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Coal mining in Plymouth, Pennsylvania

Plymouth, Pennsylvania sits on the west side of Pennsylvania's Wyoming Valley, wedged between the Susquehanna River and the Shawnee Mountain range. Just below the mountain are hills that surround the town and form a natural amphitheater that separates the town from the rest of the valley. Below the hills, the flat lands are formed in the shape of a frying pan, the pan being the Shawnee flats, once the center of the town's agricultural activities, and the handle being a spit of narrow land extending east from the flats, where the center of town is located. At the beginning of the 19th century, Plymouth's primary industry was agriculture. However, vast anthracite coal beds lay below the surface at various depths, and by the 1850s, coal mining had become the town's primary occupation.

Coal mining in Plymouth, Pennsylvania Edit

The Smith Coal Mines Edit

About 1806, Abijah Smith came to Plymouth from Derby, Connecticut, intending to mine, ship, and sell coal. Smith and Lewis Hepburn, his business partner, bought a 75-acre plot (Lots 45 and 46 on the Plymouth Township Warranty Map) on the east side of Coal Creek, and in the fall of 1807, Smith floated an ark down the Susquehanna River loaded with about fifty tons of anthracite coal, shipping it to Columbia in Lancaster County. The significance of Smith's shipment went unnoticed until 1873, when Hendrick B. Wright wrote in his Historical Sketches of Plymouth:

"Anthracite coal had been used before 1807, in this valley and elsewhere, in small quantities in furnaces, with an air blast; but the traffic in coal as an article of general use, was commenced by Abijah Smith, of Plymouth."

Beginning with the fifty tons of coal shipped by Abijah Smith in 1807, Plymouth's and the Wyoming Valley's coal industry grew steadily. In 1830, the Baltimore Patriot reported that "... a greater quantity of Anthracite Coal has been sent down the Susquehanna this Spring than in any former season. The Baltimore Company have sent three thousand tons, and from other mines about seven thousand tons were dispatched, making an aggregate of ten thousand tons."[1]

The North Branch Canal Edit

As late as the 1840s, whenever high water allowed, coal from Wyoming Valley's coal mines was shipped down the Susquehanna River on wooden arks. But by the end of 1830, canal boats began to replace arks as the preferred method of transporting coal and other goods to market. In 1826, the Pennsylvania Board of Canal Commissioners engaged John Bennett to survey the route of a new canal, to be called the North Branch Canal, to run alongside the north branch (the main branch) of the Susquehanna River from Northumberland to the New York border. In early 1827, Bennet reported that the canal was feasible, and in 1828, the state legislature authorized funds for construction. Charles T. Whippo—who had worked on the construction of the Erie Canal—was engaged to survey the route and supervise construction. The southern portion of the canal, as built, ran for 55.5 miles (89.3 km) along the west side of the river, from Northumberland to West Nanticoke, where a dam was built to divert water from the river into the canal. The work was generally complete by the fall of 1830. The first load of coal shipped on the canal from Wyoming Valley reached Berwick in October.[2]

The canal was a boon to Plymouth's coal operators—who in 1830 included John Smith, Freeman Thomas, Henderson Gaylord, and Thomas Borbidge—and it encouraged others—such as Jameson Harvey and Jacob Gould—to open mines. Smith's teamsters led teams of horses deep into his mine, turned the team, loaded the wagon and then drove the team to the river bank to load the coal into canal boats. Gaylord—whose mine at the time was a tunnel at the base of Welsh Hill—improved on this method and built a gravity railroad that ran along what is now Walnut Street, down what is now Gaylord Avenue, to his wharf on the river.[3] A similar road, called the Swetland Railroad, ran from mine tunnel in Poke Hollow adjacent to Gaylord's, down a route which later became Washington Avenue, across Bull Run to another wharf on the river. Freeman Thomas built a railroad from his Grand Tunnel mine to a chutehouse along the river near the entrance to the canal.

The early coal mines in Plymouth supported an ancillary industry: boat building. The arks used to transport goods on the river were built in a basin where Wadham's Creek entered the river. After the canal was built, the arks began to be replaced by flat-bottomed canal boats, built in the same basin with a distinctive design known as "Shawnee boats." Many of the town's young men became boatmen and were well known along the length of the canal for their distinctive call, "Shawnee against the World."[3]

The Lackawanna & Bloomsburg Railroad Edit

The 1858 Anthracite Map, prepared as part of the First Pennsylvania Geological Survey, illustrates Plymouth's mines and collieries at a moment of transition. The Lackawanna & Bloomsburg Railroad was largely completed and had begun to replace the North Branch Canal as the preferred method for shipping coal. In 1858, most mines in Plymouth were tunnels driven into the hillside above water level, with one exception: a shaft had been sunk in 1856 at the Patten Mine by experienced miners from England and Scotland. It was the first deep mine shaft in Plymouth and the first on the west side of the river—a harbinger of things to come. In 1858, all of Plymouth's mines were run by small local operators. This would soon change as large corporations, some affiliated with railroads, began to take control of much of the town's coal lands. The larger firms would be better able to handle labor disputes, and had the necessary capital to conduct deep shaft mining and operate the mines on a larger, more efficient scale.

The 1858 map (below), illustrates the path of the railroad. Several collieries appear at the west end of Plymouth, including the Harvey Mine, Grand Tunnel, Reynolds (Chauncey), French Tunnel (Jersey Mine), Reynolds (Washington Mine) and the Smith mine operation at the upper end of Coal Creek. The Wadhams mine appears along Wadhams Creek above Plymouth Village. A railroad branch line (Gaylord's Railroad) is shown running along Pine Swamp Creek (later Brown's Creek). One branch of this railroad crossed what later became Bull Run and led to a wharf along the Susquehanna River. Another branch railroad ran down to Henderson Gaylord's wharf, near what is now Gaylord Avenue. The Patten mine and Cooper mine (labeled as Galard) are shown along the creek. East of Plymouth village, John Shonk's colliery, called Rudmandale, appears where the Lance Colliery would later be, and above that, Shupp's Creek and Ross Hill are illustrated just before the Boston Mine was established.

 
The Anthracite Coal Fields map illustrates the mine operations in Plymouth in 1858, after the Lackawanna & Bloomsburg Railroad came to Plymouth. The extent of the great coal basin is shown in dark grey, and indicates the great bounty of anthracite coal below Plymouth's surface.

Coal Mines in Plymouth, Pennsylvania Edit

The Susquehanna Coal Company Mines Edit

The Harvey Mine Edit

 
Jameson Harvey's house, built ca 1832
 
Jameson Harvey's coal breaker, demolished 1871
 
Susquehanna Coal Co.'s Breaker No. 3, built 1872.

Jameson Harvey was born in 1796, the son of Elisha Harvey and his wife, Rosanna Jameson. Harvey's farm, about 350 acres (1.4 km2), was located in Plymouth Township on the east side of the intersection of Harvey's Creek and the Susquehanna River. In 1832, he built a Federal-style farmhouse and barn, both of which still stand today greatly altered, on what is now McDonald Street. By 1830, probably inspired by his neighbor Freeman Thomas's Grand Tunnel coal mine, Harvey supplemented his farm income by constructing a coal tunnel. Perhaps learning from Thomas's experience, Harvey's tunnel was higher up the hill, and thus a shorter distance from the coal beds. Later, Harvey constructed one of Plymouth's first coal breakers. His mine was closer than any other to the Nanticoke Dam and the entrance to the North Branch Canal, and when the railroad arrived, it ran right across Harvey's property. These geographical advantages helped make the mine a very successful venture. In 1869, Harvey moved to Wilkes-Barre, and in 1871, he sold his coal lands to the Susquehanna Coal Co., which merged Harvey's mine with the Grand Tunnel into a new operation called the Susquehanna Coal Co. Colliery No. 3.[4]

The Grand Tunnel Edit

Freeman Thomas was an early land owner in Plymouth. In 1809, he acquired several patents for lots in the lower end of the township, calling his estate "Harmony", better known in later years as the "Grand Tunnel". About 1828, Thomas began to dig a tunnel through solid rock into the hillside, hoping to reach the famed Red Ash coal vein.[5] He must have succeeded by 1834, for on the 6th of August that year, he petitioned the courts for the right to build a gravity railroad from his tunnel to a chute house along the Susquehanna River just above the Nanticoke Dam.[6] The private railroad allowed Thomas to ship his coal to the iron forges in Danbury and to other points south via the newly built North Branch Canal. Thomas died in 1847,[5] and in 1852, William L. Lance, Sr. became a tenant of Thomas's children, and the mine called "Lance's Grand Tunnel." Lance operated the mine until 1856, when he assigned his lease to the Mammouth Vein Coal Co. In January 1860, Mammouth abandoned Thomas's chutehouse and built a new one adjacent to the recently built Lackawanna & Bloomsburg railroad.[6] In 1866, the Grand Tunnel Coal Co. operated the mine,[7] and in 1871, the New England Coal Co. operated the mine. In 1871, the Susquehanna Coal Company took control of the Grand Tunnel.[8] By 1935, the Glen Alden Coal Co. operated the Grand Tunnel but in September that year they leased the mine to George F. Lee, owner of the adjacent Chauncey Colliery.[9]

Susquehanna Coal Co. No. 3 Colliery Edit

In 1871, the Susquehanna Coal Company, owned by the Pennsylvania Railroad, took control of both the Harvey Mine and the Grand Tunnel, although James Hutchison stayed on as mine boss.[8] After a boiler explosion in 1871, the SCC took down the old Harvey breaker and on July 27, 1872 began operating a new one, considered to be one of the largest in the district. It was designed by Charles F. Ingram, a mining engineer from Wilkes-Barre, and built by James Linskill, a carpenter from Plymouth.[10]

The Chauncey Colliery Edit

 
The Chauncey breaker, 1911

The Chauncey Colliery was located between the Grand Tunnel and the Avondale collieries. It was one of the few Plymouth collieries to remain independent of the large mining corporations. The mine was most likely named after Chauncey A. Reynolds of Plymouth, who was working at the site as early as 1831.[11] Reynolds was said to have driven the first tunnel,[12] although another source attributes the name to Thomas Chauncey James, a veteran of the War of 1812 and for a time the postmaster of the Grand Tunnel post office.[13] The Chauncey was also known as the Union Mine, and from about 1861 to 1866 the Union Coal Co., in association with Charles Hutchison, operated the mine, working both a shaft and a slope. At the time, capacity was about 50,000 tons per year.[7]

From at least 1869 until at least 1875, the mine was operated by Roberts, Albrighton & Co., and John Albrighton, the mine boss, employed about 100 men.[14] In 1875, a major cave caused a stoppage of work at both the Chauncey and the adjacent Grand Tunnel mine.[15] In 1880, the mine was operated by B. B. Reynolds.[16] In 1881, Thomas P. MacFarlane was the operator and 24,515 tons were shipped.[17] In 1891, MacFarlane still operated the mine.[18] By 1896, Reynolds & Moyer Coal Co. operated the Chauncey,[19] but in July 1900, it was put up for Sheriff's sale, subject to the many complicated leases among members of the Reynolds family.[20]

The next operator of the Chauncey, George F. Lee, was the son of Conrad Lee, from 1865 to 1886 the outside foreman of the nearby Avondale Colliery where George F. Lee was born in 1870. He purchased the Chauncey in 1902, and operated it as the George F. Lee Coal Co. He also ran a coal distribution center in Brooklyn, New York.[21] In 1914, the Chauncey processed about 6,600 tons per month.[22] In 1919, Lee built a new breaker with a capacity of 1,000 tons daily, which began operating on August 25. The breaker, designed by Frank Davenport, an engineer from Wilkes-Barre,[23] was destroyed by fire on January 28, 1923, the loss estimated to be $250,000. The following day, Lee engaged E. E. Reilly of Kingston to build a new breaker.[24] At the end of 1936, the George F. Lee Coal Co. still worked both the Chauncey mine and breaker,[25] producing 38,712 tons of coal, but by 1940, the company was bankrupt and in receivership. In 1940, the Glen Alden Coal Company took ownership of the colliery, and in February 1941 began to dismantle the breaker.[26]

The Avondale Colliery Edit

In November 1808, Hezekiah Roberts, Jr. obtained patents on five lots in the western end of Plymouth Township, about 120 acres (0.49 km2) total. He called his estate "Avondale", and it eventually gave its name to the colliery. After receiving these patents Roberts sold his soon-to-be valuable coal lands, and by 1810 was farming in Genoa Township, Delaware County, Ohio.[27] In addition to Roberts' 120 acres (0.49 km2), the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad compiled a large number of lots, including part of Freeman Thomas's Grand Tunnel property. If one includes the Wright family's 225 acres (0.91 km2) that constituted the Jersey mine, the DL&W's Avondale holdings included over 600 acres (2.4 km2).

The Delaware, Lackawanna and Western took a circuitous path to ownership of Avondale because its 1854 charter limited its ownership of coal lands. As a result, it used surrogates to acquire coal properties.[28] In 1863, John C. Phelps, a director of the DL&W, leased a portion of the Avondale property from William Reynolds and Henderson Gaylord, Plymouth natives. In 1866, the mine was transferred to the Steuben Coal Co., which in turn became part of the Nanticoke Coal & Iron Co., whose board of directors overlapped with the board of the DL&W. The NC&I built the first breaker at Avondale.[29]

On September 6, 1869, the Avondale Mine Disaster occurred, during which a fire in the shaft, ignited by a ventilating furnace, spread to the breaker which stood over the mine shaft. The breaker was destroyed by fire, trapping 108 men and boys in the mine below. All were killed, as were two men who volunteered to enter the mine after the fire. Soon after the disaster, a second breaker was built at the colliery.[29]

In 1914, the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western operated both the mine and the breaker.[22] On February 9, 1935, Glen Alden Coal Co. (successor to the DL&W) began to dismantle and demolish the Avondale breaker and to close the mine.[30] In 1936, no coal was produced. However, in December 1940, Glen Alden resumed mining on a limited scale taking coal to the Lance Breaker to be processed.[31] In 1955, the Avondale operation produced 78,401 tons of coal.[32]

Red Ash Colliery Edit

George P. Lindsay, the general manager of the Plymouth Red Ash Coal Co., began mining in 1913, and began building a breaker to process coal in 1914. The operation was, therefore, a latecomer among Plymouth's many mine operations. The colliery was located along Route 11, just east of the Avondale Colliery. In 1915, the mine produced 14,311 tons of coal. In 1931, its peak year, the mine produced 78,575 tons of coal. The breaker was demolished in 1942.

The Jersey Colliery Edit

The Jersey was one of Plymouth's oldest mines, a tunnel located at the top of Jersey Road in the hollow between Avondale Hill and Curry Hill, just west of the Plymouth Borough boundary. The mine was located on two lots of about 225 acres (0.91 km2), patented to Ellen Wadhams (1776–1872) in 1808 by virtue of the claim of her late husband Moses Wadhams (1776–1803). The mine was established by Joseph Wright (1785–1855), Ellen's second husband, a Quaker who migrated to Plymouth from New Jersey. Wright's stepdaughter, Lydia Wadhams (1803–90), married Samuel French (1803–66) who became the second operator of the Jersey. French, who was the stepson of Plymouth mine operator John Smith, operated the mine until about 1855, when the Scottish immigrant Robert Love, then a young man in his twenties, took control. Love built a gravity railroad from the mine down to the newly arrived Lackawanna & Bloomsburg Railroad and supplied the L&B with the first coal shipped from Plymouth by rail.[3]

By 1865, the Jersey breaker was operated by the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad and had an estimated annual capacity of 50,000 tons.[7] In 1871, and in accordance with laws enacted following the 1869 disaster at the adjacent Avondale mine, the DL&W sank a 10-foot (3.0 m) X 14-foot (4.3 m) air shaft at the Jersey to help ventilate the mine.[33] The breaker sat on the hill just below the mine as early as 1885. The DL&W operated the Jersey until 1902, when an underground mine fire broke out. As of 1942, the DL&W's successor, the Glen Alden Coal Co., was still trying to extinguish the fire.[34]

The Nottingham Colliery Edit

As perfected by 1908, the Nottingham Colliery included not only Nottingham and the Washington mine, but also the mines established by Abijah Smith, John Smith, and Joseph Wright. All five operations have separate histories:

Abijah Smith's Mine Edit

Vast anthracite coal beds lay below Plymouth's surface at various depths. At a few locations these beds were visible in the form of outcrops, and one such location was a gorge created by Ransom Creek (now Coal Creek) located about a mile upstream from the Susquehanna River. Coal could be seen (and accessed) on both the east side (Turkey Hill) and the west side (Curry Hill) of the creek. Attracted by this outcrop, Abijah Smith came to Plymouth about 1806, and with his business partner Lewis Hepburn, bought a 75-acre plot (called Lots 45 and 46) on the east side of the creek, intending to mine, ship and sell coal. (Hepburn’s 1/4 share of the land and mine was sold at public sale after his death in 1815.)[35]

Smith was born in Derby, Connecticut, about 1763, where he married and fathered numerous children. He worked as a blacksmith or harness maker. In 1804, he advertised: "For sale by Abijah Smith, at Derby Landing, Skirting and Bridle leather, of the first quality, May 7, 1804.[36] It is not known exactly why Smith left Derby for the Wyoming Valley, but one journalist reporting in 1901 related an anecdote that had been passed down through the years. "The story is that Abijah Smith heard through some man, who had been traveling in Pennsylvania, and who passing through Derby on his way home stopped at Smith's blacksmith shop to have his horse shod, about black stone in Pennsylvania that would burn. The result of this conversation was that Smith made a trip to Pennsylvania and eventually located there ... He left Derby in 1806 and in 1807 mined 56 tons of coal in Plymouth, Pa. at the old mine now rented to the Lehigh and Wilkes-Barre Coal Co., and known as the Smith red ash coal."[37]

According to Hendrick B. Wright, in the fall of 1807, Abijah Smith purchased an ark from John P. Arndt, a Wilkes-Barre merchant, which Arndt had used for the transportation of plaster. Smith floated the ark from Wilkes-Barre to Plymouth, loaded it with about fifty tons of anthracite coal, and shipped it to Columbia, in Lancaster County.[5] According to Wright:

"...this was probably the first cargo of anthracite coal that was ever ordered for sale in this or any country. The trade of 1807 was fifty tons ... Abijah Smith therefore, of Plymouth, was the pioneer in the coal business. Anthracite coal had been used before 1807, in this valley and elsewhere, in small quantities in furnaces, with an air blast; but the traffic in coal as an article of general use, was commenced by Abijah Smith, of Plymouth."

In 1825, Thomas Borbidge, of Kingston, Pennsylvania assumed operation of the mine, and in 1827, he and John Smith (operator of the mine across the creek) petitioned the Pennsylvania House of Representatives for permission to build a railroad from their mines to the Susquehanna River.[38] In 1830, Borbidge was still operating the mine.[39] By 1835, the mine belonged to John Ingham (married in 1827 to Abijah Smith's widow), who lost it that year in a Sheriff's sale.[40] By 1873, the mine was owned by Hendrick B. Wright, and leased to Broderick, Conyngham & Co., operators of the Nottingham Colliery.[41]

John Smith's Mine Edit

 
John Smith, a pioneer coal mine operator

In 1805, Hezekiah Roberts, Sr. obtained a patent for 121 acres (0.49 km2) of land, called Lot 44, on the west side of Coal Creek, which he sold to William Currie (who gave the place the name Curry Hill). In July 1810, Currie advertised in the newspaper: "for sale...an extensive coal bed...situated one mile from the river." He soon sold the mineral rights to Lewis Hepburn (Abijah's Smith's partner), and in 1811, Hepburn sold half of these rights to John Smith (Abijah Smith's brother). In 1816, after Lewis Hepburn died, Hepburn's son Patrick sold Smith the second half of the coal rights.

John Smith operated his mine on the west side of Coal Creek from 1811 until about 1837. A visitor in 1830 described Smith's coal mine as having a 20-foot (6.1 m) thick bed of coal, and found the mine "extensively wrought, and the scene both without and within is exceedingly imposing. The bed is followed into the mountain, large pillars of coal being left to support the superincumbent weight." The visitor noted that in some areas Smith had removed all of the coal, leaving only a roof of slate which then caved in. As a result, Smith modified his technique to leave two feet of coal to form the ceiling.[42]

In 1840, John Smith leased his coal beds to his son, Francis J. Smith, his stepson, Samuel French, and his sons-in-law, Draper Smith and William C. Reynolds. In 1848, Smith sold the coal rights to Lot 44 outright to Reynolds.[43] By 1873, the mine was owned by Mrs. William C. Reynolds, and leased to Broderick, Conyngham & Co., operators of the Nottingham Colliery.[41]

Joseph Wright's slope Edit

In 1807, Joseph Wright married Ellen Wadhams, the widow of Moses Wadhams, and thereby acquired Lot 8 (Nos. 10 & 11, Lower Tier House Lots), consisting of about 20 acres. In 1812, Wright acquired the patent to the adjacent Lot 7 (No. 12, Lower Tier House Lots), adding another 10 acres to his home lot.[44] The 1884 mine map locates "Wright's Slope" near the Main Road, on Lot 7. The 1884 map further indicates that both lots 7 and 8 had by then come under the aegis of the Lehigh & Wilkes-Barre Coal Co., part of their Nottingham operation.

Washington Colliery Edit

 
The second breaker at the Washington Colliery, built about 1890; shown here in 1904

The Washington Colliery was first opened by John Shay about 1854. Shay built a drift, an inclined plane, and a breaker. Shutz, Shay & Heebner operated the colliery until August 1869, when they sold their rights to Broderick, Conyngham & Co. At the same time, BC&C entered into leases to operate the Nottingham Colliery, the old John Smith mine and the old Abijah Smith mine, and from then on all four mines were operated under common management. On April 1, 1872 BC&C sold their lease to the Lehigh Navigation & Coal Co., and on January 1, 1874, the LN&C sold to the Lehigh & Wilkes-Barre Coal Co. which operated the mine as the Reynolds No. 16.[29] By April 1890, the first breaker had been dismantled and a new breaker was in operation. In 1908, the L&W-B abandoned the second breaker and began to process coal from the Washington mine at the Nottingham breaker. In March 1912, the company destroyed the Washington breaker with dynamite.[45]

Nottingham Colliery Edit

 
The first Nottingham breaker, shown at left just before its demolition, and the second Nottingham breaker as it neared completion in 1904

The Nottingham Coal Co. of Baltimore was incorporated on March 21, 1865, and obtained a lease to mine coal from Plymouth's Reynolds family, a lease which would bring the family great wealth. Bryce R. Blair was named superintendent, and proceeded to construct a coal breaker and a 380-foot (120 m) shaft, said to pass through 40 feet (12 m) of quicksand on its way to the coal beds below.[46]

In August 1869, the Nottingham assigned their lease to the firm of Broderick, Conyngham & Co.[29] In order to create a second means of egress from the mine, as required by the mine safety law enacted after the 1869 Avondale Mine Disaster, BC&Co. drove 2,400 feet (730 m) to the west to connect with its Washington mine.[8] On April 1, 1872 BC&Co. sold their lease to the Lehigh Coal & Navigation Company, and on January 1, 1874, the LC&N sold the property to the Lehigh & Wilkes-Barre Coal Co. which operated the mine as the Nottingham No. 15 Colliery.[29]

In 1936, the Glen Alden Coal Co. operated the Nottingham and produced 263,836 tons of coal. However, in August 1936, Glen Alden demolished the Nottingham breaker,[47] part of a general consolidation of mine operations in the Wyoming Valley. Thenceforth, coal from the Nottingham was processed at the Lance breaker. The lone voice of protest of the Nottingham's demise was the Luzerne County Communist Party, whose presidential candidate, Earl Browder, called upon the community to raise its voice against "this wrecking plan of the coal companies."[48] In December 1936, Glen Alden operated the Nottingham for the first time since the breaker's demolition, and after a subsequent period of idleness, resumed operations at the Nottingham again in 1938.[49] The mine continued to operate into the 1950s. In June 1954, Charles Medura was killed in the mine by a fall of rock, the last of many fatalities at the mine.

The Parrish Colliery Edit

 
The 2nd Parrish breaker, 1901

The Parrish Colliery was a relative late-comer to Plymouth. Its origins can be traced to the sale by the Wadhams family of their homestead farm in 1871 to the Wilkes-Barre Coal & Iron Co. The property was located in the center of Plymouth Borough, between Academy and Girard streets. In 1874, the Wilkes-Barre Coal & Iron Co. became part of the Lehigh & Wilkes-Barre Coal Co., which acquired the property, but by some arrangement the mine was operated by the Parrish Coal Co., organized in 1884. The company built a breaker, said to be "a model of neatness,"[50] built by contractor Joseph C. Tyrrell and completed in September 1884.[51] On the night of January 25, 1887, the new breaker caught fire and was completely destroyed. Another was built and was operating by July.[52]

By 1914, the mine had reverted to the Lehigh & Wilkes-Barre Coal Co. which operated a washery and breaker. Ash and waste water from the washery were flushed into the Susquehanna River.[22] In June 1914, the company closed the Parrish breaker and began construction of a tunnel under the river to transport coal to the company's breaker in Buttonwood.[53] In 1920, the Glen Alden Coal Co. acquired the Lehigh & Wilkes-Barre Coal Co., including the Parrish Colliery, and in July of that year the breaker blew down in a wind and rain storm.[54]

The Dodson Colliery Edit

 
The first Dodson Breaker, built 1869
 
Cross-section, first Dodson Breaker

The Dodson Colliery was located at Bull Run in Plymouth Borough, and its breaker stood alongside the tracks of the Lackawanna & Bloomsburg Railroad. The Dodson's coal lands ran from Center Avenue on the west to Pierce Street on the east, and thus the Dodson's mining operations took place beneath the central business district of the Borough. The colliery was first developed by Fellows & Dodson, Co., beginning in 1869, and by 1870 a large breaker had been built and a shaft sunk to a depth of 220 feet (67 m).[55]

By 1872, the mine was operated by the Wilkes-Barre Coal & Iron Co. which had recently gained control of nearly all of Plymouth Borough's coal lands east of Academy Street, including the Lance and the Gaylord collieries. In 1872, the company employed 80 men at the Dodson, sank the shaft to a depth of 280 feet (85 m), and began to experience problems with water infiltration.[56] In 1874, the Wilkes-Barre Coal & Iron Co. merged into the Lehigh & Wilkes-Barre Coal Co., but by early 1877 this firm was overextended and (temporarily) in receivership.

In 1877, the Plymouth Coal Company, managed by John J. Shonk and John C. Haddock, gained control of the Dodson. In October 1877, the Wilkes-Barre Times reported that "work is to be resumed at the Dodson shaft by the Plymouth Coal Co."[57] In 1882, Haddock assumed sole control of the Plymouth Coal Co., and ran the Dodson until his death in New York in December 1914. Haddock had a litigious reputation due to his disputes with neighboring mines, with Plymouth Borough and with Plymouth's Sweitzer family. He disputed freight rates, testifying before the Interstate Commerce Commission that the railroads discriminated against small operators.[58]

On July 13, 1899, the first Dodson breaker burned down, and on March 5, 1900, work began on the second breaker.[59] In 1914, Plymouth Borough obtained an injunction preventing the Plymouth Coal Co. from mining, owing to surface subsidence, and for most of that year the mine was idle. In January 1915, the Kingston Coal Co., which operated the adjacent Gaylord Colliery, announced it would buy the Dodson mine.[60]

The Lance Colliery Edit

 
First Lance breaker, built about 1865

In his will of 1834, Jacob Gould bequeathed to his seven children "all the coal mines which are now or may hereafter be found on any part of my landed property ... and that there shall be a reserve made in the division of my real or landed property sufficient for all necessary roads to go to and from said coal mines and sufficient land for to deposite all coal and coal dirt and the like that is necessary, and that each one shall have an equal right to dig or mine coal at any time, and each one shall be at their proper expense of keeping said coal mine or mines in repair according to what coal they may dig or mine." He further willed that with respect to "the division of all my coal mines ... each daughter is made equal to each son and holding equal rights & interest..." Twenty-four years later, the 1858 Pennsylvania Geological Survey reported that "coal has been wrought languidly for thirty years" at "Gould and Shunk's mine", the operator being John Jenks Shonk, and the mine called Rudmandale, located just west of Shupp's Creek.[61] The small operation eventually became the Lance Colliery, one of Wyoming Valley's largest and most enduring.

Despite its name, the Lance Colliery was controlled by William L. Lance, Sr. for a very short time. About 1865, Lance and his sons bought the Gould Homestead, which ran from the Susquehanna River to State Street, just east of the Plymouth Borough line. The land contained about 150 acres (0.61 km2) of coal measures. In order to develop the property by sinking a deep shaft to reach the coal seams, and building a breaker to process the coal, Lance borrowed money from Payne Pettebone, a coal mine operator. Lance overextended himself, and Pettebone aggressively pursued repayment. In January 1871, Lance's friend, Samuel Bonnell, Jr., bought the property at Sheriff's Sale so as to satisfy the debt. Bonnell allowed Lance and his sons to continue to operate the mine.[62] As of 1871, Lance had sunk the shaft 175 feet (53 m), and was in process of sinking a second shaft for emergency egress.[63] However, in July 1871, Bonnell sold the improvements and leased the coal rights to the Wilkes-Barre Coal & Iron Co., and in February 1876, Bonnell sold the property outright to the Lehigh & Wilkes-Barre Coal Co.[62] Lance, who moved to Philadelphia and became a mat manufacturer, spent years in court, suing his old friend Bonnell in a futile attempt to recover the mine.

According to The Engineering and Mining Journal, in 1879 the Lance Colliery was operated by Charles Parrish & Co., a subsidiary or tenant of the L&W-B. The journal reported that "the mine having been idle for about a year, has again been started up."[64] In 1883, William Lance's old breaker was torn down and on June 30, 1883 the Lehigh & Wilkes-Barre Coal Co. began shipping coal from a new breaker,[65] one that was constructed with 700,000 feet of Georgia pine.[66]

In 1931, the Glen Alden Coal Co., successor to the L&W-B, erected a third breaker. By this time, large coal companies were more concerned about their public image, and Glen Alden made an effort to make the building and grounds attractive. Writing in 1941, a newspaper reporter described the colliery as "beautifully landscaped."[67] In 1936, Glen Alden produced 653,141 tons of coal, and in 1945 produced 489,889 tons of coal. In 1955, the Lance breaker produced 44,534 tons of coal, and remained active as late as 1957.[32]

The Gaylord Colliery Edit

 
Second Gaylord breaker, built in 1879

An early version of the Gaylord mine was opened in 1855 by a company of capitalists composed of Henderson Gaylord (25%), James S. Mason, a Philadelphia shoe-black manufacturer (25%), the Frishmuth family, Philadelphia tobacconists (25%), and William Hoppa Cool (25%). They built a private railroad running from a mine tunnel in Poke Hollow along Brown's Creek, across what was then the Nesbit family farm to a wharf on the river near the corner of Gaylord Avenue and Main Street. The company leased the mine to Van Homer & Fellows, then to Eric L. Hedstrum (of Buffalo, New York).[29] In 1866, J. Langdon & Co. (later H.S. Mercur & Co.) operated the mine.[7] After Gaylord consolidated property at Welsh Hill, and beginning in 1871, the Wilkes-Barre Coal & Iron Co. and then its successor, the Lehigh & Wilkes-Barre Coal Co., operated the mine (by then if not earlier a tract of 257 acres), but this firm fell into receivership in 1877 and lost their lease. The Gaylord Coal Co., operated by Thomas Beaver and Daniel Edwards, took control of the Gaylord, and later merged with the Kingston Coal Co.

On March 5, 1879, the breaker at the Gaylord was destroyed by fire.[68] and on June 11, 1879, the Wilkes-Barre Record announced that Alanson Tyrrell of Kingston had been awarded a contract to build a new breaker.[69] In August 1879, The Engineering and Mining Journal wrote, "the Gaylord Coal Co. is building a new breaker in place of the one burned down last summer, and which is to prepare the coal from the old slope workings, with its tunnel to the seven foot seam, as well as the coal from its new shaft which was sunk by the Lehigh & Wilkes-Barre Coal Co., when it had it, to the Bennett seam. The new firm contemplates sinking down through the Bennett to the Red Ash seam. The coals from the Seven Foot and the Red Ash will cause it to be a very fine colliery."[70] The prediction proved accurate: in 1887, the Gaylord shaft and slope mined 248,276 tons of coal.[52]

On February 13, 1894, the Scranton Republican reported a large cave-in at the Gaylord mine: "We are called upon to detail the awful scenes of another miner horror. Thirteen men who went down to repair some damaged work-lugs in the Gaylord slope at Plymouth are caught by a fall of coal and most probably called to the great beyond, their bodies crushed and very little hope entertained for their recovery for days to come." On February 14, The Wilkes-Barre Record reported one hundred men were digging for the entombed miners. Despite these efforts, the situation was hopeless. On February 19 the Wilkes-Barre Record reported that ground water in the Gaylord was hindering the rescue. Finally on March 12 the body of Peter McLaughlin was recovered, the first of the miners to be found. By April 6, the last of the bodies was taken out of the mine, that of the foreman, Thomas Picton.

According to the Water Supply Commission of Pennsylvania, in 1914 the colliery was still operated by the Kingston Coal Co., producing about 225 tons of coal per day. Slush and waste water were pumped into three boreholes, rather than into Brown's Creek, and washwater was pumped from the Susquehanna River, 23,000,000 gallons in four months.[22]

In May 1935, the Glen Alden Coal Co. bought the Gaylord mine from the Kingston Coal Co. for $100,000. Glen Alden paid about $40,000 in back taxes owed to Plymouth Township, Plymouth Borough and Larksville Borough.[71] On June 15, 1935, the second Gaylord breaker was demolished with dynamite.[72] By this time, the mine was largely depleted, but in December 1940, the Sunday Independent reported that "the old Gaylord mine, now being operated by Samuel Bird, brother of Morgan Bird, is showing signs of being able to absorb additional number of men in the future...[the] Lance [breaker] prepares the coal."[73] In 1945, the Gaylord worked 284 days and produced 26,301 tons of coal, and In January 1955, the Bird Mining Co. stopped mining at the Gaylord.

Hillside Colliery Edit

Hillside was a minor operation first worked by George W. Shonk and John Barry, operating as the Barry, Shonk & Dooley Coal Co., on land owned by the Barry family, old settlers on Plymouth Mountain above Poke Hollow. Coal was extracted by means of a slope dug into the side of the mountain. According to the newspapers, in November 1906, the colliery began "mining on a large scale" and a "breaker ... erected which has a capacity of several hundred tons daily."[74] In 1907, Shonk and Barry sold their interest in the mine to Bright Coal Co., owned by a group of investors from Scranton. The newspapers reported that mining operations would be "carried out on a much larger scale" than before.[75] In 1914, Bright Coal Co. still operated the Hillside. At the time, waste water from the mine was dumped into a tributary of Brown's Creek.[76] In 1917, Bright mined 10,252 tons.[77]

Delaware & Hudson Collieries Along Brown's Creek Edit

Fuller's Shaft (Delaware & Hudson No. 5) Edit

 
The first D&H No. 5 breaker, which burned in 1907

The former railroad crossing at Plymouth's Bull Run (long disappeared) was originally called Fuller's Crossing, after the mine operator J. C. Fuller. The railroad ran from his mine (and several others), crossed Main Street and continued down to a wharf on the Susquehanna River. Fuller's mine was located just above the Gaylord colliery along what is now Washington Avenue. According to Munsell, the shaft was sunk by the (old) Plymouth Coal Co. and J. C. Fuller in 1858.[29] In 1864, Fuller operated the mine, which produced 23,827 tons of coal, making it that year the fourth largest mine in the Plymouth district.[7] In 1871, operation of the mine was transferred from Fuller to the Northern Coal & Iron Co., a firm owned by the Delaware & Hudson Canal Co.[8] and by 1873, if not earlier, a breaker was operating at the mine.

The Loree (Delaware & Hudson No. 5) Edit

 
The third D&H No. 5 breaker (Loree No. 5), under construction in February 1919

On April 27, 1907, the No. 5 breaker burned to the ground, causing an "awe inspiring spectacle." At the time, the breaker had been abandoned by the D&H and was being used as a washery by the Rissinger Bros.[78] By 1909, a second breaker was built, intended to process coal from several D & H mines. In 1914, The D&H was operating both the breaker and a washery and waste water from these was dumped into Shupp's Creek,[76] not Brown's Creek, because the second breaker had been relocated from its original site to a new one farther south. In 1919, fire destroyed the second No. 5 breaker.[79] That year, a new reinforced concrete breaker, called the Loree No. 5 Breaker, was built to process coal from all of the D&H operations in Plymouth. The Loree continued to operate until 1965.[80]

Swetland Shaft (Delaware & Hudson No. 4) Edit

The Swetland Shaft was located on the northwest corner of the intersection of Vine and State streets in the Poke Hollow section of what is now Larksville Borough. According to court records, William Patten and Thomas Fender established this mine in 1851.[81] About 1855, Patten and Fender contracted with an English immigrant, John Dennis (a future Plymouth burgess), to sink a shaft to the coal seams below. It was said to be the first mine shaft on the west side of the Susquehanna River.[82] In January 1857, William Patten died when he fell down the newly constructed shaft.[83] Fender continued to operate the mine, but on February 25, 1860, lost the property at sheriff's sale.[81] Josiah W. Eno built a breaker at the mine in 1857, which he operated until 1861.

A.C. Laning & Co. bought the mine, and subsequently John Jenks Shonk, Payne Pettebone and William Swetland bought the mine,[29] and the 1864 Schooley Map shows Shonk & Eno working both the shaft and two side-by-side tunnels. In 1865, J. Langdon & Co. operated the mine, although, according to local historian Samuel L. French, David Levi, a Welshman, operated the mine, followed by A.J. Davis and Charles Bennett.[3] By 1870, J.C. Fuller operated the mine, and in 1871, the Northern Coal & Iron Co., a subsidiary of the Delaware & Hudson Canal Co., assumed operation of the mine. Michael Shonk was mine boss for both Fuller and the NC&I.[84] Between 1864 and 1873, a coal breaker was built on the site, and in 1901, the D&H dismantled the breaker. As of 1914, coal from the No. 4 shaft was hauled to the No. 5 breaker for processing, although a washery at the No. 4 prepared enough coal to run the colliery boilers.[76] As of 1925, the D&H continued to operate the mine, calling it the Loree No. 4.

At least one of the tunnels had a name. According to the obituary of Patrick Dooley:[85]

...in is early life he was actively engaged in mining, being one of the expert men of his time, and for forty-five years was superintendent of the Dickey Tunnel, now the D&H No. 4 Colliery, then operated by Fuller & Co.

Delaware & Hudson Collieries Along Shupp's Creek Edit

Boston Colliery Edit

 
The 1st Boston Breaker, about 1875
 
The 2nd Boston breaker, 1904

The Boston was unique in that the mine and the breaker were originally built about 1-1/4 miles apart from one another. The mine and shaft were located north of State Street where it intersects with Shupp's Creek. A railroad was built from the mine along the creek down to the first Boston breaker, located next to and east of the old Shupp Cemetery at the bottom of Boston Hill. The mine was opened in 1857 by the Boston Coal Co., which leased to the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad in 1858, and sold to the Delaware & Hudson Canal Co. in 1868, subject to the lease of 1858.[29] In 1883, the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western mined 4,351 tons, but in January that year the Delaware & Hudson assumed operation of the mine.[86]

On January 16, 1887, the Boston breaker was destroyed by fire. The Delaware & Hudson built a second breaker, this time adjacent to the mine, completed by November 1887.[87] In 1909, the second Boston breaker was demolished and coal from the mine processed at the Delaware & Hudson No. 5 colliery.[88]

Delaware & Hudson No. 1 Colliery Edit

The No. 1 colliery was the most westerly of three collieries constructed in the late 1860s along Shupp's Creek by the Northern Coal and Iron Co., located on Main Street on the east side of the creek. The Delaware & Hudson Canal Co., which owned the NC&I, built a railroad branch connecting the No. 1, 2 and 3 collieries to the Lackawanna & Bloomsburg Railroad. By 1872, the shaft was 295 feet (90 m) deep and 130 men were working in the Lance and Cooper veins.[56] As of 1914, the Delaware & Hudson continued to operate the mine, dumping waste water into the creek.[22]

Delaware & Hudson No. 2 Colliery Edit

The Northern Coal & Iron Co. built the No. 2 shaft on the north side of Shupp's Creek, west of Nesbitt Street or about 650 feet (200 m) east of the No. 1 shaft. By 1872, the shaft was 500 feet (150 m) deep reaching the Lawler and Wilkman coal veins.[56] By 1873, the NC&I operated a breaker at the shaft. As of 1914, the Delaware & Hudson Canal Co. was operating a breaker and washery there, dumping waste water into Shupp's Creek.[22]

Delaware & Hudson No. 3 Colliery Edit

The No. 3 Colliery was located along Shupp's creek about a mile east of the No. 2 Colliery. By 1872, a contractor, T.C. Harkness, had sunk the shaft 350 feet (110 m) and was driving a tunnel toward the Boston Mine to create a second means of egress.[89] By 1873, the Northern Coal & Iron Co. operated a breaker on the site.

By 1893, the Delaware & Hudson Canal Co. was operating the colliery, producing 219,044 tons of coal. However, on November 15, 1894, the first No. 3 breaker burned. The headline in the Wilkes-Barre Times read, "A glorious scene – the whole valley lighted up and glare seen in Scranton – will be re-built at once."[90] In January 1895, the new breaker at the No. 3 was under construction,[91] designed by Abram Shaffer; it began operating on June 1, 1895. According to the newspapers, it was clad in corrugated iron and had a "fine appearance."[92] By 1916, the Delaware & Hudson decided to abandon the No. 3 breaker and run coal from the mine through the company's No. 5 breaker, and on the morning of December 2, the No. 3 breaker was destroyed by fire.

Kingston Coal Company Mines Edit

In 1864, Waterman & Beaver Co., owned by industrialists from Danville, Pennsylvania, sank the No. 1 shaft in Kingston, known as "Morgan's Shaft" after superintendent David Morgan. In 1868, Daniel Edwards, superintendent of W&B's Danville iron mines, replaced Morgan as superintendent. The firm's coal lands spanned the boundary between Plymouth and Kingston townships, and in 1872, the No. 2 shaft and the No. 2 breaker were constructed, both in Plymouth. A railroad branch connected the No. 2 colliery to the Lackawanna & Bloomsburg Railroad. In 1877, the firm's name was changed to Kingston Coal Company.[29] The Plymouth side of the colliery became part of Edwardsville when it was incorporated as a separate borough on June 16, 1884.

 
Coal from the Kingston Coal Co. No. 2 and No. 3 shafts (both shown at the far upper right on this 1892 panoramic map) was processed at the No. 2 breaker (shown at the far upper left on the map), built in 1872. The two shafts and the breaker stood in that part of Plymouth Township which became part of Edwardsville Borough in 1884. A railroad spur led from the No. 2 past the No. 4 breaker in Kingston (shown on the far lower right of the map).

Woodward Colliery Edit

 
The first Woodward coal breaker in 1900

The Woodward Colliery was located on the eastern slope of Ross Hill up-hill from Toby's Creek. With 925 acres (3.74 km2) of coal lands, it was a major colliery, and the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad took several years to establish it. In 1881, in what was then Plymouth Township, the DL&W began to sink two shafts, the largest of which (at 22 X 55 feet) was sunk 1,000 feet (300 m) to the Red Ash coal vein.[93] By 1883, the DL&W had begun to construct a breaker and to prepare railroad beds for a branch line connecting the breaker to the DL&W's railroad line on the west shore of the Susquehanna River. In September 1883, four men working on the shaft were killed when the platform supporting them collapsed.[94] In 1884, the colliery became part of the newly formed Edwardsville Borough. By 1888, the colliery was complete, and in July the Woodward began to ship coal.[95] The new mine and breaker had a large capacity: in May 1904, the colliery broke a record, producing 77,383 tons of coal.[96]

In July 1916, the DL&W announced plans to build a new concrete breaker, and to fill in part of Toby's Creek so as to straighten the railroad bed leading to the breaker.[97] By 1917, the new breaker was under construction. The foundation was built by Curtis Construction Co. of New York, and the steel frame built by the DL&W. The facade of the breaker was clad with special high-strength wire glass. The new colliery had its own power plant fueled by coal from the mine.[98] In 1936, the Glen Alden Coal Co., successor to the DL&W, operated the Woodward and produced 858,711 tons of coal. In 1945, they produced 745,586 tons. The Woodward coal breaker closed for business on October 14, 1961.[99]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Baltimore Patriot, May 12, 1830.
  2. ^ Petrillo, F. Charles (1986). Anthracite and Slackwater, The North Branch Canal 1828–1901. Easton, Pennsylvania: Harmony Press. ISBN 978-0930973049..
  3. ^ a b c d Samuel Livingston French, Reminiscences of Plymouth, Luzerne County, Penna. (New York: Lotus Press, 1915).
  4. ^ E.O. Jameson, The Jamesons in America, 1647–1900 (Boston: The Rumford Press, 1901).
  5. ^ a b c Hendrick B. Wright, Historical Sketches of Plymouth, Luzerne Co., Penna. (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: T.B. Peterson & Brothers, 1873).
  6. ^ a b P. Frazer Smith, Pennsylvania State Reports, vol. LV (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Kay & Brother, 1868).
  7. ^ a b c d e Samuel H. Daddow and Benjamin Bannan, Coal Iron and Oil (Pottsville, Pennsylvania: Benjamin Bannan, 1866).
  8. ^ a b c d Reports of the Inspectors of Coal Mines...for the year 1871 (Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: B. Singerly, 1872).
  9. ^ The Wilkes-Barre Record, September 26, 1935, page 13.
  10. ^ Wilkes-Barre Daily, August 1, 1872, p.3.
  11. ^ Wilkes-Barre Weekly Times (Wilkes-Barre, PA), July 7, 1900, page 8, column 3.
  12. ^ Samuel Robert Smith, The Black Trail of Anthracite (Kingston, Pennsylvania: S.R. Smith, 1907).
  13. ^ Wilkes-Barre Record, May 17, 1901, page 8.
  14. ^ Reports of the Inspectors of Mines...for the Year 1871 (Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: Benjamin Singerly, 1872),294.
  15. ^ New York Herald, December 6, 1875.
  16. ^ Frederick E. Saward, The Coal Mines of Pennsylvania (New York: 1880).
  17. ^ Index to Executive Documents.
  18. ^ A Dictionary of Arts, Science and General Literature, vol. II (New York: Henry G. Allen Co., 1891).
  19. ^ Reports of the Inspectors of Mines...for the Year 1896 (Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: Clarence M.Busch, 1897).
  20. ^ Wilkes-Barre Weekly Times (Wilkes-Barre, PA), July 7, 1900, page 8, columns 2-3.
  21. ^ Oscar J. Harvey and Ernest Gray Smith, A History of Wilkes-Barre, vol. V (Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania: self-published, 1930).
  22. ^ a b c d e f Water Supply Commission of Pennsylvania, Water Resources Inventory Report, Part X (Harrisburg PA: Wm. Stanley Ray, 1917).
  23. ^ Wilkes-Barre Times Leader, August 26, 1919.
  24. ^ Wilkes-Barre Times Leader, January 29, 1923.
  25. ^ Sunday Independent, December 27, 1936.
  26. ^ The Wilkes-Barre Record, August 18, 1941, page 13.
  27. ^ History of Delaware County and Ohio (Chicago: O.L. Baskin & Co., 1880).
  28. ^ Daniel Hodas, The Business Career of Moses Taylor (New York: New York University Press, 1976).
  29. ^ a b c d e f g h i j W.W. Munsell & Co., History of Luzerne, Lackawanna and Wyoming Counties, Pa. (New York: W.W. Munsell & Co., 1880).
  30. ^ Sunday Independent, February 10, 1935,
  31. ^ Sunday Independent, December 29, 1940.
  32. ^ a b 1955 Annual Report, Anthracite Division, Pennsylvania Department of Mines and Mineral Industries.
  33. ^ Reports of the Inspectors of Coal Mines...for the year 1871(Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: B. Singerly, 1872).
  34. ^ Sunday Independent, March 15, 1942.
  35. ^ The Advertiser (Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania), April 28, 1815.
  36. ^ Connecticut Journal, June 14, 1804.
  37. ^ Springfield Republican, December 27, 1901.
  38. ^ Journal of the House of Representatives, Volume I, 1826-1827, page 203.
  39. ^ The Register of Pennsylvania, Samuel Hazard, ed., November 13, 1830.
  40. ^ Wyoming Republican and Herald, July 8, 1835, page 3.
  41. ^ a b Hendrick B. Wright, Historical Sketches of Plymouth, 1873, page 327.
  42. ^ Benjamin Silliman, "Notice of the Anthracite Region", in The Register of Pennsylvania, ed. Samuel Hazard, vol. 6 (Philadelphia: Wm. F. Geddes, 1831), 70-77.
  43. ^ George W. Harris, Pennsylvania State Reports, v.23 (Philadelphia: T.K. & P.G. Collins, 1855).
  44. ^ Luzerne County Warrantee Maps, Pennsylvania State Archives.
  45. ^ Wilkes-Barre Times, March 27, 1912.
  46. ^ Wilkes-Barre Times Leader, February 12, 1916.
  47. ^ Sunday Independent, August 30, 1936.
  48. ^ Sunday Independent, September 20, 1936.
  49. ^ Sunday Independent, February 5, 1939.
  50. ^ Reports of the Inspectors of Mines...for the year 1884 (Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: Lane S. Hart, 1885).
  51. ^ Engineering and Mining Journal, September 20, 1884.
  52. ^ a b Reports of the Inspectors of Mines...for the year 1887 (Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: Edwin K. Meyers, 1888).
  53. ^ Sunday Independent, June 29, 1914.
  54. ^ Wilkes-Barre Times Leader, July 14, 1920.
  55. ^ Reports of the Inspectors of Coal Mines...for the year 1870 (Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: B. Singerly, 1871).
  56. ^ a b c Reports of the Inspectors of Mines...for the year 1872 (Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: Benjamin Singerly, 1873).
  57. ^ Wilkes-Barre Times, October 24, 1878.
  58. ^ New York Times, December 21, 1914.
  59. ^ Philadelphia Inquirer, March 5, 1900.
  60. ^ Wilkes-Barre Times Leader, January 27, 1915.
  61. ^ Henry Darwin Rogers, The Geology of Pennsylvania, vol. 2 (Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott & Co., 1858)
  62. ^ a b Lemuel Amerman, Pennsylvania State Reports, vol. 2 (New York: Banks & Brothers, 1886).
  63. ^ Reports of the Inspectors of Coal Mines ... for the year 1871(Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: B. Singerly, 1872).
  64. ^ The Engineering and Mining Journal, April 19, 1879.
  65. ^ Reports of the Inspectors of Coal Mines...for the year 1883 (Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: Lane S. Hart, 1884).
  66. ^ The Coal Trade Journal, March 7, 1883, page 153.
  67. ^ Sunday Independent, September 28, 1941.
  68. ^ Cincinnati Daily Gazette, March 6, 1879,
  69. ^ Record of the Times, page 4, June 11, 1879.
  70. ^ Engineering and Mining Journal, vol. 28 (New York: The Scientific Publishing Co., 1879).
  71. ^ Sunday Independent, May 19, 1935.
  72. ^ Wilkes-Barre Record, June 17, 1935.
  73. ^ Sunday Independent, December 29, 1940, p.C-6.
  74. ^ Wilkes-Barre Times, November 7, 1906.
  75. ^ Wilkes-Barre Times, August 29, 1907.
  76. ^ a b c Water Supply Commission of Pennsylvania, Water Resources Inventory Report, Part X (Harrisburg PA: Wm. Stanley Ray, 1917).
  77. ^ Report of the Dept. of Mines of Pennsylvania (Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: J.L.L. Kuhn, 1919).
  78. ^ Wilkes-Barre Times, April 29, 1907.
  79. ^ Wilkes-Barre Times, January 22, 1919.
  80. ^ !965 Annual Report, Anthracite Division, Pennsylvania Department of Mines and Mineral Industries.
  81. ^ a b P. Frazier Smith, Pennsylvania State Reports (Philadelphia; Kay & Brother, 1868).
  82. ^ F.C. Johnson, ed., The Historical Record, vol. 1 (Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania: Press of the Wilkes-Barre Record, 1887).
  83. ^ New York Herald Tribune, January 17, 1857.
  84. ^ Reports of the Inspectors of Mines...for the Year 1871 (Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: B. Singerly, 1872), 294.
  85. ^ Wilkes-Barre Times, August 13, 1907.
  86. ^ Frederick E. Saward, The Coal Trade (New York: 1884.)
  87. ^ Reports of the Inspectors of Mines...for the Year 1887 (Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: Edwin K. Meyers, 1888).
  88. ^ Report of the Department of Mines of Pennsylvania, 1909 (Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: C.E. Aughinbaugh, 1910).
  89. ^ Reports of the Inspectors of Mines...for the year 1872 (Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: Benjamin Singerly, 1873).
  90. ^ Wilkes-Barre Times, November 16, 1894.
  91. ^ Wilkes-Barre Times, January 8, 1895.
  92. ^ Wilkes-Barre Times, May 25, 1895.
  93. ^ Philadelphia Inquirer, November 15, 1886.
  94. ^ Reports of the Inspectors of Mines...for the year 1883 (Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: Lane S. Hart, 1884).
  95. ^ Reports of the Inspectors of Mines...for the year 1888 (Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: Edwin K. Meyers, 1889).
  96. ^ Wilkes-Barre Times, June 2, 1904.
  97. ^ Wilkes-Barre Times Leader, July 10, 1916.
  98. ^ Wilkes-Barre Times Leader, August 17, 1917.
  99. ^ 1961 Annual Report, Anthracite Division, Pennsylvania Department of Mines and Mineral Industries

41°14′31″N 75°56′53″W / 41.242°N 75.948°W / 41.242; -75.948

coal, mining, plymouth, pennsylvania, plymouth, pennsylvania, sits, west, side, pennsylvania, wyoming, valley, wedged, between, susquehanna, river, shawnee, mountain, range, just, below, mountain, hills, that, surround, town, form, natural, amphitheater, that,. Plymouth Pennsylvania sits on the west side of Pennsylvania s Wyoming Valley wedged between the Susquehanna River and the Shawnee Mountain range Just below the mountain are hills that surround the town and form a natural amphitheater that separates the town from the rest of the valley Below the hills the flat lands are formed in the shape of a frying pan the pan being the Shawnee flats once the center of the town s agricultural activities and the handle being a spit of narrow land extending east from the flats where the center of town is located At the beginning of the 19th century Plymouth s primary industry was agriculture However vast anthracite coal beds lay below the surface at various depths and by the 1850s coal mining had become the town s primary occupation Contents 1 Coal mining in Plymouth Pennsylvania 1 1 The Smith Coal Mines 1 2 The North Branch Canal 1 3 The Lackawanna amp Bloomsburg Railroad 2 Coal Mines in Plymouth Pennsylvania 2 1 The Susquehanna Coal Company Mines 2 1 1 The Harvey Mine 2 1 2 The Grand Tunnel 2 1 3 Susquehanna Coal Co No 3 Colliery 2 2 The Chauncey Colliery 2 3 The Avondale Colliery 2 4 Red Ash Colliery 2 5 The Jersey Colliery 2 6 The Nottingham Colliery 2 6 1 Abijah Smith s Mine 2 6 2 John Smith s Mine 2 6 3 Joseph Wright s slope 2 6 4 Washington Colliery 2 6 5 Nottingham Colliery 2 7 The Parrish Colliery 2 8 The Dodson Colliery 2 9 The Lance Colliery 2 10 The Gaylord Colliery 2 11 Hillside Colliery 2 12 Delaware amp Hudson Collieries Along Brown s Creek 2 12 1 Fuller s Shaft Delaware amp Hudson No 5 2 12 2 The Loree Delaware amp Hudson No 5 2 12 3 Swetland Shaft Delaware amp Hudson No 4 2 13 Delaware amp Hudson Collieries Along Shupp s Creek 2 13 1 Boston Colliery 2 13 2 Delaware amp Hudson No 1 Colliery 2 13 3 Delaware amp Hudson No 2 Colliery 2 13 4 Delaware amp Hudson No 3 Colliery 2 14 Kingston Coal Company Mines 2 15 Woodward Colliery 3 See also 4 ReferencesCoal mining in Plymouth Pennsylvania EditThe Smith Coal Mines Edit About 1806 Abijah Smith came to Plymouth from Derby Connecticut intending to mine ship and sell coal Smith and Lewis Hepburn his business partner bought a 75 acre plot Lots 45 and 46 on the Plymouth Township Warranty Map on the east side of Coal Creek and in the fall of 1807 Smith floated an ark down the Susquehanna River loaded with about fifty tons of anthracite coal shipping it to Columbia in Lancaster County The significance of Smith s shipment went unnoticed until 1873 when Hendrick B Wright wrote in his Historical Sketches of Plymouth Anthracite coal had been used before 1807 in this valley and elsewhere in small quantities in furnaces with an air blast but the traffic in coal as an article of general use was commenced by Abijah Smith of Plymouth Beginning with the fifty tons of coal shipped by Abijah Smith in 1807 Plymouth s and the Wyoming Valley s coal industry grew steadily In 1830 the Baltimore Patriot reported that a greater quantity of Anthracite Coal has been sent down the Susquehanna this Spring than in any former season The Baltimore Company have sent three thousand tons and from other mines about seven thousand tons were dispatched making an aggregate of ten thousand tons 1 The North Branch Canal Edit As late as the 1840s whenever high water allowed coal from Wyoming Valley s coal mines was shipped down the Susquehanna River on wooden arks But by the end of 1830 canal boats began to replace arks as the preferred method of transporting coal and other goods to market In 1826 the Pennsylvania Board of Canal Commissioners engaged John Bennett to survey the route of a new canal to be called the North Branch Canal to run alongside the north branch the main branch of the Susquehanna River from Northumberland to the New York border In early 1827 Bennet reported that the canal was feasible and in 1828 the state legislature authorized funds for construction Charles T Whippo who had worked on the construction of the Erie Canal was engaged to survey the route and supervise construction The southern portion of the canal as built ran for 55 5 miles 89 3 km along the west side of the river from Northumberland to West Nanticoke where a dam was built to divert water from the river into the canal The work was generally complete by the fall of 1830 The first load of coal shipped on the canal from Wyoming Valley reached Berwick in October 2 The canal was a boon to Plymouth s coal operators who in 1830 included John Smith Freeman Thomas Henderson Gaylord and Thomas Borbidge and it encouraged others such as Jameson Harvey and Jacob Gould to open mines Smith s teamsters led teams of horses deep into his mine turned the team loaded the wagon and then drove the team to the river bank to load the coal into canal boats Gaylord whose mine at the time was a tunnel at the base of Welsh Hill improved on this method and built a gravity railroad that ran along what is now Walnut Street down what is now Gaylord Avenue to his wharf on the river 3 A similar road called the Swetland Railroad ran from mine tunnel in Poke Hollow adjacent to Gaylord s down a route which later became Washington Avenue across Bull Run to another wharf on the river Freeman Thomas built a railroad from his Grand Tunnel mine to a chutehouse along the river near the entrance to the canal The early coal mines in Plymouth supported an ancillary industry boat building The arks used to transport goods on the river were built in a basin where Wadham s Creek entered the river After the canal was built the arks began to be replaced by flat bottomed canal boats built in the same basin with a distinctive design known as Shawnee boats Many of the town s young men became boatmen and were well known along the length of the canal for their distinctive call Shawnee against the World 3 The Lackawanna amp Bloomsburg Railroad Edit The 1858 Anthracite Map prepared as part of the First Pennsylvania Geological Survey illustrates Plymouth s mines and collieries at a moment of transition The Lackawanna amp Bloomsburg Railroad was largely completed and had begun to replace the North Branch Canal as the preferred method for shipping coal In 1858 most mines in Plymouth were tunnels driven into the hillside above water level with one exception a shaft had been sunk in 1856 at the Patten Mine by experienced miners from England and Scotland It was the first deep mine shaft in Plymouth and the first on the west side of the river a harbinger of things to come In 1858 all of Plymouth s mines were run by small local operators This would soon change as large corporations some affiliated with railroads began to take control of much of the town s coal lands The larger firms would be better able to handle labor disputes and had the necessary capital to conduct deep shaft mining and operate the mines on a larger more efficient scale The 1858 map below illustrates the path of the railroad Several collieries appear at the west end of Plymouth including the Harvey Mine Grand Tunnel Reynolds Chauncey French Tunnel Jersey Mine Reynolds Washington Mine and the Smith mine operation at the upper end of Coal Creek The Wadhams mine appears along Wadhams Creek above Plymouth Village A railroad branch line Gaylord s Railroad is shown running along Pine Swamp Creek later Brown s Creek One branch of this railroad crossed what later became Bull Run and led to a wharf along the Susquehanna River Another branch railroad ran down to Henderson Gaylord s wharf near what is now Gaylord Avenue The Patten mine and Cooper mine labeled as Galard are shown along the creek East of Plymouth village John Shonk s colliery called Rudmandale appears where the Lance Colliery would later be and above that Shupp s Creek and Ross Hill are illustrated just before the Boston Mine was established The Anthracite Coal Fields map illustrates the mine operations in Plymouth in 1858 after the Lackawanna amp Bloomsburg Railroad came to Plymouth The extent of the great coal basin is shown in dark grey and indicates the great bounty of anthracite coal below Plymouth s surface Coal Mines in Plymouth Pennsylvania EditThe Susquehanna Coal Company Mines Edit The Harvey Mine Edit Jameson Harvey s house built ca 1832 Jameson Harvey s coal breaker demolished 1871 Susquehanna Coal Co s Breaker No 3 built 1872 Jameson Harvey was born in 1796 the son of Elisha Harvey and his wife Rosanna Jameson Harvey s farm about 350 acres 1 4 km2 was located in Plymouth Township on the east side of the intersection of Harvey s Creek and the Susquehanna River In 1832 he built a Federal style farmhouse and barn both of which still stand today greatly altered on what is now McDonald Street By 1830 probably inspired by his neighbor Freeman Thomas s Grand Tunnel coal mine Harvey supplemented his farm income by constructing a coal tunnel Perhaps learning from Thomas s experience Harvey s tunnel was higher up the hill and thus a shorter distance from the coal beds Later Harvey constructed one of Plymouth s first coal breakers His mine was closer than any other to the Nanticoke Dam and the entrance to the North Branch Canal and when the railroad arrived it ran right across Harvey s property These geographical advantages helped make the mine a very successful venture In 1869 Harvey moved to Wilkes Barre and in 1871 he sold his coal lands to the Susquehanna Coal Co which merged Harvey s mine with the Grand Tunnel into a new operation called the Susquehanna Coal Co Colliery No 3 4 The Grand Tunnel Edit Freeman Thomas was an early land owner in Plymouth In 1809 he acquired several patents for lots in the lower end of the township calling his estate Harmony better known in later years as the Grand Tunnel About 1828 Thomas began to dig a tunnel through solid rock into the hillside hoping to reach the famed Red Ash coal vein 5 He must have succeeded by 1834 for on the 6th of August that year he petitioned the courts for the right to build a gravity railroad from his tunnel to a chute house along the Susquehanna River just above the Nanticoke Dam 6 The private railroad allowed Thomas to ship his coal to the iron forges in Danbury and to other points south via the newly built North Branch Canal Thomas died in 1847 5 and in 1852 William L Lance Sr became a tenant of Thomas s children and the mine called Lance s Grand Tunnel Lance operated the mine until 1856 when he assigned his lease to the Mammouth Vein Coal Co In January 1860 Mammouth abandoned Thomas s chutehouse and built a new one adjacent to the recently built Lackawanna amp Bloomsburg railroad 6 In 1866 the Grand Tunnel Coal Co operated the mine 7 and in 1871 the New England Coal Co operated the mine In 1871 the Susquehanna Coal Company took control of the Grand Tunnel 8 By 1935 the Glen Alden Coal Co operated the Grand Tunnel but in September that year they leased the mine to George F Lee owner of the adjacent Chauncey Colliery 9 Susquehanna Coal Co No 3 Colliery Edit In 1871 the Susquehanna Coal Company owned by the Pennsylvania Railroad took control of both the Harvey Mine and the Grand Tunnel although James Hutchison stayed on as mine boss 8 After a boiler explosion in 1871 the SCC took down the old Harvey breaker and on July 27 1872 began operating a new one considered to be one of the largest in the district It was designed by Charles F Ingram a mining engineer from Wilkes Barre and built by James Linskill a carpenter from Plymouth 10 The Chauncey Colliery Edit The Chauncey breaker 1911The Chauncey Colliery was located between the Grand Tunnel and the Avondale collieries It was one of the few Plymouth collieries to remain independent of the large mining corporations The mine was most likely named after Chauncey A Reynolds of Plymouth who was working at the site as early as 1831 11 Reynolds was said to have driven the first tunnel 12 although another source attributes the name to Thomas Chauncey James a veteran of the War of 1812 and for a time the postmaster of the Grand Tunnel post office 13 The Chauncey was also known as the Union Mine and from about 1861 to 1866 the Union Coal Co in association with Charles Hutchison operated the mine working both a shaft and a slope At the time capacity was about 50 000 tons per year 7 From at least 1869 until at least 1875 the mine was operated by Roberts Albrighton amp Co and John Albrighton the mine boss employed about 100 men 14 In 1875 a major cave caused a stoppage of work at both the Chauncey and the adjacent Grand Tunnel mine 15 In 1880 the mine was operated by B B Reynolds 16 In 1881 Thomas P MacFarlane was the operator and 24 515 tons were shipped 17 In 1891 MacFarlane still operated the mine 18 By 1896 Reynolds amp Moyer Coal Co operated the Chauncey 19 but in July 1900 it was put up for Sheriff s sale subject to the many complicated leases among members of the Reynolds family 20 The next operator of the Chauncey George F Lee was the son of Conrad Lee from 1865 to 1886 the outside foreman of the nearby Avondale Colliery where George F Lee was born in 1870 He purchased the Chauncey in 1902 and operated it as the George F Lee Coal Co He also ran a coal distribution center in Brooklyn New York 21 In 1914 the Chauncey processed about 6 600 tons per month 22 In 1919 Lee built a new breaker with a capacity of 1 000 tons daily which began operating on August 25 The breaker designed by Frank Davenport an engineer from Wilkes Barre 23 was destroyed by fire on January 28 1923 the loss estimated to be 250 000 The following day Lee engaged E E Reilly of Kingston to build a new breaker 24 At the end of 1936 the George F Lee Coal Co still worked both the Chauncey mine and breaker 25 producing 38 712 tons of coal but by 1940 the company was bankrupt and in receivership In 1940 the Glen Alden Coal Company took ownership of the colliery and in February 1941 began to dismantle the breaker 26 The Avondale Colliery Edit In November 1808 Hezekiah Roberts Jr obtained patents on five lots in the western end of Plymouth Township about 120 acres 0 49 km2 total He called his estate Avondale and it eventually gave its name to the colliery After receiving these patents Roberts sold his soon to be valuable coal lands and by 1810 was farming in Genoa Township Delaware County Ohio 27 In addition to Roberts 120 acres 0 49 km2 the Delaware Lackawanna and Western Railroad compiled a large number of lots including part of Freeman Thomas s Grand Tunnel property If one includes the Wright family s 225 acres 0 91 km2 that constituted the Jersey mine the DL amp W s Avondale holdings included over 600 acres 2 4 km2 The Delaware Lackawanna and Western took a circuitous path to ownership of Avondale because its 1854 charter limited its ownership of coal lands As a result it used surrogates to acquire coal properties 28 In 1863 John C Phelps a director of the DL amp W leased a portion of the Avondale property from William Reynolds and Henderson Gaylord Plymouth natives In 1866 the mine was transferred to the Steuben Coal Co which in turn became part of the Nanticoke Coal amp Iron Co whose board of directors overlapped with the board of the DL amp W The NC amp I built the first breaker at Avondale 29 On September 6 1869 the Avondale Mine Disaster occurred during which a fire in the shaft ignited by a ventilating furnace spread to the breaker which stood over the mine shaft The breaker was destroyed by fire trapping 108 men and boys in the mine below All were killed as were two men who volunteered to enter the mine after the fire Soon after the disaster a second breaker was built at the colliery 29 In 1914 the Delaware Lackawanna and Western operated both the mine and the breaker 22 On February 9 1935 Glen Alden Coal Co successor to the DL amp W began to dismantle and demolish the Avondale breaker and to close the mine 30 In 1936 no coal was produced However in December 1940 Glen Alden resumed mining on a limited scale taking coal to the Lance Breaker to be processed 31 In 1955 the Avondale operation produced 78 401 tons of coal 32 Red Ash Colliery Edit George P Lindsay the general manager of the Plymouth Red Ash Coal Co began mining in 1913 and began building a breaker to process coal in 1914 The operation was therefore a latecomer among Plymouth s many mine operations The colliery was located along Route 11 just east of the Avondale Colliery In 1915 the mine produced 14 311 tons of coal In 1931 its peak year the mine produced 78 575 tons of coal The breaker was demolished in 1942 The Jersey Colliery Edit The Jersey was one of Plymouth s oldest mines a tunnel located at the top of Jersey Road in the hollow between Avondale Hill and Curry Hill just west of the Plymouth Borough boundary The mine was located on two lots of about 225 acres 0 91 km2 patented to Ellen Wadhams 1776 1872 in 1808 by virtue of the claim of her late husband Moses Wadhams 1776 1803 The mine was established by Joseph Wright 1785 1855 Ellen s second husband a Quaker who migrated to Plymouth from New Jersey Wright s stepdaughter Lydia Wadhams 1803 90 married Samuel French 1803 66 who became the second operator of the Jersey French who was the stepson of Plymouth mine operator John Smith operated the mine until about 1855 when the Scottish immigrant Robert Love then a young man in his twenties took control Love built a gravity railroad from the mine down to the newly arrived Lackawanna amp Bloomsburg Railroad and supplied the L amp B with the first coal shipped from Plymouth by rail 3 By 1865 the Jersey breaker was operated by the Delaware Lackawanna and Western Railroad and had an estimated annual capacity of 50 000 tons 7 In 1871 and in accordance with laws enacted following the 1869 disaster at the adjacent Avondale mine the DL amp W sank a 10 foot 3 0 m X 14 foot 4 3 m air shaft at the Jersey to help ventilate the mine 33 The breaker sat on the hill just below the mine as early as 1885 The DL amp W operated the Jersey until 1902 when an underground mine fire broke out As of 1942 the DL amp W s successor the Glen Alden Coal Co was still trying to extinguish the fire 34 The Nottingham Colliery Edit As perfected by 1908 the Nottingham Colliery included not only Nottingham and the Washington mine but also the mines established by Abijah Smith John Smith and Joseph Wright All five operations have separate histories Abijah Smith s Mine Edit Vast anthracite coal beds lay below Plymouth s surface at various depths At a few locations these beds were visible in the form of outcrops and one such location was a gorge created by Ransom Creek now Coal Creek located about a mile upstream from the Susquehanna River Coal could be seen and accessed on both the east side Turkey Hill and the west side Curry Hill of the creek Attracted by this outcrop Abijah Smith came to Plymouth about 1806 and with his business partner Lewis Hepburn bought a 75 acre plot called Lots 45 and 46 on the east side of the creek intending to mine ship and sell coal Hepburn s 1 4 share of the land and mine was sold at public sale after his death in 1815 35 Smith was born in Derby Connecticut about 1763 where he married and fathered numerous children He worked as a blacksmith or harness maker In 1804 he advertised For sale by Abijah Smith at Derby Landing Skirting and Bridle leather of the first quality May 7 1804 36 It is not known exactly why Smith left Derby for the Wyoming Valley but one journalist reporting in 1901 related an anecdote that had been passed down through the years The story is that Abijah Smith heard through some man who had been traveling in Pennsylvania and who passing through Derby on his way home stopped at Smith s blacksmith shop to have his horse shod about black stone in Pennsylvania that would burn The result of this conversation was that Smith made a trip to Pennsylvania and eventually located there He left Derby in 1806 and in 1807 mined 56 tons of coal in Plymouth Pa at the old mine now rented to the Lehigh and Wilkes Barre Coal Co and known as the Smith red ash coal 37 According to Hendrick B Wright in the fall of 1807 Abijah Smith purchased an ark from John P Arndt a Wilkes Barre merchant which Arndt had used for the transportation of plaster Smith floated the ark from Wilkes Barre to Plymouth loaded it with about fifty tons of anthracite coal and shipped it to Columbia in Lancaster County 5 According to Wright this was probably the first cargo of anthracite coal that was ever ordered for sale in this or any country The trade of 1807 was fifty tons Abijah Smith therefore of Plymouth was the pioneer in the coal business Anthracite coal had been used before 1807 in this valley and elsewhere in small quantities in furnaces with an air blast but the traffic in coal as an article of general use was commenced by Abijah Smith of Plymouth In 1825 Thomas Borbidge of Kingston Pennsylvania assumed operation of the mine and in 1827 he and John Smith operator of the mine across the creek petitioned the Pennsylvania House of Representatives for permission to build a railroad from their mines to the Susquehanna River 38 In 1830 Borbidge was still operating the mine 39 By 1835 the mine belonged to John Ingham married in 1827 to Abijah Smith s widow who lost it that year in a Sheriff s sale 40 By 1873 the mine was owned by Hendrick B Wright and leased to Broderick Conyngham amp Co operators of the Nottingham Colliery 41 John Smith s Mine Edit John Smith a pioneer coal mine operatorIn 1805 Hezekiah Roberts Sr obtained a patent for 121 acres 0 49 km2 of land called Lot 44 on the west side of Coal Creek which he sold to William Currie who gave the place the name Curry Hill In July 1810 Currie advertised in the newspaper for sale an extensive coal bed situated one mile from the river He soon sold the mineral rights to Lewis Hepburn Abijah s Smith s partner and in 1811 Hepburn sold half of these rights to John Smith Abijah Smith s brother In 1816 after Lewis Hepburn died Hepburn s son Patrick sold Smith the second half of the coal rights John Smith operated his mine on the west side of Coal Creek from 1811 until about 1837 A visitor in 1830 described Smith s coal mine as having a 20 foot 6 1 m thick bed of coal and found the mine extensively wrought and the scene both without and within is exceedingly imposing The bed is followed into the mountain large pillars of coal being left to support the superincumbent weight The visitor noted that in some areas Smith had removed all of the coal leaving only a roof of slate which then caved in As a result Smith modified his technique to leave two feet of coal to form the ceiling 42 In 1840 John Smith leased his coal beds to his son Francis J Smith his stepson Samuel French and his sons in law Draper Smith and William C Reynolds In 1848 Smith sold the coal rights to Lot 44 outright to Reynolds 43 By 1873 the mine was owned by Mrs William C Reynolds and leased to Broderick Conyngham amp Co operators of the Nottingham Colliery 41 Joseph Wright s slope Edit In 1807 Joseph Wright married Ellen Wadhams the widow of Moses Wadhams and thereby acquired Lot 8 Nos 10 amp 11 Lower Tier House Lots consisting of about 20 acres In 1812 Wright acquired the patent to the adjacent Lot 7 No 12 Lower Tier House Lots adding another 10 acres to his home lot 44 The 1884 mine map locates Wright s Slope near the Main Road on Lot 7 The 1884 map further indicates that both lots 7 and 8 had by then come under the aegis of the Lehigh amp Wilkes Barre Coal Co part of their Nottingham operation Washington Colliery Edit The second breaker at the Washington Colliery built about 1890 shown here in 1904The Washington Colliery was first opened by John Shay about 1854 Shay built a drift an inclined plane and a breaker Shutz Shay amp Heebner operated the colliery until August 1869 when they sold their rights to Broderick Conyngham amp Co At the same time BC amp C entered into leases to operate the Nottingham Colliery the old John Smith mine and the old Abijah Smith mine and from then on all four mines were operated under common management On April 1 1872 BC amp C sold their lease to the Lehigh Navigation amp Coal Co and on January 1 1874 the LN amp C sold to the Lehigh amp Wilkes Barre Coal Co which operated the mine as the Reynolds No 16 29 By April 1890 the first breaker had been dismantled and a new breaker was in operation In 1908 the L amp W B abandoned the second breaker and began to process coal from the Washington mine at the Nottingham breaker In March 1912 the company destroyed the Washington breaker with dynamite 45 Nottingham Colliery Edit The first Nottingham breaker shown at left just before its demolition and the second Nottingham breaker as it neared completion in 1904The Nottingham Coal Co of Baltimore was incorporated on March 21 1865 and obtained a lease to mine coal from Plymouth s Reynolds family a lease which would bring the family great wealth Bryce R Blair was named superintendent and proceeded to construct a coal breaker and a 380 foot 120 m shaft said to pass through 40 feet 12 m of quicksand on its way to the coal beds below 46 In August 1869 the Nottingham assigned their lease to the firm of Broderick Conyngham amp Co 29 In order to create a second means of egress from the mine as required by the mine safety law enacted after the 1869 Avondale Mine Disaster BC amp Co drove 2 400 feet 730 m to the west to connect with its Washington mine 8 On April 1 1872 BC amp Co sold their lease to the Lehigh Coal amp Navigation Company and on January 1 1874 the LC amp N sold the property to the Lehigh amp Wilkes Barre Coal Co which operated the mine as the Nottingham No 15 Colliery 29 In 1936 the Glen Alden Coal Co operated the Nottingham and produced 263 836 tons of coal However in August 1936 Glen Alden demolished the Nottingham breaker 47 part of a general consolidation of mine operations in the Wyoming Valley Thenceforth coal from the Nottingham was processed at the Lance breaker The lone voice of protest of the Nottingham s demise was the Luzerne County Communist Party whose presidential candidate Earl Browder called upon the community to raise its voice against this wrecking plan of the coal companies 48 In December 1936 Glen Alden operated the Nottingham for the first time since the breaker s demolition and after a subsequent period of idleness resumed operations at the Nottingham again in 1938 49 The mine continued to operate into the 1950s In June 1954 Charles Medura was killed in the mine by a fall of rock the last of many fatalities at the mine The Parrish Colliery Edit The 2nd Parrish breaker 1901The Parrish Colliery was a relative late comer to Plymouth Its origins can be traced to the sale by the Wadhams family of their homestead farm in 1871 to the Wilkes Barre Coal amp Iron Co The property was located in the center of Plymouth Borough between Academy and Girard streets In 1874 the Wilkes Barre Coal amp Iron Co became part of the Lehigh amp Wilkes Barre Coal Co which acquired the property but by some arrangement the mine was operated by the Parrish Coal Co organized in 1884 The company built a breaker said to be a model of neatness 50 built by contractor Joseph C Tyrrell and completed in September 1884 51 On the night of January 25 1887 the new breaker caught fire and was completely destroyed Another was built and was operating by July 52 By 1914 the mine had reverted to the Lehigh amp Wilkes Barre Coal Co which operated a washery and breaker Ash and waste water from the washery were flushed into the Susquehanna River 22 In June 1914 the company closed the Parrish breaker and began construction of a tunnel under the river to transport coal to the company s breaker in Buttonwood 53 In 1920 the Glen Alden Coal Co acquired the Lehigh amp Wilkes Barre Coal Co including the Parrish Colliery and in July of that year the breaker blew down in a wind and rain storm 54 The Dodson Colliery Edit The first Dodson Breaker built 1869 Cross section first Dodson BreakerThe Dodson Colliery was located at Bull Run in Plymouth Borough and its breaker stood alongside the tracks of the Lackawanna amp Bloomsburg Railroad The Dodson s coal lands ran from Center Avenue on the west to Pierce Street on the east and thus the Dodson s mining operations took place beneath the central business district of the Borough The colliery was first developed by Fellows amp Dodson Co beginning in 1869 and by 1870 a large breaker had been built and a shaft sunk to a depth of 220 feet 67 m 55 By 1872 the mine was operated by the Wilkes Barre Coal amp Iron Co which had recently gained control of nearly all of Plymouth Borough s coal lands east of Academy Street including the Lance and the Gaylord collieries In 1872 the company employed 80 men at the Dodson sank the shaft to a depth of 280 feet 85 m and began to experience problems with water infiltration 56 In 1874 the Wilkes Barre Coal amp Iron Co merged into the Lehigh amp Wilkes Barre Coal Co but by early 1877 this firm was overextended and temporarily in receivership In 1877 the Plymouth Coal Company managed by John J Shonk and John C Haddock gained control of the Dodson In October 1877 the Wilkes Barre Times reported that work is to be resumed at the Dodson shaft by the Plymouth Coal Co 57 In 1882 Haddock assumed sole control of the Plymouth Coal Co and ran the Dodson until his death in New York in December 1914 Haddock had a litigious reputation due to his disputes with neighboring mines with Plymouth Borough and with Plymouth s Sweitzer family He disputed freight rates testifying before the Interstate Commerce Commission that the railroads discriminated against small operators 58 On July 13 1899 the first Dodson breaker burned down and on March 5 1900 work began on the second breaker 59 In 1914 Plymouth Borough obtained an injunction preventing the Plymouth Coal Co from mining owing to surface subsidence and for most of that year the mine was idle In January 1915 the Kingston Coal Co which operated the adjacent Gaylord Colliery announced it would buy the Dodson mine 60 The Lance Colliery Edit First Lance breaker built about 1865In his will of 1834 Jacob Gould bequeathed to his seven children all the coal mines which are now or may hereafter be found on any part of my landed property and that there shall be a reserve made in the division of my real or landed property sufficient for all necessary roads to go to and from said coal mines and sufficient land for to deposite all coal and coal dirt and the like that is necessary and that each one shall have an equal right to dig or mine coal at any time and each one shall be at their proper expense of keeping said coal mine or mines in repair according to what coal they may dig or mine He further willed that with respect to the division of all my coal mines each daughter is made equal to each son and holding equal rights amp interest Twenty four years later the 1858 Pennsylvania Geological Survey reported that coal has been wrought languidly for thirty years at Gould and Shunk s mine the operator being John Jenks Shonk and the mine called Rudmandale located just west of Shupp s Creek 61 The small operation eventually became the Lance Colliery one of Wyoming Valley s largest and most enduring Despite its name the Lance Colliery was controlled by William L Lance Sr for a very short time About 1865 Lance and his sons bought the Gould Homestead which ran from the Susquehanna River to State Street just east of the Plymouth Borough line The land contained about 150 acres 0 61 km2 of coal measures In order to develop the property by sinking a deep shaft to reach the coal seams and building a breaker to process the coal Lance borrowed money from Payne Pettebone a coal mine operator Lance overextended himself and Pettebone aggressively pursued repayment In January 1871 Lance s friend Samuel Bonnell Jr bought the property at Sheriff s Sale so as to satisfy the debt Bonnell allowed Lance and his sons to continue to operate the mine 62 As of 1871 Lance had sunk the shaft 175 feet 53 m and was in process of sinking a second shaft for emergency egress 63 However in July 1871 Bonnell sold the improvements and leased the coal rights to the Wilkes Barre Coal amp Iron Co and in February 1876 Bonnell sold the property outright to the Lehigh amp Wilkes Barre Coal Co 62 Lance who moved to Philadelphia and became a mat manufacturer spent years in court suing his old friend Bonnell in a futile attempt to recover the mine According to The Engineering and Mining Journal in 1879 the Lance Colliery was operated by Charles Parrish amp Co a subsidiary or tenant of the L amp W B The journal reported that the mine having been idle for about a year has again been started up 64 In 1883 William Lance s old breaker was torn down and on June 30 1883 the Lehigh amp Wilkes Barre Coal Co began shipping coal from a new breaker 65 one that was constructed with 700 000 feet of Georgia pine 66 In 1931 the Glen Alden Coal Co successor to the L amp W B erected a third breaker By this time large coal companies were more concerned about their public image and Glen Alden made an effort to make the building and grounds attractive Writing in 1941 a newspaper reporter described the colliery as beautifully landscaped 67 In 1936 Glen Alden produced 653 141 tons of coal and in 1945 produced 489 889 tons of coal In 1955 the Lance breaker produced 44 534 tons of coal and remained active as late as 1957 32 The Gaylord Colliery Edit Second Gaylord breaker built in 1879An early version of the Gaylord mine was opened in 1855 by a company of capitalists composed of Henderson Gaylord 25 James S Mason a Philadelphia shoe black manufacturer 25 the Frishmuth family Philadelphia tobacconists 25 and William Hoppa Cool 25 They built a private railroad running from a mine tunnel in Poke Hollow along Brown s Creek across what was then the Nesbit family farm to a wharf on the river near the corner of Gaylord Avenue and Main Street The company leased the mine to Van Homer amp Fellows then to Eric L Hedstrum of Buffalo New York 29 In 1866 J Langdon amp Co later H S Mercur amp Co operated the mine 7 After Gaylord consolidated property at Welsh Hill and beginning in 1871 the Wilkes Barre Coal amp Iron Co and then its successor the Lehigh amp Wilkes Barre Coal Co operated the mine by then if not earlier a tract of 257 acres but this firm fell into receivership in 1877 and lost their lease The Gaylord Coal Co operated by Thomas Beaver and Daniel Edwards took control of the Gaylord and later merged with the Kingston Coal Co On March 5 1879 the breaker at the Gaylord was destroyed by fire 68 and on June 11 1879 the Wilkes Barre Record announced that Alanson Tyrrell of Kingston had been awarded a contract to build a new breaker 69 In August 1879 The Engineering and Mining Journal wrote the Gaylord Coal Co is building a new breaker in place of the one burned down last summer and which is to prepare the coal from the old slope workings with its tunnel to the seven foot seam as well as the coal from its new shaft which was sunk by the Lehigh amp Wilkes Barre Coal Co when it had it to the Bennett seam The new firm contemplates sinking down through the Bennett to the Red Ash seam The coals from the Seven Foot and the Red Ash will cause it to be a very fine colliery 70 The prediction proved accurate in 1887 the Gaylord shaft and slope mined 248 276 tons of coal 52 On February 13 1894 the Scranton Republican reported a large cave in at the Gaylord mine We are called upon to detail the awful scenes of another miner horror Thirteen men who went down to repair some damaged work lugs in the Gaylord slope at Plymouth are caught by a fall of coal and most probably called to the great beyond their bodies crushed and very little hope entertained for their recovery for days to come On February 14 The Wilkes Barre Record reported one hundred men were digging for the entombed miners Despite these efforts the situation was hopeless On February 19 the Wilkes Barre Record reported that ground water in the Gaylord was hindering the rescue Finally on March 12 the body of Peter McLaughlin was recovered the first of the miners to be found By April 6 the last of the bodies was taken out of the mine that of the foreman Thomas Picton According to the Water Supply Commission of Pennsylvania in 1914 the colliery was still operated by the Kingston Coal Co producing about 225 tons of coal per day Slush and waste water were pumped into three boreholes rather than into Brown s Creek and washwater was pumped from the Susquehanna River 23 000 000 gallons in four months 22 In May 1935 the Glen Alden Coal Co bought the Gaylord mine from the Kingston Coal Co for 100 000 Glen Alden paid about 40 000 in back taxes owed to Plymouth Township Plymouth Borough and Larksville Borough 71 On June 15 1935 the second Gaylord breaker was demolished with dynamite 72 By this time the mine was largely depleted but in December 1940 the Sunday Independent reported that the old Gaylord mine now being operated by Samuel Bird brother of Morgan Bird is showing signs of being able to absorb additional number of men in the future the Lance breaker prepares the coal 73 In 1945 the Gaylord worked 284 days and produced 26 301 tons of coal and In January 1955 the Bird Mining Co stopped mining at the Gaylord Hillside Colliery Edit Hillside was a minor operation first worked by George W Shonk and John Barry operating as the Barry Shonk amp Dooley Coal Co on land owned by the Barry family old settlers on Plymouth Mountain above Poke Hollow Coal was extracted by means of a slope dug into the side of the mountain According to the newspapers in November 1906 the colliery began mining on a large scale and a breaker erected which has a capacity of several hundred tons daily 74 In 1907 Shonk and Barry sold their interest in the mine to Bright Coal Co owned by a group of investors from Scranton The newspapers reported that mining operations would be carried out on a much larger scale than before 75 In 1914 Bright Coal Co still operated the Hillside At the time waste water from the mine was dumped into a tributary of Brown s Creek 76 In 1917 Bright mined 10 252 tons 77 Delaware amp Hudson Collieries Along Brown s Creek Edit Fuller s Shaft Delaware amp Hudson No 5 Edit The first D amp H No 5 breaker which burned in 1907The former railroad crossing at Plymouth s Bull Run long disappeared was originally called Fuller s Crossing after the mine operator J C Fuller The railroad ran from his mine and several others crossed Main Street and continued down to a wharf on the Susquehanna River Fuller s mine was located just above the Gaylord colliery along what is now Washington Avenue According to Munsell the shaft was sunk by the old Plymouth Coal Co and J C Fuller in 1858 29 In 1864 Fuller operated the mine which produced 23 827 tons of coal making it that year the fourth largest mine in the Plymouth district 7 In 1871 operation of the mine was transferred from Fuller to the Northern Coal amp Iron Co a firm owned by the Delaware amp Hudson Canal Co 8 and by 1873 if not earlier a breaker was operating at the mine The Loree Delaware amp Hudson No 5 Edit The third D amp H No 5 breaker Loree No 5 under construction in February 1919On April 27 1907 the No 5 breaker burned to the ground causing an awe inspiring spectacle At the time the breaker had been abandoned by the D amp H and was being used as a washery by the Rissinger Bros 78 By 1909 a second breaker was built intended to process coal from several D amp H mines In 1914 The D amp H was operating both the breaker and a washery and waste water from these was dumped into Shupp s Creek 76 not Brown s Creek because the second breaker had been relocated from its original site to a new one farther south In 1919 fire destroyed the second No 5 breaker 79 That year a new reinforced concrete breaker called the Loree No 5 Breaker was built to process coal from all of the D amp H operations in Plymouth The Loree continued to operate until 1965 80 Swetland Shaft Delaware amp Hudson No 4 Edit The Swetland Shaft was located on the northwest corner of the intersection of Vine and State streets in the Poke Hollow section of what is now Larksville Borough According to court records William Patten and Thomas Fender established this mine in 1851 81 About 1855 Patten and Fender contracted with an English immigrant John Dennis a future Plymouth burgess to sink a shaft to the coal seams below It was said to be the first mine shaft on the west side of the Susquehanna River 82 In January 1857 William Patten died when he fell down the newly constructed shaft 83 Fender continued to operate the mine but on February 25 1860 lost the property at sheriff s sale 81 Josiah W Eno built a breaker at the mine in 1857 which he operated until 1861 A C Laning amp Co bought the mine and subsequently John Jenks Shonk Payne Pettebone and William Swetland bought the mine 29 and the 1864 Schooley Map shows Shonk amp Eno working both the shaft and two side by side tunnels In 1865 J Langdon amp Co operated the mine although according to local historian Samuel L French David Levi a Welshman operated the mine followed by A J Davis and Charles Bennett 3 By 1870 J C Fuller operated the mine and in 1871 the Northern Coal amp Iron Co a subsidiary of the Delaware amp Hudson Canal Co assumed operation of the mine Michael Shonk was mine boss for both Fuller and the NC amp I 84 Between 1864 and 1873 a coal breaker was built on the site and in 1901 the D amp H dismantled the breaker As of 1914 coal from the No 4 shaft was hauled to the No 5 breaker for processing although a washery at the No 4 prepared enough coal to run the colliery boilers 76 As of 1925 the D amp H continued to operate the mine calling it the Loree No 4 At least one of the tunnels had a name According to the obituary of Patrick Dooley 85 in is early life he was actively engaged in mining being one of the expert men of his time and for forty five years was superintendent of the Dickey Tunnel now the D amp H No 4 Colliery then operated by Fuller amp Co Delaware amp Hudson Collieries Along Shupp s Creek Edit Boston Colliery Edit The 1st Boston Breaker about 1875 The 2nd Boston breaker 1904The Boston was unique in that the mine and the breaker were originally built about 1 1 4 miles apart from one another The mine and shaft were located north of State Street where it intersects with Shupp s Creek A railroad was built from the mine along the creek down to the first Boston breaker located next to and east of the old Shupp Cemetery at the bottom of Boston Hill The mine was opened in 1857 by the Boston Coal Co which leased to the Delaware Lackawanna and Western Railroad in 1858 and sold to the Delaware amp Hudson Canal Co in 1868 subject to the lease of 1858 29 In 1883 the Delaware Lackawanna and Western mined 4 351 tons but in January that year the Delaware amp Hudson assumed operation of the mine 86 On January 16 1887 the Boston breaker was destroyed by fire The Delaware amp Hudson built a second breaker this time adjacent to the mine completed by November 1887 87 In 1909 the second Boston breaker was demolished and coal from the mine processed at the Delaware amp Hudson No 5 colliery 88 Delaware amp Hudson No 1 Colliery Edit The No 1 colliery was the most westerly of three collieries constructed in the late 1860s along Shupp s Creek by the Northern Coal and Iron Co located on Main Street on the east side of the creek The Delaware amp Hudson Canal Co which owned the NC amp I built a railroad branch connecting the No 1 2 and 3 collieries to the Lackawanna amp Bloomsburg Railroad By 1872 the shaft was 295 feet 90 m deep and 130 men were working in the Lance and Cooper veins 56 As of 1914 the Delaware amp Hudson continued to operate the mine dumping waste water into the creek 22 Delaware amp Hudson No 2 Colliery Edit The Northern Coal amp Iron Co built the No 2 shaft on the north side of Shupp s Creek west of Nesbitt Street or about 650 feet 200 m east of the No 1 shaft By 1872 the shaft was 500 feet 150 m deep reaching the Lawler and Wilkman coal veins 56 By 1873 the NC amp I operated a breaker at the shaft As of 1914 the Delaware amp Hudson Canal Co was operating a breaker and washery there dumping waste water into Shupp s Creek 22 Delaware amp Hudson No 3 Colliery Edit The No 3 Colliery was located along Shupp s creek about a mile east of the No 2 Colliery By 1872 a contractor T C Harkness had sunk the shaft 350 feet 110 m and was driving a tunnel toward the Boston Mine to create a second means of egress 89 By 1873 the Northern Coal amp Iron Co operated a breaker on the site By 1893 the Delaware amp Hudson Canal Co was operating the colliery producing 219 044 tons of coal However on November 15 1894 the first No 3 breaker burned The headline in the Wilkes Barre Times read A glorious scene the whole valley lighted up and glare seen in Scranton will be re built at once 90 In January 1895 the new breaker at the No 3 was under construction 91 designed by Abram Shaffer it began operating on June 1 1895 According to the newspapers it was clad in corrugated iron and had a fine appearance 92 By 1916 the Delaware amp Hudson decided to abandon the No 3 breaker and run coal from the mine through the company s No 5 breaker and on the morning of December 2 the No 3 breaker was destroyed by fire Kingston Coal Company Mines Edit In 1864 Waterman amp Beaver Co owned by industrialists from Danville Pennsylvania sank the No 1 shaft in Kingston known as Morgan s Shaft after superintendent David Morgan In 1868 Daniel Edwards superintendent of W amp B s Danville iron mines replaced Morgan as superintendent The firm s coal lands spanned the boundary between Plymouth and Kingston townships and in 1872 the No 2 shaft and the No 2 breaker were constructed both in Plymouth A railroad branch connected the No 2 colliery to the Lackawanna amp Bloomsburg Railroad In 1877 the firm s name was changed to Kingston Coal Company 29 The Plymouth side of the colliery became part of Edwardsville when it was incorporated as a separate borough on June 16 1884 Coal from the Kingston Coal Co No 2 and No 3 shafts both shown at the far upper right on this 1892 panoramic map was processed at the No 2 breaker shown at the far upper left on the map built in 1872 The two shafts and the breaker stood in that part of Plymouth Township which became part of Edwardsville Borough in 1884 A railroad spur led from the No 2 past the No 4 breaker in Kingston shown on the far lower right of the map Woodward Colliery Edit The first Woodward coal breaker in 1900The Woodward Colliery was located on the eastern slope of Ross Hill up hill from Toby s Creek With 925 acres 3 74 km2 of coal lands it was a major colliery and the Delaware Lackawanna and Western Railroad took several years to establish it In 1881 in what was then Plymouth Township the DL amp W began to sink two shafts the largest of which at 22 X 55 feet was sunk 1 000 feet 300 m to the Red Ash coal vein 93 By 1883 the DL amp W had begun to construct a breaker and to prepare railroad beds for a branch line connecting the breaker to the DL amp W s railroad line on the west shore of the Susquehanna River In September 1883 four men working on the shaft were killed when the platform supporting them collapsed 94 In 1884 the colliery became part of the newly formed Edwardsville Borough By 1888 the colliery was complete and in July the Woodward began to ship coal 95 The new mine and breaker had a large capacity in May 1904 the colliery broke a record producing 77 383 tons of coal 96 In July 1916 the DL amp W announced plans to build a new concrete breaker and to fill in part of Toby s Creek so as to straighten the railroad bed leading to the breaker 97 By 1917 the new breaker was under construction The foundation was built by Curtis Construction Co of New York and the steel frame built by the DL amp W The facade of the breaker was clad with special high strength wire glass The new colliery had its own power plant fueled by coal from the mine 98 In 1936 the Glen Alden Coal Co successor to the DL amp W operated the Woodward and produced 858 711 tons of coal In 1945 they produced 745 586 tons The Woodward coal breaker closed for business on October 14 1961 99 See also EditPlymouth Pennsylvania History of Plymouth Pennsylvania Architecture of Plymouth PennsylvaniaReferences Edit Baltimore Patriot May 12 1830 Petrillo F Charles 1986 Anthracite and Slackwater The North Branch Canal 1828 1901 Easton Pennsylvania Harmony Press ISBN 978 0930973049 a b c d Samuel Livingston French Reminiscences of Plymouth Luzerne County Penna New York Lotus Press 1915 E O Jameson The Jamesons in America 1647 1900 Boston The Rumford Press 1901 a b c Hendrick B Wright Historical Sketches of Plymouth Luzerne Co Penna Philadelphia Pennsylvania T B Peterson amp Brothers 1873 a b P Frazer Smith Pennsylvania State Reports vol LV Philadelphia Pennsylvania Kay amp Brother 1868 a b c d e Samuel H Daddow and Benjamin Bannan Coal Iron and Oil Pottsville Pennsylvania Benjamin Bannan 1866 a b c d Reports of the Inspectors of Coal Mines for the year 1871 Harrisburg Pennsylvania B Singerly 1872 The Wilkes Barre Record September 26 1935 page 13 Wilkes Barre Daily August 1 1872 p 3 Wilkes Barre Weekly Times Wilkes Barre PA July 7 1900 page 8 column 3 Samuel Robert Smith The Black Trail of Anthracite Kingston Pennsylvania S R Smith 1907 Wilkes Barre Record May 17 1901 page 8 Reports of the Inspectors of Mines for the Year 1871 Harrisburg Pennsylvania Benjamin Singerly 1872 294 New York Herald December 6 1875 Frederick E Saward The Coal Mines of Pennsylvania New York 1880 Index to Executive Documents A Dictionary of Arts Science and General Literature vol II New York Henry G Allen Co 1891 Reports of the Inspectors of Mines for the Year 1896 Harrisburg Pennsylvania Clarence M Busch 1897 Wilkes Barre Weekly Times Wilkes Barre PA July 7 1900 page 8 columns 2 3 Oscar J Harvey and Ernest Gray Smith A History of Wilkes Barre vol V Wilkes Barre Pennsylvania self published 1930 a b c d e f Water Supply Commission of Pennsylvania Water Resources Inventory Report Part X Harrisburg PA Wm Stanley Ray 1917 Wilkes Barre Times Leader August 26 1919 Wilkes Barre Times Leader January 29 1923 Sunday Independent December 27 1936 The Wilkes Barre Record August 18 1941 page 13 History of Delaware County and Ohio Chicago O L Baskin amp Co 1880 Daniel Hodas The Business Career of Moses Taylor New York New York University Press 1976 a b c d e f g h i j W W Munsell amp Co History of Luzerne Lackawanna and Wyoming Counties Pa New York W W Munsell amp Co 1880 Sunday Independent February 10 1935 Sunday Independent December 29 1940 a b 1955 Annual Report Anthracite Division Pennsylvania Department of Mines and Mineral Industries Reports of the Inspectors of Coal Mines for the year 1871 Harrisburg Pennsylvania B Singerly 1872 Sunday Independent March 15 1942 The Advertiser Wilkes Barre Pennsylvania April 28 1815 Connecticut Journal June 14 1804 Springfield Republican December 27 1901 Journal of the House of Representatives Volume I 1826 1827 page 203 The Register of Pennsylvania Samuel Hazard ed November 13 1830 Wyoming Republican and Herald July 8 1835 page 3 a b Hendrick B Wright Historical Sketches of Plymouth 1873 page 327 Benjamin Silliman Notice of the Anthracite Region in The Register of Pennsylvania ed Samuel Hazard vol 6 Philadelphia Wm F Geddes 1831 70 77 George W Harris Pennsylvania State Reports v 23 Philadelphia T K amp P G Collins 1855 Luzerne County Warrantee Maps Pennsylvania State Archives Wilkes Barre Times March 27 1912 Wilkes Barre Times Leader February 12 1916 Sunday Independent August 30 1936 Sunday Independent September 20 1936 Sunday Independent February 5 1939 Reports of the Inspectors of Mines for the year 1884 Harrisburg Pennsylvania Lane S Hart 1885 Engineering and Mining Journal September 20 1884 a b Reports of the Inspectors of Mines for the year 1887 Harrisburg Pennsylvania Edwin K Meyers 1888 Sunday Independent June 29 1914 Wilkes Barre Times Leader July 14 1920 Reports of the Inspectors of Coal Mines for the year 1870 Harrisburg Pennsylvania B Singerly 1871 a b c Reports of the Inspectors of Mines for the year 1872 Harrisburg Pennsylvania Benjamin Singerly 1873 Wilkes Barre Times October 24 1878 New York Times December 21 1914 Philadelphia Inquirer March 5 1900 Wilkes Barre Times Leader January 27 1915 Henry Darwin Rogers The Geology of Pennsylvania vol 2 Philadelphia J B Lippincott amp Co 1858 a b Lemuel Amerman Pennsylvania State Reports vol 2 New York Banks amp Brothers 1886 Reports of the Inspectors of Coal Mines for the year 1871 Harrisburg Pennsylvania B Singerly 1872 The Engineering and Mining Journal April 19 1879 Reports of the Inspectors of Coal Mines for the year 1883 Harrisburg Pennsylvania Lane S Hart 1884 The Coal Trade Journal March 7 1883 page 153 Sunday Independent September 28 1941 Cincinnati Daily Gazette March 6 1879 Record of the Times page 4 June 11 1879 Engineering and Mining Journal vol 28 New York The Scientific Publishing Co 1879 Sunday Independent May 19 1935 Wilkes Barre Record June 17 1935 Sunday Independent December 29 1940 p C 6 Wilkes Barre Times November 7 1906 Wilkes Barre Times August 29 1907 a b c Water Supply Commission of Pennsylvania Water Resources Inventory Report Part X Harrisburg PA Wm Stanley Ray 1917 Report of the Dept of Mines of Pennsylvania Harrisburg Pennsylvania J L L Kuhn 1919 Wilkes Barre Times April 29 1907 Wilkes Barre Times January 22 1919 965 Annual Report Anthracite Division Pennsylvania Department of Mines and Mineral Industries a b P Frazier Smith Pennsylvania State Reports Philadelphia Kay amp Brother 1868 F C Johnson ed The Historical Record vol 1 Wilkes Barre Pennsylvania Press of the Wilkes Barre Record 1887 New York Herald Tribune January 17 1857 Reports of the Inspectors of Mines for the Year 1871 Harrisburg Pennsylvania B Singerly 1872 294 Wilkes Barre Times August 13 1907 Frederick E Saward The Coal Trade New York 1884 Reports of the Inspectors of Mines for the Year 1887 Harrisburg Pennsylvania Edwin K Meyers 1888 Report of the Department of Mines of Pennsylvania 1909 Harrisburg Pennsylvania C E Aughinbaugh 1910 Reports of the Inspectors of Mines for the year 1872 Harrisburg Pennsylvania Benjamin Singerly 1873 Wilkes Barre Times November 16 1894 Wilkes Barre Times January 8 1895 Wilkes Barre Times May 25 1895 Philadelphia Inquirer November 15 1886 Reports of the Inspectors of Mines for the year 1883 Harrisburg Pennsylvania Lane S Hart 1884 Reports of the Inspectors of Mines for the year 1888 Harrisburg Pennsylvania Edwin K Meyers 1889 Wilkes Barre Times June 2 1904 Wilkes Barre Times Leader July 10 1916 Wilkes Barre Times Leader August 17 1917 1961 Annual Report Anthracite Division Pennsylvania Department of Mines and Mineral Industries 41 14 31 N 75 56 53 W 41 242 N 75 948 W 41 242 75 948 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Coal mining in Plymouth Pennsylvania amp oldid 1158403378, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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