Chicago, Ill Paper - The Pocahontas Mine-Explosion

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
J. H. Bramwell Stuart M. Buck Edward H. Williams
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
14
File Size:
661 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1885

Abstract

The Southwest Virginia Improvement Company began operations in the Bluestone Flat-Top coal-field, situated in Tazewell County, Virginia, in the fall of 1881. In May, 1883, the company had built 200 coke-ovens, and by March, 188-1, had 9000 feet of entries, exclusive of air-ways, in the Nelson or Rig coal-bed of this district (which here averages eleven feet in thickness), and had extracted 200,000 tons of coal, representing an area of about twenty acres. About this opening has grown the recently incorporated city of Pocahontas, and the completion of the New River branch of the Norfolk and Western Railroad to this point enabled the company to make large contracts for supplying coal and coke, so that it was deemed necessary, on account of the limited area developed, to work the mine day and night to fill orders. At 1.30 Thursday morning, March 13th, the inhabitants of Pocahontas were awakened by a violent shock, and within a few minutes all knew that the East mine had been the scene of an explosion of so general a nature that, of the 114 men at work, not one had escaped. The daily papers gave more or less distorted accounts of the number of victims, the scenes in and about, the mine, and the probable cause of the disaster. At the request of the company, the President of the American Institute of Mining Engineers appointed the undersigned a committee of three to investigate the matter, and the committee thus constituted presents the following report, accompanied by a copy of the testimony taken daring the investigation, for preservation in the archives of the Institute. Pocahontas was reached on Thursday, April 24th, and left on Friday, May 2d. During this interval the committee made repeated visits to the mine, especially to the points, of most importance, examining it carefully in every part; and summoned a number of witnesses, twenty-six of whom appeared and testified. The mine had been left in the same state as when the bodies were
Citation

APA: J. H. Bramwell Stuart M. Buck Edward H. Williams  (1885)  Chicago, Ill Paper - The Pocahontas Mine-Explosion

MLA: J. H. Bramwell Stuart M. Buck Edward H. Williams Chicago, Ill Paper - The Pocahontas Mine-Explosion. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1885.

Export
Purchase this Article for $25.00

Create a Guest account to purchase this file
- or -
Log in to your existing Guest account