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Coal industry in America
3 0802 000808438 1
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West Virginia University Library
This book is due on the date indicated below.
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JUN 23 1893
AUG S i m
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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
KufoJuj
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
/
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
/
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-
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127. HAZARD, ERSKINE
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128. HEINRICH, OSWALD J.
The Midlothian Colliery, Virginia. AIME. Transactions 1:
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129. HERMELIN, SAMUEL G.
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1793. Philadelphia: John Morton Memorial Museum, 1931.
82p.
130. HIGGINS, WALLACE W.
Mine dogs and dog miners. Chillicothe, Ohio: Ross County
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Working conditions in small Ohio coal mines during 1870's, 1880.
Dogs were used to help pull cars.
. 131.
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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.
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135. HOFFMAN, JOHN N.
Girard estate coal lands in Pennsylvania, 1801-1884. Wash-
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15
/
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.
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138. ILLINOIS COAL
Hunfs Merchants Magazine 42: 492-94 1860.
Brief account of the history and present status of coal mining in
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139. ILLINOIS COAL OPERATORS ASSOCIATION
A brief outline of 25 years history and experience, with
special reference to the unusual developments of the war
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140. ILLINOIS. DEPT. OF MINES AND MINERALS
A compilation of the reports of the mining industry of Ill-
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141. IMBODEN, JOHN D.
The coal and iron resources of Virginia; their extent, com-
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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
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144. JAMES, THOMAS C.
A brief account of the discovery of anthracite coal on the
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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-
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/
147. JILLSON, WTLLARD R.
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147a. JOHNSON, CYNTHIA
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148. JOHNSON, OLE S.
The industrial store; its history, operations, and economic
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149. JOHNSON, WALTER R.
The coal trade of British America, with researches on the
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150. JOHNSON, WALTER R.
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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
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152. JOHNSON, WALTER R.
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153. JOHNSON, WALTER R.
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17
/
154. JONES, ALFRED C.
Remarks on the use of anthracite coal in smith's work.
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155. JONES, ELIOT
Anthracite coal combination in the United States; with
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261p. ( Harvard Economic Studies XI ) .
156. KEATING, WILLIAM
Considerations upon the art of mining. To which are add-
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157. KEISER, JOHN H.
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158. KELEMEN, THOMAS A.
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159. KENTUCKY GOAL MINING CO.
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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-
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161. rasFT., RICHARD H.
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The Raton coal field is located in northern New Mexico. The author
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18
162. KEYES, CHARLES R.
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163. KULP, GEORGE B.
Coal; its antiquity, discovery and early development in the
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164. THE LACKAWANNA AND WYOMING COAL REGION
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165. LAING, JAMES T.
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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
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168. LEAMER, LAURENCE
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Interview of Major W. P. Tarns, Jr., the last of the West Vir-
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169. LEHIGH COAL AND NAVIGATION CO.
Facts illustrative of the character of the anthracite or Le-
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170. LEHIGH COAL AND NAVIGATION COMPANY
A history of the Lehigh Coal and Navigation Company.
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19
171. LEHIGH NAVIGATION COAL COMPANY
The story of the old company. Landford, Pennsylvania,
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172. LEIGHTON, GEORGE R.
Shenandoah, Pennsylvania; the story of an anthracite town.
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173. LOGAN COAL OPERATORS ASSOCIATION
The story of Logan County, West Virginia coal. Logan,
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174. LONGEST, THOMAS C.
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175. LOVE, GEORGE H.
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176. LYCOMING COAL COMPANY
A brief description of the property belonging to the Ly-
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177. MC AULIFFE, EUGENE
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178. MC AULIFFE, EUGENE
Romance and tragedy of coal. Omaha, Nebraska: Colonial
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179. MC CAULEY, RAY L.
The natural and cultural factors that have affected coal
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180. MC CLANE, WILLIAM
Letter on the supply of bituminous coal from North Caro-
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181. MC CORMICK, ALLEN
Development of the coal industry of Grundy County,
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20
182. MC DONALD, RITA AND M. G. BURLING AME
Montana's first commercial coal mine. Pacific Northwest
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183. MC FARLAND, CHARLES K.
Roosevelt, Lewis and the New Deal, 1933-1940. Fort
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184. MANLEY, ROBERT N.
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184a. MARTIN, ALBRO
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185. MARYLAND UNIVERSITY. BUREAU OF BUSINESS AND ECONOMIC
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Coal in the Maryland economy, 1736-1965. 20p. (Its Stud-
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186. MASSAY, GLENN F.
Coal consolidation: profile of the Fairmont field of north-
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187. MELDER, F. E.
History of the discoveries and physical development of the
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188. MICHALIK, BENJAMIN A.
The decline of anthracite, 1913-1955. Dissertation. Ford-
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189. MTESSE, CHARLES
Points on coal and the coal business. Myerstown, Pennsyl-
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21
190. MILLER, GEORGE L.
Early dreams of coal in Nebraska. Nebraska State Histor-
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191. MINER, WILLIAM P.
"Cist versus Fell," or the domestic use of anthracite coal.
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192. MITCHELL, THOMAS D.
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193. MOONEY, FRED
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The autobiography of Mooney, an important figure in the UMWA
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194. MORTON, ELEANOR
Josiah White, prince of pioneers. New York: Stephen
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White was an important figure in the development of the anthra-
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195. MORY, SAMUEL A.
History of coal mining in Laurel County, Kentucky, 1750
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196. MOSS, ALEX
Highlights in the coal trade during the war period. Coal
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197. MOURAT, MARY P.
A history of coal mining in West Virginia to 1933. Thesis.
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198. NEW ERA IN THE COAL TRADE
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The introduction of steam colliers to take the place of schooners will
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199. NEW YORK COAL COMPANY
Plan for supplying the City of New York with fuel. New
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22
200. NICOLLS, WILLIAM J.
Above ground and below in the George's Creek coal reg-
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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,
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203. THE NORTH AMERICAN (PHILADELPHIA)
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204. NOTICE OF COAL MINES IN ILLINOIS
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Short account of the Mount Carbon coal mines near Brownsville.
205. OHIO. DEPT. OF INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS. DIVISION OF LABOR
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206. ON COAL AS A FUEL IN AMERICA
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"Would it not be in the interest of the United States to establish a
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207. P. & M. HISTORY
Coal Age Oct. 1966 82-168.
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208. PAPANIKOLAS, HELEN Z.
The Greeks of Carbon County. Utah Historical Quarterly
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209. PAPANIKOLAS, HELEN Z.
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23
210. PATTERSON, JOSEPH F.
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211. PATTERSON, LOUISE H.
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212. PAUL, WOLFGANG
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940p.
A collection dealing with the history, folklore, music etc. of all types
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213. PEACH ORCHARD COAL COMPANY
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"The works and lands of the Company are situated in Lawrence
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214. PEARCE, ALBERT
The growth and development of the Kentucky coal indus-
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215. PENNSYLVANIA COAL REGION
Harper 27: 455-67 1863.
Account of a trip through the area.
216. PENNSYLVANIA. DEPARTMENT OF MINES AND MINERAL INDUS-
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An excellent source for statistical information; arranged by county.
217. PENNSYLVANIA. GENERAL ASSEMBLY
Acts of the General Assembly of Pennsylvania concerning
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24
218. PENNSYLVANIA. GENERAL ASSEMBLY. SENATE. COMMITTEE ON
COAL TRADE
Report of the committee of the State of Pennsylvania, upon
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219. PHULIPPS, G. JENKINS
Systems of mining coal and metalliferous veins fully ex-
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220. PICKARD, CLAUDE E.
The western Kentucky coal field: the influence of coal
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221. PIERCE, JAMES
Anthracite region of Pennsylvania. [Hazard's] Register of
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222. PIERCE, JAMES
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223. PIERCE, RICHARD A.
The Russian coal mine on the Kenai. Alaska Journal 5:
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224. PITTSBURGH AND BUFFALO COMPANY
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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.
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"Early coal mining in picture and story in the land of the Mollie
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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
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229. POWELL, H. BENJAMIN
Coal, Philadelphia, and the Schuylkill. Dissertation. Le-
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230. POWELL, H. BENJAMIN
Establishing the anthracite boomtown of Maunch Chunk,
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A documentary history of the establishment of an early center of
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231. POWELL, WILLIAM E.
European settlement in the Cherokee-Craford coal field of
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The demand for labor in the mines caused a considerable immigra-
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232. PROPOSED PLAN FOR SMELTING IRON ORE WITH ANTHRACITE
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Journal of the Franklin Institute 8: 231-32 1831.
233. PRYDE, GEORGE B.
The Union Pacific Coal Company, 1868-1952. Annals of
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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
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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
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242. RICE, OTIS K.
Coal mining in the Kanawha Valley to 1861: a view of in-
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Problems of financing and transportation gready hindered the de-
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243. RICH, PAUL .
Early industries in Perry County, Illinois. Illinois Histor-
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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-
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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
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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-
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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-
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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-
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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
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122p.
298. THOMAS, SAMUEL
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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-
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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-
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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
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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-
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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
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567. MONELL, LOUIS F.
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583. NATHAN (ROBERT R.) ASSOCIATES
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585. NATIONAL COAL ASSOCIATION
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587. NATIONAL INDUSTRIAL CONFERENCE BOARD
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287p.
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technologies for solving environmental problems and for transform-
ing solid coal into synthetic gaseous and liquid fuels are promising.
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likely that coal alone could completely eliminate the Nation's de-
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592. NEBRASKA. UNIVERSITY. COMMITTEE ON BUSINESS RESEARCH
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'^abor costs are too high.
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622. PHILLIPS, JAMES G.
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626. PITTSBURGH. CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
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631. RANDALL, D. T.
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632. RAU, OTTO M.
Preliminary report on stabilization of Illinois coal industry.
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633. RAUSHENBUSH, HILMAR
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636. REEVES, H. C. AND H. A. SPALDING
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637. REITELL, CHARLES
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638. RICE, GEORGE S.
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70
641. RIDGEWAY, JAMES
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643. RISSER, HUBERT E.
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644. RISSER, HUBERT E.
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645. RISSER, HUBERT E.
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646. ROBERTS, PETER
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71
650. SALARIES OF MINE OFFICIALS
Coal Age 12: 594-95, 629 1917.
Gives average salaries by state of mine officials— superintendents,
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651. SALVATERRA, A. C.
The application of computers in the mining industry.
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652. SALVATI, RAYMOND E.
Island Creek, a career company devoted to coal. New
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653. SAUNDERS (W. B. ) & CO.
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654. SAWARD, FREDERICK
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657. SAWARD, FREDERICK
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658. SAWARD, FREDERICK
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72
661. SCHENCK, GEORGE H. K. AND JOHN J. SCHANZ
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662. SEAR1GHT, WALTER V.
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663. SHURICK, ADAM
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665. SKAGGS, CHARLES P.
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667. SMITH, FRANK G.
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669. SMITH, GEORGE O.
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73
671. SOMERS, GERALD G.
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Forecast: doubled coal production in Appalachia. Appal-
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Very substantial growth in Appalachian coal production will take
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Clean power is possible provided there is a large investment in re-
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676. SQUIRES, ARTHUR M.
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679. STEIN, JANE
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680a. STEVENS, THOMAS H.
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683. STEWART, E.
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Coal operators in Missouri and Kansas establish a cooperative ad-
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687. SYMPOSIUM ON GOAL AND PUBLIC POLICIES
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690. TAYLOR, SAMUEL A.
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Legislative Council Committee study on the coal industry.
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698. THOMPSON, JAMES H.
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76
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701. THORNLEY, FRED C.
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704. TRACY, ELEANOR J.
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724. U. S. CONGRESS. SENATE
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725. U. S. CONGRESS. SENATE
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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:
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739. U. S. CONGRESS. SENATE. COMMITTEE ON PUBLIC WORKS. SUB-
COMMITTEE ON ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
Impact of energy development on northwestern New Mex-
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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,
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742. U. S. FEDERAL ENERGY ADMINISTRATION
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"This report contains the final technical analysis of the Project In-
dependence Interagency Coal Task Force chaired by the Depart-
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743. UNITED STATES FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION
Cost reports of the Federal Trade Commission. Coal. 1919-
1921. Washington. 7 volumes, vl. Pennsylvania— bitumin-
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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.
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House. Document 561 ) .
747. U. S. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. CONGRESSIONAL RESEARCH SERVICE
Factors affecting the use of coal in present and future
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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
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749. U. S. TREASURY DEPARTMENT
Taxes of anthracite coal mining companies. Washington:
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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-
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752. UTAH. COMMITTEE TO STUDY OPERATIONS OF STATE GOVERN-
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An economic study of the development of Utah's coal re-
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753. vaile, r. s.
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754. VANCE, STANLEY C.
A critical analysis of the data and methods available for
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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-
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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-
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759. VIRTUE, g. o.
The anthracite combinations. Quarterly Journal of Econ-
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760. VOGTLE, A. W.
Coal by wire. Public Utilities 63: 433-41 1959.
The increase in transportation costs may force the location of elec-
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sion lines.
761. VOSKUIL, WALTER H.
Economic and competitive position of Illinois coal. AIME.
Transactions 119: 392-404 1936.
762. VOSKUIL, WALTER H.
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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-
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The very high price of anthracite may make it necessary to turn to
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766. WALKER, ALBERT H.
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Deals largely with the Philadelphia & Reading Coal & Iron Co.
84
767. WALKER, FRANCIS
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Amer. Acad. Ill: 234-248 1924.
768. WALSH, JOHN
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770. WARNER, FAYETTE S.
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Commerce. Research Studies. VIII).
771. WARRINER. S. D.
The anthracite industry: wage, prices and regulation. Ann.
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772. WATKINS, HAROLD M.
Coal and men; an economic and social study of the Brit-
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773. WATSON, WTLLIAM D.
Costs of air pollution control in the coal-fired electric
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774. WEAVER, PAUL H.
Behind the big scrubber fracas. Fortune Feb 1975 106-10.
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775. WEBB, JOHN N.
Unemployment in a depressed coal-mining area in south-
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776. WEINBERG, EDGAR
Technological change and productivity in the bituminous
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85
777. WEST, JIM
U. S. oils pour money into expanding coal production. Oil
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778. WEST VIRGINIA. LEGISLATURE. JOINT COMMITTEE ON GOVERN-
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A study of the West Virginia Coal Industry and ways to
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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
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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
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784. WOLFE, THOMAS M.
Recent changes in the bituminous coal industry. Harvard
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785. WOOLRICH, WILLIS R.
The purchase and storage of domestic coal. Knoxville,
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786. WOZNIEWICZ, EDWARD J.
Causes and remedies of declining employment in the
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86
787. YOUNG, GORDON
Will coal be tomorrow's "Black Gold". National Geo-
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Useful and well-illustrated review of the problems and prospects of
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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
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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.
109
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-
orado Magazine 44: 324-41 1967.
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-
thly Labor Review Oct 1975 21-28.
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).
113
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-
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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,
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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
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1345. U. S. COMMISSION ON INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS
Final Report and Testimony. Washington: the Commis-
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1346. U. S. COMMISSION ON INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS
Report on the Colorado Coal Strike. Washington: the
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1347. U. S. COMMISSIONER OF LABOR
A report on labor disturbances in the State of Colorado,
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1348. U. S. CONGRESS. HOUSE. COMMISSION ON EDUCATION AND LA-
BOR. SUBCOMMITTEE IN LABOR
Oversight hearing on Brookside mine labor-management
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1349. U. S. CONGRESS. HOUSE. COMMITTEE ON LABOR TROUBLES IN
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Labor troubles in the anthracite regions of Pennsylvania,
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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:
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1352. U. S. CONGRESS. HOUSE. SELECT COMMITTEE ON EXISTING LA-
BOR TROUBLES IN PENNSYLVANIA
Labor troubles in the anthracite regions of Pennsylvania,
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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
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1355. U. S. CONGRESS. SENATE. COMMITTEE ON EDUCATION AND LA-
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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
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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-
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149
1358. U. S. CONGRESS. SENATE. COMMITTEE ON INTERSTATE COM-
MERCE
Conditions in the coal fields of Pennsylvania, West Vir-
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state commerce, U. S. Senate. Seventieth Congress, first
session, pursuant to S. Res. 105, a resolution to investi-
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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
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UMW Welfare and Retirement Fund. Washington: GPO,
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1361. U. S. CONGRESS. SENATE. COMMITTEE ON LABOR AND PUBLIC
WELFARE. SUBCOMMITTEE ON LABOR
United Mine Workers' election, Hearings. Washington:
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1362. U. S. CONGRESS. SENATE. COMMITTEE ON MANUFACTURES
Conditions in coal fields in Harlan and Bell counties, Ken-
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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-
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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-
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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
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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
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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-
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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.
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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
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152
1382. WARNE, FRANK
Effect of unionism upon the mine worker. Ann. Amer.
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Deals with the anthracite fields.
1383. WARNE, FRANK
John Mitchell; the labor leader and the man. Review of
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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.
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1386. WARNE, FRANK
Union movement among coal mine workers. Washington:
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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.
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1389. WECKESSER, ERNEST
The radio rhetoric of John L. Lewis. Dissertation. Michi-
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1390. WEITZELL, E. H.
Industrial relations in coal mines. American Mining Con-
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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-
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Charleston, Assistant Attorneys General on behalf of the
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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-
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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-
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154
1399. WHEELER, HOYT N.
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1400. WHITE, THOMAS E.
Development and operation of the welfare and retirement
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1401. THE WHITE SLAVES OF MONOPOLIES: OR, JOHN FITZ PATRICK,
THE MINER, SOLDIER AND WORKINGMAN's FRIEND
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1402. WICE, MARSHA N.
Revolution in the mines: an analysis of the miners revolt of
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1403. WICKERSHAM, EDWARD D.
Opposition to the international officers of the United Mine
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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-
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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-
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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.
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1614. VECSEY, GEORGE
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1615. WALKER, \VI1.\1 \
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1616. WANCE, WILLIAM AND RICHARD BUTLER
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1619. WELLER, JACK
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General discussion of the industry, especially life of the miners.
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Treats of plans for and arrangement of mining towns.
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Food habits of the pupils in Monongahela & Dunbar
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Transformation of a coal mining town. Mining Congress
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Describes the improvement of Wheelwright, Kentucky as the result
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Socioeconomic problems facing industry include inad-
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The new generation of miners demands vastly better housing than
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Shenandoah area of Pennsylvania.
1628. WILSON, JOHN M.
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1629. WOODBRIDGE, DWIGHT
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1630. ZIMMERMAN, H. O.
Modernization of living conditions in a coal mining town.
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1631. ZIMOLZAK, CHESTER E.
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183
Jiumpvdalm.
1632. ACUFF, REECE
The coal rail rate structure and fourth section relief.
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1633. ADELMAN, M. A.
American coal in Western Europe. Journal of Industrial
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1634. AMERICAN RAILWAY ASSOCIATION. CONFERENCE COMMITTEE
WITH UNITED STATES COAL COMMISSION
Report. Washington, 1923. 104p.
1635. AMERICAN RAILWAY ASSOCIATION. SPECIAL COMMITTEE ON
NATIONAL DEFENSE
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1636. ASSOCIATION OF AMERICAN RAILROADS. RAILROAD COMMITTEE
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Slurry-pipeline systems for coal, other solids come of age.
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1639. BALLERT, ALBERT G.
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Shipping mines and coal railroads of Illinois and Indiana.
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"Issued with the compliments of the Peabody Coal Company."
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1647. CAMPBELL, THOMAS C.
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185
1647a. CAMPBELL, THOMAS C. AND SIDNEY KATELL
Railroad volume freight rates: evolution and analysis ICC
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Transporting western coal: unit train or slurry pipeline.
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"The energy crisis and increasing output from the Western coal
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1649. CARLSON, FRED A. AND FRANK SEAWALL
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1650. CARUSO, JOHN A.
The Coal & Coke Railway Company of West Virginia.
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1651. CHAMBERLAIN, J. W.
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1652. CHESAPEAKE AND OHIO RAILROAD COMPANY
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Transportation economics of coal resources of northern
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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,
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1655. A COAL PIPE LINE
Black Diamond 17: 213 1896.
Report of an experiment near Pittsburgh. "The much discussed pro-
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186
1656. COAL ROAD FIFTY YEARS AGO
Colliery Engineer 8: 163 1888.
Brief account of the Danville & Pottsville R. R.
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Forerunner of Virginia's first railway. Virginia Cavalcade
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Account of the development (1828) and operation of a thirteen-
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1659. CREDITOR, MORRIS
Rail-river-rail transportation of coal today and days ahead.
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Coal shipping on the Great Lakes. Coal Age 4: 338-42
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1661. DAHL, H. D. AND D. L. MC CAIN
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Change of railroad rates in West Virginia. Coal Age 8:
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Writer sees a conspiracy of the Pennsylvania R. R. and the Pitts-
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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,
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1666. GREENBRIER COAL AND COKE CO. VS. NORFOLK AND WESTERN
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Coal & Coke Jl 1, 1905 7-10.
Discussion and text of judical decision concerning discrimination
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1667. GREENE, JOSEPH A.
History of the rate differentials on bituminous coal be-
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• University of Virginia. 1943. 187p.
1668. GREINER, JOHN E.
Coal docks on the Great Lakes; report of an investigation
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1669. GUTHEIM, A. G.
The transportation problem in the bituminous coal indus-
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1670. HARRISON, FAIRFAX
Hearings before a subcommittee of the Committee on Na-
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Account of two-tongued wagon used to transport coal in Norfolk
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188
1674. HUDSON, JAMES F.
The anthracite coal pool. North American Review 144: 43-
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A denunciation of the railroads for the attempt to control the price
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1675. INDIANA COAL ASSOCIATION
Report of coal production by rail shipping mines in the
state of Indiana, during calendar years 1917 to 1953, class-
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1676. JOHNSTON, RICHARD M.
Coal car distribution and handling in the Pocahontas reg-
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1678. JONES, CHESTER L.
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1679. JONES, ELIOT
The commodity clause legislation and the anthracite rail-
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Government construction of railroads and leasing of coal
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Attack on government policies in Alaska.
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Cheap coal; or the Boston & Northwestern, Massachusetts
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1682. KEITH, JEAN E.
The role of the Louisville and Nashville Roalroad in the
early development of Alabama coal and iron. Business His-
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1683. KING, L. AND OTHERS
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the Norfolk and Western Railroad. New York: New York
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A work of the first importance. Vital for an understanding of the
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Coal transportation practices and equipment requirements
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Freight rates on anthracite coal, 1914-1920. Washington,
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Operating and financial performance of anthracite rail-
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Comparison of earnings between coal carrying and non-
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The Lake cargo coal rate controversy. Thesis. West Vir-
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190
1692. MANSFIELD, HARVEY C.
The Lake cargo coal rate controversy; a study in govern-
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The commodities clause [of the Hepburn Act]. Journal of
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Coal traffic of the Great Lakes. Journal of Geography 15:
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Transportation factor in the price of coal. Academy of Poli-
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Comparative transportation costs of supplying low-sulfur
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1698. NEW JERSEY. LEGISLATURE. SENATE. COMMITTEE ON HIGH-
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Public hearing on Assembly bill 675 (coal slurry pipeline
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1700. NEW YORK ( STATE ) . PUBLIC WORKS DEPT.
The New York State canals; the canal as a carrier of coal.
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1701. NEWCOMB, HARRY T.
The anthracite carrying railroads. Review of Revietvs 26:
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1702. NORFOLK AND WESTERN TURNS COAL TO GOLD
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1703. PAGE, WILLIAM N.
West Virginia coal. Engineering & Mining Journal 81: 67-
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Stresses the importance of transportation in the southern coal fields.
1704. PARKER, W. J.
The great coal schooners of New England, 1870-1909. My-
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1705. PATTON, NORMAN F.
The economics of the distribution of anthracite. AIME.
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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
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1707. PITTSBURGH. CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
Unjust and discriminatory freight rates of Pittsburgh dis-
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Economics of using western coal in Appalachian markets.
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By efficient use of unit trains and barges, Burlington Northern can
deliver coal from Montana and Wyoming to powerplants in Appala-
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1709. POWELL, H. BENJAMIN
Coal and Pennsylvania's transportation policy, 1825-1828.
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The development of the coal regions by the construction of canals
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1712. ROPIEQUET, R. W.
Coal freight rates-relativity and uniformity. American
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Coal trains north: the Rochester and Pittsburgh Railroad
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Rochester and Pittsburgh was one of several railroads competing for
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1714. ST. JOHN, ISAAC M.
Notes on the coal trade of the Chesapeake and Ohio Rail-
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1715. SCAMEHORN, HOWARD L.
Transportation and coal: the development of the coal min-
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Illinois. 1952.
1716. SCRANTON, BOARD OF TRADE
Report of the transportation committee of the Scrantort
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An analysis of the coal car situation. Coal Age 4: 452-55
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1717a. SLURRY TRANSPORT ASSOCIATION
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Transportation of Kentucky coal by water. Kentucky Min-
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1719 TEXAS EASTERN TRANSMISSION CORPORATION
Coal pipelines; a handbook of facts on a new industry.
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1720 toexc.es, albert l. and frank a. JONES
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1721. TRANSPORTATION FOR COAL
Coal Age Jl 1974.
The July 1974 issue is devoted to transportation. All aspects are
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1722. U. S. CONGRESS. HOUSE. COMMITTEE ON INTERSTATE AND FOR-
EIGN COMMERCE
The alleged combination of the Philadelphia and Reading
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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
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1724. U. S. CONGRESS. SENATE. COMMITTEE ON INTERIOR AND INSU-
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Transportation of coal. Washington: GPO, 1915. 901p.
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1726. U. S. FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION
Anthracite and bituminous coal. Washington: GPO, 19.17.
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"A report and recommendations on the anthracite and bituminous
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1727. U. S. INTERSTATE COMMERCE COMMISSION
Alleged unlawful rates and practices in the transportation
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1728. U. S. INTERSTATE COMMERCE COMMISSION
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1729. U. S. LNTERSTATE COMMERCE COMMISSION
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1730. U. S. INTERSTATE COMMERCE COMMISSION
Railroad discrimination and monopolies in coal and oil.
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1731. U. S. INTERSTATE COMMERCE COMMISSION
Report of investigation by Interstate Commerce Commis-
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1732. U. S. RAILROAD ADMINISTRATION
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1733. U. S. RAILROAD ADMINISTRATION
Distribution of coal and coke. Washington: GPO, 1920.
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1734. U. S. TRANSPORTATION INVESTIGATION AND RESEARCH BOARD
The economics of coal traffic flow. Washington: GPO,
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Bituminous coal movements in the United States. Geo-
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Coal slurry pipelines and national transportation policy: a
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The economics of transportation of Ohio coal. Disser-
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1737. WARNER, LARKIN
Railroad rates and the growth of coal trucking in Ohio.
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195
1738. wasp, e. j.
Progress with coal slurry pipelines. Mining Congress Jour-
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1739. WASP, E. J. AND T. L. THOMPSON
Slurry pipelines, energy movers of the future. Oil and Gas
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1740. what's ahead for unit trains
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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-
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1742. YERKES, S. L.
Transportation as a factor in irregularity of coal mine op-
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Author advocates a national railroad car pool.
196
Gw&uuwd RegufoiiaK
Material dealing with the government regulation of surface min-
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1743. BAGGE, CARL E.
Coal and clean air law: a case for reconciliation. Ecology
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1744. BAKER, RALPH H.
The National Bituminous Coal Commission: Administra-
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Excess production could be controlled by the proper use of govern-
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1746. BITUMINOUS COAL CONSERVATION ACT ( GUFFEY ACT) HELD
UNCONSTITUTIONAL
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1747. CLYDE, EDWARD W.
Coal mining, development and processing— the associated
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Expansion of coal mining in the West will increase the competition
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1748. CODE FOR COAL
Fortune O 1933 56-63
Effect of the NRA on the coal industry in general and the Pitts-
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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-
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203
1806. U. S. CONGRESS. HOUSE
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1814. U. S. CONGRESS. SENATE
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Federal coal leasing amendments act of 1975. Washington:
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1818. U. S. CONGRESS. SENATE. COMMITTEE ON INTERSTATE COM-
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1825. WEST VIRGINIA. MINING COMMISSION
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1826. WHEELER, EDWARD K. AND JOHN W. SNOW
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1828. ZIEGLER, MARTIN
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Acid mine drainage in Appalachia. Washington, 1969.
126p.
A useful overview of the problem, written for the layman. More de-
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1831. BAGGE, CARL E.
Coal and the environment. Public Utilities Fortnightly
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1832. BERKOWITZ, DAVID A. AND ARTHUR M. SQUIRES
Power generation and environmental change. Cambridge:
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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
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1834. BIESECKER, J. E. AND J. R. GEORGE
Stream quality in Appalachia as related to coal mine drain-
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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-
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The "ultimate problem" is the increasing amount of slurry-like
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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
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1843. COALGATE, JERRY L. AND OTHERS
Gob pile stabilization, reclamation, and utilization. Mor-
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1843a. COALGATE, JERRY L.
Literature survey— coal associated wastes. Morgantown:
West Virginia University, 1973. 140p. ( Coal Research Bur-
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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
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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.
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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-
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76p.
210
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1852. GEER, MAX RICHARD
Disposal of solid wastes from coal mining in Washington,
Oregon, and Montana. Washington: GPO, 1969. 39p. (U. S.
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1853. GRURE, WALTER E. AND OTHERS
Mine spoil potentials for water quality and controlled ero-
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1971. 206p.
1854. HALLIBURTON COMPANY
New mine sealing techniques for water pollution abate-
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1855. HEBLEY, HENRY F.
Stream pollution by coal mine wastes. Mining Engineer-
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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-
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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.
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211
1861. KOLBASH, RONALD L.
A study of Appalachia's coal mining communities and as-
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1862. KREBS, GDIARD
Technological and social impact assessment of resource ex-
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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-
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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-
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1872. PRICE, TOM
Who killed Buffalo Creek? Rolling Stone Jan 3, 1974, 28-
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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-
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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-
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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
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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-
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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-
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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-
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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
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2637. BEEBE, GILBERT W.
Differential fertility by color for coal miners in Logan
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2638. BEMENT, ALBURTO
The Peabody atlas. Shipping mines and coal railroads in
the central commercial district of the United States. Chi-
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2639. BENDALL, JOHN W.
A study of the Minnesota multiphasic personality inven-
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2640. BOBICK, THOMAS G. AND DENNIS A. GIARDINO
The noise environment of the underground coal mine.
Washington, 1976. 26p. (U. S. Mining Enforcement and
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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-
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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-
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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
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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
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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
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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
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308
/
2681. GAUCER, A. W.
Coal and research— two great national resources. Coal Uti-
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2682. GIBBS AND HILL, IXC.
Development of an overall economic/environmental plan
for Monongahela River Basin. New York, 1974. 1 vol. (Pre-
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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-
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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-
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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
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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