 

Hutson,  Andrew  C.  1038,  1039 

Hyatt,  R.E.  2363 

Ickes,  Harold  L.  1040 

Illinois  117,  138,  139,  140,  157,  204, 
243,  264,  384,  427,  428,  568,  632, 
643,  761,  762,  775,  803,  845,  852, 
853,  887,  943,  948,  998,  1021,  1041, 
1042,  1043,  1044,  1047,  1121,  1159, 
1179,  1184,  1225,  1405,  1408,  1427, 
1448,  1450,  1464,  1467,  1485,  1500, 
1509,  1512.  1537,  1562,  1563,  1576, 
1592,  1600,  1607,  1611,  1615,  1643, 
1673,  1715,  1921,  1929,  1957,  1963, 
1993,  2007,  2011,  2016,  2017,  2037, 
2089,  2115,  2241,  2242,  2249,  2250, 
2257,  2265,  2266,  2278,  2358,  2449, 
2486,  2488,  2526,  2623,  2629,  2702, 
2761 
Illinois.  Bureau  of  Labor  Statistics 

2241 
Illinois   Coal   Operators   Association 

139,  506,  1041,  1042 
Illinois    Coal    Strippers    Association 


2016 
Illinois.  Dept.  of  Mines  and  Minerals 

140 
Illinois.  Special  Commissioners  1044 
Illinois.     Strip    Mine     Investigation 

Commissioners  1044 
Illinois.     Strip     Mine     Investigation 

Commission  2017 
Imbach.  Theodore  F.  2705 
Imboden,  John  D.  141 
Imhoff,  Edgar  A.  2018 
Immigrants  SEE  Racial  and  ethnic 

groups 
Indiana  77.  99,  390,  486,  957,  1628, 
1643,  1664,  1675.  1938,  1971,  1998, 
2000,  2001,  2002,  2020,  2039,  2040, 
2046,  2657 
Indiana  Coal  Association  1675 
Indiana  Coal  Producers  Association 

2020 
Indians  1799,  1899,  2025,  2805 
Industrial    Workers    of    the    World 

1045,  1046 
Institute  on  Man  and  Science  1502 
International    Carbon     &    Minerals 

Group  704 
International  Union  of  Mine,  Mill  and 

Smelter  Workers  1027 
Inter-University  Case  Program  1773 
International  Labor  League  1047 
Iowa  132,  147a,  263,  287,  507,  740, 
1606,  2239,  2326,  2554a,  2750,  2813 
Iowa.  State  Planning  Board  507 
Irwin,  N.O.  508 
Irwin,  William  G.  142 
Island  Creek  Coal  Co.  509,  652,  910 
Isley,  Ralph  706 
Italians  231,  999 
Ites,  Alfred  1048 
Itter,  William  A.  1049 

Jackson,  Bruce  1503 
Jackson,  Charles  T.  143 
Jackson,  Daniel  510,  511,  512 
Jackson  County,  Ohio  259 
Jacksonville  Agreement  832 
James,  Charles  M.  450,  513 
James,  Thomas  C.  144 
James  River  145 
Japan  640 
Jarrett,  F.G.  2525 
Jensen,  Billie  1050 
Jensen,  Richard  J.  1051 
Jewell  Ridge  Coal  Company  1471 
Jillson,  Willard  R.  146,  147 
Johnsen,  Julia  E.  1774,  1775 
Johnson,  Allen  J.  2706 
Johnson,  Arthur  F.  2707 
Johnson,  Cynthia  147a 


335 


Johnson,  Elizabeth  S.  1054 
Johnson,  James  P.  514,  1055,  1776 
Johnson,  Jasper  2526 
Johnson,  Linda  2021 
Johnson,  Ole  S.  148 
Johnson,  Robert  E.  703 
Johnson,  Virginia  B.  1777 
Johnson,  Walter  J.  2527 
Johnson,  Walter  R.  149-53 
Johnston,  Richard  M.  1676 
Joint  Conference  of  Coal  Operators 

and  Coal  Miners  1056,  1057 
Jones,  Alfred  C.  154 
Jones,  Charles  0.  2707a 
Jones,  Chester  L.  1677,  1678 
Jones,  David  R.  1058 
Jones,  Eliot  155,  1679 
Jones,  F.  Addison  515 
Jones,  Frank  A.  1720 
Jones,  Mary  H.  (Mother)  932,  949, 

1059,  1060,  1061,  1094,  1123a,  1135, 

1155.  1292,  1295.  1391,  2308 
Jones,  Paul  M.  2022 
Jones,  Richard  W.  2686 
Jones,  W.G.  2023 
Jordan,  Margaret  W.  1504 
Josephy,  Alvin  M.  2024,  2025 
Joslin,  Falcon  1680 
Journalism  911,  1162.  2772 
Judkins,  Bennett  M.  2363a 
Justi,  Herman  1062,  1063 
Jutelis,  Victoria  1505 
Kalisch,  Philip  A.  2242 
Kanarek,  Harold  K.  1064,  1065,  1066 
Kanawha  Coal  Co.  2546 
Kanawha  Valley  32,  64,  242,  297,  816, 

2582 
Kansas  119,  231,  307,  685,  797,  965, 

1010,  r028,  1327,  1962,  2094,  2243, 

2478,  2479 
Kaplan,  SteUa  A.  1506 
Kapp,  Frederic  T.  2417 
Karaska,  Gerald  J.  2708 
Karp,  Michael  2709 
Karsch,  Carl  G.  1507 
Karsh,  Bernard  1068 
Katell,  Sidney  516,  517,  1647a 
Katz,  Max  1859 
Keating,  William  156 
Keely,  Josiah  1069,  1508 
Keenan,  Charles  M.  2244 
Keeney,  Frank  1414 
Kehoe,  John  1070 
Keighley,  F.C.  2528 
Keiser,  John  H.  157 
Keith,  Herbert  1681 
Keith,  Jean  E.  1682 
Kelemen,  Thomas  A.  158 


Keller,  Alvin  G.  2026 

Keller,  Joseph  H.  518 

Kelley,  Jay  H.  519 

Kellog,  P.U.  1014 

Kelly,  James  F.  1509 

Kemball,  K.W.  2463 

Kemp,  James  F.  2710 

Kennecott  Corp.  1780 

Kennedy,  Thomas  989 

Kennedy,  Thomas  F.  1071,  1072 

Kennell,  H.  Richard  521 

Kent,  Raymond  P.  1073 

Kent,  W.H.  2182 

Kentfield.  Calvin  2027 

Kentucky  10, 11,  37a,  41,  76,  101,  146, 
147,  158,  159,  160,  195,  213,  214, 
220,  255,  256.  301.  306,  370,  474a, 
488a,  489,  508,  529,  636,  798,  813, 
830,  839a,  840a,  864,  870,  871,  874a, 
875,  888,  892,  914,  916,  935,  937, 
940,  967,  985,  1011,  1020,  1024, 
1031,  1120,  1136,  1142,  1143,  1186, 
1194,  1277,  1288,  1310,  1311,  1312, 
1315,  1321,  1348,  1362,  1370,  1371, 
1416,  1420,  1447,  1451,  1454,  1461, 
1463,  1469,  1473,  1484,  1490,  1495, 
1497,  1503,  1515,  1543,  1558,  1561, 
1564,  1568,  1583,  1598,  1617,  1624, 
1630,  1718,  1846,  1934,  1948,  1999, 
2012,  2013,  2014,  2022,  2028,  2029, 
2033a,  2048,  2049,  2085,  2093,  2095, 
2149,  2154,  2181,  2217,  2218,  2221, 
2231,  2261,  2327,  2378,  2428,  2433, 
2434,  2461,  2482,  2489,  2506,  2542, 
2564,  2568,  2597,  2608,  2711,  2777, 
2778 

Kentucky  Coal  Mining  Co.  159 

Kentucky  Fuel  Co.  249 

Kentucky.  General  Assembly  160 

Kentucky.  Geological  Survey  2711 

Kentucky.  Legislative  Research 
Commission  2028 

Kentucky  Strip  Mining  and  Reclama- 
tion Commission  2029 

Kenworthy,  Wilmer  E.  2712 

Kerr,  Lorin  E.  2364-68 

Kesel,  Richard  H.  161 

Key,  Marcus  M.  2369 

Keyes,  Charles  R.  162 

Kiessling,  O.E.  522,  523,  2030 

Kilby,  Thomas  E.  791 

Killebrew,  Joseph  2529,  2530 

Killeen,  John  F.  524,  1074 

Kimball,  James  P.  2531 

King,  Clyde  L.  525 

King,  F.A.  1075 

King,  L.  1683 

King,  Lawrence  T.  1076 


336 


Kinney,  Edward  C.  1860 
Kirbv.  Richard  M.  1077 
Kirchway.  Freda  1078 
Kish,  Gabe  526 
Kissell,  F.N.  2245 
Klock,  Joseph  J.  1079 
Kneeland,  Frank  H.  2031 
Knights  of  Labor  1015,  1124 
Knipe,  Edward  E.  1510,  1511,  1519 
Kodrowskv,  William  G.  2183 
Koenig,  George  A.  2532 
Koenig.  Robert  2032 
Kolbash,  Ronald  L.  1861 
Kolde,  Endel  Jakob  527 
Korson,  George  2310,  2314-22 
Kouzian,  A.  373 
Krafft,  Fred  A.  1080 
Krebs,  Frank  J.  118 
Krebs,  Girard  1862,  2033 
Kube,  W.R.  2672,  2713 
Kuhn.  H.A.  2533 
Kulp,  George  B.  163 

Labor  relations  388,  389,   508,  791- 

1426,  2274,  2280,  2281,  2282,  2283, 

2296 
Labor  requirements  374,   402,   403, 

532 
Lacey,  John  W.  1082 
Lackawanna  Iron  &  Coal  Co.  537 
Laing,  James  T.  165,  2289,  2290 
Lainhart,  William  S.  2370 
Laird,  Wilson  M.  1941 
Lake  Erie  Bituminous  Coal  Exchange 

2714 
Lamb,  George  A.  528 
Lambie,  Joseph  T.  1685 
Landy,  Marc  K.  2033a 
Lane,  Alfred  C.  2534,  2535 
Lane,  John  Q.  1083 
Lane,  Winthrop  D.  1084,  1085,  1086 
Lang,  Robert  2045 
Langdon,  Emma  F.  1087,  1088 
Lansing,  R.R.  166 
Lantz,  Herman  R.  1512 
Lapp,  N.  Leroy  2371 
Larkin,  R.P.  1863 
Larsen,  Thomas  A.  2034 
Larwood,  Gary  M.  1686 
Lash,  Terry  R.  1778 
Laslett,  John  H.M.  1089 
Lathrop,  John  E.  2715 
Lauck,  Rex  1091,  1864 
Lauck,  W.J.  1513,  1687,  1688,  2184 
Laurel  County;  Kentucky  11,  195 
Lavine,  Irvin  167 
Lawson,  John  R.  837 
Lawson,  William  F.  2185 


Leach,  Paul  R.  1008 
Learner,  Laurence  168.  1092.  1514 
Leasing  SEE  Government  Regulation 
Lebus,  William  F.  529 
Leckie,  William  85 
Lee,  Howard  B.  1093 
Lee,  Jennie  1515 
Leeds,  Joseph  1094 
Lehigh  Coal  and  Navigation  Co.  73, 
169,  170,  171,  217,  288,  530,  1095 
Lehigh  Coal  Mine  Co.  92 
Leibenguth,  C.  2035 
Leigh  ton,  George  R.  172 
Leisenring,  E.B.  531 
Leiserson,  William  M.  1096 
Leistritz,  F.L.  1516, 1965,  2481,  2715a 
Leo  Kramer,  Inc.  532,  2372 
Leonard,  Joseph  W.  533,  2179 
Lesher,  C.E.  534,  535,  668,  2716 
Leshy,  John  D.  1778 
Lesley,  J.P.  2717 
Lessing,  Lawrence  536 
Letcher.  Duane  A.  2718 

Levine,  Milton  D.  2373 
Lewis,  Arthur  H.  1097,  1098 
Lewis,  Helen  M.  1511,  1517-19 
Lewis,  John  L.  (About)  183,  254,  794, 
853,  866,  872,  874,  884,  913,  961, 
961a,  962.  966,  988.  993.  1002,  1009, 
1016,  1036,  1052,  1053,  1091,  1144, 
1150,  1182,  1187,  1235,  1256,  1271, 
1289,  1306,  1314,  1324,  1388,  1389 

Lewis,  John  L.  (By)  1099-1116 

Lewis,  Robert  S.  2536 

Lewis,  Thomas  L.  117,  118 

Lewis,  W.  David  537 

Lewis,  William  D.  1779 

Lezius,  Walter  G.  2719 

Libby,  John  H.  538 

Lieben,  Jan  2374 

Light,  Ed  2035a 

Lignite  34,  167,  539,  582,  1985,  2073, 
2567,  2672,  2713 

Ligutti,  Father  1606 

Lilienthal,  Daisy  M.  1119 

Lilienthal,  David  E.  540 

Limstrom,  G.A.  2036,  2037,  2038 

Lind,  Owen  T.  1939 

Lindsay,  J.J.  1520 

Linton,  Ron  M.  1120 

Liquefaction  336,  707,  711,  2670,  2703, 
2803 

Little  (Arthur  D)  Inc.  541,  542 

Little  Schuylkill  Navigation,  Railroad 
&  Coal  Co.  251 

Lively,  C.E.  1086 

Livingston,  William  J.  1523 

Lloyd,  Henry  D.  929,  1121 

337 


Loaf,  T.  1122 

Lockshin,  M.D.  2375 

Logan,  Samuel  C.  1123 

Logan    Coal   Operators    Association 

173 
Logan  County,  W.Va.  120,  137,  173, 

283,  300,  319,  1307 
Lohmann,  Karl  B.  1524 
London,  Jack  1068 
London,  Kentucky  1312 
Long,  Priscilla  1123a 
Long,  Stephen  C.  2720 
Longin,  Thomas  C.  174 
Lopez,  Lorreda  2631 
Lopushansky,  Joseph  2323 
Lord,  N.W.  2721,  2722 
Lorenz,  Walter  C.  1865 
Loring,  Robert  D.  2039,  2040 
Louisville  and  Nashville  Railroad  1682 
Love,  George  H.  175 
Love,  Robert  A.  543 
Lovejoy,  Owen  R.  1525,  1526,  1527 
Lovell,  Hugh  G.  836 
Loving,  Rush  1780 
Lowery,  William  1689 
Lowitt,  Richard  1124 
Lowrie,  Raymond  L.  544 
Lozier,  John  1528 
Lubin,  Isador  545 
Lucas,  John  W.  546 
Lucas,  Joseph  R.  547 
Lucas,  Rex  A.  220,  2246,  2247 
Lucy,  Ernest  W.  1125 
Lund,  Richard  L.  460 
Luther,  Edward  T.  2537 
Lycoming  Coal  Company  176 
Lynch,  Edward  A.  1134 
Lynch,  Lawrence  R.  1126 

Mabry,  Scott  H.  1793 
McAdam,  Dunlap  J.  1781 
McAteer,  James  Davitt  1833,  2186, 

2187 
McAuliffe,  Eugene  177,  178,  548 
MacAvoy,  Paul  W.  1690 
McCabe,  James  D.  1127 
McCain,  D.L.  1661 
McCalley,  Henry  2539,  2540 
McCarthy,  Colman  1529 
McCarthy,  Justin  1128 
MacCartney,  John  C.  1866 
McCaslin,  Hugh  1459 
McCauley,  Ray  L.  179 
McClane,  William  180 
Maclean,  Annie  M.  1530 
McCloud,  Leland  W.  549 
McClurg,  Donald  J.  1129 
McConagha,  William  A.  1130 
McConnell,  George  W.  1131 


MacCorkle,  William  A.  2723 

McCormick,  Allen  181 

McCormick,  Kyle  1132,  1133 

McCullough,  David  G.  2041 

McDonald,  David  J.  1134 

McDonald,  Rita  182 

McDowell,  Ira  L.  1691 

McDowell  Recorder  1135 

McFarland,  Charles  K.  183 

Macfarlane,  Graham  2542,  2724 

Macfarlane,  James  2541 

McGill,  Nettie  P.  1531 

McGinley,  Patrick  C.  2041a 

McGoldrick,  Joseph  1136 

McGovern,  George  S.  1137 

McGraw-Hill  Department  of  Econom- 
ics 550 

Maguire,  Don  2248 

Machinery  SEE  Equipment 

Machisak,  John  C.  2188 

Mackey,  Terrence  2042 

McKie,  James  W.  551 

M'Killop,  James  2543 

McLeod,  A.A.  2725 

McNair,  Mary  B.  2191,  2192 

McParlan,  James  817 

Maddala,  G.S.  552 

Magnusson,  Leifur  1532,  1533 

Maguire,  John  210,  1782 

Mahany,  Rowland  B.  1138 

Mailly,  William  1139 

Maloney,  John  1534 

Management  340,  354,  456,  468,  492, 
493,  494,  594,  605,  705,  1032,  1161, 
2684,  2696 

Maneval,  David  R.  2043,  2044 

Manley,  Robert  N.  184 

Mansfield,  Harvey  C.  1692 

Marble,  Samuel  W.  1140 

Marcus,  Irwin  M.  1141 

Marja,  Fern  1535 

Marketing  330,  413,  415,  417,  429, 
502,  533,  546,  585,  685,  698,  701, 
758,  783,  789,  2642 

Markham,  Edwin  1536 

Markon,  George  553 

Marks,  Avrum  554 

Marley,  Harold  P.  1142,  2726 

Marshall,  Eliot  1143 

Marshall,  L.C.  1693 

Marshall,  J.J.  2727 

Martens,  Charles  D.  555 

Martin,  Albro  184a 

Martin,  G.C.  2544 

Martin,  John  B.  1144,  1537,  1538, 
2249 

Martin,  Joseph  E.  2376,  2377 


338 


Mary  Evengela,  Sister  1145 

Maryland  12,  68.  89,  102,  121.  122, 
185.  200,  228,  234,  304,  313,  846. 
1015,  1124,  2509,  2520,  2560 

Maryland  Mining  Co.  2520 

Maryland  University.  Bureau  of  Busi- 
ness and  Economic  Research  185 

Mason,  Arthur  J.  2728 

Mason,  Richard  H.  1914 

Mason  County,  West  Virginia  82,  249 

Massay,  Glenn  F.  186,  1783 

Massie,  William  A.  2378 

Mathews.  P.L.  2291 

Mathews,  William  G.  1146 

Matson,  Thomas  K.  2728a 

Matthews,  Ellen  N.  1539 

Matthiessen,  F.O.  1147 

Mauch  Chunk  230,  273 

Mauer,  M.  1148 

Maurer,  Charles  E.  1149 

Maury,  Matthew  F.  2545 

Maury,  Richard  L.  2546 

May,  Morton  2045 

Mazzei,  Frank  Joseph  1540 

Mead,  Richard  R.  556 

Meade,  Edward  S.  557 

Mechanization  416,  443,  501,  623, 
1519.  2653,  2783,  2784,  2790 

Medical  care  SEE  Health 

Medrick,  George  949a 

Medvick,  Charles  2046 

Meier,  Richard  L.  1923 

Meiners,  Robert  G.  2047 

Melder,  F.E.  187 

Mell,  P.H.  2547 

Melton,  John  R.  558 

Menefee,  Seldon  C.  1150 

Mercier,  J.D.  27a 

Merrick,  Mary  A.  1151 

Merrill,  William  M.  559 

Merritt,  Stephen  E.  2048 

Merritt.  Walter  G.  1152,  1153 

Meriwether,  F.V.  2380 

Merz,  Robert  2049 

Michalik,  Benjamin  A.  188 

Michelson,  M.  1154 

Michigan  166,  382,  2517,  2534,  2581 

Midlothian  Colliery,  Virginia  128,  274 

Miernyk,  William  H.  560,  561,  562 

Miesse,  Charles  189 

Mihalek,  John  A.  563 

Mikeal,  Judith  E.  1155 

Miller,  Arnold  860,  1784,  2381,  2730 

Miller,  B.L.  2548 

Miller,  E.  Willard  564,  565,  1785, 
2050,  2549 

Miller,  George  L.  190 

Miller,  Glenn  W.  1156 


Miller,  Harold  W.  2382 

Miller,  Iva  A.  2383 

Miller,  Lee  H.  2384 

Miller,  Nora  1541 

Miller,  Rice  1157 

Miller,  Saunders  565a 

Miller.  Stanley  1158 

Millet.  Philippe  1159 

Mills,  C.  Wright  1160 

Mills,  Ted  1161 

Minard,  Ralph  D.  2292 

Mine  disasters  2217-71,  2304,  2305 

Mine  drainage  1830,  1834.  1835.  1856. 

1858.  1859,  1860,  1865,  1871,  1877, 

1883,  1884a,  1886,  1891,  1894 
Minear,  Roger  A.  1867a 
Miner,  William  P.  191 
Miners    for    Democracy    834,    1051, 

1196a,  1230,  1279 
Mining  Enforcement  &  Safety  Ad- 
ministration 2196 
Minnesota  433,  753 
Mintz,  Robert  E.  2051 
Mischaikow,  Michael  K.  566 
Missouri  25,  26,  662,  685,  2251,  2462, 

2621 
Missouri.  Bureau  of  Labor  Statistics 

2251 
Mitchell,  John  981,  984a,  984b,  1165- 

70,  1293,  1383,  1398,  2731 
Mitchell,  Thomas  D.  192 
Mitchell,  William  1148 
Mollie  Maguires  793,  817,  819,  840, 

861,  897,  898,  930,  1070,  1097,  1125, 

1222,  1245 
Monell,  Louis  F.  567 
Monnett,  Osborn  1868 
Monongah  Mines  Relief  Committee 

2252 
Monongahela  River  Basin  2682 
Monopolies  SEE  Competition 
Montana  39,  94, 182,  1767,  1852,  1954, 

1980,  1981,  1996,  2003,  2055,  2151, 

2527,  2561,  2576,  2577,  2594,  2685, 

2755 
Montgomery,  Hugh  B.  2052 
Mooney,  Fred  193 
Moore,  Elizabeth  C.  423 
Moore,  James  R.  568 
Moran,  E.L.  1694 
Morgan,  John  D.  569 
Morgan,  William  K.C.  2385-88 
Morgis,  G.  2165 
Morony,  Ives  Guy  1171 
Morris,  Homer  L.  1543 
Morris,  Israel  W.  570 
Morris,  Thomas  John  1544 
Morris  and  Essex  Railroad  312 


339 


Morrow,  Felix  1172 
Morrow,  J.D.A.  571,  572,  1695,  2732 
Morse,  Kenneth  M.  2190 
Morton,  Edward  W.  1127 
Morton,  Eleanor  194 
Morton,  Rogers  C.  2053 
Mory,  Samuel  A.  11,  195 
Moses,  H.M.  573,  1173 
Moss,  Alex  196 

Mountain  Community  Union  2054 
Mourat,  Mary  P.  197 
Moyer,  Forrest  T.  2191,  2192 
Moyer,  Reed  574,  575,  1696 
Muckelston,  Sandra  2055 
Muelhof,  William  E.  576 
Muhlenberg  County,  Kentucky  256 
Mules  2659,  2700,  2742 
Mulholland,  Joseph  P.  577 
Mullan,  Joseph  W.  1786 
Mumford,  John  Kimberly  2733 
Munn,  Robert  F.  2056,  2057,  2058 
Munroe,  Henry  S.  2734 
Murphy,  Marion  2550 
Murphy,  R.E.  578,  1545,  2550 
Murphy,  Raymond  2735,  2736 
Murray,  Ellen  P.  1175 
Murray,  Philip  1176,  1177,  1178 
Murray,  T.J.  579 
Mushrooms  2705,  2812 
Musick,  Ruth  Ann  2324,  2325 
Muste,  A.J.  1179 
Mutmansky,  Jan  M.  2059 
Mutschler,  Paul  H.  580,  1697 
Myers,  James  1546 
Myers,  Leroy  0.  2060 
Myers,  Robert  J.  1180,  1181 
Myerscough,  Tom  1182 

Nader,  Ralph  1183 

Nash,  Harry  D.  2061 

Nathan  (Robert  R.)  Associates  581, 

582,  583 
National   Academy    of   Engineering 

2193 
National  Academy  of  Public  Adminis- 
tration 1787 
National  Coal  Association  584,  585, 

1184,  1185,  2737 
National  Coal  Policy  Conference  524, 

2738,  2739 
National   Fuels  and   Energy    Study 

Group  586 
National  Committee  for  the  Defense 

of  Political  Prisoners  1186 
National  Independent  Coal  Operators 

Assoc.  2769 
National  Industrial  Conference  Board 

587,  588,  2740 
National   Mine    Health    and;  Safety 


Academy  2816a 
National  Miners  Union  870,  935a 
National  Petroleum  Council  589 
National    Recovery    Administration 

1104,  1748,  1776 
National  Research  Council  2391 
National  Save  the  Miners  Union  1187 
Nearing,  Scott  590,  591 
Nebraska  University.  Committee  on 

Business  Research  592 
Nebraska  125,  184,  190,  592 
Negroes  997,  1453,  2272,  2273,  2274, 

2275,  2276,  2277,  2284,  2285,  2286, 

2287,  2288,  2289,  2290,  2292,  2293, 

2294,  2296,  2297,  2299 
Nellis,  Lee  1547 
Nelson,  C.W.  2401 
Nelson,  H.L.  1548 
Nelson,  Jon  P.  2741 
Nelson,  Wilbur  A.  2551 
Nephew,  E.A.  593,  2062 
Nerlove,  Marc  594 
Neubert,  Ann  1549 
Neumann,  G.R.  2741 
New  Deal  514 

New  Jersey.  Legislature  1698,  2743 
New  Mexico  161,  739,  969,  970,  1147, 

1316,  1904,  2099,  2585 
New  York  78,  286,  311,  363,  491 
New  York  &  Richmond  Coal  Co.  2747 
New  York  City  363 
New  York  Coal  Co.  199 
New  York.  Legislature  1699 
New  York  Public  Library  1788 
New  York.  Public  Works  Dept.  1700 
Newcomb,  Harry  T.  1188,  1701 
Newhard,  I.C.  2742 
Newhouse,  Joseph  595 
Newman,  C.  Janet  2392 
Newspapers  SEE  Journalism 
Nicholls,  T.D.  1191 
Nichols,  Francis  H.  1550 
Nicolls,  William  J.  200,  201,  202 
Noehren,  T.H.  2343 
Noise  2640,  2662 
Nold,  H.E.  2748 
Nolden,  Carol  2749 
Noon,  W.H.  1551 
Noonan,  J.  Robert  1552,  1552a 
Norfolk  and  Western  Railroad  1685, 

1702 
Norris,  R.V.  596,  597 
North,  Dan  1192 
North  American  203 
North  Carolina  143,  153,  180,  2463, 

2466,  2507 
North  Dakota  34,   167,   1516,   1941, 

1985,  2005,  2073,  2481 


340 


Northern  West  Virginia  Coal  As- 
sociation 1193 

Northern  West  Virginia  Coal  Opera- 
tors Association  2552 

Northrup,  Herbert  R.  2293 

Norton,  Helen  G.  1553 

Norton,  R.  Henry  2553 

Nugent,  Tom  1870 

Nunn,  W.L.  1419 

Nuttall,  John  1554 

Nyden.  Paul  J.  1194-97.  2294 

Obenauer,  Marie  L.  1555,  1556 
O'Brien.  Larry  D.  1198 
O'Brien,  William  S.  1871 
Ogden,  R.D.  2108 
OHanlon.  Thomas  1199 
Ohio  35.  49,  55.  59,  75,  130,  131,  205. 
227.  241.  253,  259,  260.  278,  279, 
280,  282,  289,  321,  322,  500,  598, 
599,  664,  783,  825,  833,  844,  1198, 
1200,  1260,  1318.  1358,  1449,  1489, 
1588,  1736,  1737,  1796.  1910,  1950, 
1953,  1969,  1974,  1983,  2008,  2021, 
2033,  2038,  2077.  2078,  2086.  2087, 
2103,  2219.  2285,  2358,  2393,  2435, 
2465,  2522,  2523.  2524,  2554,  2578, 
2587,  2605,  2664,  2695,  2719,  2759, 
2774 
Ohio  Chamber  of  Commerce  598 
Ohio.  Coal  Mining  Commission  599 
Ohio.  Dept.  of  Industrial  Relations 

205 
Ohio.  General  Assembly  1200 
Ohio.  Mining  Commission  2554,  2774 
Ohio.  State  Department   of  Health 

2393 
Ohio  State  University  2722 
Oil  companies  SEE  ALSO  Competi- 
tion 424,  577,  641,  707.  777 
Oklahoma  47.  103,  1586,  1849.  2457. 

2484,  2485,  2805 
Old  Dominion  Coal  Co.  2546 
Older,  Cora  1201,  1202 
Olin,  H.L.  2554a,  2750 
Olmsted,  Harry  1203 
Operators'  Association  of  the   WUl- 

iamson  Field  1205 
Operators  associations  265 
Orchard,  John  E.  1789,  1790 
Oregon  1852,  2553,  2574 
Ormiston,  Thomas  600 
Osage  County,  Kansas  119 
Osborn.  Elburt  F.  601 
Otto,  H.H.  2063 
Owen,  CE.  1557 
Owens.  John  W.  1206 

Pabst,  William  R.  602 


Packer.  Mel  2253 

Packer,  Paul  E.  2064 

Page,  William  N.  1013.  1703,  2254 

Palange,  Mark  1558 

Palmer,  Frank  L.  1207,  1208 

Palomba,  Catherine  A.  2194 

Palomba.  Neil  2195 

Palzer,  Doris  1079 

Paone,  James  2065 

Papanikolas,  Helen  Z.  208.  209,  1209 

Parker.   Edward   W.  603-607,    1210. 

1211.  1559,  2752 
Parker,  Glen  L.  608 
Parker.  Ruth  L.  1560 
Parker.  U.S.  1212 
Parker,  W.J.  1704 
Parlow,  Anita  1561 
Parry,  V.F.  609 
Parsons,  Floyd  W.  1213.  1562,  2066, 

2255,  2510,  2555-61 
Parsons.  John  D.  2067 
Patterson,  Joseph  F.  210,  1214 
Patterson,  Louise  H.  211 
Patton,  James  L.  2753 
Patton,  Norman  F.  1705 
Paul,  J.W.  1791.  2256 
Paul.  Wolfgang  212 
Payne,  Henry  M.  2562,  2563 
Peabody  Coal  Co.  610,  1563,   1794, 

1913.  1925 
Peach  Orchard  Coal  Co.  213 
Pearce,  Albert  214 
Pearce,  John  E.  1564 
Pearse,  Ben  1215 
Pearson,  Ronald  G.  611 
Peck,  Maynard  A.  612 
Peck,  W.R.  2564,  2565 
Peltier,  M.F.  2566 
Penchansky.  Roy  2394,  2415 
Pendergast,  John  J.  2395 
Pendergrass,  Eugene  P.  23%,  2397 
Pennsylvania  2.  16, 17,  19,  20,  21.  24. 
27,  27a,  33,  43,  45,  46,  50,  51,  52,  53, 
56,  57,  58,  65,  86,  88,  90,  91,  92, 100, 
110,  115,  116,  126,  135,  144,  152, 
163,  164,  168,  169,  170,  172,  176, 
179,  194,  203,  210,  211,  215,  216, 
217,  218,  221,  222,  226,  228.  229. 
230,  237,  244,  245,  246,  251,  252, 
267,  268,  269,  271,  273,  276,  281, 
285,  288.  292,  294,  299,  308,  309, 
310,  311,  312,  316,  320,  328,  329, 
333,  346,  356,  394,  463,  483,  498, 
537,  555,  564,  565,  605,  613,  614, 
615,  616,  617,  618,  619,  620,  626, 
639,  661,  664.  750,  786,  793,  796, 
840,  850,  897,  898,  912,  919,  946, 
949a,  975,  999,  1000,   1001,   1006. 
1014.  1034,  1049,  1065,  1071,  1072. 

341 


1081,  1083,  1090,  1096,  1123,  1138, 
1139,  1141,  1151,  1153,  1190,  1214, 
1216,  1217,  1223,  1224,  1231,  1232, 
1245,  1272,  1273,  1289,  1302,  1343, 
1349, 1352, 1358, 1411,  1419,  1433a, 
1434,  1435,  1442,  1445,  1465,  1472, 
1482,  1483,  1490a,  1493, 1502, 1513, 
1522,  1526,  1530,  1532,  1542,  1550, 
1569,  1575,  1579,  1580,  1596,  1603, 
1612,  1616,  1627,  1709,  1713,  1741, 
1782,  1785,  1803,  1828,  1844,  1863, 
1866,  1873,  1876,  1878,  1882,  1895, 
1898a,  1948, 1955,  1968,  2023,  2031, 
2044,  2050,  2060,  2063,  2066,  2068, 
2074,  2097,  2121,  2161,  2162,  2199, 
2222,  2224,  2229,  2264,  2273,  2281, 
2282,  2283,  2318,  2321,  2322,  2323, 
2329,  2374,  2387,  2436,  2438,  2467, 
2468,  2497,  2499,  2505,  2528,  2531, 
2533,  2549,  2550,  2575,  2580,  2592, 
2596,  2598,  2613,  2624,  2626,  2654, 
2660,  2668,  2676,  2678,  2679,  2680, 
2708,  2709,  2818 

Pennsylvania.  Anthracite  Coal  Com- 
mission 613 

Pennsylvania.  Anthracite  Coal  In- 
dustry Commission  614,  615,  616 

Pennsylvania.  Commission  on  Special 
Policing  in  Industry  1216 

Pennsylvania.  Commissioners  to  In- 
vestigate the  Bituminous  Coal 
Mines  617 

Pennsylvania.  Department  of  Mines 
and  Mineral  Industries  216,  2068 

Pennsylvania.  General  Assembly  217, 
218,  618,  1217 

Pennsylvania.  Greater  Pennsylvania 
Council  619,  620 

Pennsylvania  Railroad  123 

Pense,  Ronald  A.  2754 

Pensions  576 

Perry,  Harry  621 

Perry,  Huey  1565 

Perry,  Vernon  F.  1218 

Perry  County,  Illinois  243 

Persee,  Franklin  H.  2069 

Peterson,  Bill  1566 

Peterson,  Robert  L.  1980 

Petitt,  S.W.  1083 

Petras,  George  S.  1219 

Pfleider,  Eugene  P.  2070 

Phee,  Catherine  A.  2257 

Philadelphia  &  Reading  Coal  &  Iron 
Co.  48,  766,  1706 

Philadelphia  &  Reading  Co.  393 

Philadelphia  &  Reading  Railroad  Co. 
6,  1706,  1722 

Phillipps,  G.  Jenkins  219 


Phillips,  Cabell  1220 

Phillips,  James  G.  622 

Phoebus,  J.W.  1221 

Pickard,  Claude  E.  220 

Pickell,  John  159 

Pickett,  Tom  623 

Pierce,  James  221,  222 

Pierce,  R.A.  2567 

Pierce,  Richard  A.  223 

Pinchot,  Gifford  624 

Pineville,  Kentucky  1461 

Pinkerton,  Allan  1222 

Pinkertons  380 

Pinkowski,  Edward  625,  1223,  1224 

Pipelines  1638, 1648, 1655, 1661, 1671, 

1717a    1719.  1723,  1724,  1738,  1739 

Pittsburgh  &  Buffalo  Co.  244 

Pittsburgh  &  Midway  Coal  Mining 

Co.  207 
Pittsburgh  &  Westmoreland  Coal  Co. 

630 
Pittsburgh.  Chamber  of  Commerce 

626,  1707 
Pittsburgh  coal  bed  80,  83 
Pittsburgh  Coal  Co.  1748 
Pittsburgh    Consolidation    Coal    Co. 

400 
Pittsburgh.  University  2071 
Pittston  Coal  Company  SEE  Buffalo 

Plass,  William  T.  2072 
Pneumoconiosis  SEE  Health 
Pocahontas    Operators    Association 

225 
Pohlmann,  Kenneth  E.  2398 
Poles  SEE  Racial  and  ethnic  groups 
Police  380,  919, 1001, 1216,  1273,  1419 
Poliniak,  Louis  226 
Pollak,  Katherine  H.  1225 
Pollard,  Benjamin  C.  2073 
Pollard,  Spencer  D.  1226 
Pollock,  John  1797 
Polskov,  Walter  N.  1567 
Polzin,  Paul  E.  2755 
Pomeroy,  S.  227 
Pomeroy,  Samuel  W.  228 
Pope,  George  S.  2756 
Porter,  Eugene  O.  1227 
Posey,  Thomas  E.  627,  1228 
Petkin,  Allen  J.  2073a 
Potter,  Charles  J.  628 
Powderly,  Terence  V.  1372 
Powe,  George  R.  1708 
Powell,  Allan  K.  1229,  2258 
Powell,  H.  Benjamin  229,  230,  1709 
Powell,  William  E.  231 
Power,  Garrett  1990 
Pratt,  John  B.  1792 


342 


Preate.  Ernest  D.  2074 

Preston,  Dennis  R.  2757 

Price,  Tom  1872 

Price  fixing  SEE  Competition 

Price  of  coal  348,  369,  375,  410,  437. 

441,  450,  492.  525,  535.  545.  549. 

624.  668.  713.  725.  733.  781.  2808a 
Priest.  Whayne  C.  Jr.  2075 
Primack.  Phil  1230 
Pritchard.  Paul  W.  1231,  1232 
Privratsky,  Bruce  629 
Production  452,  738,  2767 
Productivity  331,  350,  352,  453,  513, 

552,  681,  683,  776 
Profits  350,  437,  470,  695,  738,  744, 

781,  782 
Progressive  Miners  of  America  853, 

1018,  1033,  1369,  1425,  1426 
Project   Independence    SEE    ALSO 

U.S.  Federal  Energy  Administra- 
tion 503,  742 
Proposed  Plan  for  Smelting  Iron  Ore 

with  Anthracite  Coal  232 
Pryde,  George  B.  233 
Psychological  tests  2639,  2656,  2668, 

2819 
Public  opinion  1981,  2077,  2078,  2080, 

2149,  2825 
Public  relations  926,  1897,  2729,  2769, 

2772 
Pultz,  J.L.  630,  2568 
Pundari,  N.B.  2076 
Purcell,  William  J.  1233 

Quakers  SEE  Friends,  Society  of 
Quarles,  Mary  A.  1568 

Raccoon  Coal  &  Iron  Co.  44 

Racial  and  ethnic  groups  SEE  ALSO 
Negroes  208.  231.  999.  1124,  1175. 
1229,  1427,  1479,  1482,  2272-2300 

Railroads  SEE  ALSO  Names  of  in- 
dividual railroads,  unit  trains  6,  67, 
119,  1090,  1632,  1674,  1681,  1710, 
1711,  1712,  1717,  1722,  1730,  1731, 
1732.  1733.  1737,  1741.  1742.  1752, 
1810 

Ramsay,  E.  2569 

Randall,  D.T.  631 

Randall,  James  G.  1234 

Randolph,  B.S.  234,  2570 

Randolph,  L.S.  235 

Randolph  County,  West  Virginia  60 

Rangell,  Leo  2399 

Ranick,  Elmer  236 

Rashleigh,  Alice  V.  237 

Raskin,  A.H.  1235,  1569 

Rasmussen,  Donald  L.  2400,  2401 

Rasmussen,  Jeanne  M.   1236,   1237, 


2402 

Ratliff.  Paul  1570 

Rau,  Otto  M.  632 

Raushenbush.  Hilmar  633,  1238 

Raushenbush,  Stephen  1239 

Ray,  Frank  A.  2759 

Ray.  John  R.  2077.  2078 

Raymond,  R.W.  2403 

Read,  Thomas  L.  1240 

Reclamation  1896,  1904.  1912.  1914, 
1915,  1929,  1935,  1969,  1970.  1971. 
1976,  1978,  1979,  1988.  1990.  1991. 
1994,  1999,  2001,  2003,  2015,  2018, 
2036,  2037,  2038,  2045,  2046,  2055. 
2064,  2065,  2068,  2072,  2075.  2079. 
2081.  2083,  2090,  2091,  2106,  2107, 
2124,  2127,  2139,  2141,  2153 

Recreation  1867,  1898a,  1923 

Reddy,  Nallapu  N.  2080 

Reed,  J.R.  1671 

Reed,  William  B.  634 

Rees,  Albert  635 

Reeves,  H.C.  636 

Reid,  Ford  1420 

Reitell,  Charles  637,  1711 

Reith,  John  W.  2760,  2761 

Reitze,  Arnold  W.  2084 

Religion  1523,  1572 

Renkey,  Leslie  E.  2085 

Reorganized  Mine  Workers  of  Ameri- 
ca 879 

Research  409,  727,  2674,  2681,  2692, 
2701,  2749,  2798,  2799,  2800.  2809a. 
2824 

Resources  2632 

Retail  coal  trade  418.  500.  592,  677, 
680,  710 

Reyes  Associates,  Inc.  2195a 

Reynolds,  James  E.  1571 

Reynolds,  Robert  J.  1243 

Reynolds,  S.C.  240,  1244 

Reynolds,  W.C.  2571 

Rhode  Island  1,  87, 134,  248,  272,  2442 

Rhodes,  Ben  2763 

Rhodes,  James  F.  241,  1245 

Rice,  George  S.  638,  2259,  2764 

Rice,  James  P.  639 

Rice,  Millard  M.  1246 

Rice,  Otis  K.  242 

Rich,  Mark  1572 

Rich,  Paul  243 

Richards,  W.B.  244 

Richardson,  F.L.W.  1573 

Richardson,  G.B.  2572 

Richardson,  Richard  245 

Richmond,  William  H.  246 

Rickard,  Thomas  A.  247 

Ridenour,  George  L.  1574 


343 


Ridgeway,  James  640,  641,  1247 

Ridgway,  Thomas  S.  248 

Rieber,  Michael  641a 

Riley,  Charles  V.  2086,  2087 

Rimlinger,  Gaston  1248 

Ringer,  Strawder  A.  1249 

Risser,  Hubert  E.  642-45 

Robbins,  W.B.  249 

Roberts,  Derrell  250 

Roberts,  Ellis  W.  1873 

Roberts,  James  A.  1793 

Roberts,  Peter  646,  1250,  1575,  2295 

Roberts,  W.F.  251,  252 

Robinson,  M.B.  1576 

Robinson,  Neil  1251,  2573 

Rochester,  Anna  1252 

Rochester  and  Pittsburgh  Railroad 

1713 
Rockefeller,  John  D.  1253 
Rockville  Coal  Mining  Co.  253 
Rockwell,  Cleveland  2574 
Roden,  B.F.  1577 
Roepke,  Howard  H.  647 
Rogan,  John  M.  2404 
Rogers,  H.O.  2765 
Rogers,  Jack  1578 
Rogers,  Nelson  F.  2088 
Rogers,  William  H.  1794 
Roller,  Anne  H.  2575 
Rood,  Henry  E.  1254,  1579 
Roosevelt,    Franklin   D.   961a,    962, 

1020,  1172,  1255 
Roosevelt,  Theodore  1580 
Ropiequet,  R.W.  1712,  2766 
Rosen,  George  2405 
Ross,  Hugh  254 
Ross,  M.I}-  1581,  1582 
Ross,  Malcolm  H.  1582,  1584 
Rostow,  Eugene  1795 
Rothert,  Otto  A.  255,  256 
Rothfus,  Robert  R.  1713 
Rothman,  Richard  M.  1256 
Rothwell,  Richard  2767 
Rouse,  Elaine  1257 
Rowe,  J.P.  2576,  2577 
Rowe,  J.W.F.  2768 
Rowland  Coal  Co.  510 
Roy,    Andrew    257-60,    1258,    1585, 

1796,  1797,  2260,  2406,  2578,  2579 
Rubenstein,  Stanley  2769 
Rudd,  R.D.  2089 
Ruffin,  Edmund  261 
Rutherford,  George  W.  262 
Rutland,  Robert  263 
Rutledge,  J.J.  264,  2770 
Ryan,  Frederick,  265,  1586 
Ryan,  John  A.  1798 
Ryan,  John  T.  648 


Saalbach,  William  F.  649 

Safety  1431,  1477,  2112,  2157-2216 

Safford,  Beryl  M.  2407 

St.  Clair  Coal  Company  1259 

St.  John,  Isaac  M.  1714 

Saliers,  Earl  A.  1260 

Saline  Coal  and  Manufacturing  Co. 

266 
Salvaterra,  A.C.  651 
Salvati,  Raymond  E.  652 
Sampson,  R.J.  2564 
Samuels,  John  704 
Sanitation  SEE  ALSO  Health  1441 
Sauer,  Nora  1261 
Saunders  (W.B.)  &  Co.  653 
Saward,  Frederick  654-58,  2580 
Sawhill,  John  C.  659 
Sawyer,  L.E.  2090 
Saxon,  George  1262 
Saye,  William  H.  660 
Scamehorn,  Howard  L.  1715 
Scanlon,  David  H.  2091 
Schaefer,  Charles  B.  2581 
Schaefer,  Donald  F.  267 
Schanz,  John  J.  661 
Schenck,  George  661 
Schilling,  Jane  M.  885 
Schlegel,  Marvin  W.  1263 
Schlick,  Donald  P.  1874,  2196 
Schlottmann,  Alan  1875,  2092 
Schmidt,  Richard  A.  495 
Schmidt,  William  F.  2329 
Schmulowitz,  Jack  407 
Schneider,  David  A.  2093 
Schools  SEE  Education 
Schuylkill  County,   Pennsylvania  2, 

210,  329,  1049,  1612 
Scobee,  Barry  2094 
Scotia  Mine  Co.  2261,  2266a 
Scott,  Addison  2582 
Scott,  George  H.  1264 
Scott,  Jeffrey  2771 
Scott,  Karl  M.  1265 
Scott,  Nell  1266 
Scranton,   Pennsylvania    299,    1372, 

1482,  2624 
Scranton.  Board  of  Trade  1716 
Scrip  2645 

Searight,  Walter  V.  662 
Seaton,  Anthony  2388 
Seawall,  Frank  1649 
Seeger,  Pete  1267 
Segerberg,  Osborn  2095 
Seitz,  Wesley  D.  2096 
Selekman,  Benjamin  M.  1268,  1269 
Seltzer,  Bob  2197 
Seltzer,  Curtis  1270 
Selvin,  David  F.  1271 


344 


Sennig,  C.F.  1148 
Shaffner,  M.N.  2097 
Shalloo,  Jeremiah  P.  1273 
Shamokin  Coal  and  Iron  Co.  268 
Shane,  Michael  1274 
Shannon,  Irwin  V.  1588 
Shaw,  A.H.  2583 
Shaw,  Ira  D.  1589 
Sheafer,  Peter  W.  2584 
Shenandoah,  Pa.  172 
Shepherd,  William  G.  1590 
Sheppard,  Muriel  269 
Sheridan,  J.E.  2585 
Sherrill,  Robert  1275 
Sherwood,  R.H.  2098 
Sherwood  Diversified  Services  511 
Shields,  Art  1276 
Shoemaker,  John  W.  2099 
Shotts,  Reynold  Q.  2100 
Showalter,  W.J.  2773 
Shurick,  A.T.  1591,  2586,  2587 

Shurick,  Adam  270,  663,  1717,  2774 

Siehl,  George  H.  2101 

Siems,  George  H.  2102 

Silliman,  Benjamin  271-74 

Simmons,  C.W.  2295a 

Simmons,  Jesse  2588,  2589 

Simonds,  Jerome  H.  1799 

Simpson,  Alexander  G.  1592 

Simpson,  Floyd  R.  1800 

Sinclair,  Hamish  1277 

Sinclair,  Ward  E.  1278,  1279 

Siney,  John  1223 

Sinks,  Alfred  H.  2103 

Sisler,  James  D.  664 

Sitterley,  J.H.  2104 

Sizer,  Samuel  A.  1281 

Skaggs,  Charles  P.  665 

Skelly  &  Loy  1876 

Skinner,  B.F.  2775 

Slab  Fork  Coal  Co.  275 

Slavs  SEE  Racial  and  ethnic  groups 

Slocum,  William  J.  1282 

Sloss,  James  1690 

Slosson,  Edwin  E.  2776 

Sluzalis,  Stanley  E.  276 

Smith,  Bruce  W.  666 

Smith,  Eldon,  D.  2777,  2778 

Smith,  Eugene  277 

Smith,  Frank  G.  667,  1283 

Smith,  George  0.  668,  669,  1284,  2590 

Smith,  Grace  P.  2326 

Smith,  Joseph  B.  2105 

Smith,  Richard  C.  1593 

Smith,  Robert  S.  1991 

Smith,  Ronald  W.  1877 

Smith,  Samuel  R.  2779 

Smith,  Thomas  G.  2591 


Smith,  W.E.  2683 
Snelling,  Walter  0.  2175 
Snow.  John  W.  1826 
Sopper,  William  E.  2106,  2107 
Smithers,  F.S.  &  Company  670 
Smurthwaite,  William  278,  279 
Socialist  and  Labor  Star  911 
Socialist  Party  1089 
Soloman,  H.J.  2198 
Somers,  Gerald  G.  671,  672,  1285 
Songs  SEE  Folklore 
South  Dakota  2780 
South-East  Coal  Company  839 
Southern   Appalachian   Coal   Opera- 
tors' Association  1286 
Southern  Exposure  1287 
Southern   West   Virginia    Economic 

Development  Corporation  673 
Spahr,  Charles  B.  1596 
Spaid,  Ora  674 
Spalding,  H.A.  636 
Spaulding,  Bishop  1145 
Spaulding,  Willard  M.  2108 
Speare,  Morris  E.  2781 
Speltz,  Charles  N.  2109 
Spencer,  K.A.  2110 
Spero,  Sterling  D.  1288 
Sperry,  J.R.  1289 
Spicer,  T.S.  1878 
Spittal,  Hugh  E.  2735,  2736 
Spore,  Robert  L.  2062,  2092,  2111 
Sprague,  Stuart  S.  1289a 
Squire,  Joseph  2593 
Squires,  Arthur  M.  675,  676,  1832 
Stachura,  John  A.  2112 
Stacks,  John  F.  2113 
Stacy,  Charles  B.  2409 
Stanford  Research  Institute  2114 
Stang,  Alan  1290 
Stanley,  Cathy  1457 
Stanley,  Louis  1291 
Starr,  George  W.  677 
Stearns  Coal  &  Lumber  Co.   1966, 

2146 
Stebinger,  Eugene  2594 
Steel,  Alvin  A.  2595 
Steel,  Edward  M.  1292 
Steele,  H.E.  2410 
Steelman,  James  1597 
Steffens,  Lincoln  1293 
Stein,  Jane  679 
Stein,  Leon  1294 
Steiner,  D.E.  1440 
Stephens,  Roderick  680 
Stern,  Gerald  M.  1879 
Stevens,  Elizabeth  2262 
Stevens,  Thomas  H.  680a 
Stevenson,  George  E.  2782 


345 


Stevenson,  Gloria  1295 

Stewart,  Charles  L.  2116 

Stewart,  E.  681,  682,  683 

Stewart,  Ethel  R.  2783 

Stewart,  Paul  D.  684 

Stillman,  Don  1162,  1286,  1598,  1599 

Stinnett,  Landy  A.  and  others  2783a 

Stock,  A.R.  685 

Stocking,  George  W.  1297 

Stockton,  Richard  1600 

Stoddard,  C.E.  1298 

Stoddard,  Paul  W.  280 

Stoek,  H.H.  2117,  2199,  2263,  2596 

Stone,  Ralph  W.  2597 

Stone,  Warren  S.  1113,  1326,  1330 

Storrs,  Arthur  H.  2598 

Storrs,  L.S.  2599 

Stotesbury  coal  museum  93 

Stow,  Audley  H.  2600 

Straton.  John  W.  2784 

Straw,  Richard  A.  1299,  2296 

Strikes  SEE  Labor  relations 

Strip  mining  SEE  Surface  mining 

Strong,  Edna  R.  1602 

Strong,  Henry  K.  281 

Stroup,  Richard  2785 

Sturgeon,  Myron  T.  282 

Subsidence  790,  1844,  1873,  2793 

Suffern,  Arthur  E.  686,  1303,  1304 

Suggs,  G.G.  1305 

Sulzberger,  C.L.  1306 

Supply  &  demand  for  coal  372,  421, 

423,   580,   589,   737,   2688,    2728a, 

2762,  2783a,  2827 
Surface,  George  T.  2297 
Surface  mining  1896-2156 
Sutherland,  Howard  1801,  2786 
Swados,  Harvey  1603 
Swain,  George  T.  283,  1307 
Swank,  James  M.  284,  285 
Sweet,  Patricia  A.  1604 
Sweet,  Sylvanus  H.  286 
Swift,  Bert  1605 
Swisher,  Jacob  A.  287 
Switch-Back  Railroad  288 
Sycamore  Coal  mines  75,  289 
Sydenstricker,  Edgar  1308,  1309 

Tabb,  William  K.  688 

Taff,  Joseph  A.  2601 

Tabershaw,  Irving  R.  2414 

Taft,  Philip  1294 

Tarns,  W.P.  171,  290 

Tankersley,  Allen  P.  291 

Tariff  65,  323,  570 

Taubenhaus,  Marjorie  2415 

Taxation  353,  356,  364,  377,  380,  490, 
518,  558,  560,  579,  597,  629,  636, 
639,  665,  700,  749,  2644,  2680,  2685, 


2720 

Taylor,  George  292 

Taylor,  Glenn  R.  1718 

Taylor,  John  R.  689 

Taylor,  Paul  F.  1310,  1311,  1312 

Taylor,  Richard  C.  293,  294 

Taylor,  Samuel  A.  690 

Taylor,  Warren  C.  1606 

Teleky,  Ludwig  2416 

Tennessee  8,  70,  105,  181,  385,  504, 
691,  804,  805,  921,  956,  1038,  1039, 
1217,  1267,  1287,  1430,  1966,  2125, 
2132,  2146,  2228,  2302,  2303,  2328, 
2378,  2464,  2473,  2529,  2530,  2532, 
2532,  2537,  2538,  2551,  2602,  2603, 
2604,  2635,  2787 

Tennessee.  Bureau  of  Agriculture, 
Statistics  and  Mines  2602 

Tennessee  Coal,  Iron  &  Railroad  Co. 
108,  464 

Tennessee.  Dept.  of  Conservation 
and  Commerce  2125 

Tennessee.  Energy  Office  2604 

Tennessee.  General  Assembly  691 

Tennessee.  State  Planning  Commiss- 
ion 2787 

Tennessee  University  692 

Tennessee  Valley  Authority  447,  488, 
584,  693,  1881,  1924,  1925,  2095, 
2126,  2152 

Tennessee  Valley  Authority.  Office  of 
Power  693 

Tetra  Tech,  Inc.  2788 

Texas  98,  2437,  2563,  2609 

Texas  Eastern  Transmission  Corp- 
oration 1719 

Tharp,  Marilyn  295 

Thomas,  B.B.  694 

Thomas,  E.H.C.  695 

Thomas,  Jerry  B.  2%,  297 

Thomas,  Samuel  298 

Thompson,  Carol  L.  1802 

Thompson,  Craig  1313 

Thompson,  J.C.  696 

Thompson,  James  H.  697-700 

Thompson,  T.L.  1739 

Thornley,  Fred  C.  701 

Thorp,  William  L.  702 

Thrasher,  Sue  2302 

Throop,  Benjamin  299 

Thurman,  Walter  2785 

Thurmond,  Walter  R.  300 

Tidewater  Coal  Exchange  2789 

Tioga  County,  Pa.  116,  1000,  1141 

Tippett,  Thomas  1314,  1607 

Tipton,  J.C.  301 

Titchener,  James  L.  2417 

Titler,  George  J.  1315 

Toenges,  Albert  L.  1720,  2127,  2606 

346 


Tomimatsu.  T.T.  703 

Tomkins,  Calvin  2128 

Tompkins,  Dorothy  L.  2128a 

Toohey.  Pat  1316 

Toole.  K.  Ross  2129 

Toothman,  Fred  R.  2790 

Tower,  Charlemagne  27 

Towson.  Charles  R.  1608 

Trachtenberg,  Alexander  1803 

Tracy,  Eleanor  J.  704 

Traer,  Glenn  W.  705 

Trail,  William  R.  1317 

Training  521,  2195a,  2625,  2635,  2697, 

2718,  2721,  2722,  2734,  2740,  2753, 

2816a, 
Transportation  SEE  ALSO  Canals, 

pipelines,   railroads   6,    198,    306, 

1632-1742,  2689,  2778 
Trapnell,  W.C.  706 
Treacy,  John  2130 
Trester,  Delmer  J.  1318 
Trisko,  Ralph  L.  1804 
Trott,  Harlan  707 
Truax-Traer  Coal  Co.  1883 
Truax,  Chester  N.  2131 
Tryon,  F.G.  708,  1320,  2791,  2792 
Tugendhat,  George  709 
Tung,  Hong-Shoug  2132 
Tuomey,  M.  302 
Turner.  George  E.  2715 
Turner,  Harry  710 
Turner,  Scott  2133 
Tyron,  523,  788 

Uhrin,  David  C.  358 

Unemployment  361,  431,  627,  735, 
736,  750,  775,  1178 

Union  Pacific  Coal  Co.  233,  303 

Union  Potomac  Co.  304 

Unit  Trains  1648,  1665,  1690,  1740 

United  Anthracite  Miners  1081,  1411 

United  Mine  Workers  of  America 
416,  713a,  792,  815,  819,  822,  832, 
834,  838,  844,  846,  847,  859,  866, 
867,  868,  878.  880,  881,  913,  926, 
929,  937,  942,  944,  951,  957,  960, 
989,  990,  1004,  1012,  1022,  1023, 
1025,  1026,  1030,  1031,  1035,  1037, 
1051,  1052,  1053,  1055,  1066,  1077, 
1079,  1089,  1091,  1092,  1098,  1106, 
1109,  1114,  1115,  1119,  1128,  1130, 
1150,  1152,  1158,  1161,  1163,  1173, 
1179,  1180,  1181,  1183,  1192,  1197, 
1199,  1204,  1219.  1226.  1233.  1235. 
1236,  1237,  1254,  1257,  1261,  1270, 
1275.  1276.  1278,  1279,  1280,  1291, 
1296,  1299,  1310,  1317,  1322-40, 
1361,  1366,  1374,  1375,  1402,  1403, 
1415,  1784,  1908,  2274,  2284,  2293, 
2296 


United   Mine  Workers  of   America. 

Journal  1162.  1187,  1247,  1249 
United   Mine   Workers  of   America. 

Welfare  &  Retirement  Fund  1180, 

1181.  1215.  1264.  1341,  1360,  1400. 

2345,  2346,  2347 
U.S.  Army.  Corps  of  Engineers  1884 
U.S.  Atomic  Energy  Commission.  711 
U.S.  Bureau  of  Labor  1343 
U.S.  Bureau  of  Labor  Statistics  712, 

713 
U.S.   Bureau   of  Mines  2200,   2201, 

2419,  2793-96 

U.S.  Children's  Bureau  1609,  2202 
U.S.  Coal  Commission  482,  714,  1329 

1331,  1413,  1634,  1771,  1772 
U.S.  Coal  Mines  Administration  2420 
U.S.  Colorado  Coal  Commission  1344 
U.S.  Commission  on  Industrial  Rela- 
tions 1345,  1346 
U.S.    Commissioner    of   Labor    715, 

1347 
U.S.  Comptroller  General  1884a,  2797 
U.S.   Congress.    Committee   on   the 

District  of  Columbia  716 
U.S.  Congress.  House  305,  717,  718, 

1805,  1806,  1807,  1808 
U.S.  Congress.  House.  Committee  on 

Education  &  Labor  1348,  2203-9, 

2265,  2421,  2422 
U.S.  Congress.  House.  Committee  on 

Government     Operations.      1885, 

2210 
U.S.  Congress.  House.  Committee  on 

Interior  and  Insular  Affairs  1809-11, 

2134-36,  2798,  2799,  2800 
U.S.  Congress.  House.  Committee  on 

Interstate  and  Foreign  Commerce 

719,  1722,  2801, 
U.S.  Congress.  House.  Committee  on 

Labor   Troubles   in   Pennsylvania 

1349 
U.S.  Congress.  House.  Committee  on 

Mines  and  Mining  2211 
U.S.  Congress.  HOuse.  Committee  on 

public  lands  2802 
U.S.  Congress.  House.  Committee  on 

the  Budget  2803 
U.S.  Congress.  House.  Committee  on 

the  judiciary  2804 
U.S.  Congress.  House.  Committee  on 

Ways  and  Means  720,  721,  1812 
U.S.  Congress.  House.  Select  Com- 
mittee on  Existing  Labor  Troubles 

in  Pennsylvania  1352 
U.S.  Congress.  Senate  722,  723,  724, 

725,  1813,  1814 
U.S.  Congress.  Senate.  Committee  on 


347 


Commerce  1723 

U.S.  Congress.  Senate.  Committee  on 
Education  and  Labor  1353-57,  1815 

U.S.  Congress.  Senate.  Committee  on 
Indian  Affairs  2805 

U.S.  Congress.  Senate  Committee  on 
Interior  &  Insular  Affairs  726-32, 
1724,  1816,  2137-40,  2266,  2806, 
2807 

U.S.  Congress.  Senate.  Committee  on 
Interstate  Commerce  733,  1358, 
1817-21 

U.S.  Congress.  Senate.  Committee  on 
Interstate  and  Foreign  Commerce 
734 

U.S.  Congress.  Senate.  Committee  on 
Labor  and  Public  Welfare  735,  736, 
1359,  1360,  1361,  2212,  2213,  2266a, 
2423-25 

U.S.  Congress.  Senate.  Committee  on 
Manufacturers  737,  738,  1362 

U.S.  Congress.  Senate.  Committee  on 
Mines  and  Mining  1822,  2214 

U.S.  Congress.  Senate.  Committee  on 
Naval  Affairs  1725 

U.S.  Congress.  Senate.  Committee  on 
Public  Works  739 

U.S.  Congress.  Senate.  Committee  on 
the  District  of  Columbia  2808 

U.S.  Congress.  Senate.  Special  Com- 
mittee to  Investigate  Industrial 
Centralization  740 

U.S.  Congress.  Senate.  Special  Com- 
mittee to  Investigate  the  Fuel 
Situation  on  the  Middle  West  741 

U.S.  Council  on  Wage  and  Price 
Stability  2808a 

U.S.  Department  of  Agriculture  2141 

U.S.  Department  of  the  Interior  1823, 
2142,  2143,  2144,  2267 

U.S.  Environmental  Protection 
Agency  2144a 

U.S.  Federal  Energy  Administration 
742 

U.S.  Federal  Fuel  Distributor  2809 

U.S.  Federal  Trade  Commission  718, 
743,  744,  745,  1726 

U.S.  Federal  Water  Pollution  Control 
Administration  1886 

U.S.  Fuel  Administration  572 

U.S.  General  Accounting  Office  2809a 

U.S.  Geological  Survey  2631 

U.S.  Immigration  Commission  2298 

U.S.  Industrial  Commission  1363 

U.S.  Interstate  Commerce  Commiss- 
ion 746, 1727, 1728, 1729, 1730, 1731 

U.S.  Library  of  Congress.  Congress- 
ional Research  Service  747,  1824 

U.S.  National  Archives  2810 


U.S.  Office  of  Coal  Research  1887 
U.S.  Public  Health  Service  2426 
U.S.  Railroad  Administration  1732, 

1733 
U.S.  Steel  Corp.  748 
U.S.     Transportation    Investigation 

and  Research  Board  1734 
U.S.  Treasury  Department  749 
U.S.  Women's  Bureau  1610 
Urwick,  Currie  Ltd.  2811 
Utah  208,  209,  475,  752,  1209,  1229, 
1868,  2248,  2258,  2439,  2469,  2498, 
2536,  2572,  2610,  2699 
Utah.  Committee  to  Study   Opera- 
tions of  State  Government  752 
Utah  International  Inc.  1904 
Utilities  SEE  Electric  power  produc- 
tion 

Vaile,  R.S.  753 

Valuation  SEE  Appraisal 

Vance,  Stanley  C.  754 

Vandervliet,  B.  2007 

Van  De  Water,  Frederick  2215 

Van  Hise,  Charles  R.  755 

Van  Kleeck,  Mary  453,  1268,  1365 

Van  Meter,  LaRue  1611 

Vargas,  Ernest  A.  1433 

Vaughan,  Thomas  W.  2609 

Veal,  Phil  1366 

Vecsey,  George  1613,  1614 

Veenstra,  T.A.  463,  756 

Venslauskas,  Stanley  C.  1612 

Verhoeff,  Mary  306 

Victor,  Richard  H.  1888 

Vincent,  Merle  D.  757 

Vining,  Stanley  307 

Virginia  9,  12,  61,  84,  95,  128,  141, 
145,  235,  261,  274,  302,  304,  305, 
326,  327,  401,  404,  499,  559,  629, 
758,  1457,  1462,  1471,  1602,  1613, 
1614,  1658,  1667,  1672,  1714,  2260, 
2516,  2545,  2565,  2568,  2597 

Virginia.  Division  of  Planning  and 
Economic  Development  758 

Virtue,  G.O.  759,  1367,  1368 

Vocabulary  2757 

Voelker,  S.W.  2715a 

Vogtle,  A.W.  760 

Vorse,  Mary  H.  1369 

Voskuil,  Walter  H.  761,  762,  1735 

Vyas,  K.C.  1837 

Wadleigh,  F.R.  763,  764,  765,  2814 
Wages  341,  344,  350,  357,  369,  373, 
406,  432,  451,  461,  497,  520,  538, 
545,  624,  650,  671,  712,  713a,  722, 
816,  841,  909,  978,  1077,  1219, 1332, 
1333 
Wagner,  E.C.  310 


348 


Wahler  and  Associates  1889 

Wakefield.  D.  1370 

Wali,  M.K.  2145 

Walker,  Albert  H.  766 

Walker.  Charles  R.  1371 

Walker,  Elmore  311 

Walker,  Francis  767 

Walker,  James  R.  1735a 

Walker,  Samuel  E.  1372 

Walker.  William  S.  2299 

Walker,  Wilma  1615 

Wallace,  George  Selden  1373 

Wallace,  Tom  2146 

Walling  Henry  F.  312 

Walsh,  John  768 

Walsh,  William  J.  1374 

Walter,  George  H.  2147 

Walter,  R.A.  313 

Walters,  A.  314 

Walters,  Robert  1375 

Walton,  Mary  1890 

Walton,  Thomas  H.  315 

Wance,  William  1615 

Warburton,  Amber  A.  1617 

Ward,  Willard  E.  2815 

Wardley,  C.S.  316 

Warne,  Colston  E.  1378,  1379 

Warne,  Frank  J.  769,  1380-86,  2300 

Warner,  Arthur  1387 

Warner,  Fayette  S.  770 

Warner,  Larkin  1736,  1737 

Warriner,  J.B.  1102,  2148 

Warriner,  S.D.  771,  2816 

Washburn,  Harry  L.  10 

Washington  187,  295,  1319,  1622, 
1852,  2233,  2492,  2504,  2515,  2525 

Wasp,  E.J.  1738,  1739 

Water  pollution  1770,  1834,  1853, 
1854,  1855,  1877, 1884a,  1886, 1891, 
1893,  1895,  1939,  1974,  2035a,  2061, 
2071,  2086 

Water  Resources  Scientific  Informa- 
tion Center  1891 

Water  supply  1747,  1857,  1947,  2131, 
2755 

Watkins,  Harold  M.  772 

Watson,  William  D.  773 

Watts,  A.C.  1618,  2610 

Weaver,  Paul  H.  774 

Webb,  John  N.  775 

Webbink,  Douglas  W.  577 

Wechsler.  James  A.  1388 

Week,  Egon  2816a 

Weckesser,  Ernest  1389 

Weedfall,  Robert  0.  2268 

Weeks,  Joseph  D.  2611 

Weinberg,  Edgar  776 

Weitzell,  E.H.  1390 

Welfare  plans  104 


Weller,  Jack  1619 

Wellman.  Walter  2612 

Wells,  Jane  F.  2149 

Werner.  G.  J.  2703 

Werstein,  Irving  1391 

West,  Harold  E.  1392 

West.  Jim  777 

West  Virginia  4.  14,  32,  36,  39.  60,  63, 
64,  66,  67,  69,  82,  85,  93,  95,  97, 
103a,  112,  118,  120,  137,  151,  165, 
171,  186,  193,  197,  225,  242,  275, 
283,  290,  291,  296,  297,  300,  318, 
319,  324.  332.  353.  374.  377.  397. 
497.  510.  511.  512.  559.  627,  664, 
673.  684,  697,  698,  699,  778,  802, 
806.  816.  822.  824,  828,  847,  849, 
851,  876.  877.  899,  911,  917,  923. 
931.  933.  941.  947,  968,  979,  980, 
1013,  1024,  1030,  1067,  1078,  1084. 
1086,  1093,  1126,  1132,  1133,  1146, 
1148,  1154,  1171,  1177,  1201,  1202, 
1205,  1206,  1220,  1228,  1234,  1251, 
1289a,  1292,  1301, 1307, 1313,  1317. 
1353,  1354,  1356,  1357,  1358,  1373, 
1377,  1387,  1392,  1393,  1394,  1395, 
1396,  1399,  1414,  1417,  1418,  1431, 
1432,  1436,  1439,  1440,  1443,  1452, 
1458,  1475,  1478,  1491.  1498,  1504, 
1507,  1514,  1523,  1531,  1535,  1540, 
1543,  1545,  1546,  1549,  1551,  1553, 
1554,  1557,  1565,  1569,  1571,  1572, 
1578,  1583,  1584,  1590,  1594,  1623, 
1631,  1662,  1685,  1703,  1783,  1825, 
1833,  1838-41,  1847,  1850,  1856, 
1864,  1869,  1870,  1872,  1879,  1884, 
1890,  1897,  1903,  1906,  1914,  1930, 
1932,  1940,  1948,  1951,  1964,  2054, 
2057,  2102,  2114,  2123,  2170,  2179, 
2185,  2186,  2194,  2225,  2226,  2232, 
2234,  2235,  2236,  2238,  2252,  2253, 
2254,  2255,  2256,  2259,  2262,  2263, 
2267,  2268,  2269,  2275,  2289,  2290, 
2292,  2295a,  2317,  2332,  2350,  2356, 
2360,  2361,  2363,  2375,  2392,  2399, 
2417,  2429,  2445,  2450,  2451,  2453, 
2459,  2483,  2490,  2496,  2508,  2511, 
2519,  2545,  2546,  2552,  2556,  2557, 
2559,  2562,  2570,  2571,  2573,  2579, 
2582,  2600,  2611,  2612,  2637,  2682, 
2691,  2718,  2723,  2727,  2745,  2745, 
2746,  2783,  2790 

West  Virginia.  Attorney  General's 
Office  1393 

West  Virginia  Coal  Mining  Co.  317 

West  Virginia  Federation  of  Labor 
118 

West  Virginia.  Governor's  Ad  Hoc 
Commission  of  Inquiry  1892 

West  Virginia.  Governor's  Commiss 

349 


ion  on  Logan  County  Situation  1394 
West  Virginia.   Governor's   Investi- 
gating Committee  1395 
West  Virginia.  Legislature  778,  2269 
West  Virginia.  Mining  Commission 

1825 
West  Virginia.  Mining  Investigation 

Commission  1396 

West  Virginia  University.  Coal  Re- 
search Bureau  533,  1893 

Western  coal  SEE  Western  States 

Western  Federation  of  Miners  903, 
1397 

Western  States  396,  432a,  531,  582, 
609,  779,  1708,  1747,  1900,  1905, 
1917,  1933,  1954,  1961,  1965,  1970, 
2024,  2025,  2027,  2064,  2076,  2083, 
2129,  2144a,  2691a,  2720,  2728a 

Westfield,  James  1827 

Westover,  J.H.  2328 

Wetherill,  J.  Price  2613 

Wetzel,  John  A.  1620 

Weyl,  Walter  1398 

Whaite,  Ralph  H.  1866 

Wheeler,  Edward  K.  1826 

Wheeler,  Hoyt  N.  1399 

White,  D.H.  1846,  2728a 

White,  David  2614 

White,  Elizabeth  319 

White,  I.C.  2615,  2616,  2617 

White,  J.H.  1621,  2427 

White,  Josiah  194,  245,  320 

White,  Thomas  E.  1400 

Whiteside,  F.W.  2618,  2619,  2620 

Whitlatch,  Elbert  E.  2817 

Whitman,  Ira  L.  1894 

Whittlesey,  Charles  321,  322 

Wice,  Marsha  N.  1402 

Wickersham,  Edward  D.  1403 

Wiebe,  Robert  H.  1404 

Wieck,  Agnes  1405 

Wieck,  Edward  A.  1406-9,  2270,  2271 

Wiener,  Frederick  B.  2150 

Wiesel,  Carl  2428 

Wilder,  Henry  J.  2818 

Wilderness  of  St.  Anthony  17 

Wildlife  SEE  Fish  and  wildlife 

Wilfong,  Harry  Dean  2819 

Wilkerson,  W.V.  2429 

Wilkinson,  Joseph  F.  2151 

Willard,  Lucius  1622 

Willcox,  David  1410 

Williams,  Bruce  T.  1622a 

Williams,  Dorcas  A.  1623 

Williams,  Frank  E.  1895 

Williams,  Gertrude  M.  1411 

Williams,  John  A.  323,  324 

Williams,  L.M.  1624 

Williams,  Pierce  2430 


Williams,  Roger  M.  2152 

Williams,  Stanley  B.  1625 

Williams,  Talcott  1412 

Williams,  William  H.  1741 

Williamson,  H.A.  2820 

Willis,  Beverly  A.  1626 

Willits,  Joseph  H.  1413 

Wilson,  Edmund  1414 

Wilson,  H.A.  2153 

Wilson,  H.M.  2216 

Wilson,  Helen  1627 

Wilson,  Isabella  C.  2431 

Wilson,  John  M.  1628 

Wilson,  William  B.  1231,  1232,  1415 

Wilson,  Woodrow  1050 

Wilson  Survey  4,  151 

Wimpfen,  Sheldon  P.  780 

Wing,  David  L.  781,  782 

Wisconsin  2760 

Wisconsin  Steel  Co.  508 

Withrow,  Michael  V.  2154 

Witt,  Matt  325,  1416 

Wolfe,  Charles  F.  783 

Wolfe,  George  1417 

Wolfe,  Marshall  L.  2621 

Wolfe,  Thomas  M.  784 

Wolfle,  Lee  M.  2821 

Wolf  son,  Harold  2769 

Wolkins,  George  G.  2822 

Woolley,  Bryan  1420 

Woll,  Matthew  1418 

Woltman,  Frederick  1419 

Women  236,  1078,  1213,  1457,  1474, 
1508,  1530,  1610,  2288 

Woodbridge,  Dwight  1629 

Woodworth,  Jay  B.  326,  2622 

Woolrich,  Willis  R.      785 

Wooldridge,  A.S.  327 

Wootton  Land  &  Fuel  Co.  22 

Work  stoppages  SEE  ALSO  Labor 
relations  934,  964,  1017 

Workingmen's  Benevolent  Associa- 
tion 820,  1214,  1263 

Wozniewicz,  Edward  J.  786 

Wright,  Carroll  D.  1423 

Wright,  Helen  R.  480,  481,  1424 

Wyler,  Samuel  S.  2823 

Wyoming  1547,  1857,  1936,  2042, 
2045,  2105,  2469,  2527,  2555,  2558, 
2566,  2686,  2588,  2589,  2686 

Wyoming  County,  Pa.  110,  111,  163, 
164,  211,  308,  328 

Yablonski,    Joseph   815,   868,    1098, 

1183,  1237 
Yancik,  Joseph  J.  2824 
Yanik,  Glenn  G.  2155 
Yeager,  Lee  E.  2156 
Yearley,  C.K.  329 

350 


Yerkes.  S.L.  1742  Ziegler,  Martin  1828 

Young,  CM.  2623  Ziegler.  Robert  H.  1426a 

Young,  Dallas  M.  1425,  1426  Ziegler  Coal  Co.  1562 

Young,  Gordon  787  Zierer.  Clifford  M.  2624 

Young,  Lewis  H.  2825  Zimmerman,  H.O.  1630 

Young,  W.H.  788  Zimmerman,  M.B.  2827 

Zahorski.  Witold  W.  2432  Zimolzak,  Chester  E    1631 

Zandarski.  Joseph  R.  789  Zuberer    David  A^2153 

Zanolli,  S.W.  2826  Zwartendyk,  Jan  790 
Zapata  Norness,  Inc.  512 


351