fbpx
Wikipedia

History of coal mining

The history of coal mining goes back thousands of years, with early mines documented in ancient China, the Roman Empire and other early historical economies. It became important in the Industrial Revolution of the 19th and 20th centuries, when it was primarily used to power steam engines, heat buildings and generate electricity. Coal mining continues as an important economic activity today, but has begun to decline due to the strong contribution coal plays in global warming and environmental issues, which result in decreasing demand and in some geographies, peak coal.

Compared to wood fuels, coal yields a higher amount of energy per unit mass, specific energy or massic energy, and can often be obtained in areas where wood is not readily available. Though it was used historically as a domestic fuel, coal is now used mostly in industry, especially in smelting and alloy production, as well as electricity generation. Large-scale coal mining developed during the Industrial Revolution, and coal provided the main source of primary energy for industry and transportation in industrial areas from the 18th century to the 1950s. Coal remains an important energy source.[1] Coal is also mined today on a large scale by open pit methods wherever the coal strata strike the surface or are relatively shallow. Britain developed the main techniques of underground coal mining from the late 18th century onward, with further progress being driven by 19th-century and early 20th-century progress.[1] However, oil and gas were increasingly used as alternatives from the 1860s onward.

By the late 20th century, coal was, for the most part, replaced in domestic as well as industrial and transportation usage by oil, natural gas or electricity produced from oil, gas, nuclear power or renewable energy sources. By 2010, coal produced over a fourth of the world's energy.[2]

Since 1890, coal mining has also been a political and social issue. Coal miners' labour and trade unions became powerful in many countries in the 20th century, and often, the miners were leaders of the Left or Socialist movements (as in Britain, Germany, Poland, Japan, Chile, Canada and the U.S.)[3][4] Since 1970, environmental issues have been increasingly important, including the health of miners, destruction of the landscape from strip mines and mountaintop removal, air pollution, and coal combustion's contribution to global warming.

Early history edit

 
Ruins of the hypocaust under the floor of the Roman villa La Olmeda. The part under the exedra is covered.

Early coal extraction was small-scale, the coal lying either on the surface, or very close to it. Typical methods for extraction included drift mining and bell pits. As well as drift mines, small scale shaft mining was used. This took the form of a bell pit, the extraction working outward from a central shaft, or a technique called room and pillar in which 'rooms' of coal were extracted with pillars left to support the roofs. Both of these techniques however left considerable amount of usable coal behind.

Archeological evidence in China indicates surface mining of coal and household usage after approximately 3490 BC. [5]

The earliest reference to the use of coal in metalworking is found in the geological treatise On stones (Lap. 16) by the Greek scientist Theophrastus (c. 371–287 BC):

Among the materials that are dug because they are useful, those known as coals are made of earth, and, once set on fire, they burn like charcoal. They are found in Liguria... and in Elis as one approaches Olympia by the mountain road; and they are used by those who work in metals.[6]

The earliest known use of coal in the Americas was by the Aztecs who used coal for fuel and jet (a type of lignite) for ornaments.[1]

In Roman Britain, the Romans were exploiting all major coalfields (save those of North and South Staffordshire) by the late 2nd century AD.[7] While much of its use remained local, a lively trade developed along the North Sea coast supplying coal to Yorkshire and London.[7] This also extended to the continental Rhineland, where bituminous coal was already used for the smelting of iron ore.[7] It was used in hypocausts to heat public baths, the baths in military forts, and the villas of wealthy individuals. Excavation has revealed coal stores at many forts along Hadrian's Wall as well as the remains of a smelting industry at forts such as Longovicium nearby.[citation needed]

After the Romans left Britain, in AD 410, there are few records of coal being used in the country until the end of the 12th century. One that does occur is in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle for the year 852 when a rent including 12 loads of coal is mentioned.[8] In 1183 a smith was given land for his work, and was required to "raise his own coal"[9]: 171–2  Shortly after the granting of the Magna Carta, in 1215, coal began to be traded in areas of Scotland and the north-east England, where the carboniferous strata were exposed on the seashore, and thus became known as "sea coal". This commodity, however, was not suitable for use in the type of domestic hearths then in use and was mainly used by artisans for lime burning, metal working and smelting. As early as 1228, sea coal from the north-east was being taken to London.[10]: 5 

During the 13th century, the trading of coal increased across Britain and by the end of the century most of the coalfields in England, Scotland and Wales were being worked on a small scale.[10]: 8  As the use of coal amongst the artisans became more widespread, it became clear that coal smoke was detrimental to health and the increasing pollution in London led to much unrest and agitation. As a result of this, a Royal proclamation was issued in 1306 prohibiting artificers of London from using sea coal in their furnaces and commanding them to return to the traditional fuels of wood and charcoal.[10]: 10 

Marco Polo wrote about the widespread use of coal in Yuan dynasty China in the late 13th century in The Travels of Marco Polo, remarking that coal was the primary fuel of the land and that it helped support heated baths for the citizenry beyond what wood would be able to do.[11]

During the first half of the 14th century coal began to be used for domestic heating in coal producing areas of Britain, as improvements were made in the design of domestic hearths.[10]: 13  Edward III was the first king to take an interest in the coal trade of the north east, issuing a number of writs to regulate the trade and allowing the export of coal to Calais.[10]: 15  The demand for coal steadily increased in Britain during the 15th century, but it was still mainly being used in the mining districts, in coastal towns or being exported to continental Europe.[10]: 19  However, by the middle of the 16th century supplies of wood were beginning to fail in Britain and the use of coal as a domestic fuel rapidly expanded.[10]: 22 

In 1575, Sir George Bruce of Carnock of Culross, Scotland, opened the first coal mine to extract coal from a "moat pit" under the sea on the Firth of Forth. He constructed an artificial loading island into which he sank a 40 ft shaft that connected to another two shafts for drainage and improved ventilation. The technology was far in advance of any coal mining method in the late medieval period and was considered one of the industrial wonders of the age.[12]

During the 17th century a number of advances in mining techniques were made, such as the use of test boring to find suitable deposits and chain pumps, driven by water wheels, to drain the collieries.[10]: 57–9 

People who sold wood, or those who preferred the smell of wood smoke to coal smoke, opposed the transition in England from wood to coal. One name these opponents gave to the new fuel was "the devil's excrement." If the coal had a high sulfur content, such a description was quite apt. [13]

North American coal deposits were first discovered by French explorers and fur traders along the shores of Grand Lake in central New Brunswick, Canada in the 1600s. Coal seams were exposed where rivers flowed into the lake and was dug by hand off the surface and from tunnels dug into the seam. About 1631 the French made their fur trading post at the mouth of the Saint John River their main post in Acadia and started construction of a new fort. The main residence at the fort was designed with two 11-foot-wide fireplaces which were stocked with wood and coal from upriver. As early as 1643, the French were sending coal and other supplies to the British colony at Boston. [14][15][16][17]

Industrial Revolution edit

The Industrial Revolution, which began in Britain in the 18th century, and later spread to continental Europe, North America, and Japan, was based on the availability of coal to power steam engines. International trade expanded exponentially when coal-fed steam engines were built for the railways and steamships during the Victorian era. Coal was cheaper and much more efficient than wood fuel in most steam engines. Because central and Northern England contains an abundance of coal, many mines were situated in these areas, as well as in the South Wales coalfield, and Scotland. The small-scale techniques were unsuited to the increasing demand, with extraction moving away from surface extraction to deep shaft mining as the Industrial Revolution progressed.[18]

As steamships traveled overseas from the industrialized countries of Europe their need for coal served as trigger for coal mining to start at various locations across the globe. An example of this is the coal mining in Zona Centro Sur, Chile, that began as a response to the arrival of steamships to Talcahuano.[19]

Beginning of the 20th century edit

 
Coal miners in Hazleton PA, USA, 1905
 
Iowa coal mine, 1936.
Coal Production of the World, around 1905[20]
Country Year Short Tons
Europe 
United Kingdom 1905 236,128,936
Germany (coal) 121,298,167
Germany (lignite) 52,498,507
France 35,869,497
Belgium 21,775,280
Austria (coal) 12,585,263
Austria (lignite) 22,692,076
Hungary (coal) 1904 1,031,501
Hungary (lignite) 5,447,283
Spain 1905 3,202,911
Russia 1904 19,318,000
Netherlands 466,997
Bosnia (lignite) 540,237
Romania 110,000
Serbia 1904 183,204
Italy (coal and lignite) 1905 412,916
Sweden 322,384
Greece (lignite) 1904 466,997
Asia
India 1905 8,417,739
Japan 1905 11,542,000
Sumatra 1904 207,280
Africa 
Transvaal 1904 2,409,033
Natal 1905 1,129,407
Cape Colony 1904 154,272
North and South America 
United States 1905 350,821,000
Canada 1904 7,509,860
Mexico 700,000
Peru 1905 72,665
Australasia 
New South Wales 1905 6,632,138
Queensland 529,326
Victoria 153,135
Western Australia 127,364
Tasmania 51,993
New Zealand 1,585,756

Australia edit

In 1984 Australia surpassed the US as the world's largest coal exporter.[21] One-third of Australia's coal exports were shipped from the Hunter Valley region of New South Wales, where coal mining and transport had begun nearly two centuries earlier. Coal River was the first name given by British settlers to the Hunter River after coal was found there in 1795. In 1804 the Sydney-based administration established a permanent convict settlement near the mouth of the Hunter River to mine and load the coal, predetermining the town's future as a coal port by naming it Newcastle. Today, Newcastle, NSW, is the largest coal port in the world. Now the state of Queensland is Australia's top coal producer, with its Bowen Basin the main source of black coal, and plans by miners such as Gina Rinehart to open up the Galilee and Surat Basins to coal mining. China became the main customer.[22]

Belgium edit

When iron and later steel became important in Wallonia around 1830, the Belgian coal industry had long been established and used steam engines for pumping. The Belgian coalfield lay near the navigable river Meuse, so coal was shipped downstream to the ports and cities of the Rhine-Meuse-Scheldt delta. The opening of the Saint-Quentin Canal in 1810 allowed coal to go by barge to Paris. The Belgian coalfield outcrops over most of its area, and the highly folded nature of the coal seams, part of the geological Rhenohercynian Zone, meant that surface occurrences of the coal were very abundant. Deep mines were not required at first, so a large number of small operations sprang up. There was a complex legal system for concessions, and often multiple layers had different owners. Entrepreneurs started going deeper and deeper, thanks to the good pumping system. In 1790, the maximum depth of mines was 220 meters (720 ft). By 1856, the average depth in the Borinage was 361 meters (1,184 ft), and in 1866, 437 meters (1,434 ft) and some pits had reached down 700 to 900 meters (2,300 to 3,000 ft); one was 1,065 meters (3,494 ft) deep, probably the deepest coal mine in Europe at this time. Gas explosions were a serious problem, and Belgium had high coal miner fatality rates. By the late 19th century the seams were becoming exhausted, and the steel industry was importing some coal from the Ruhr.[23] André Dumont's discovery in 1900 of coal in the Campine basin, in the Belgian Province Limburg, prompted entrepreneurs from Liège to open coal mines, mainly producing coal for the steel industry. An announced re-organisation of the Belgian coal mines in 1965 resulted in strikes and a revolt which led to the death of two coal miners in 1966 at the Zwartberg mine. Coal was mined in the Liège basin until 1980, in the Southern Wallonian basin until 1984, and in the Campine basin until 1992.

Canada edit

Canadian coal mining started in New Brunswick and also occurred in Alberta, British Columbia, Nova Scotia and Saskatchewan. The United States has been a major supplier for the industrial regions of Ontario. By 2000 about 19% of Canada's energy was supplied by coal, much of it imported from the U.S while Eastern Canadian ports import considerable coal from Venezuela.

New Brunswick edit

The first coal mining in North America began in New Brunswick, Canada, in the early 1600s. Coal was found by French explorers and fur traders along the shores of Grand Lake where rivers and erosion had exposed the coal. Small amounts of coal were dug from surface deposits and tunnels dug into the coal seams, and this coal supplied Fort Saint Marie, built by the French about 1632 at the mouth of the Saint John River. The French sold coal to the British colony at Boston as early as 1639. Due to this earliest export of coal in North America, Grand Lake has been recognized as a Canadian Historic Site . Coal mining expanded after the British took control of the area in the mid 1700s and encouraged permanent settlements in New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Quebec and Ontario by British Loyalists. Beginning in 1765, over 11,000 Loyalists settled in N.B., most along the lower 100 miles of the Saint John River and around Grand Lake. Approximately 200,000 tons of coal were dug at Grand Lake between 1639 and 1887 using surface collection, vertical shafts and the room and pillar system. By 1920, the use of draglines and other modern equipment made strip mining possible and the privately owned Grand Lake area mines produced over 200,000 tons per year. Most of this coal was used by the railroad and large businesses. By 1936, a coal-burning electric power generating plant at Newcastle Creek was operating with two 33,000 volt lines going to Fredericton and one 66,000 volt line going to Marysville. By 1950, coal production at Grand Lake often reached 1 million tons per year. In 1969, all the privately owned Grand Lake area coal companies and approximately 1,000 employees were consolidated into one provincial government controlled company named N.B. Coal Ltd.. In 2009, the increasing availability of oil and environmental concerns with coal use caused the closing of the Grand Lake coal mines and New Brunswick's coal mining industry.

Nova Scotia edit

 
Foord Coal Seam, Stellarton

The first coal mining in Nova Scotia began in the 18th century with small hand-dug mines close to the sea at Joggins, Nova Scotia and in the Sydney area of Cape Breton Island. Large scale coal mining began in the late 1830s when the General Mining Association (GMA), a group of English mining investors, obtained a coal mining monopoly in Nova Scotia. They imported the latest in mining technology including steam water pumps and railways to develop large mines in the Stellarton area of Pictou County, Nova Scotia, including the Foord Pit which by 1866 was the deepest coal mine in the world.[24] Coal mining also developed in Springhill and Joggins in Cumberland County, Nova Scotia. After the GMA monopoly expired, the largest and longest lasting mines developed at Cape Breton in Nova Scotia. Nova Scotia was the major supplier of Canadian coal until 1945.[25] At its peak in 1949 25,000 miners dug 17 million metric tons of coal from Nova Scotian mines. The miners, who lived in company towns, became politically active in left-wing politics during labour struggles for safety and fair wages. Westray Mine near Stellarton closed in 1992 after an explosion killed 26 miners. All the subsurface mines were closed by 2001, although some open pit coal mining continues near Stellarton. The Nova Scotia Museum of Industry at Stellarton explores the history of mining in the province from its location on the site of the Foord Pit.

Alberta edit

Coal was easy to find in what is now Drumheller, Alberta, Canada. The Atlas Coal Mine National Historic Site has turned this coalfield into a museum. This museum interprets how the Blackfoot and Cree knew about the "black rock that burned." After colonizers reported coal in the area, a handful of ranchers and homesteaders dug out the coal for their homes. Sam Drumheller started the coal rush in this area when he bought the land from a local rancher, which he then sold to the Canadian National Railway. Sam Drumheller also registered a coal mine. However, before his mine opened Jesse Gouge and Garnet Coyle beat him to it by opening the Newcastle Mine. Once the railway was built thousands of people came to mine this area.

By the end of 1912, there were nine working coal mines, in Newcastle, Drumheller, Midland, Rosedale, and Wayne. In years to follow more mines sprang up: Nacmine, Cambria, Willow Creek, Lehigh, and East Coulee. The timing of the Drumheller mine industry was "lucky" according to the Atlas National Historical Site, in that the United Mine Workers union had recently won the right for better working conditions. As a result of union action, child labour laws were passed to prevent boys under 14 years old working underground.[26]

Miners' camps in this area were called "hell's holes" because miners lived in tents and shacks. These camps were filled with drinking, gambling and watching fistfights as forms of recreation. With time, living conditions improved: little houses took the place of the tents, and more women joined the men and started families. With new activities such as hockey, baseball and theatre the camps were no longer "hell's holes" but became "the wonder town of the west."[citation needed]

Between 1911 and 1979, 139 mines were registered in the Drumheller Valley, of which only 34 were productive for many years. The beginning of the end for the Drumheller mining industry was the discovery of oil at Leduc No. 1 in 1947, after which natural gas became the predominant fuel for heating homes in western Canada. As the demand for coal dropped, mines closed and communities suffered. Some communities, Willow Creek for example, completely vanished while others went from boomtowns to ghost towns.

Atlas #4 Mine shipped its last load of coal in 1979, after which the Atlas Coal Mine National Historic Site has preserved the last of the Drumheller mines. Also nearby, East Coulee School Museum interprets the life of families in mine towns for its visitors.[27]

China edit

 
Chinese coal miners in an illustration of the Tiangong Kaiwu Ming Dynasty encyclopedia, published in 1637 by Song Yingxing.

The coal industry in China goes back many centuries.[28] In recent decades it has become the main energy source of what (from 2010) is the world's second largest economy.[29] Thus China is by far the largest producer of coal in the world, producing over 2.8 billion tons of coal in 2007, or approximately 39.8 percent of all coal produced in the world during that year.[30] For comparison, the second largest producer, the United States, produced more than 1.1 billion tons in 2007. An estimated 5 million people work in China's coal-mining industry. As many as 20,000 miners die in accidents each year.[31] Most Chinese mines are deep underground and do not produce the surface disruption typical of strip mines.[32]

France edit

 
Le Petit Journal the 1906 Courrières mine disaster in France

Pierre-Francois Tubeuf laid the foundations of the modern industry in France, starting in 1770 in Languedoc.[33] Labor unions emerged with an emphasis on the safety issue in the late 19th century. In 1885, there were 175 injuries per thousand workers per year. Deaths were low in most years 2 per 1000 workers), but major disaster was always a threat. 1099 men died in the Courrières mine disaster of 1906.[34] The campaign for mine safety enabled miners to break from their peasant psychology and create solidarity that came from sharing dangerous work, and to develop a working-class consciousness. Unions gain strength by setting up a system of worker elected mine-safety delegates. The national government encouraged the mine safety movement as a means of limiting strife in the sometimes turbulent coal fields.[35] Nevertheless, strikes remained very common, and coal miners took the lead in political organization.[36] Germany seized control of some mining districts in the First World War, leaving them devastated. Polish, Spanish and other immigrants were brought in to provide a stable labor force at the end of the war.[37]

Germany edit

 
Historical coalfields of Western Germany, Belgium, The Netherlands and Northern France

The first important mines appeared in the 1750s, in the valleys of the rivers Ruhr, Inde and Wurm where coal seams outcropped and horizontal adit mining was possible. In 1782 the Krupp family began operations near Essen. After 1815 entrepreneurs in the Ruhr Area, which then became part of Prussia took advantage of the tariff zone (Zollverein) to open new mines and associated iron smelters. New railways were built by British engineers around 1850. Numerous small industrial centres sprang up, focused on ironworks, using local coal. The iron and steel works typically bought mines, and erected coking ovens to supply their own requirements in coke and gas. These integrated coal-iron firms ("Huettenzechen") became numerous after 1854; after 1900 they became mixed firms called "Konzern."

The average output of a mine in 1850 was about 8,500 short tons (7,700 t); its employment about 64. By 1900, the average mine's output had risen to 280,000 short tons (250,000 t) and the employment to about 1,400.[38] Total Ruhr coal output rose from 2.0 million short tons (1.8 Mt) in 1850 to 22(20 Mt) in 1880, 60(54 Mt) in 1900, and 114(103 Mt) in 1913, on the verge of war. In 1932 output was down to 73 million short tons (66 Mt), growing to 130(120 Mt) in 1940. Output peaked in 1957 (at 123 million(112 Mt)), declining to 78 million short tons (71 Mt) in 1974.[39] At the end of 2010 five coal mines were producing in Germany. The last hard coal mine in Germany closed on December 21, 2018.

The miners in the Ruhr region were divided by ethnicity (with Germans and Poles) and religion (Protestants and Catholics). Mobility in and out of the mining camps to nearby industrial areas was high. The miners split into several unions, with an affiliation to a political party. As a result, the socialist union (affiliated with the Social Democratic Party) competed with Catholic and Communist unions until 1933, when the Nazis took over all of them. After 1945 the socialists came to the fore.[40]

India edit

Coal was not known during the Mughal rule despite their contact with Europeans.[41] Commercial exploitation began in 1774, John Sumner and Suetonius Grant Heatly of the East India Company setting up operations in the Raniganj Coalfield along the Western bank of river Damodar. Due to a lack of demand growth was sluggish until 1853, with the introduction of steam locomotives to the fast-expanding rail system.

As late as 1895, India imported large quantities of coal from Britain, but as domestic production increased and was found to be suitable for locomotives and ships, demand for coal imports declined dramatically. India's export of coal increased, especially to Burma, Ceylon, and the Malay states.[42]

By 1900 production had risen to an annual average of 1 million tonne (mt) and India was producing 6.12 mts. per year by 1910[citation needed] and 18 mts per year by 1920.[citation needed] Temporary wartime demand (1914-1918) was followed by a slump in the 1930s. The production reached a level of 29 mts. by 1942 and 30 mts. by 1946.

After India became independent, the new government stressed the rapid growth of heavy industry. The National Coal Development Corporation was founded in 1956 (as a Government of India undertaking). The founding of this body was major step in the development of an indigenous Indian coal sector. Especially important was the development of the vast Dhanbad coal-mining complex with such major operations as Tata Steel, BCCL, ECL and IISCO (Indian Iron And Steel Company), as well as the Indian School of Mines IIT (ISM) Dhanbad to train engineers, geologists and managers.[43]

Poland edit

The first permanent coal mine in Poland was established in Szczakowa near Jaworzno in 1767. In 19th century development of iron, copper and lead mining and processing in southern Poland (notably in the Old-Polish Industrial Region and later in the region of Silesia) led to a quick development of coal mining. Among the most prominent deposits are those located in what are now the Upper Silesian Industrial Region and Rybnik Coal Area (formerly part of Prussia) and the Zagłębie Dąbrowskie on the Russian side of the border.

In modern times coal is still considered a strategic resource for Poland's economy. It covers roughly 65% of energetic needs. Before and after World War II Poland has been one of the major coal producers worldwide, usually listed among the five largest. However, after 1989 the coal production is in decline, with the overall production for 1994 reaching 132 million metric tons, 112 million metric tons in 1999 and 104 million metric tons in 2002.

Russia edit

From the 1860s large deposits in the Don Basin ("Donbas") in southern Russia supplied 87% of Russia's coal. It was used by railways and the iron and steel industry. After 1900 smaller deposits near Dombrovo, Zabaikal and Cheremkhovo in Siberia were opened. Small older mines south of Moscow also operated. Coal production was controlled by inefficient Russo-British syndicates, and there were shortages of workers, so the companies set up welfare systems for them. Their smallish output and the weak Russian railway system centered on the Ekaterininskaia (Krivoi Rog) Railway held back the growth of Russian heavy industry.[44][45][46]

In the Second World War the loss of 60% of the mining areas to German invaders forced the rapid expansion of mines in the Urals, as well as greater use of mines in the Kuznetsk Basin in Siberia. In 1939 the Urals produced only half the fuel needed by local industry. During the war the mines were expanded and over 700 factories were evacuated from the west, greatly increasing the demand for Ural coal. Prisoners from the Gulag were sent to the mines; up to a third of the workers were women. The miners were given much higher rations of food. Output doubled and the share of the region in the total national coal production rose from 8% to 22%.[47]

In 1989-91 militant coal miners in Russia and Ukraine were the mainstay of the revolutionary forced which finally overthrew the Communist system in 1991.[48]

Today the Donets Basin is the major coal-mining district in eastern Ukraine and adjacent portions of Russia. Production during 2009 was 68.7 million tons in the Ukrainian and 4.9million tons in the Russian part of the basin, but coal gas is a major hazard.[49]

United Kingdom edit

 
British coalfields in the nineteenth century.

Before 1900 edit

Although some deep mining took place as early as the 1500s (in North East England, and along the Firth of Forth coast)[50][51] deep shaft mining in the UK began to develop extensively in the late 18th century, with rapid expansion throughout the 19th century and early 20th century when the industry peaked. The location of the coalfields helped to make the prosperity of Lancashire, of Yorkshire, and of South Wales. The Yorkshire pits which supplied Sheffield were only about 300 feet deep. Northumberland and Durham were the leading coal producers and they were the sites of the first deep pits. In much of Britain coal was worked from drift mines, or scraped off when it outcropped on the surface. Small groups of part-time miners used shovels and primitive equipment.

Scottish miners had been bonded to their "maisters" by a 1606 Act "Anent Coalyers and Salters". A Colliers and Salters (Scotland) Act 1775, recognised this to be "a state of slavery and bondage" and formally abolished it; this was made effective by a further law in 1799.[52][53]

Before 1800 a great deal of coal was left in place because extraction was still primitive. As a result, in the deep Tyneside pits (300 to 1,000 ft deep), only about 40 percent of the coal could be extracted. The use of wooden pit props to support the roof was an innovation first introduced about 1800. The critical factor was circulation of air and control of dangerous explosive gases. At first fires were burned at the bottom of the "upcast" shaft to create air currents and circulate air, but were replaced by fans driven by steam engines. Protection for miners came with the invention of the Davy lamp and Geordie lamp, where any firedamp (or methane) burnt harmlessly within the lamp. It was achieved by preventing the combustion spreading from the light chamber to the outside air with either metal gauze or fine tubes, but the illumination from such lamps was very poor. Great efforts were made to develop better safe lamps, such as the Mueseler produced in the Belgian pits near Liège.

Coal was so abundant in Britain that the supply could be stepped up to meet the rapidly rising demand. In 1700 the annual output of coal was just under 3 million tons. Between 1770 and 1780 the annual output of coal was some 6¼ million long tons (or about the output of a week and a half in the 20th century). After 1790 output soared, reaching 16 million long tons by 1815 at the height of the Napoleonic War. By 1830 this had risen to over 30 million tons[54] The miners, less affected by imported labour or machines than were the cotton mill workers, had begun to form trade unions and fight their grim battle for wages against the coal owners and royalty-lessees.[55]

Use of women and children (at a fraction of the cost of men) was common until abolished in an Act of August 1842.[56]

In South Wales, the miners showed a high degree of solidarity. They lived in isolated villages where the miners comprised the great majority of workers. There was a high degree of equality in life style; combined with an evangelical religious style based on Methodism, leading to an ideology of egalitarianism. They forged a "community of solidarity" - under the leadership of the Miners Federation. The union supported first the Liberal Party, then after 1918 Labour, with some Communist Party activism at the fringes.[40]

Since 1900 edit

The need to maintain coal supplies (a primary energy source) had figured in both world wars.[57] As well as energy supply, coal became a very political issue, due to conditions under which colliers worked and the way they were treated by colliery owners. Much of the 'old Left' of British politics can trace its origins to coal-mining areas, with the main labour union being the Miners' Federation of Great Britain, founded in 1888. The MFGB claimed 600,000 members in 1908. (The MFGB later became the more centralised National Union of Mineworkers).

Although other factors were involved, one cause of the UK General Strike of 1926 was concerns colliers had over very dangerous working conditions, reduced pay and longer shifts.

Technological development throughout the 19th and 20th centuries helped both to improve the safety of colliers and the productive capacity of the collieries in which they worked. In the late 20th century, improved integration of coal extraction with bulk industries (such as electrical generation) helped coal maintain its position despite the emergence of alternative energy supplies such as oil, natural gas and, from the late 1950s, nuclear power. More recently coal has faced competition from renewable energy sources and bio-fuels.

Most of the coal mines in Britain were purchased by the government in 1947 and put under the control of the National Coal Board, with only the smaller mines left in private ownership. The NUM had campaigned for nationalisation for decades and, once it was achieved, sought to work with the NCB in managing the industry and discouraging strikes. Under the chairmanship of Alf Robens, pit closures became widespread as coal's place in energy generation declined. The NUM leadership continued to resist calls for strike action, but an unofficial strike began in 1969 after a conference pledge on the hours of surface-workers was not acted upon. This was a watershed moment that led to increased spending on the coal industry and a much slower rate of pit closures, as well as the election of more militant officials to the NUM leadership. Under the government of Ted Heath, an official strike in 1972 won increased wages after the Wilberforce Commission. Less than two years later, Heath called a general election over another official strike, called after an overtime ban had led to a Three Day Week in Britain, and lost the election to the Labour Party. The wage demands were then met and spending on the industry continued to increase, including the establishment of the new Selby Coalfield.

By the early 1980s, many pits were almost 100 years old and were considered uneconomic[58] to work at current wage rates compared to cheap North Sea oil and gas, and in comparison to subsidy levels in Europe. The Miners' Strike of 1984 failed to stop the Conservative government's plans under Margaret Thatcher to shrink the industry, and a break-away Union of Democratic Mineworkers was founded by miners, mostly in the Midlands, who felt that the NUM had broken its own democratic rules in calling the strike. The National Coal Board (by then British Coal), was privatised by selling off a large number of pits to private concerns through the mid-1990s. Because of exhausted seams, high prices and cheap imports, the mining industry disappeared almost completely, despite the militant protests of some miners.[57][59]

In January 2008, the South Wales Valleys last deep pit mine, Tower Colliery in Hirwaun, Rhondda Cynon Taff closed with the loss of 120 jobs. The coal was exhausted.[60] Until 2015 coal was still mined at Hatfield, Kellingley and Thoresby Collieries, and is extracted at several very large opencast pits in South Wales, Scotland and elsewhere. Kellingley Colliery was the last deep coal mine in operation in the UK and its last coaling shift was on 18 December 2015 when coaling operations ceased with the loss of 450 jobs bringing deep coal mining in the UK to an end in its entirety, a skeleton team of men will remain to service the colliery until it is finally dismantled.

Coal mining was never a major industry in Ireland, apart from a spell in the mid-19th century when east Tyrone collieries were at their peak. Deerpark Mines was the largest opencast site. In 1919, it got rail connections and reached peak production in the 1950s.[61]

United States edit

Anthracite (or "hard" coal), clean and smokeless, became the preferred fuel in cities, replacing wood by about 1850. Bituminous (or "soft coal") mining came later. In the mid-century Pittsburgh was the principal market. After 1850 soft coal, which is cheaper but dirtier, came into demand for railway locomotives and stationary steam engines, and was used to make coke for steel after 1870.[62]

Total coal output soared until 1918; before 1890, it doubled every ten years, going from 8.4 million short tons (7.6 Mt) in 1850 to 40 million (36 Mt) in 1870, 270 million (240 Mt) in 1900, and peaking at 680 million short tons (620 Mt) in 1918. New soft coal fields opened in Ohio, Indiana and Illinois, as well as West Virginia, Kentucky and Alabama. The Great Depression of the 1930s lowered the demand to 360 million short tons (330 Mt) in 1932.[63]

 
Changing shifts at the mine portal in the afternoon, Floyd County, Kentucky, 1946

Under John L. Lewis, the United Mine Workers (UMW) became the dominant force in the coal fields in the 1930s and 1940s, producing high wages and benefits.[64] In 1914 at the peak there were 180,000 anthracite miners; by 1970 only 6,000 remained. At the same time steam engines were phased out in railways and factories, and bituminous coal was used primarily for the generation of electricity. Employment in bituminous peaked at 705,000 men in 1923, falling to 140,000 by 1970 and 70,000 in 2003. UMW membership among active miners fell from 160,000 in 1980 to only 16,000 in 2005, as coal mining became more mechanized and non-union miners predominated in the new coal fields.

In the 1960s a series of mergers saw coal production shift from small, independent coal companies to large, more diversified firms. Several oil companies and electricity producers acquired coal companies or leased Federal coal reserves in the west of the United States. Concerns that competition in the coal industry could decline as a result of these changes were heightened by a sharp rise in coal prices in the wake of the 1973 oil crisis. Coal prices fell in the 1980s, partly in response to oil price movements, but primarily in response to the large increase in supply worldwide which was brought about by the earlier price surge. During this period, the industry in the U.S. was characterized by a move towards low-sulfur coal.[65]

In 1987 Wyoming became the largest coal producing state. It uses strip mining exclusively. Wyoming's coal reserves total about 69.3 billion short tons (62.9 Pg), or 14.2% of the U.S. coal reserve.[66]

In 2008, competition was intense in the US coal mining industry with some U.S. mines approaching the end of their useful life (mine closure).[citation needed] Other coal-producing countries also stepped up production to win a share of traditional US export markets. Coal is used primarily to generate electricity, but the rapid drop in natural gas prices after 2008 created severe competition.

Other countries edit

In the 21st century, Indonesia has expanded its coal mining and by 2011 ranked #5 globally in production.[67] By 2011 Kazakhstan ranks in the top ten in terms of coal production and reserves. Lignite ("brown coal") remains important with Germany, China and Russia the largest producers.[68]

Disasters edit

 
Removing bodies from the pit at Senghenydd, 1913
 
The Courrières mine disaster in France in 1906

Mining has always been especially dangerous, because of explosions, roof cave-ins, and the difficulty of underground rescue. The worst single disaster in British coal mining history was at Senghenydd in the South Wales coalfield. On the morning of 14 October 1913 an explosion and subsequent fire killed 436 men and boys. Only 72 bodies were recovered. It followed a series of many extensive Mining accidents in the late 19th century, such as The Oaks explosion of 1866 and the Hartley Colliery Disaster of 1862. Most of the explosions were caused by firedamp ignitions followed by coal dust explosions. At Hartley there was no explosion, but the miners entombed when the single shaft was blocked by a broken cast iron beam from the haulage engine. Deaths were mainly caused by carbon monoxide poisoning, known as afterdamp.[69]

Mitsubishi Hojyo coal mine disaster, occurred on 15 December 1914 at the Mitsubishi Hojyo coal mine located in the Kyushu Island of Japan. The disaster directly led to the deaths of 687, representing the worst mining incident in Japanese history.

The Courrières mine disaster, Europe's worst mining accident, caused the death of 1,099 miners in Northern France on 10 March 1906. The Benxihu Colliery accident in China on April 26, 1942, killed 1,549 miners.[70]

As well as disasters directly affecting mines, there have been disasters attributable to the impact of mining on the surrounding landscapes and communities. The Aberfan disaster in 1966 buried a school in South Wales when a huge slag heap collapsed, killing 116 children and 28 adults.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c Barbara Freese (2004). Coal: A Human History. Penguin Books. pp. 137. ISBN 9780142000984.(stating that, "[c]oal consumption doubled every decade between 1850 and 1890" and that by turn of the century, "coal was the unrivaled foundation of U.S. Power," providing "71 percent of the nation's energy."
  2. ^ James G. Speight (2011). An Introduction to Petroleum Technology, Economics, and Politics. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 260–61. ISBN 9781118192542.
  3. ^ Geoff Eley, Forging Democracy: The History of the Left in Europe, 1850-2000 (2002); Frederic Meyers, European Coal Mining Unions: structure and function (1961) P. 86; Kazuo and Gordon (1997) p 48; Hajo Holborn, History of Modern Germany (1959) p. 521; David Frank, J. B. McLachlan: A Biography: The Story of a Legendary Labour Leader and the Cape Breton Coal Miners, (1999) p, 69; David Montgomery, The fall of the house of labor: the workplace, the state, and American labor activism, 1865-1925 (1991) p 343.
  4. ^ Reyes Herrera, Sonia E.; Rodríguez Torrent, Juan Carlos; Medina Hernández, Patricio (2014). "El sufrimiento colectivo de una ciudad minera en declinación. El caso de Lota, Chile". Horizontes Antropológicos (in Spanish). 20 (42).
  5. ^ John Dodson; Xiaoqiang; Nan Sun; Pia Atahan; Xinying Zhou; Hanbin Liu; Keliang Zhao; Songmei Hu; Zemeng Yang (March 3, 2014). "Use of coal in the Bronze Age in China". The Holocene. 0959683614523155 (5): 525–530. Bibcode:2014Holoc..24..525D. doi:10.1177/0959683614523155. S2CID 130577642.
  6. ^ Mattusch, Carol (2008): "Metalworking and Tools", in: Oleson, John Peter (ed.): The Oxford Handbook of Engineering and Technology in the Classical World, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-518731-1, pp. 418–38 (432).
  7. ^ a b c Smith, A. H. V. (1997): "Provenance of Coals from Roman Sites in England and Wales", Britannia, Vol. 28, pp. 297–324 (322–4).
  8. ^ Giles, J. A. (trans) The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, London, G Bell & Sons 1914. "At this time Ceolred, abbat of Medeshamstede and the monks let to Wulfred the land of Sempringham, ... and each year [he] should deliver into the minster sixty loads of wood, and twelve of coal and six of faggots, and two tuns full of pure ale, and two beasts fit for slaughter, and six hundred loaves, and ten measures of Welsh ale, and each year a horse, and thirty shillings, and one day's entertainment."
  9. ^ Yeats, John, LLD (1871), The technical history of commerce, London: Cassell, Petter and Galpin{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h Galloway (1882).
  11. ^ Polo, Marco. The Travels of Marco Polo.
  12. ^ Brown, Ian, From Columba to the Union (Until 10707), The Edinburgh History of Scottish Literature.
  13. ^ Shellenberger, Michael, Apocalypse Never, HarperCollins Publishers, New York, copyright 2020, page 123.
  14. ^ Coal Association of Canada, Coal Kit, Coal Evolution module, Digging up the Past http://www.coal.ca/coal-kit 2016-03-02 at the Wayback Machine
  15. ^ Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada (monument in Minto, NB for earliest export of coal) http://www.pc.gc.ca/apps/dfhd/page_nhs_eng.aspx?id=1012
  16. ^ John Winthrop, The Journal of John Winthrop 1630 – 1649, Harvard University / Massachusetts Historical Society, 1996, page 474 (Massachusetts Bay Colony Governor's description of their August 1643 receipt of a ship load of coal from 20 leagues up the Saint John River)
  17. ^ M.A. MacDonald, Fortune & La Tour, The Civil War in Acadia, Toronto, 1983 / Halifax, 2000, Chapter 8 (description of the 1640 use of "coal from up river" in the main residence of the French fort at the mouth of the Saint John River)
  18. ^ Flinn and Stoker (1984)
  19. ^ Vivallos Espinoza, Carlos; Brito Peña, Alejandra (2010). "Inmigración y sectores populares en las minas de carbón de Lota y Coronel (Chile 1850-1900)" [Immigration and popular sectors in the coal mines of Lota and Coronel (Chile 1850-1900)]. Atenea (in Spanish). 501: 73–94.
  20. ^ Bauerman, Hilary (1911). "Coal" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 6 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 579.
  21. ^ Anthony David Owen, "Australia's role as an energy exporter: Status and prospects." Energy policy 16.2 (1988): 131-151.
  22. ^ Bo-qiang Lin, nd Jiang-hua Liu, "Estimating coal production peak and trends of coal imports in China." Energy Policy 38.1 (2010): 512-519.
  23. ^ Parker and Pounds (1957)
  24. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-03-17. Retrieved 2011-04-01.
  25. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-03-18. Retrieved 2011-04-01.
  26. ^ Robert McIntosh, Boys in the pits: Child labour in coal mines (McGill-Queen's Press-MQUP, 2000)
  27. ^ [1] "Atlas Coal Mine National Historical Site"
  28. ^ Shellen Xiao Wu, Empires of Coal: Fueling China’s Entry into the Modern World Order, 1860-1920 (2015) excerpt
  29. ^ Elspeth Thomson, The Chinese Coal Industry: An Economic History (2003)
  30. ^ "World Coal Production, Most Recent Estimates 1980-2007 (October 2008)". U.S. Energy Information Administration. 2008. Retrieved 2 November 2008.
  31. ^ Time, March 2, 2007.
  32. ^ Shellen Xiao Wu, Empires of Coal: Fueling China’s Entry into the Modern World Order, 1860-1920 (2015) online review
  33. ^ Gwynne Lewis, The Advent of Modern Capitalism in France, 1770-1840: The Contribution of Pierre-François Tubeuf (1993) online
  34. ^ Stephen J. Spignesi (2004). Catastrophe!: The 100 Greatest Disasters Of All Time. p. 168ff. ISBN 9780806525587.
  35. ^ Donald Reid, "The role of mine safety in the development of working-class consciousness and organization: The case of the Aubin Coal Basin, 1867-1914." French Historical Studies 12#1 (1981): 98-119. in JSTOR
  36. ^ Leo Loubère, "Coal Miners, Strikes and Politics in the Lower Languedoc, 1880–1914." Journal of Social History 2.1 (1968): 25-50.
  37. ^ Donald Reid, "The Limits of Paternalism: Immigrant Coal Miners' Communities in France, 1919-45." European History Quarterly 15.1 (1985): 99-118.
  38. ^ Griffin, Emma. "Why was Britain first? The Industrial revolution in global context". Short History of the British Industrial Revolution. Retrieved 6 February 2013.
  39. ^ Pounds (1952)
  40. ^ a b Stefan Llafur Berger, "Working-Class Culture and the Labour Movement in the South Wales and the Ruhr Coalfields, 1850-2000: A Comparison," Journal of Welsh Labour History/Cylchgrawn Hanes Llafur Cymru (2001) 8#2 pp 5-40.
  41. ^ "Assess the development of Science and Technology in the Mughal India". 21 August 2018.
  42. ^ A.B. Ghosh, "India's Foreign Trade in Coal Before Independence: A Note," Indian Economic and Social History Review (Oct 1969) 6#4 pp 431-437
  43. ^ Simon Commander, "Industrialization and Sectoral Imbalance: Coal Mining and the Theory of Dualism in Colonial and Independent India," Journal of Peasant Studies (1981) 9#1 pp 86-96
  44. ^ A. M. Solovyova, "The Railway System in the Mining Area of Southern Russia in the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries," Journal of Transport History (1984) 5#1 pp 66-81.
  45. ^ Susan P. MaCaffray, "Origins of Labor Policy in the Russian Coal and Steel Industry, 1874-1900," Journal of Economic History (1987) 47#4 pp 951-67 in JSTOR
  46. ^ John P. McKay, Pioneers for Profit: Foreign Entrepreneurship and Russian Industrialization, 1885-1913 (1970)
  47. ^ Walter Scott Dunn (1995). The Soviet Economy and the Red Army, 1930-1945. Greenwood. p. 38. ISBN 9780275948931.
  48. ^ Michael Burawoy and Pavel Michael, "Russian Miners Bow to the Angel of History," Antipode (Jan 1995) 27#2 pp 115-136.
  49. ^ R.F. Sachsenhofer et al. "Basin evolution and coal geology of the Donets Basin (Ukraine, Russia): An overview," International Journal of Coal Geology (2012), Vol. 89, p26-40.
  50. ^ "Papers on Mining in Scotland, 18th and 19th centuries". Archives Hub. Archived from the original on 2012-08-01. Retrieved 2008-10-17.
  51. ^ "Culross". BBC. Retrieved 2008-10-17.
  52. ^ "Erskine May on Slavery in Britain (Vol. III, Chapter XI)". Retrieved 2009-07-20.
  53. ^ James Barrowman, Mining Engineer (14 September 1897). "Slavery In The Coal-Mines Of Scotland". Scottish Mining Website. Retrieved 2017-11-02.
  54. ^ Griffin, Emma (2010). A Short History of the British Industrial Revolution. Palgrave. pp. 109–10.
  55. ^ J. Steven Watson; The Reign of George III, 1760-1815. 1960. p, 516.
  56. ^ Townhill: Dunfermline Coaltown, by William D. Henderson
  57. ^ a b Fine (1990)
  58. ^ Margaret Thatcher, quoted in B. Fine, The coal question: political economy and industrial change from the Nineteenth Century to the present day
  59. ^ Ben Curtis, "A Tradition of Radicalism: The Politics of the South Wales Miners, 1964-1985," Labour History Review (2011) 76#1 pp 34-50
  60. ^ BBC Coal mine closes with celebration 25 January 2008
  61. ^ William Alan McCutcheon (1984). The Industrial Archaeology of Northern Ireland. Fairleigh Dickinson U.P. p. 108. ISBN 9780838631256.
  62. ^ Binder (1974)
  63. ^ Bruce C. Netschert and Sam H. Schurr, Energy in the American Economy, 1850-1975: An Economic Study of Its History and Prospects. pp 60-62.
  64. ^ Dubofsky and Van Tine (1977)
  65. ^ "Coal Mining Industry Report" IBISWorld, 2009
  66. ^ Manuel Lujan; Harry M. Snyder (1992). Surface Coal Mining Reclamation: 15 Years of Progress, 1977-1992, Statistical Information. DIANE. p. 68. ISBN 9780788142154.
  67. ^ Michael S. Hamilton (2005). Mining Environmental Policy: Comparing Indonesia and the USA. Ashgate. ISBN 9780754644934.
  68. ^ World Coal Association, Coal Facts 2012 (2012)
  69. ^ Mason, T.; Atkinson, Peter (1911). "The Hartley Pit Disaster". The Science and Art of Mining. Durham Mining Museum. Retrieved 3 October 2013.
  70. ^ "Marcel Barrois" (in French). Le Monde. March 10, 2006.[permanent dead link]

Bibliography edit

  • Freese, Barbara, Coal: A Human History (2004).
  • Jeffrey, E. C. Coal and Civilization 1925.

Current conditions edit

  • Burns, Daniel. The modern practice of coal mining (1907)
  • Chirons, Nicholas P. Coal Age Handbook of Coal Surface Mining (ISBN 0-07-011458-7)
  • Hamilton, Michael S. Mining Environmental Policy: Comparing Indonesia and the USA (Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2005). (ISBN 0-7546-4493-6).
  • Hayes, Geoffrey. Coal Mining (2004), 32 pp
  • Hughes. Herbert W, A Text-Book of Mining: For the use of colliery managers and others (London, many editions 1892-1917), the standard British textbook for its era.
  • Kuenzer, Claudia. Coal Mining in China (In: Schumacher-Voelker, E., and Mueller, B., (Eds.), 2007: BusinessFocus China, Energy: A Comprehensive Overview of the Chinese Energy Sector. gic Deutschland Verlag, 281 pp., ISBN 978-3-940114-00-6 pp. 62–68)
  • National Energy Information Center. "Greenhouse Gases, Climate Change, Energy". Retrieved 2007-10-16.
  • Charles V. Nielsen and George F. Richardson. 1982 Keystone Coal Industry Manual (1982)
  • Saleem H. Ali. "Minding our Minerals, 2006."
  • Speight, James G, "An Introduction to Petroleum Technology, Economics, and Politics," John Wiley & Sons 2011.
  • A.K. Srivastava. Coal Mining Industry in India (1998) (ISBN 81-7100-076-2)
  • Tonge, James. The principles and practice of coal mining (1906)
  • Trade and Industry, UK Department of. . Archived from the original on 2008-10-13. Retrieved 2007-10-16.
  • World Coal Institute. The cOaL Resource (2005) covers all aspects of the coal industry in 48 pp; online version
  • Woytinsky, W. S., and E. S. Woytinsky. World Population and Production Trends and Outlooks (1953) pp 840–881; with many tables and maps on the worldwide coal industry in 1950

Britain edit

Scholarly histories edit

  • Ashton, T. S. & Sykes, J. The coal industry of the eighteenth century. 1929.
  • Baylies, Carolyn. History of the Yorkshire Miners 1881-1918 (Routledge, 2003) in England online.
  • Benson, John. "Coalmining" in Chris Wrigley, ed. A History of British industrial relations, 1875-1914 (Univ of Massachusetts Press, 1982), pp 187–208.
  • Benson, John. British Coal-Miners in the Nineteenth Century: A Social History (Holmes & Meier, (1980)
  • Buxton, N.K. The economic development of the British coal industry: from Industrial Revolution to the present day. 1979.
  • Dron, Robert W. The economics of coal mining (1928).
  • Faull, Margaret L. "Coal mining and the landscape of England, 1700 to the present day." Landscape History 30.1 (2008): 59-74.
  • Fine, B. The Coal Question: Political Economy and Industrial Change from the Nineteenth Century to the Present Day (1990).
  • Galloway, R.L. Annals of coal mining and the coal trade. First series [to 1835] 1898; Second series. [1835-80] 1904. Reprinted 1971. Online at the University of Illinois
  • Galloway, Robert L. A History Of Coal Mining In Great Britain (1882) Online at Open Library
  • Griffin, A. R. The British coalmining industry: retrospect and prospect. 1977.
  • Hatcher, John, et al. The History of the British Coal Industry (5 vol, Oxford U.P., 1984–87); 3000 pages of scholarly history
    • John Hatcher: The History of the British Coal Industry: Volume 1: Before 1700: Towards the Age of Coal (1993). online
    • Michael W. Flinn, and David Stoker. History of the British Coal Industry: Volume 2. 1700-1830: The Industrial Revolution (1984).
    • Roy Church, Alan Hall and John Kanefsky. History of the British Coal Industry: Volume 3: Victorian Pre-Eminence
    • Barry Supple. The History of the British Coal Industry: Volume 4: 1913-1946: The Political Economy of Decline (1988) excerpt and text search
    • William Ashworth and Mark Pegg. History of the British Coal Industry: Volume 5: 1946-1982: The Nationalized Industry (1986)
  • Heinemann, Margot. Britain's coal: A study of the mining crisis (1944).
  • Hill, Alan. Coal - a Chronology for Britain. Northern Mine Research Society.
  • Hull, Edward (1861). The coal-fields of Great Britain: their history, structure, and resources. London: 1861: Stanford.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  • Hull, Edward. Our coal resources at the close of the nineteenth century (1897) Online at Open Library. Stress on geology.
  • Jaffe, James Alan. The Struggle for Market Power: Industrial Relations in the British Coal Industry, 1800-1840 (2003).
  • Jevons, H.S. The British coal trade. 1920, reprinted 1969
  • Jevons, W. Stanley. The Coal Question: An Inquiry Concerning the Progress of the Nation, and the Probable Exhaustion of Our Coal Mines (1865).
  • Kirby, M.W. The British coalmining industry, 1870-1946: a political and economic history. (1977).
  • Kirby, Peter Thomas. "Aspects of the employment of children in the British coal-mining industry, 1800-1872" (PhD. Diss. University of Sheffield, 1995) online.
  • Laslett, John H.M. "The Independent Collier: Some Recent Studies of Nineteenth Century Coalmining Communities in Britain and the United States." International Labor and Working-Class History 21 (1982): 18–27. online
  • Lewis, B. Coal mining in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Longman, 1971.
  • Lucas, Arthur F. "A British Experiment in the Control of Competition: The Coal Mines Act of 1930." Quarterly Journal of Economics (1934): 418–441. in JSTOR
    • Prest, Wilfred. "The British Coal Mines Act of 1930, Another Interpretation." Quarterly Journal of Economics (1936): 313–332. in JSTOR
  • Merrill, Travers, and Lucy Kitson. End of Coal Mining in South Wales: Lessons learned from industrial transformation. (International Institute for Sustainable Development, 2017) online
  • Mitchell, Brian R. Economic development of the British coal industry 1800-1914 (Cambridge UP, 1984). online
  • Nef, J. U. Rise of the British coal industry. 2v 1932, a comprehensive scholarly survey
  • Orwell, George. "Down the Mine" (The Road to Wigan Pier chapter 2, 1937) full text
  • Rowe, J.W.F. Wages In the coal industry (1923).
  • Supple, Barry. "The political economy of demoralization: the state and the coalmining industry in America and Britain between the wars." Economic History Review 41.4 (1988): 566–591.
  • Turnheim, Bruno, and Frank W. Geels. "The destabilisation of existing regimes: Confronting a multi-dimensional framework with a case study of the British coal industry (1913–1967)." Research Policy 42.10 (2013): 1749–1767. online
  • Waller, Robert. The Dukeries Transformed: A history of the development of the Dukeries coal field after 1920 (Oxford U.P., 1983) on the Dukeries
  • Williams, Chris. Capitalism, community and conflict: The south Wales coalfield, 1898-1947 (U of Wales Press, 1998).

Bibliographic guides edit

  • Benson, J., Thompson, C.H. & Neville, R.G. Bibliography of the British coal industry. 1981
  • British Library Coal mining[permanent dead link] (Social Sciences Collection Guides: Topical Bibliographies)
  • Galloway, R.L. Annals of coal mining and the coal trade. - v1 of the 1971 reprint has a bibliography in the introduction.
  • Linsley, S.M. The Coal Industry - A Select Bibliography. Durham Mining Museum
  • Mining History Network Bibliography of British Mining History: Published Since 1987. Despite the title there is earlier material included.
  • North of England Institute of Mining and Mechanical Engineers. Nicholas Wood Memorial Library. History of mining in the UK: some useful books. 2018

United States edit

Industry edit

  • Adams, Sean Patrick, . "The US Coal Industry in the Nineteenth Century." EH.Net Encyclopedia, August 15, 2001 scholarly overview
  • Adams, Sean Patrick. "Promotion, Competition, Captivity: The Political Economy of Coal," Journal of Policy History (2006) 18#1 pp 74–95 online
  • Adams, Sean Patrick. Old Dominion, Industrial Commonwealth: Coal, Politics, and Economy in Antebellum America. Johns Hopkins University Press, 2004.
  • Binder, Frederick Moore. Coal Age Empire: Pennsylvania Coal and Its Utilization to 1860. Harrisburg: Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission, 1974.
  • Chandler, Alfred. "Anthracite Coal and the Beginnings of the 'Industrial Revolution' in the United States", Business History Review 46 (1972): 141–181. in JSTOR
  • Conley, Phil. History of West Virginia Coal Industry (Charleston: Education Foundation, 1960)
  • Davies, Edward J., II. The Anthracite Aristocracy: Leadership and Social Change in the Hard Coal Regions of Northeastern Pennsylvania, 1800–1930 (1985).
  • DiCiccio, Carmen. Coal and Coke in Pennsylvania. Harrisburg: Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission, 1996
  • Eavenson, Howard. The First Century and a Quarter of the American Coal Industry 1942.
  • Verla R. Flores and A. Dudley Gardner. Forgotten Frontier: A History of Wyoming Coal Mining (1989)
  • Hudson Coal Company. The Story of Anthracite (New York, 1932), 425pp; Useful overview of the industry in the 20th century; fair-minded with an operators perspective
  • Lauver, Fred J. "A Walk Through the Rise and Fall of Anthracite Might", Pennsylvania Heritage Magazine 27#1 (2001)
  • Long, Priscilla. Where the Sun Never Shines: A History of America's Bloody Coal Industry. Paragon House, 1989.
  • Matheis, Mike. "Local Economic Impacts of Coal Mining in the United States 1870 to 1970" Journal of Economic History (2016) 76#4 pp. 1152–1181. abstract
  • Nelson, Robert H.
  • Netschert, Bruce C. and Sam H. Schurr, Energy in the American Economy, 1850-1975: An Economic Study of Its History and Prospects. (1960) online
  • Parker, Glen Lawhon. The Coal Industry: A Study in Social Control (Washington: American Council on Public Affairs, 1940)
  • Powell, H. Benjamin. Philadelphia's First Fuel Crisis. Jacob Cist and the Developing Market for Pennsylvania Anthracite. The Pennsylvania State University Press, 1978.
  • Rottenberg, Dan. In the Kingdom of Coal: An American Family and the Rock That Changed the World (2003), owners' perspective online
  • Schurr, Sam H., and Bruce C. Netschert. Energy in the American Economy, 1850-1975: An Economic Study of Its History and Prospects. Johns Hopkins Press, 1960.
  • Supple, Barry. "The political economy of demoralization: the state and the coalmining industry in America and Britain between the wars." Economic History Review 41.4 (1988): 566–591.
  • Veenstra, Theodore A., and Wilbert G. Fritz. "Major Economic Tendencies in the Bituminous Coal Industry," Quarterly Journal of Economics 51#1 (1936) pp. 106–130 in JSTOR
  • Vietor, Richard H. K. and Martin V. Melosi; Environmental Politics and the Coal Coalition Texas A&M University Press, 1980 online
  • Warren, Kenneth. Triumphant Capitalism: Henry Clay Frick and the Industrial Transformation of America. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1996.

Primary sources edit

  • United States Anthracite Coal Strike Commission, 1902–1903, Report to the President on the Anthracite Coal Strike of May–October, 1902 By United States Anthracite Coal Strike (1903) online edition
  • Report of the United states coal commission.... (5 vol in 3; 1925) Official US government investigation of the 1922 anthracite strike. online vol 1-2
    • Tryon, Frederick Gale, and Joseph Henry Willits, eds. What the Coal Commission Found: An Authoritative Summary by the Staff (1925).
    • General policies committee of anthracite operators. The anthracite coal strike of 1922: A statement of its causes and underlying purposes (1923); Official statement by the operators. online

Coal miners, unions and strikes edit

  • Arnold, Andrew B. Fueling the Gilded Age: Railroads, Miners, and Disorder in Pennsylvania Coal Country (2014)
  • Aurand, Harold W. Coalcracker Culture: Work and Values in Pennsylvania Anthracite, 1835-1935 (2003).
  • Baratz, Morton S. The Union and the Coal Industry (Yale University Press, 1955)
  • Blatz, Perry. Democratic Miners: Work and Labor Relations in the Anthracite Coal Industry, 1875-1925. Albany: SUNY Press, 1994.
  • Campolieti, Michele. "Strikes in British Coal Mining, 1893–1940: Testing Models of Strikes." Industrial Relations 60.2 (2021): 243-273. https://doi.org/10.1111/irel.12276
  • Church, R., and Q. Outram. "British Coal Mining Strikes, 1893-1940." (2022). http://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-3899-1
  • Coal Mines Administration, U.S, Department Of The Interior. A Medical Survey of the Bituminous-Coal Industry. (U.S. Government Printing Office. 1947)
  • Corbin, David Alan Life, Work, and Rebellion in the Coal Fields: The Southern West Virginia Miners, 1880-1922 (1981)
  • Dix, Keith. What's a Coal Miner to Do? The Mechanization of Coal Mining (1988), changes in the coal industry prior to 1940
  • Dubofsky, Melvyn and Warren Van Tine, John L. Lewis: A Biography (1977), leader of Mine Workers union, 1920–1960
  • Eller, Ronald D. Miners, Millhands, and Mountaineers: Industrialization of the Appalachian South, 1880–1930 1982.
  • Fishback, Price V. Soft Coal, Hard Choices: The Economic Welfare of Bituminous Coal Miners, 1890-1930 (1992)
  • Grossman, Jonathan.
  • Harvey, Katherine. The Best Dressed Miners: Life and Labor in the Maryland Coal Region, 1835-1910. Cornell University Press, 1993.
  • Hinrichs; A. F. The United Mine Workers of America, and the Non-Union Coal Fields (Columbia University, 1923
  • Lantz; Herman R. People of Coal Town (Columbia University Press, 1958; on southern Illinois.
  • Laslett, John H.M. ed. The United Mine Workers: A Model of Industrial Solidarity? Penn State University Press, 1996.
  • Laslett, John H.M. "The Independent Collier: Some Recent Studies of Nineteenth Century Coalmining Communities in Britain and the United States." International Labor and Working-Class History 21 (1982): 18–27. online
  • Lewis, Ronald L. Black Coal Miners in America: Race, Class, and Community Conflict. University Press of Kentucky, 1987.
  • Lunt, Richard D. Law and Order vs. the Miners: West Virginia, 1907-1933 Archon Books, 1979, On labor conflicts of the early 20th century.
  • Lynch, Edward A. and David J. McDonald.Coal and Unionism: A History of the American Coal Miners' Unions (1939)
  • McIntosh, Robert. Boys in the pits: Child labour in coal mines (McGill-Queen's Press-MQUP, 2000), Canadian mines
  • Phelan, Craig. Divided Loyalties: The Public and Private Life of Labor Leader John Mitchell (1994)
  • Rössel, Jörg. "Industrial Structure, Union Strategy and Strike Activity in Bituminous Coal Mining, 1881 - 1894", Social Science History (2002) 16#1 pp 1 – 32.
  • Seltzer, Curtis. Fire in the Hole: Miners and Managers in the American Coal Industry University Press of Kentucky, 1985, conflict in the coal industry to the 1980s.
  • Trotter Jr., Joe William. Coal, Class, and Color: Blacks in Southern West Virginia, 1915-32 (1990)
  • U.S. Immigration Commission, Report on Immigrants in Industries, Part I: Bituminous Coal Mining, 2 vols. Senate Document no. 633, 61st Cong., 2nd sess. (1911)
  • Wallace, Anthony F.C. St. Clair. A Nineteenth-Century Coal Town's Experience with a Disaster-Prone Industry. Knopf, 1981.
  • Ward, Robert D. and William W. Rogers, Labor Revolt in Alabama: The Great Strike of 1894 (University of Alabama Press, 1965); on the coal strike

China edit

  • Dorian, James P. Minerals, Energy, and Economic Development in China Clarendon Press, 1994
  • Huaichuan Rui; Globalisation, Transition and Development in China: The Case of the Coal Industry (Routledge, 2004)
  • Thomson; Elspeth. The Chinese Coal Industry: An Economic History (Routledge 2003)
  • Wu, Shellen Xiao. Empires of Coal: Fueling China’s Entry into the Modern World Order, 1860-1920 (Stanford University Press, 2015) 266 pp. online review

Europe edit

  • Parnell, Martin F. The German Tradition of Organized Capitalism: Self-Government in the Coal Industry Oxford University Press Inc., 1998 online
  • Pounds, Norman J. G., and William N. Parker; Coal and Steel in Western Europe; the Influence of Resources and Techniques on Production Indiana University Press, 1957 online
  • Pounds, Norman J. G. An Historical Geography of Europe, 1800-1914 (1993)
  • Pounds, Norman J. G. The Ruhr: A Study in Historical and Economic Geography (1952) online

Other edit

  • Calderón, Roberto R. Mexican Coal Mining Labor in Texas & Coahuila, 1880-1930 (2000) 294pp.
  • Frank, David. J. B. McLachlan: A Biography: The Story of a Legendary Labour Leader and the Cape Breton Coal Miners, (1999), in Canada
  • Marsden, Susan, Coals to Newcastle: a History of Coal Loading at the Port of Newcastle, New South Wales 1797-1997 (2002) ISBN 0-9578961-9-0; Australia
  • Nimura Kazuo, Andrew Gordon, and Terry Boardman; The Ashio Riot of 1907: A Social History of Mining in Japan. Duke University Press, 1997.

External links edit

  • "Illawarra Coal" - An unofficial history of coal mining in the Illawarra region of Australia
  • on current issues
  • Mining History Network numerous links (many are broken)
  • Down the Mine — George Orwell essay on a visit to a coal mine.
  • Historic Images of Philadelphia and Reading Coal and Iron Company Courtesy of the Hagley Library Digital Archives
  • Online mapping of Coal Mining sites in the British Isles (Northern Mine Research Society)

history, coal, mining, history, coal, mining, goes, back, thousands, years, with, early, mines, documented, ancient, china, roman, empire, other, early, historical, economies, became, important, industrial, revolution, 19th, 20th, centuries, when, primarily, u. The history of coal mining goes back thousands of years with early mines documented in ancient China the Roman Empire and other early historical economies It became important in the Industrial Revolution of the 19th and 20th centuries when it was primarily used to power steam engines heat buildings and generate electricity Coal mining continues as an important economic activity today but has begun to decline due to the strong contribution coal plays in global warming and environmental issues which result in decreasing demand and in some geographies peak coal Compared to wood fuels coal yields a higher amount of energy per unit mass specific energy or massic energy and can often be obtained in areas where wood is not readily available Though it was used historically as a domestic fuel coal is now used mostly in industry especially in smelting and alloy production as well as electricity generation Large scale coal mining developed during the Industrial Revolution and coal provided the main source of primary energy for industry and transportation in industrial areas from the 18th century to the 1950s Coal remains an important energy source 1 Coal is also mined today on a large scale by open pit methods wherever the coal strata strike the surface or are relatively shallow Britain developed the main techniques of underground coal mining from the late 18th century onward with further progress being driven by 19th century and early 20th century progress 1 However oil and gas were increasingly used as alternatives from the 1860s onward By the late 20th century coal was for the most part replaced in domestic as well as industrial and transportation usage by oil natural gas or electricity produced from oil gas nuclear power or renewable energy sources By 2010 coal produced over a fourth of the world s energy 2 Since 1890 coal mining has also been a political and social issue Coal miners labour and trade unions became powerful in many countries in the 20th century and often the miners were leaders of the Left or Socialist movements as in Britain Germany Poland Japan Chile Canada and the U S 3 4 Since 1970 environmental issues have been increasingly important including the health of miners destruction of the landscape from strip mines and mountaintop removal air pollution and coal combustion s contribution to global warming Contents 1 Early history 2 Industrial Revolution 3 Beginning of the 20th century 4 Australia 5 Belgium 6 Canada 6 1 New Brunswick 6 2 Nova Scotia 6 3 Alberta 7 China 8 France 9 Germany 10 India 11 Poland 12 Russia 13 United Kingdom 13 1 Before 1900 13 2 Since 1900 14 United States 15 Other countries 16 Disasters 17 See also 18 Notes 19 Bibliography 19 1 Current conditions 19 2 Britain 19 2 1 Scholarly histories 19 2 2 Bibliographic guides 19 3 United States 19 3 1 Industry 19 3 2 Primary sources 19 3 3 Coal miners unions and strikes 19 4 China 19 5 Europe 19 6 Other 20 External linksEarly history edit nbsp Ruins of the hypocaust under the floor of the Roman villa La Olmeda The part under the exedra is covered Early coal extraction was small scale the coal lying either on the surface or very close to it Typical methods for extraction included drift mining and bell pits As well as drift mines small scale shaft mining was used This took the form of a bell pit the extraction working outward from a central shaft or a technique called room and pillar in which rooms of coal were extracted with pillars left to support the roofs Both of these techniques however left considerable amount of usable coal behind Archeological evidence in China indicates surface mining of coal and household usage after approximately 3490 BC 5 The earliest reference to the use of coal in metalworking is found in the geological treatise On stones Lap 16 by the Greek scientist Theophrastus c 371 287 BC Among the materials that are dug because they are useful those known as coals are made of earth and once set on fire they burn like charcoal They are found in Liguria and in Elis as one approaches Olympia by the mountain road and they are used by those who work in metals 6 The earliest known use of coal in the Americas was by the Aztecs who used coal for fuel and jet a type of lignite for ornaments 1 In Roman Britain the Romans were exploiting all major coalfields save those of North and South Staffordshire by the late 2nd century AD 7 While much of its use remained local a lively trade developed along the North Sea coast supplying coal to Yorkshire and London 7 This also extended to the continental Rhineland where bituminous coal was already used for the smelting of iron ore 7 It was used in hypocausts to heat public baths the baths in military forts and the villas of wealthy individuals Excavation has revealed coal stores at many forts along Hadrian s Wall as well as the remains of a smelting industry at forts such as Longovicium nearby citation needed After the Romans left Britain in AD 410 there are few records of coal being used in the country until the end of the 12th century One that does occur is in the Anglo Saxon Chronicle for the year 852 when a rent including 12 loads of coal is mentioned 8 In 1183 a smith was given land for his work and was required to raise his own coal 9 171 2 Shortly after the granting of the Magna Carta in 1215 coal began to be traded in areas of Scotland and the north east England where the carboniferous strata were exposed on the seashore and thus became known as sea coal This commodity however was not suitable for use in the type of domestic hearths then in use and was mainly used by artisans for lime burning metal working and smelting As early as 1228 sea coal from the north east was being taken to London 10 5 During the 13th century the trading of coal increased across Britain and by the end of the century most of the coalfields in England Scotland and Wales were being worked on a small scale 10 8 As the use of coal amongst the artisans became more widespread it became clear that coal smoke was detrimental to health and the increasing pollution in London led to much unrest and agitation As a result of this a Royal proclamation was issued in 1306 prohibiting artificers of London from using sea coal in their furnaces and commanding them to return to the traditional fuels of wood and charcoal 10 10 Marco Polo wrote about the widespread use of coal in Yuan dynasty China in the late 13th century in The Travels of Marco Polo remarking that coal was the primary fuel of the land and that it helped support heated baths for the citizenry beyond what wood would be able to do 11 During the first half of the 14th century coal began to be used for domestic heating in coal producing areas of Britain as improvements were made in the design of domestic hearths 10 13 Edward III was the first king to take an interest in the coal trade of the north east issuing a number of writs to regulate the trade and allowing the export of coal to Calais 10 15 The demand for coal steadily increased in Britain during the 15th century but it was still mainly being used in the mining districts in coastal towns or being exported to continental Europe 10 19 However by the middle of the 16th century supplies of wood were beginning to fail in Britain and the use of coal as a domestic fuel rapidly expanded 10 22 In 1575 Sir George Bruce of Carnock of Culross Scotland opened the first coal mine to extract coal from a moat pit under the sea on the Firth of Forth He constructed an artificial loading island into which he sank a 40 ft shaft that connected to another two shafts for drainage and improved ventilation The technology was far in advance of any coal mining method in the late medieval period and was considered one of the industrial wonders of the age 12 During the 17th century a number of advances in mining techniques were made such as the use of test boring to find suitable deposits and chain pumps driven by water wheels to drain the collieries 10 57 9 People who sold wood or those who preferred the smell of wood smoke to coal smoke opposed the transition in England from wood to coal One name these opponents gave to the new fuel was the devil s excrement If the coal had a high sulfur content such a description was quite apt 13 North American coal deposits were first discovered by French explorers and fur traders along the shores of Grand Lake in central New Brunswick Canada in the 1600s Coal seams were exposed where rivers flowed into the lake and was dug by hand off the surface and from tunnels dug into the seam About 1631 the French made their fur trading post at the mouth of the Saint John River their main post in Acadia and started construction of a new fort The main residence at the fort was designed with two 11 foot wide fireplaces which were stocked with wood and coal from upriver As early as 1643 the French were sending coal and other supplies to the British colony at Boston 14 15 16 17 Industrial Revolution editThe Industrial Revolution which began in Britain in the 18th century and later spread to continental Europe North America and Japan was based on the availability of coal to power steam engines International trade expanded exponentially when coal fed steam engines were built for the railways and steamships during the Victorian era Coal was cheaper and much more efficient than wood fuel in most steam engines Because central and Northern England contains an abundance of coal many mines were situated in these areas as well as in the South Wales coalfield and Scotland The small scale techniques were unsuited to the increasing demand with extraction moving away from surface extraction to deep shaft mining as the Industrial Revolution progressed 18 As steamships traveled overseas from the industrialized countries of Europe their need for coal served as trigger for coal mining to start at various locations across the globe An example of this is the coal mining in Zona Centro Sur Chile that began as a response to the arrival of steamships to Talcahuano 19 Beginning of the 20th century edit nbsp Coal miners in Hazleton PA USA 1905 nbsp Iowa coal mine 1936 Coal Production of the World around 1905 20 Country Year Short Tons Europe United Kingdom 1905 236 128 936 Germany coal 121 298 167 Germany lignite 52 498 507 France 35 869 497 Belgium 21 775 280 Austria coal 12 585 263 Austria lignite 22 692 076 Hungary coal 1904 1 031 501 Hungary lignite 5 447 283 Spain 1905 3 202 911 Russia 1904 19 318 000 Netherlands 466 997 Bosnia lignite 540 237 Romania 110 000 Serbia 1904 183 204 Italy coal and lignite 1905 412 916 Sweden 322 384 Greece lignite 1904 466 997 Asia India 1905 8 417 739 Japan 1905 11 542 000 Sumatra 1904 207 280 Africa Transvaal 1904 2 409 033 Natal 1905 1 129 407 Cape Colony 1904 154 272 North and South America United States 1905 350 821 000 Canada 1904 7 509 860 Mexico 700 000 Peru 1905 72 665 Australasia New South Wales 1905 6 632 138 Queensland 529 326 Victoria 153 135 Western Australia 127 364 Tasmania 51 993 New Zealand 1 585 756Australia editMain article Coal in Australia In 1984 Australia surpassed the US as the world s largest coal exporter 21 One third of Australia s coal exports were shipped from the Hunter Valley region of New South Wales where coal mining and transport had begun nearly two centuries earlier Coal River was the first name given by British settlers to the Hunter River after coal was found there in 1795 In 1804 the Sydney based administration established a permanent convict settlement near the mouth of the Hunter River to mine and load the coal predetermining the town s future as a coal port by naming it Newcastle Today Newcastle NSW is the largest coal port in the world Now the state of Queensland is Australia s top coal producer with its Bowen Basin the main source of black coal and plans by miners such as Gina Rinehart to open up the Galilee and Surat Basins to coal mining China became the main customer 22 Belgium editWhen iron and later steel became important in Wallonia around 1830 the Belgian coal industry had long been established and used steam engines for pumping The Belgian coalfield lay near the navigable river Meuse so coal was shipped downstream to the ports and cities of the Rhine Meuse Scheldt delta The opening of the Saint Quentin Canal in 1810 allowed coal to go by barge to Paris The Belgian coalfield outcrops over most of its area and the highly folded nature of the coal seams part of the geological Rhenohercynian Zone meant that surface occurrences of the coal were very abundant Deep mines were not required at first so a large number of small operations sprang up There was a complex legal system for concessions and often multiple layers had different owners Entrepreneurs started going deeper and deeper thanks to the good pumping system In 1790 the maximum depth of mines was 220 meters 720 ft By 1856 the average depth in the Borinage was 361 meters 1 184 ft and in 1866 437 meters 1 434 ft and some pits had reached down 700 to 900 meters 2 300 to 3 000 ft one was 1 065 meters 3 494 ft deep probably the deepest coal mine in Europe at this time Gas explosions were a serious problem and Belgium had high coal miner fatality rates By the late 19th century the seams were becoming exhausted and the steel industry was importing some coal from the Ruhr 23 Andre Dumont s discovery in 1900 of coal in the Campine basin in the Belgian Province Limburg prompted entrepreneurs from Liege to open coal mines mainly producing coal for the steel industry An announced re organisation of the Belgian coal mines in 1965 resulted in strikes and a revolt which led to the death of two coal miners in 1966 at the Zwartberg mine Coal was mined in the Liege basin until 1980 in the Southern Wallonian basin until 1984 and in the Campine basin until 1992 Canada editCanadian coal mining started in New Brunswick and also occurred in Alberta British Columbia Nova Scotia and Saskatchewan The United States has been a major supplier for the industrial regions of Ontario By 2000 about 19 of Canada s energy was supplied by coal much of it imported from the U S while Eastern Canadian ports import considerable coal from Venezuela New Brunswick edit The first coal mining in North America began in New Brunswick Canada in the early 1600s Coal was found by French explorers and fur traders along the shores of Grand Lake where rivers and erosion had exposed the coal Small amounts of coal were dug from surface deposits and tunnels dug into the coal seams and this coal supplied Fort Saint Marie built by the French about 1632 at the mouth of the Saint John River The French sold coal to the British colony at Boston as early as 1639 Due to this earliest export of coal in North America Grand Lake has been recognized as a Canadian Historic Site Coal mining expanded after the British took control of the area in the mid 1700s and encouraged permanent settlements in New Brunswick Nova Scotia Quebec and Ontario by British Loyalists Beginning in 1765 over 11 000 Loyalists settled in N B most along the lower 100 miles of the Saint John River and around Grand Lake Approximately 200 000 tons of coal were dug at Grand Lake between 1639 and 1887 using surface collection vertical shafts and the room and pillar system By 1920 the use of draglines and other modern equipment made strip mining possible and the privately owned Grand Lake area mines produced over 200 000 tons per year Most of this coal was used by the railroad and large businesses By 1936 a coal burning electric power generating plant at Newcastle Creek was operating with two 33 000 volt lines going to Fredericton and one 66 000 volt line going to Marysville By 1950 coal production at Grand Lake often reached 1 million tons per year In 1969 all the privately owned Grand Lake area coal companies and approximately 1 000 employees were consolidated into one provincial government controlled company named N B Coal Ltd In 2009 the increasing availability of oil and environmental concerns with coal use caused the closing of the Grand Lake coal mines and New Brunswick s coal mining industry Nova Scotia edit nbsp Foord Coal Seam Stellarton The first coal mining in Nova Scotia began in the 18th century with small hand dug mines close to the sea at Joggins Nova Scotia and in the Sydney area of Cape Breton Island Large scale coal mining began in the late 1830s when the General Mining Association GMA a group of English mining investors obtained a coal mining monopoly in Nova Scotia They imported the latest in mining technology including steam water pumps and railways to develop large mines in the Stellarton area of Pictou County Nova Scotia including the Foord Pit which by 1866 was the deepest coal mine in the world 24 Coal mining also developed in Springhill and Joggins in Cumberland County Nova Scotia After the GMA monopoly expired the largest and longest lasting mines developed at Cape Breton in Nova Scotia Nova Scotia was the major supplier of Canadian coal until 1945 25 At its peak in 1949 25 000 miners dug 17 million metric tons of coal from Nova Scotian mines The miners who lived in company towns became politically active in left wing politics during labour struggles for safety and fair wages Westray Mine near Stellarton closed in 1992 after an explosion killed 26 miners All the subsurface mines were closed by 2001 although some open pit coal mining continues near Stellarton The Nova Scotia Museum of Industry at Stellarton explores the history of mining in the province from its location on the site of the Foord Pit Alberta edit Coal was easy to find in what is now Drumheller Alberta Canada The Atlas Coal Mine National Historic Site has turned this coalfield into a museum This museum interprets how the Blackfoot and Cree knew about the black rock that burned After colonizers reported coal in the area a handful of ranchers and homesteaders dug out the coal for their homes Sam Drumheller started the coal rush in this area when he bought the land from a local rancher which he then sold to the Canadian National Railway Sam Drumheller also registered a coal mine However before his mine opened Jesse Gouge and Garnet Coyle beat him to it by opening the Newcastle Mine Once the railway was built thousands of people came to mine this area By the end of 1912 there were nine working coal mines in Newcastle Drumheller Midland Rosedale and Wayne In years to follow more mines sprang up Nacmine Cambria Willow Creek Lehigh and East Coulee The timing of the Drumheller mine industry was lucky according to the Atlas National Historical Site in that the United Mine Workers union had recently won the right for better working conditions As a result of union action child labour laws were passed to prevent boys under 14 years old working underground 26 Miners camps in this area were called hell s holes because miners lived in tents and shacks These camps were filled with drinking gambling and watching fistfights as forms of recreation With time living conditions improved little houses took the place of the tents and more women joined the men and started families With new activities such as hockey baseball and theatre the camps were no longer hell s holes but became the wonder town of the west citation needed Between 1911 and 1979 139 mines were registered in the Drumheller Valley of which only 34 were productive for many years The beginning of the end for the Drumheller mining industry was the discovery of oil at Leduc No 1 in 1947 after which natural gas became the predominant fuel for heating homes in western Canada As the demand for coal dropped mines closed and communities suffered Some communities Willow Creek for example completely vanished while others went from boomtowns to ghost towns Atlas 4 Mine shipped its last load of coal in 1979 after which the Atlas Coal Mine National Historic Site has preserved the last of the Drumheller mines Also nearby East Coulee School Museum interprets the life of families in mine towns for its visitors 27 China editParts of this article those related to Coal Mining Casualties need to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information January 2016 nbsp Chinese coal miners in an illustration of the Tiangong Kaiwu Ming Dynasty encyclopedia published in 1637 by Song Yingxing The coal industry in China goes back many centuries 28 In recent decades it has become the main energy source of what from 2010 is the world s second largest economy 29 Thus China is by far the largest producer of coal in the world producing over 2 8 billion tons of coal in 2007 or approximately 39 8 percent of all coal produced in the world during that year 30 For comparison the second largest producer the United States produced more than 1 1 billion tons in 2007 An estimated 5 million people work in China s coal mining industry As many as 20 000 miners die in accidents each year 31 Most Chinese mines are deep underground and do not produce the surface disruption typical of strip mines 32 France edit nbsp Le Petit Journal the 1906 Courrieres mine disaster in France Pierre Francois Tubeuf laid the foundations of the modern industry in France starting in 1770 in Languedoc 33 Labor unions emerged with an emphasis on the safety issue in the late 19th century In 1885 there were 175 injuries per thousand workers per year Deaths were low in most years 2 per 1000 workers but major disaster was always a threat 1099 men died in the Courrieres mine disaster of 1906 34 The campaign for mine safety enabled miners to break from their peasant psychology and create solidarity that came from sharing dangerous work and to develop a working class consciousness Unions gain strength by setting up a system of worker elected mine safety delegates The national government encouraged the mine safety movement as a means of limiting strife in the sometimes turbulent coal fields 35 Nevertheless strikes remained very common and coal miners took the lead in political organization 36 Germany seized control of some mining districts in the First World War leaving them devastated Polish Spanish and other immigrants were brought in to provide a stable labor force at the end of the war 37 Germany edit nbsp Historical coalfields of Western Germany Belgium The Netherlands and Northern France The first important mines appeared in the 1750s in the valleys of the rivers Ruhr Inde and Wurm where coal seams outcropped and horizontal adit mining was possible In 1782 the Krupp family began operations near Essen After 1815 entrepreneurs in the Ruhr Area which then became part of Prussia took advantage of the tariff zone Zollverein to open new mines and associated iron smelters New railways were built by British engineers around 1850 Numerous small industrial centres sprang up focused on ironworks using local coal The iron and steel works typically bought mines and erected coking ovens to supply their own requirements in coke and gas These integrated coal iron firms Huettenzechen became numerous after 1854 after 1900 they became mixed firms called Konzern The average output of a mine in 1850 was about 8 500 short tons 7 700 t its employment about 64 By 1900 the average mine s output had risen to 280 000 short tons 250 000 t and the employment to about 1 400 38 Total Ruhr coal output rose from 2 0 million short tons 1 8 Mt in 1850 to 22 20 Mt in 1880 60 54 Mt in 1900 and 114 103 Mt in 1913 on the verge of war In 1932 output was down to 73 million short tons 66 Mt growing to 130 120 Mt in 1940 Output peaked in 1957 at 123 million 112 Mt declining to 78 million short tons 71 Mt in 1974 39 At the end of 2010 five coal mines were producing in Germany The last hard coal mine in Germany closed on December 21 2018 The miners in the Ruhr region were divided by ethnicity with Germans and Poles and religion Protestants and Catholics Mobility in and out of the mining camps to nearby industrial areas was high The miners split into several unions with an affiliation to a political party As a result the socialist union affiliated with the Social Democratic Party competed with Catholic and Communist unions until 1933 when the Nazis took over all of them After 1945 the socialists came to the fore 40 India editCoal was not known during the Mughal rule despite their contact with Europeans 41 Commercial exploitation began in 1774 John Sumner and Suetonius Grant Heatly of the East India Company setting up operations in the Raniganj Coalfield along the Western bank of river Damodar Due to a lack of demand growth was sluggish until 1853 with the introduction of steam locomotives to the fast expanding rail system As late as 1895 India imported large quantities of coal from Britain but as domestic production increased and was found to be suitable for locomotives and ships demand for coal imports declined dramatically India s export of coal increased especially to Burma Ceylon and the Malay states 42 By 1900 production had risen to an annual average of 1 million tonne mt and India was producing 6 12 mts per year by 1910 citation needed and 18 mts per year by 1920 citation needed Temporary wartime demand 1914 1918 was followed by a slump in the 1930s The production reached a level of 29 mts by 1942 and 30 mts by 1946 After India became independent the new government stressed the rapid growth of heavy industry The National Coal Development Corporation was founded in 1956 as a Government of India undertaking The founding of this body was major step in the development of an indigenous Indian coal sector Especially important was the development of the vast Dhanbad coal mining complex with such major operations as Tata Steel BCCL ECL and IISCO Indian Iron And Steel Company as well as the Indian School of Mines IIT ISM Dhanbad to train engineers geologists and managers 43 Poland editThe first permanent coal mine in Poland was established in Szczakowa near Jaworzno in 1767 In 19th century development of iron copper and lead mining and processing in southern Poland notably in the Old Polish Industrial Region and later in the region of Silesia led to a quick development of coal mining Among the most prominent deposits are those located in what are now the Upper Silesian Industrial Region and Rybnik Coal Area formerly part of Prussia and the Zaglebie Dabrowskie on the Russian side of the border In modern times coal is still considered a strategic resource for Poland s economy It covers roughly 65 of energetic needs Before and after World War II Poland has been one of the major coal producers worldwide usually listed among the five largest However after 1989 the coal production is in decline with the overall production for 1994 reaching 132 million metric tons 112 million metric tons in 1999 and 104 million metric tons in 2002 Russia editFrom the 1860s large deposits in the Don Basin Donbas in southern Russia supplied 87 of Russia s coal It was used by railways and the iron and steel industry After 1900 smaller deposits near Dombrovo Zabaikal and Cheremkhovo in Siberia were opened Small older mines south of Moscow also operated Coal production was controlled by inefficient Russo British syndicates and there were shortages of workers so the companies set up welfare systems for them Their smallish output and the weak Russian railway system centered on the Ekaterininskaia Krivoi Rog Railway held back the growth of Russian heavy industry 44 45 46 In the Second World War the loss of 60 of the mining areas to German invaders forced the rapid expansion of mines in the Urals as well as greater use of mines in the Kuznetsk Basin in Siberia In 1939 the Urals produced only half the fuel needed by local industry During the war the mines were expanded and over 700 factories were evacuated from the west greatly increasing the demand for Ural coal Prisoners from the Gulag were sent to the mines up to a third of the workers were women The miners were given much higher rations of food Output doubled and the share of the region in the total national coal production rose from 8 to 22 47 In 1989 91 militant coal miners in Russia and Ukraine were the mainstay of the revolutionary forced which finally overthrew the Communist system in 1991 48 Today the Donets Basin is the major coal mining district in eastern Ukraine and adjacent portions of Russia Production during 2009 was 68 7 million tons in the Ukrainian and 4 9million tons in the Russian part of the basin but coal gas is a major hazard 49 United Kingdom edit nbsp British coalfields in the nineteenth century Main article Coal mining in the United Kingdom Before 1900 edit Although some deep mining took place as early as the 1500s in North East England and along the Firth of Forth coast 50 51 deep shaft mining in the UK began to develop extensively in the late 18th century with rapid expansion throughout the 19th century and early 20th century when the industry peaked The location of the coalfields helped to make the prosperity of Lancashire of Yorkshire and of South Wales The Yorkshire pits which supplied Sheffield were only about 300 feet deep Northumberland and Durham were the leading coal producers and they were the sites of the first deep pits In much of Britain coal was worked from drift mines or scraped off when it outcropped on the surface Small groups of part time miners used shovels and primitive equipment Scottish miners had been bonded to their maisters by a 1606 Act Anent Coalyers and Salters A Colliers and Salters Scotland Act 1775 recognised this to be a state of slavery and bondage and formally abolished it this was made effective by a further law in 1799 52 53 Before 1800 a great deal of coal was left in place because extraction was still primitive As a result in the deep Tyneside pits 300 to 1 000 ft deep only about 40 percent of the coal could be extracted The use of wooden pit props to support the roof was an innovation first introduced about 1800 The critical factor was circulation of air and control of dangerous explosive gases At first fires were burned at the bottom of the upcast shaft to create air currents and circulate air but were replaced by fans driven by steam engines Protection for miners came with the invention of the Davy lamp and Geordie lamp where any firedamp or methane burnt harmlessly within the lamp It was achieved by preventing the combustion spreading from the light chamber to the outside air with either metal gauze or fine tubes but the illumination from such lamps was very poor Great efforts were made to develop better safe lamps such as the Mueseler produced in the Belgian pits near Liege Coal was so abundant in Britain that the supply could be stepped up to meet the rapidly rising demand In 1700 the annual output of coal was just under 3 million tons Between 1770 and 1780 the annual output of coal was some 6 million long tons or about the output of a week and a half in the 20th century After 1790 output soared reaching 16 million long tons by 1815 at the height of the Napoleonic War By 1830 this had risen to over 30 million tons 54 The miners less affected by imported labour or machines than were the cotton mill workers had begun to form trade unions and fight their grim battle for wages against the coal owners and royalty lessees 55 Use of women and children at a fraction of the cost of men was common until abolished in an Act of August 1842 56 In South Wales the miners showed a high degree of solidarity They lived in isolated villages where the miners comprised the great majority of workers There was a high degree of equality in life style combined with an evangelical religious style based on Methodism leading to an ideology of egalitarianism They forged a community of solidarity under the leadership of the Miners Federation The union supported first the Liberal Party then after 1918 Labour with some Communist Party activism at the fringes 40 Since 1900 edit The need to maintain coal supplies a primary energy source had figured in both world wars 57 As well as energy supply coal became a very political issue due to conditions under which colliers worked and the way they were treated by colliery owners Much of the old Left of British politics can trace its origins to coal mining areas with the main labour union being the Miners Federation of Great Britain founded in 1888 The MFGB claimed 600 000 members in 1908 The MFGB later became the more centralised National Union of Mineworkers Although other factors were involved one cause of the UK General Strike of 1926 was concerns colliers had over very dangerous working conditions reduced pay and longer shifts Technological development throughout the 19th and 20th centuries helped both to improve the safety of colliers and the productive capacity of the collieries in which they worked In the late 20th century improved integration of coal extraction with bulk industries such as electrical generation helped coal maintain its position despite the emergence of alternative energy supplies such as oil natural gas and from the late 1950s nuclear power More recently coal has faced competition from renewable energy sources and bio fuels Most of the coal mines in Britain were purchased by the government in 1947 and put under the control of the National Coal Board with only the smaller mines left in private ownership The NUM had campaigned for nationalisation for decades and once it was achieved sought to work with the NCB in managing the industry and discouraging strikes Under the chairmanship of Alf Robens pit closures became widespread as coal s place in energy generation declined The NUM leadership continued to resist calls for strike action but an unofficial strike began in 1969 after a conference pledge on the hours of surface workers was not acted upon This was a watershed moment that led to increased spending on the coal industry and a much slower rate of pit closures as well as the election of more militant officials to the NUM leadership Under the government of Ted Heath an official strike in 1972 won increased wages after the Wilberforce Commission Less than two years later Heath called a general election over another official strike called after an overtime ban had led to a Three Day Week in Britain and lost the election to the Labour Party The wage demands were then met and spending on the industry continued to increase including the establishment of the new Selby Coalfield By the early 1980s many pits were almost 100 years old and were considered uneconomic 58 to work at current wage rates compared to cheap North Sea oil and gas and in comparison to subsidy levels in Europe The Miners Strike of 1984 failed to stop the Conservative government s plans under Margaret Thatcher to shrink the industry and a break away Union of Democratic Mineworkers was founded by miners mostly in the Midlands who felt that the NUM had broken its own democratic rules in calling the strike The National Coal Board by then British Coal was privatised by selling off a large number of pits to private concerns through the mid 1990s Because of exhausted seams high prices and cheap imports the mining industry disappeared almost completely despite the militant protests of some miners 57 59 In January 2008 the South Wales Valleys last deep pit mine Tower Colliery in Hirwaun Rhondda Cynon Taff closed with the loss of 120 jobs The coal was exhausted 60 Until 2015 coal was still mined at Hatfield Kellingley and Thoresby Collieries and is extracted at several very large opencast pits in South Wales Scotland and elsewhere Kellingley Colliery was the last deep coal mine in operation in the UK and its last coaling shift was on 18 December 2015 when coaling operations ceased with the loss of 450 jobs bringing deep coal mining in the UK to an end in its entirety a skeleton team of men will remain to service the colliery until it is finally dismantled Coal mining was never a major industry in Ireland apart from a spell in the mid 19th century when east Tyrone collieries were at their peak Deerpark Mines was the largest opencast site In 1919 it got rail connections and reached peak production in the 1950s 61 United States editMain article History of coal mining in the United States Anthracite or hard coal clean and smokeless became the preferred fuel in cities replacing wood by about 1850 Bituminous or soft coal mining came later In the mid century Pittsburgh was the principal market After 1850 soft coal which is cheaper but dirtier came into demand for railway locomotives and stationary steam engines and was used to make coke for steel after 1870 62 Total coal output soared until 1918 before 1890 it doubled every ten years going from 8 4 million short tons 7 6 Mt in 1850 to 40 million 36 Mt in 1870 270 million 240 Mt in 1900 and peaking at 680 million short tons 620 Mt in 1918 New soft coal fields opened in Ohio Indiana and Illinois as well as West Virginia Kentucky and Alabama The Great Depression of the 1930s lowered the demand to 360 million short tons 330 Mt in 1932 63 nbsp Changing shifts at the mine portal in the afternoon Floyd County Kentucky 1946 Under John L Lewis the United Mine Workers UMW became the dominant force in the coal fields in the 1930s and 1940s producing high wages and benefits 64 In 1914 at the peak there were 180 000 anthracite miners by 1970 only 6 000 remained At the same time steam engines were phased out in railways and factories and bituminous coal was used primarily for the generation of electricity Employment in bituminous peaked at 705 000 men in 1923 falling to 140 000 by 1970 and 70 000 in 2003 UMW membership among active miners fell from 160 000 in 1980 to only 16 000 in 2005 as coal mining became more mechanized and non union miners predominated in the new coal fields In the 1960s a series of mergers saw coal production shift from small independent coal companies to large more diversified firms Several oil companies and electricity producers acquired coal companies or leased Federal coal reserves in the west of the United States Concerns that competition in the coal industry could decline as a result of these changes were heightened by a sharp rise in coal prices in the wake of the 1973 oil crisis Coal prices fell in the 1980s partly in response to oil price movements but primarily in response to the large increase in supply worldwide which was brought about by the earlier price surge During this period the industry in the U S was characterized by a move towards low sulfur coal 65 In 1987 Wyoming became the largest coal producing state It uses strip mining exclusively Wyoming s coal reserves total about 69 3 billion short tons 62 9 Pg or 14 2 of the U S coal reserve 66 In 2008 competition was intense in the US coal mining industry with some U S mines approaching the end of their useful life mine closure citation needed Other coal producing countries also stepped up production to win a share of traditional US export markets Coal is used primarily to generate electricity but the rapid drop in natural gas prices after 2008 created severe competition Other countries editIn the 21st century Indonesia has expanded its coal mining and by 2011 ranked 5 globally in production 67 By 2011 Kazakhstan ranks in the top ten in terms of coal production and reserves Lignite brown coal remains important with Germany China and Russia the largest producers 68 Disasters editMain article Mining disasters nbsp Removing bodies from the pit at Senghenydd 1913 nbsp The Courrieres mine disaster in France in 1906 Mining has always been especially dangerous because of explosions roof cave ins and the difficulty of underground rescue The worst single disaster in British coal mining history was at Senghenydd in the South Wales coalfield On the morning of 14 October 1913 an explosion and subsequent fire killed 436 men and boys Only 72 bodies were recovered It followed a series of many extensive Mining accidents in the late 19th century such as The Oaks explosion of 1866 and the Hartley Colliery Disaster of 1862 Most of the explosions were caused by firedamp ignitions followed by coal dust explosions At Hartley there was no explosion but the miners entombed when the single shaft was blocked by a broken cast iron beam from the haulage engine Deaths were mainly caused by carbon monoxide poisoning known as afterdamp 69 Mitsubishi Hojyo coal mine disaster occurred on 15 December 1914 at the Mitsubishi Hojyo coal mine located in the Kyushu Island of Japan The disaster directly led to the deaths of 687 representing the worst mining incident in Japanese history The Courrieres mine disaster Europe s worst mining accident caused the death of 1 099 miners in Northern France on 10 March 1906 The Benxihu Colliery accident in China on April 26 1942 killed 1 549 miners 70 As well as disasters directly affecting mines there have been disasters attributable to the impact of mining on the surrounding landscapes and communities The Aberfan disaster in 1966 buried a school in South Wales when a huge slag heap collapsed killing 116 children and 28 adults See also editCoal mining History of coal miners Mining disasters Child labour in coal mines nbsp Geology portalNotes edit a b c Barbara Freese 2004 Coal A Human History Penguin Books pp 137 ISBN 9780142000984 stating that c oal consumption doubled every decade between 1850 and 1890 and that by turn of the century coal was the unrivaled foundation of U S Power providing 71 percent of the nation s energy James G Speight 2011 An Introduction to Petroleum Technology Economics and Politics John Wiley amp Sons pp 260 61 ISBN 9781118192542 Geoff Eley Forging Democracy The History of the Left in Europe 1850 2000 2002 Frederic Meyers European Coal Mining Unions structure and function 1961 P 86 Kazuo and Gordon 1997 p 48 Hajo Holborn History of Modern Germany 1959 p 521 David Frank J B McLachlan A Biography The Story of a Legendary Labour Leader and the Cape Breton Coal Miners 1999 p 69 David Montgomery The fall of the house of labor the workplace the state and American labor activism 1865 1925 1991 p 343 Reyes Herrera Sonia E Rodriguez Torrent Juan Carlos Medina Hernandez Patricio 2014 El sufrimiento colectivo de una ciudad minera en declinacion El caso de Lota Chile Horizontes Antropologicos in Spanish 20 42 John Dodson Xiaoqiang Nan Sun Pia Atahan Xinying Zhou Hanbin Liu Keliang Zhao Songmei Hu Zemeng Yang March 3 2014 Use of coal in the Bronze Age in China The Holocene 0959683614523155 5 525 530 Bibcode 2014Holoc 24 525D doi 10 1177 0959683614523155 S2CID 130577642 Mattusch Carol 2008 Metalworking and Tools in Oleson John Peter ed The Oxford Handbook of Engineering and Technology in the Classical World Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 518731 1 pp 418 38 432 a b c Smith A H V 1997 Provenance of Coals from Roman Sites in England and Wales Britannia Vol 28 pp 297 324 322 4 Giles J A trans The Anglo Saxon Chronicle London G Bell amp Sons 1914 At this time Ceolred abbat of Medeshamstede and the monks let to Wulfred the land of Sempringham and each year he should deliver into the minster sixty loads of wood and twelve of coal and six of faggots and two tuns full of pure ale and two beasts fit for slaughter and six hundred loaves and ten measures of Welsh ale and each year a horse and thirty shillings and one day s entertainment Yeats John LLD 1871 The technical history of commerce London Cassell Petter and Galpin a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b c d e f g h Galloway 1882 Polo Marco The Travels of Marco Polo Brown Ian From Columba to the Union Until 10707 The Edinburgh History of Scottish Literature Shellenberger Michael Apocalypse Never HarperCollins Publishers New York copyright 2020 page 123 Coal Association of Canada Coal Kit Coal Evolution module Digging up the Past http www coal ca coal kit Archived 2016 03 02 at the Wayback Machine Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada monument in Minto NB for earliest export of coal http www pc gc ca apps dfhd page nhs eng aspx id 1012 John Winthrop The Journal of John Winthrop 1630 1649 Harvard University Massachusetts Historical Society 1996 page 474 Massachusetts Bay Colony Governor s description of their August 1643 receipt of a ship load of coal from 20 leagues up the Saint John River M A MacDonald Fortune amp La Tour The Civil War in Acadia Toronto 1983 Halifax 2000 Chapter 8 description of the 1640 use of coal from up river in the main residence of the French fort at the mouth of the Saint John River Flinn and Stoker 1984 Vivallos Espinoza Carlos Brito Pena Alejandra 2010 Inmigracion y sectores populares en las minas de carbon de Lota y Coronel Chile 1850 1900 Immigration and popular sectors in the coal mines of Lota and Coronel Chile 1850 1900 Atenea in Spanish 501 73 94 Bauerman Hilary 1911 Coal In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 6 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 579 Anthony David Owen Australia s role as an energy exporter Status and prospects Energy policy 16 2 1988 131 151 Bo qiang Lin nd Jiang hua Liu Estimating coal production peak and trends of coal imports in China Energy Policy 38 1 2010 512 519 Parker and Pounds 1957 History of the Site Nova Scotia Museum of Industry Archived from the original on 2011 03 17 Retrieved 2011 04 01 Coal Mining Nova Scotia Museum of Industry Archived from the original on 2011 03 18 Retrieved 2011 04 01 Robert McIntosh Boys in the pits Child labour in coal mines McGill Queen s Press MQUP 2000 1 Atlas Coal Mine National Historical Site Shellen Xiao Wu Empires of Coal Fueling China s Entry into the Modern World Order 1860 1920 2015 excerpt Elspeth Thomson The Chinese Coal Industry An Economic History 2003 World Coal Production Most Recent Estimates 1980 2007 October 2008 U S Energy Information Administration 2008 Retrieved 2 November 2008 Where The Coal Is Stained With Blood Time March 2 2007 Shellen Xiao Wu Empires of Coal Fueling China s Entry into the Modern World Order 1860 1920 2015 online review Gwynne Lewis The Advent of Modern Capitalism in France 1770 1840 The Contribution of Pierre Francois Tubeuf 1993 online Stephen J Spignesi 2004 Catastrophe The 100 Greatest Disasters Of All Time p 168ff ISBN 9780806525587 Donald Reid The role of mine safety in the development of working class consciousness and organization The case of the Aubin Coal Basin 1867 1914 French Historical Studies 12 1 1981 98 119 in JSTOR Leo Loubere Coal Miners Strikes and Politics in the Lower Languedoc 1880 1914 Journal of Social History 2 1 1968 25 50 Donald Reid The Limits of Paternalism Immigrant Coal Miners Communities in France 1919 45 European History Quarterly 15 1 1985 99 118 Griffin Emma Why was Britain first The Industrial revolution in global context Short History of the British Industrial Revolution Retrieved 6 February 2013 Pounds 1952 a b Stefan Llafur Berger Working Class Culture and the Labour Movement in the South Wales and the Ruhr Coalfields 1850 2000 A Comparison Journal of Welsh Labour History Cylchgrawn Hanes Llafur Cymru 2001 8 2 pp 5 40 Assess the development of Science and Technology in the Mughal India 21 August 2018 A B Ghosh India s Foreign Trade in Coal Before Independence A Note Indian Economic and Social History Review Oct 1969 6 4 pp 431 437 Simon Commander Industrialization and Sectoral Imbalance Coal Mining and the Theory of Dualism in Colonial and Independent India Journal of Peasant Studies 1981 9 1 pp 86 96 A M Solovyova The Railway System in the Mining Area of Southern Russia in the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries Journal of Transport History 1984 5 1 pp 66 81 Susan P MaCaffray Origins of Labor Policy in the Russian Coal and Steel Industry 1874 1900 Journal of Economic History 1987 47 4 pp 951 67 in JSTOR John P McKay Pioneers for Profit Foreign Entrepreneurship and Russian Industrialization 1885 1913 1970 Walter Scott Dunn 1995 The Soviet Economy and the Red Army 1930 1945 Greenwood p 38 ISBN 9780275948931 Michael Burawoy and Pavel Michael Russian Miners Bow to the Angel of History Antipode Jan 1995 27 2 pp 115 136 R F Sachsenhofer et al Basin evolution and coal geology of the Donets Basin Ukraine Russia An overview International Journal of Coal Geology 2012 Vol 89 p26 40 Papers on Mining in Scotland 18th and 19th centuries Archives Hub Archived from the original on 2012 08 01 Retrieved 2008 10 17 Culross BBC Retrieved 2008 10 17 Erskine May on Slavery in Britain Vol III Chapter XI Retrieved 2009 07 20 James Barrowman Mining Engineer 14 September 1897 Slavery In The Coal Mines Of Scotland Scottish Mining Website Retrieved 2017 11 02 Griffin Emma 2010 A Short History of the British Industrial Revolution Palgrave pp 109 10 J Steven Watson The Reign of George III 1760 1815 1960 p 516 Townhill Dunfermline Coaltown by William D Henderson a b Fine 1990 Margaret Thatcher quoted in B Fine The coal question political economy and industrial change from the Nineteenth Century to the present day Ben Curtis A Tradition of Radicalism The Politics of the South Wales Miners 1964 1985 Labour History Review 2011 76 1 pp 34 50 BBC Coal mine closes with celebration 25 January 2008 William Alan McCutcheon 1984 The Industrial Archaeology of Northern Ireland Fairleigh Dickinson U P p 108 ISBN 9780838631256 Binder 1974 Bruce C Netschert and Sam H Schurr Energy in the American Economy 1850 1975 An Economic Study of Its History and Prospects pp 60 62 Dubofsky and Van Tine 1977 Coal Mining Industry Report IBISWorld 2009 Manuel Lujan Harry M Snyder 1992 Surface Coal Mining Reclamation 15 Years of Progress 1977 1992 Statistical Information DIANE p 68 ISBN 9780788142154 Michael S Hamilton 2005 Mining Environmental Policy Comparing Indonesia and the USA Ashgate ISBN 9780754644934 World Coal Association Coal Facts 2012 2012 Mason T Atkinson Peter 1911 The Hartley Pit Disaster The Science and Art of Mining Durham Mining Museum Retrieved 3 October 2013 Marcel Barrois in French Le Monde March 10 2006 permanent dead link Bibliography editFreese Barbara Coal A Human History 2004 Jeffrey E C Coal and Civilization 1925 Current conditions edit Burns Daniel The modern practice of coal mining 1907 Chirons Nicholas P Coal Age Handbook of Coal Surface Mining ISBN 0 07 011458 7 Hamilton Michael S Mining Environmental Policy Comparing Indonesia and the USA Burlington VT Ashgate 2005 ISBN 0 7546 4493 6 Hayes Geoffrey Coal Mining 2004 32 pp Hughes Herbert W A Text Book of Mining For the use of colliery managers and others London many editions 1892 1917 the standard British textbook for its era Kuenzer Claudia Coal Mining in China In Schumacher Voelker E and Mueller B Eds 2007 BusinessFocus China Energy A Comprehensive Overview of the Chinese Energy Sector gic Deutschland Verlag 281 pp ISBN 978 3 940114 00 6 pp 62 68 National Energy Information Center Greenhouse Gases Climate Change Energy Retrieved 2007 10 16 Charles V Nielsen and George F Richardson 1982 Keystone Coal Industry Manual 1982 Saleem H Ali Minding our Minerals 2006 Speight James G An Introduction to Petroleum Technology Economics and Politics John Wiley amp Sons 2011 A K Srivastava Coal Mining Industry in India 1998 ISBN 81 7100 076 2 Tonge James The principles and practice of coal mining 1906 Trade and Industry UK Department of The Coal Authority Archived from the original on 2008 10 13 Retrieved 2007 10 16 World Coal Institute The cOaL Resource 2005 covers all aspects of the coal industry in 48 pp online version Woytinsky W S and E S Woytinsky World Population and Production Trends and Outlooks 1953 pp 840 881 with many tables and maps on the worldwide coal industry in 1950 Britain edit Scholarly histories edit Ashton T S amp Sykes J The coal industry of the eighteenth century 1929 Baylies Carolyn History of the Yorkshire Miners 1881 1918 Routledge 2003 in England online Benson John Coalmining in Chris Wrigley ed A History of British industrial relations 1875 1914 Univ of Massachusetts Press 1982 pp 187 208 Benson John British Coal Miners in the Nineteenth Century A Social History Holmes amp Meier 1980 Buxton N K The economic development of the British coal industry from Industrial Revolution to the present day 1979 Dron Robert W The economics of coal mining 1928 Faull Margaret L Coal mining and the landscape of England 1700 to the present day Landscape History 30 1 2008 59 74 Fine B The Coal Question Political Economy and Industrial Change from the Nineteenth Century to the Present Day 1990 Galloway R L Annals of coal mining and the coal trade First series to 1835 1898 Second series 1835 80 1904 Reprinted 1971 Online at the University of Illinois Galloway Robert L A History Of Coal Mining In Great Britain 1882 Online at Open Library Griffin A R The British coalmining industry retrospect and prospect 1977 Hatcher John et al The History of the British Coal Industry 5 vol Oxford U P 1984 87 3000 pages of scholarly history John Hatcher The History of the British Coal Industry Volume 1 Before 1700 Towards the Age of Coal 1993 online Michael W Flinn and David Stoker History of the British Coal Industry Volume 2 1700 1830 The Industrial Revolution 1984 Roy Church Alan Hall and John Kanefsky History of the British Coal Industry Volume 3 Victorian Pre Eminence Barry Supple The History of the British Coal Industry Volume 4 1913 1946 The Political Economy of Decline 1988 excerpt and text search William Ashworth and Mark Pegg History of the British Coal Industry Volume 5 1946 1982 The Nationalized Industry 1986 Heinemann Margot Britain s coal A study of the mining crisis 1944 Hill Alan Coal a Chronology for Britain Northern Mine Research Society Hull Edward 1861 The coal fields of Great Britain their history structure and resources London 1861 Stanford a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Hull Edward Our coal resources at the close of the nineteenth century 1897 Online at Open Library Stress on geology Jaffe James Alan The Struggle for Market Power Industrial Relations in the British Coal Industry 1800 1840 2003 Jevons H S The British coal trade 1920 reprinted 1969 Jevons W Stanley The Coal Question An Inquiry Concerning the Progress of the Nation and the Probable Exhaustion of Our Coal Mines 1865 Kirby M W The British coalmining industry 1870 1946 a political and economic history 1977 Kirby Peter Thomas Aspects of the employment of children in the British coal mining industry 1800 1872 PhD Diss University of Sheffield 1995 online Laslett John H M The Independent Collier Some Recent Studies of Nineteenth Century Coalmining Communities in Britain and the United States International Labor and Working Class History 21 1982 18 27 online Lewis B Coal mining in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries Longman 1971 Lucas Arthur F A British Experiment in the Control of Competition The Coal Mines Act of 1930 Quarterly Journal of Economics 1934 418 441 in JSTOR Prest Wilfred The British Coal Mines Act of 1930 Another Interpretation Quarterly Journal of Economics 1936 313 332 in JSTOR Merrill Travers and Lucy Kitson End of Coal Mining in South Wales Lessons learned from industrial transformation International Institute for Sustainable Development 2017 online Mitchell Brian R Economic development of the British coal industry 1800 1914 Cambridge UP 1984 online Nef J U Rise of the British coal industry 2v 1932 a comprehensive scholarly survey Orwell George Down the Mine The Road to Wigan Pier chapter 2 1937 full text Rowe J W F Wages In the coal industry 1923 Supple Barry The political economy of demoralization the state and the coalmining industry in America and Britain between the wars Economic History Review 41 4 1988 566 591 Turnheim Bruno and Frank W Geels The destabilisation of existing regimes Confronting a multi dimensional framework with a case study of the British coal industry 1913 1967 Research Policy 42 10 2013 1749 1767 online Waller Robert The Dukeries Transformed A history of the development of the Dukeries coal field after 1920 Oxford U P 1983 on the Dukeries Williams Chris Capitalism community and conflict The south Wales coalfield 1898 1947 U of Wales Press 1998 Bibliographic guides edit Benson J Thompson C H amp Neville R G Bibliography of the British coal industry 1981 British Library Coal mining permanent dead link Social Sciences Collection Guides Topical Bibliographies Galloway R L Annals of coal mining and the coal trade v1 of the 1971 reprint has a bibliography in the introduction Linsley S M The Coal Industry A Select Bibliography Durham Mining Museum Mining History Network Bibliography of British Mining History Published Since 1987 Despite the title there is earlier material included North of England Institute of Mining and Mechanical Engineers Nicholas Wood Memorial Library History of mining in the UK some useful books 2018 United States edit Industry edit Adams Sean Patrick The US Coal Industry in the Nineteenth Century EH Net Encyclopedia August 15 2001 scholarly overview Adams Sean Patrick Promotion Competition Captivity The Political Economy of Coal Journal of Policy History 2006 18 1 pp 74 95 online Adams Sean Patrick Old Dominion Industrial Commonwealth Coal Politics and Economy in Antebellum America Johns Hopkins University Press 2004 Binder Frederick Moore Coal Age Empire Pennsylvania Coal and Its Utilization to 1860 Harrisburg Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission 1974 Chandler Alfred Anthracite Coal and the Beginnings of the Industrial Revolution in the United States Business History Review 46 1972 141 181 in JSTOR Conley Phil History of West Virginia Coal Industry Charleston Education Foundation 1960 Davies Edward J II The Anthracite Aristocracy Leadership and Social Change in the Hard Coal Regions of Northeastern Pennsylvania 1800 1930 1985 DiCiccio Carmen Coal and Coke in Pennsylvania Harrisburg Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission 1996 Eavenson Howard The First Century and a Quarter of the American Coal Industry 1942 Verla R Flores and A Dudley Gardner Forgotten Frontier A History of Wyoming Coal Mining 1989 Hudson Coal Company The Story of Anthracite New York 1932 425pp Useful overview of the industry in the 20th century fair minded with an operators perspective Lauver Fred J A Walk Through the Rise and Fall of Anthracite Might Pennsylvania Heritage Magazine 27 1 2001 online edition Long Priscilla Where the Sun Never Shines A History of America s Bloody Coal Industry Paragon House 1989 Matheis Mike Local Economic Impacts of Coal Mining in the United States 1870 to 1970 Journal of Economic History 2016 76 4 pp 1152 1181 abstract Nelson Robert H The Making of Federal Coal Policy 1983 Netschert Bruce C and Sam H Schurr Energy in the American Economy 1850 1975 An Economic Study of Its History and Prospects 1960 online Parker Glen Lawhon The Coal Industry A Study in Social Control Washington American Council on Public Affairs 1940 Powell H Benjamin Philadelphia s First Fuel Crisis Jacob Cist and the Developing Market for Pennsylvania Anthracite The Pennsylvania State University Press 1978 Rottenberg Dan In the Kingdom of Coal An American Family and the Rock That Changed the World 2003 owners perspective online Schurr Sam H and Bruce C Netschert Energy in the American Economy 1850 1975 An Economic Study of Its History and Prospects Johns Hopkins Press 1960 Supple Barry The political economy of demoralization the state and the coalmining industry in America and Britain between the wars Economic History Review 41 4 1988 566 591 Veenstra Theodore A and Wilbert G Fritz Major Economic Tendencies in the Bituminous Coal Industry Quarterly Journal of Economics 51 1 1936 pp 106 130 in JSTOR Vietor Richard H K and Martin V Melosi Environmental Politics and the Coal Coalition Texas A amp M University Press 1980 online Warren Kenneth Triumphant Capitalism Henry Clay Frick and the Industrial Transformation of America Pittsburgh University of Pittsburgh Press 1996 Primary sources edit United States Anthracite Coal Strike Commission 1902 1903 Report to the President on the Anthracite Coal Strike of May October 1902 By United States Anthracite Coal Strike 1903 online edition Report of the United states coal commission 5 vol in 3 1925 Official US government investigation of the 1922 anthracite strike online vol 1 2 Tryon Frederick Gale and Joseph Henry Willits eds What the Coal Commission Found An Authoritative Summary by the Staff 1925 General policies committee of anthracite operators The anthracite coal strike of 1922 A statement of its causes and underlying purposes 1923 Official statement by the operators online Coal miners unions and strikes edit Arnold Andrew B Fueling the Gilded Age Railroads Miners and Disorder in Pennsylvania Coal Country 2014 Aurand Harold W Coalcracker Culture Work and Values in Pennsylvania Anthracite 1835 1935 2003 Baratz Morton S The Union and the Coal Industry Yale University Press 1955 Blatz Perry Democratic Miners Work and Labor Relations in the Anthracite Coal Industry 1875 1925 Albany SUNY Press 1994 Campolieti Michele Strikes in British Coal Mining 1893 1940 Testing Models of Strikes Industrial Relations 60 2 2021 243 273 https doi org 10 1111 irel 12276 Church R and Q Outram British Coal Mining Strikes 1893 1940 2022 http doi org 10 5255 UKDA SN 3899 1 Coal Mines Administration U S Department Of The Interior A Medical Survey of the Bituminous Coal Industry U S Government Printing Office 1947 Corbin David Alan Life Work and Rebellion in the Coal Fields The Southern West Virginia Miners 1880 1922 1981 Dix Keith What s a Coal Miner to Do The Mechanization of Coal Mining 1988 changes in the coal industry prior to 1940 Dubofsky Melvyn and Warren Van Tine John L Lewis A Biography 1977 leader of Mine Workers union 1920 1960 Eller Ronald D Miners Millhands and Mountaineers Industrialization of the Appalachian South 1880 1930 1982 Fishback Price V Soft Coal Hard Choices The Economic Welfare of Bituminous Coal Miners 1890 1930 1992 Grossman Jonathan The Coal Strike of 1902 Turning Point in U S Policy Monthly Labor Review October 1975 online Harvey Katherine The Best Dressed Miners Life and Labor in the Maryland Coal Region 1835 1910 Cornell University Press 1993 Hinrichs A F The United Mine Workers of America and the Non Union Coal Fields Columbia University 1923 Lantz Herman R People of Coal Town Columbia University Press 1958 on southern Illinois Laslett John H M ed The United Mine Workers A Model of Industrial Solidarity Penn State University Press 1996 Laslett John H M The Independent Collier Some Recent Studies of Nineteenth Century Coalmining Communities in Britain and the United States International Labor and Working Class History 21 1982 18 27 online Lewis Ronald L Black Coal Miners in America Race Class and Community Conflict University Press of Kentucky 1987 Lunt Richard D Law and Order vs the Miners West Virginia 1907 1933 Archon Books 1979 On labor conflicts of the early 20th century Lynch Edward A and David J McDonald Coal and Unionism A History of the American Coal Miners Unions 1939 McIntosh Robert Boys in the pits Child labour in coal mines McGill Queen s Press MQUP 2000 Canadian mines Phelan Craig Divided Loyalties The Public and Private Life of Labor Leader John Mitchell 1994 Rossel Jorg Industrial Structure Union Strategy and Strike Activity in Bituminous Coal Mining 1881 1894 Social Science History 2002 16 1 pp 1 32 Seltzer Curtis Fire in the Hole Miners and Managers in the American Coal Industry University Press of Kentucky 1985 conflict in the coal industry to the 1980s Trotter Jr Joe William Coal Class and Color Blacks in Southern West Virginia 1915 32 1990 U S Immigration Commission Report on Immigrants in Industries Part I Bituminous Coal Mining 2 vols Senate Document no 633 61st Cong 2nd sess 1911 Wallace Anthony F C St Clair A Nineteenth Century Coal Town s Experience with a Disaster Prone Industry Knopf 1981 Ward Robert D and William W Rogers Labor Revolt in Alabama The Great Strike of 1894 University of Alabama Press 1965 on the coal strike China edit Dorian James P Minerals Energy and Economic Development in China Clarendon Press 1994 Huaichuan Rui Globalisation Transition and Development in China The Case of the Coal Industry Routledge 2004 Thomson Elspeth The Chinese Coal Industry An Economic History Routledge 2003 Wu Shellen Xiao Empires of Coal Fueling China s Entry into the Modern World Order 1860 1920 Stanford University Press 2015 266 pp online review Europe edit Parnell Martin F The German Tradition of Organized Capitalism Self Government in the Coal Industry Oxford University Press Inc 1998 online Pounds Norman J G and William N Parker Coal and Steel in Western Europe the Influence of Resources and Techniques on Production Indiana University Press 1957 online Pounds Norman J G An Historical Geography of Europe 1800 1914 1993 Pounds Norman J G The Ruhr A Study in Historical and Economic Geography 1952 online Other edit Calderon Roberto R Mexican Coal Mining Labor in Texas amp Coahuila 1880 1930 2000 294pp Frank David J B McLachlan A Biography The Story of a Legendary Labour Leader and the Cape Breton Coal Miners 1999 in Canada Marsden Susan Coals to Newcastle a History of Coal Loading at the Port of Newcastle New South Wales 1797 1997 2002 ISBN 0 9578961 9 0 Australia Nimura Kazuo Andrew Gordon and Terry Boardman The Ashio Riot of 1907 A Social History of Mining in Japan Duke University Press 1997 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to History of coal mining Illawarra Coal An unofficial history of coal mining in the Illawarra region of Australia World Coal Institute on current issues Abandoned mine Research Mining History Network numerous links many are broken Coal mining in Wales Down the Mine George Orwell essay on a visit to a coal mine Historic Images of Philadelphia and Reading Coal and Iron Company Courtesy of the Hagley Library Digital Archives Coal Mining in the British Isles Northern Mine Research Society Online mapping of Coal Mining sites in the British Isles Northern Mine Research Society Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of coal mining amp oldid 1217238828, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.