Coal Region
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The Coal Region is a term used to refer to an area of Northeastern Pennsylvania in the central Appalachian Mountains comprising Lackawanna, Luzerne, Columbia, Carbon, Schuylkill, Northumberland, and the extreme northeast corner of Dauphin counties.
The region's population was 890,121 people as of the most recent census. Many of the names in the region are from the Delaware Indians or Lenapes and Susquehanna native American Indians. The region is home to the largest known deposits of anthracite coal found in the Americas, with an estimated reserve of seven billion short tons (PA DEP Website). It is these deposits that provide the region with its nickname. In the lower Anthracite coal region, Carbon County, Pennsylvania, the discovery of anthracite coal was first made.
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[edit] Geography
The Region lies north of the Lehigh Valley and Berks County Regions, south of the Endless Mountains, west of the Pocono Mountains, and east of the Susquehanna Valley, though the Susquehanna River passes through the Wyoming Valley located within the coal region in the central Appalachian Mountains. The Wyoming Valley is the most densely populated area of the region, containing the cities of Wilkes-Barre and Scranton. Hazleton and Pottsville are two of the larger cities in the southern portion of the region. The headwaters of the Lehigh and Schuylkill Rivers both lie within the region.
[edit] History and miscellany
Settlement in the region predates the American Revolution, however the discovery of the anthracite coal for which it is named did not occur until the early nineteenth century. Population rapidly grew in the period following the American Civil War, with the expansion of the mining and railroad industries. English, Welsh, Irish and German immigrants formed a large portion of this increase, followed by Polish, Slovak, Ruthenian, Ukrainian, Hungarian, Italian, Russian and Lithuanian immigrants. The influence of these immigrant populations is still strongly felt in the region, with various towns possessing pronounced ethnic characters and ethnic food.
The anthracite mining industry loomed over much of the region until its decline in the 1950s. Strip mines and evidence of mine fires such as the Centralia, Pennsylvania mine fire are still visible throughout much of the area. Several of the more violent incidences in the history of the US labor movement occurred within the coal region as this was the location Lattimer Massacre and the home of the Molly Maguires.
The Knox Mine Disaster in 1959 essentially served as the death knell for deep mining within the region; almost all current anthracite mining is done via strip mining. Tours of underground mines can be taken in Ashland, Scranton, and Lansford, each of them also having museums dedicated to the mining industry.
Also evident are "patch towns", small villages affiliated with a particular mine. These small towns, with populations typically less than 500, were solely owned by the mine; the resident miners were tenants, the general store was owned by the mining concern, and police were mine employees whose most prominent charge was to protect the coal from theft by the residents. Though no longer company owned, many such hamlets survive; one of them, the Eckley Miners' Village, is a historical park owned and administered by the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission, which seeks to restore patch towns to their original state.
[edit] Famous people from the Coal Region
- Joe Biden - U.S. Senator.
- David Bohm - quantum physicist.
- Ben Burnley - lead singer of rock band Breaking Benjamin.
- George Catlin - artist.
- P. J. Carlesimo, professional basketball coach, San Antonio Spurs.
- Robert P. Casey, former Governor of Pennsylvania.
- Bob Casey, Jr., U.S. Senator.
- Stan Coveleski, Major League Baseball Hall of Fame member
- Anthony P. Damato - United States Marine, Medal of Honor recipient.
- Jack Dolbin, Professional football player, Denver Broncos.
- Jimmy Dorsey - jazz clarinetist, saxophonist, big band leader.
- Tommy Dorsey- jazz trombonist, big band leader.
- Ellen Albertini Dow - actress, The Wedding Singer's Rapping Granny
- Ham Fisher - cartoonist.
- Alexander Joseph Foley - United States Marine, Medal of Honor recipient.
- Howard Gardner - scientist, author.
- James M. Gavin - Lieutenant General, United States Army.
- Jane Jacobs - sociologist, author.
- Russell Johnson - actor.
- John E. Jones III - born in Pottsville in 1955, presided over the landmark Intelligent design case, Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District in 2005.
- Paul E. Kanjorski - Member of Congress.
- John "Black Jack" Kehoe- Charistmatic Irish leader, born in County Wicklow, who immigrated to the anthracite coal fields of Pennsylvania and whose inspiration spurred the downtrodden miners in their struggle for improved labor conditions
- Jean Kerr - author.
- Eddie Korbich - actor, The Little Mermaid (musical), The Drowsy Chaperone, Seussical, Carousel
- Matthew Lesko - infomercial personality.
- Edward B. Lewis - Nobel Prize-winning scientist.
- Christy Mathewson - former professional baseball player, New York Giants (now the San Francisco Giants).
- Joseph L. Mankiewicz - film director, producer, and screenwriter.
- Richard Marcinko - Navy seal, author.
- Mary McDonnell - actress.
- Gerry McNamara - college basketball player, Syracuse University.
- Jason Miller - Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright, actor.
- Mike Munchak, professional football coach, Tennessee Titans, former professional football player, Houston Oilers.
- Jozef Murgaš - radio pioneer.
- Amedeo Obici - founder of Planters Peanuts Company.
- John O'Hara - author.
- Jack Palance - actor.
- William Daniel Phillips - Nobel Prize-prize winning scientist.
- Darryl Ponicsan - author, screenwriter.
- Robert Reich - former U.S. Secretary of Labor.
- Paul W. Richards - former astronaut.
- Conrad Richter - author.
- Hugh Rodham - father of U.S. Senator and former First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton.
- Tim Ruddy was a center for the Miami Dolphins from 1994 - 2003.
- Victor Schertzinger - composer, film director, film producer and screenwriter.
- William Scranton - former Governor of Pennsylvania, U. S. Ambassador to the United Nations, and 1964 U.S. Presidential candidate.
- William Scranton, III - former Lieutenant Governor of Pennsylvania, two-time gubernatorial candidate.
- Jimmy Spencer - Former NASCAR Driver and Current TV Analyst for the Speed Channel
- Bob Sura - Houston Rockets NBA basketball player.
- John Anthony Walker - spy for the Soviet Union.
- Ed Walsh - former professional baseball player, Chicago White Sox.
[edit] See also
- Eckley Miners' Village
- Franklin B. Gowen, president of the Reading Railroad who served as the lead prosecutor in the trial to break up the Molly Maguires.
- Shenandoah, PA
- Hazleton
- Mahanoy
- Mahantongo
- Major coal producing regions
- Schuylkill canal
[edit] External links
The external links in this article may not follow Wikipedia's content policies or guidelines. Please improve this article by removing excessive or inappropriate external links. |
[edit] Anthracite
- Mining Photos
- The Anthracite Coal region
- Map of the anthracite coal fields of Pennsylvania
- History of anthracite coal mining
- Abandoned Anthracite Mines in PA
- Abandoned Mine Research
[edit] Mine Disaster
[edit] Coal Region
- Coalregion.com
- Coal Region Picture Gallery
- Coal town, Coal talk
- Website leading to a The Coal Region, a webring that focus on history, culture, towns, mining, songs, music, foods, ethnic celebrations, and all things coal cracker
[edit] History of Anthracite or "The Coal Region"
[edit] Shenandoah, Pennsylvania
[edit] Molly Maguires
- Brief history of the Molly Maguires
- Molly Maguire information
- The hand print that never goes away on the jail wall, proclaiming innocence, before being hung
- Historical site on the O'Donnell family and Wiggans Patch Massacre, commonly known as The O'Donnell House Murders
- Historical site on the coal region town, Girardville, home to The Hibernian House, John "Black Jack" Kehoe's historic bar
[edit] Northern anthracite coal region
- "A Jewel In the Crown of Old King Coal Eckley Miners' Village" by Tony Wesolowsky, Pennsylvania Heritage Magazine, Volume XXII, Number 1 - Winter 1996
- A website with extensive detail on and a virtual tour of Eckley
[edit] Porter Tunnel Mine Disaster
[edit] Contemporary Coal Region Culture
- My Coal Country Photo Project
- Clover Irish Weekend, held annually the last weekend in July and located in Schuylkill County's historic Irish Valley, is a blended celebration of Irish and Coal Cracker culture