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Cherry Hill Coal Mines Crew!
Bottom Row-L to R-John Render, Claude Maple, Lou
Francis, Cecil McCoy, Dennie Saling, "Fat" Givens, Sam
Durham.
Middle Row: Mine Secretary/Bookkeeper from Muhlenberg
County, "Mawh" Porter, Herman King, C. L. Marlow, Hutlet Curtis,
Jeff Curtis, Dellie Singleton, Russell Blades, John Tom Eaves,
Martin Durham.
There are two on the back row. L to
R-Mitchell Curtis and Roy Hoskins.
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Greetings and a Good Day to you. Guess
that with some computer time and a picture, I will place these
tired old fingers on the keyboard and see what this brain can cause
the fingers to punch out. With the above picture and an
identity to all of the mine crew, most all will know some of
the miners or at least recognize the name of Cherry Hill Mines and
have a, somewhat, clear picture of where the mine is located.
I don't know very much about this mine, but I should. A
lot of my kin, and the kin of a lot of my friends that I
grew up with, were directly or indirectly involved with the
operation of Cherry Hill Mines. As a lad in the forties and
fifties, we played, went to school, and fished and hunted
while Cherry Hill Mines gave up most of its' coal and took some
of the miners. We were just to busy with growing up to be
concerned with the mines. The miners had another
story. Some miners retired from the Cherry Hill
Mines and ended up drawing a small pension. Most of
the "Long Time" Miners developed "Black Lung" and paid the price for
not wearing protective equipment. These miners died an earlier
death than what would have been normal. This was just one
price for working in a coal mine. A lot of the miners could
not take the conditions and just did not show up for work. The
ones that worked until retirement never looked back and retired
as soon as they were eligible. Most of these miners
were able to draw "Black Lung" benefits along with their small
pensions. I don't think that Cherry Hill was a
dangerous mine, but at that, there were some deaths and a lot
injuries. The complete operation was probably as safe as the
best of mines in the area. Methane or other "Bad Gasses" did
not seem to be a problem. On the downside, the output from the
mine went to the Louisville Gas and Electric power plant on the
Ohio River, and was used to produce electricity for the
company. Thus, the mine may work one day and off
three. The miners were just not sure of a steady
income.
Louisville Gas and Electric Company was, and is
today, a "Power" company. They supply Gas and Electricity
to their customers in Louisville and some of the
surrounding area. The natural gas is simply purchased from
places like Texas and piped in to holding tanks and/or underground
storage containers and then supplied "As Needed" to their
customers. The electricity is another matter. It, as
such, can not be stored and if a customer flips a switch, a
demand for electricity is created and the "Power Plant
Generator", must instantly produce that newly needed
power. Most "Steam Power Plants" use coal to create the
heat to produce the steam that turns the turbine to produce the
electricity. Louisville and the surrounding areas do not have
any coal and what is used at their Power Plant much be shipped in
from somewhere else. Now, this is where Cherry Hill enters the
picture. The purchase of coal is the most expensive cost of
producing electricity. Not only must the coal be mined in
locations remote from the plant, it much be transported, by some
means, to the plant. Any small savings in a ton of delivered
coal, to the plant, will be magnified many times. L G & E
learned a long time ago that they could purchase the "Coal Rights",
from areas of Western Kentucky, as a cost saving venture, and then
have someone mine the coal and transport it to their Power Plant on
the Ohio River. L G & E not only bought the "Coal Rights",
they set up a separate company to mine the coal. Thus, with IC
Railroad available to transport the coal, their operation for a
constant coal supply for their power plant was established.
This mode of operation continued for over thirty
years.
Twenty or so years into the Twentieth Century,
electricity was becoming more prevalent and even places in rural
Kentucky was being "Wired". Now people in small
towns were having access to the wonderful power of electricity. It
was used to light their homes, keep their food cool and even warm
their houses. In areas where "Seams Of Coal" were buried from
just a few feet under the ground to over hundreds of feet,
"Coal Miners" were learning how to extract the coal from the
earth. Once extracted, the coal could be used to
heat and to cook with, as well as to be sold. Enter the old
Echols and Rockport mines. There were also mines in
McHenry and other areas of Ohio and Muhlenberg Counties,
as this area seemed to have several seams of coal under
the ground. To my knowledge, the Echols Mine was
located close to where the Western KY Turnpike made
a swath through Echols. The Rockport mines was
located on the hillside where the Rockport Highway Bridge is
today. Of course, the bridge was not there then and the Old
Rockport Ferry was used to get from one side of the river to the
other. And again, that is another story. Initially, the
Echols Mine was supplying coal to L G & E and probably all that
the mine could produce. The Rockport Mine had a river loading
dock, just below the bridge on US 62. Most of the
coal that was mined at Rockport was shipped out by
barge. From the Green River, the coal was barged to
the Ohio River and probably some of the coal ended up in
Louisville at the L G & E Power Plant. I think that
the Rockport Mines were locally owned and the Echols Mine had ties
to L G & E. H. L. (?) Tucker, I have been told, was
a partner in the Rockport Mine. I don't think that
either mine was a great producer of coal and probably played out in
the late thirties.
In the early Twentieth Century, most of the coal
mined was by the "Underground" method. This was done by
digging into the side of the hill or sinking a shaft straight
down to reach the coal seam. The "Slope" method was
a mine opening going down to the coal seam at an angle
until the coal seam was reach and then mining the coal in different
directions. The coal could be brought back up by rail car and
the miners could enter and leave the mine in like manner. Most
of the mines in this area used this method. The "Shaft" mines
was another method to mine the coal. This method consisted of
sinking a "Shaft", straight down, and then move horizontally to
"Mine" the coal. The miners used an elevator to enter and exit
the mining area. Coal was brought back up to the surface in a
similar manner. In either method, the coal could be removed
from the bowels of the earth and the surface area would not be
disturbed. This presented an unique situation where a
person could own the land and another person could own the coal
under the land.
The property owners in Western Kentucky, in most
cases, were just average working families trying to make a
living. Whether they worked at a job away from home, or
whether they were trying to make a living off their land, in each
case, they were just trying to feed, clothe, and educate their
children and put away enough money for retirement. There was
never an excess of money and times were hard. Oh, there was
the "Money People", as today as well as then, that had money to
spend and money to invest. One particular group of people were
the owners of the Beaver Dam Coal Company. While there was not
any coal in Beaver Dam, there were investors. This company
went from farm to farm and house to house and presented an offer, to
the property owner, that most owners could not resist. For
something like twenty-five cents to the acre, this Beaver Dam
Coal Company purchased the coal under the ground from the
landowner. This became know as having "Mineral Rights" for the
land in question. The "Mineral Rights" gave the company the
ownership of the coal and other minerals, and with written
permission to mine the coal in any means possible. The property
owner was presented a small check and not only did he think that he
had a very good deal, but knew that he would never have any use for
the coal that he had sold. Eventually, The Beaver Dam Coal Company
owned most of the "Mineral Rights" in Ohio County. This was not a
problem until the "Strip Mining" method entered the scene, but that
is another story.
As the mines in Rockport and Echols played out
or were emptied of their coal, industry and power plants
needed more coal. I am thinking that in the mid to
late thirties, the Louisville Gas and Electric Company bought the
"Mineral Rights" to the coal in the Cherry Hill area, formed a
company to mine the coal, hired most of the miners in the
Rockport/Echols area, and set up a mine that was named "Cherry
Hill". Assuming that the Echols Mine was associated
with L G & E, whether entirely owned or a partnership, most
of the miners already worked for them. It was a short
drive/ride to the new mines and the miners from Rockport and Echols
had a new mine that should last some thirty years.
Ah, most of them could retire from their last mine. It was
mostly a win/win situation except that L G & E only needed
enough coal to keep the power plant running and the miners could dig
that amount coal out of the ground by working only a couple of
days a week. It was a living and by selective
digging of the coal, the power plant could have a source of coal for
well into the future. A coal mine is finite and Cherry
Hill was no exception. The coal seams were finally worked out
and new mines were opening all over the place. As Cherry Hill
was closing new mines were opening. Most of these new mines
were "Strip Mines" and the "Coal Digging" machines, at a strip mine,
were behemoth in size and coal removal capacity. Again,
another story.
As the end of the Twentieth Century ended and a new
century dawned, Cherry Hill was no longer a mining area. Where
"Strip Mines" made the land almost inhabitable, the Cherry Hill Mine
area became a community. New homes were built and a nice
subdivision became as asset to the community. Where the
"Peabody Coal Trains" hauled off the quaint old town of Paradise, on
the banks of the Green River, Cherry Hill Mine area was mostly
recovered and homes and gardens replaced the old mining
machinery.
If you are still reading, thanks. Thanks for
looking at this and allowing yourself to be taken back in
time. Please remember that what has been written comes from
the old memory bank. As memory banks age, truth sometimes
becomes stretched. Bits and pieces of information are added to
the brain cells and the recollection is sometimes more and in most
cases, less that the actual events. No research has been done
on this item. Have jogged the minds of others to help identify
some of the coal miners and appreciate their time and effort.
Appreciate Hilma for her picture of the miners and for helping
identify some of the individuals.
:-)))
See
you.............. jrd
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