Posts Tagged ‘Extractive Industry’

Ceramic Gravemarkers

hand made slatfired ceramic gravemarker in haydenville cemetary.

hand made saltfired ceramic gravemarker in haydenville cemetery.

detail of handmade saltfired ceramic gravemarker in wolfe cemetary, haydenville ohio.

detail of handmade saltfired ceramic gravemarker in wolfe cemetery, haydenville ohio.reverse side of haydenville marker

houses with saltfired tile exteriors

houses with saltfired tile exteriors

Recently I visited two cemeteries in Haydenville, both are just across the road from Sawmillers Pallette Co.  Haydenville Cemetery is easily accessible by car and has a number of interesting handmade gravemarkers. Wolfe Cemetery is gated, and requires a 5 minute walk up a trail to the crown of a hill, which offers a nice view of the surrounding landscape. There is only one large saltfired marker here, but worth the trip. Both sites contain a majority of infant graves. A large vein of coarse reddish clay made the production of  sewer pipes, and roofing tiles, as well as many other items a major industry in this area. It is interesting how intimately linked life and death were with this local material.

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Paul Nutter on New Straitsville Ohio

Paul Nutter on New Straitsville Ohio from Jeff Lovett on Vimeo.

New Straitsville

Born as Old Straitsville, high on a hill just up the road apiece.

Then came the railroad to the valley below, the roar of the whistle was too much not to be heard.

So to the valley below we came to see what all the hustle and bulstle was about

Building our homes, stores and businesses along the tracks and the hills above.

Oh my, now we have a new town. I know… we can name it New Straitsville.

There’s coal in them hills, let’s dig it out. Coal becomes King – and the rush is on to New Straitsville.

Well, coal is not enough, so lets punch some holes in them hills and valleys and see what they give up – Oh My! Oil. A well in everyone’s back yard and garden. The rush to New Straitsville is on again.

Now the mine fires are burning, using up our coal as we dig. Prohibition has come. I know – we’ll make the best moonshine in the old abandoned mines and use the smoke from the mine fires to cover it up.

Yes, our town has dwindled to a small village, and our natural resources are all but gone. But wait – the greatest asset is still here – our people.

Yes, this is New Straitsville. Just walk down the streets and stop and gaze into the hills. Our Love for New Straitsville — like the mine fires, will never be put out.

Paul Nutter, December ‘04

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Site Visits in Southeast Ohio

Click to Visit a Map of Images

Click to Visit a Map of Images

Itinerary by Dr. Geoffrey Buckley:

Is there a better way to learn about a place than experiencing it firsthand?  Southeastern Ohio – or Appalachian Ohio as it is sometimes called – has a rich and colorful past. Today’s trip takes us into the heart of southeastern Ohio’s historic mining district.  Among other things, we’ll see remnants of past mining operations, including drift mines and “company” towns.  We’ll learn how two sites – the Majestic Mine and Essex Mine complexes – have been restored. We’ll tour a theatre in the process of restoration and hike to Robinson Cave, where miners first hatched the plan to form the United Mine Workers of America (UMWA).  Time permitting, we’ll also view some abandoned surface mine operations.  I hope you enjoy this all-too-brief tour of our area’s physical and cultural landscapes!

As we head west on Route 33, we will pass the new headquarters of the Wayne National Forest.  Notice the building’s design – modeled after a coal tipple.  It reminds us of the critical role resource extraction (especially coal mining) has played in the region’s economy.  We’ll also pass very close to the Eclipse company town, out the window to our left.  Our first stop will be the Majestic Mine complex.  Abandoned more than seventy years ago, this mine contributes significant amounts of acid mine drainage to Monday Creek just one half mile from its confluence with the Hocking River.  Although the company town associated with this mine, Floodwood, is long since gone, the Majestic Mine complex remains a wonderful example of an early twentieth century drift mine operation. Here, Pam Stachler of the USDA Forest Service will tell us a bit about the history of this site and on-going efforts to restore it. Turning east on Route 78, we’ll pass through the region’s “Little Cities of Black Diamonds.”  Buchtel, Shawnee, Glouster, New Straitsville, and Murray City (to name but a few) were important coal-mining towns during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.  All were once linked to the railroad, a key outlet not only for coal but also the bricks that were manufactured in southeastern Ohio.

In Murray City we’ll pick up Route 216 and head toward New Straitsville.  Our next stop is the Essex Mine complex.  The Essex Mine is another good example of a drift mine, which describes the way miners entered the coal seam.  Notice the milky white water emanating from the mine. As Pam will explain, here it is aluminum, and not iron, that is influencing the color. The mine water at this site is being treated by a limestone “doser,” which you can inspect when we return to the bus.  From here it is on to New Straitsville where we will meet Cheryl BlosserCheryl will give us a tour of Robinson Cave and tell us all about the area’s labor history.  We’ll then board the bus and take a short trip up the road to the intersection of 155 and 93, where we will stop to inspect the false-fronted buildings and second-story porches that have made the town of Shawnee a national landmark.  In addition to telling us about this company town’s past – and its unique architecture – we are very fortunate to have John Winnenburg on hand to give us a tour of the old Tecumseh Theatre.

At this point, we will head back to New Straitsville where we will pick up Route 595.  Although we do not have time to visit Glouster, Millfield, Corning, and Rendville, note that they’re not too far away.  Located just a few miles south of Glouster, Millfield was the site of Ohio’s worst mine disaster.  An explosion here on November 5, 1930 killed 82 men employed by the Sunday Creek Coal Company. Remains of the power plant and various out buildings can still be seen. (Note: The worst explosion on record in the U.S. killed at least 362 miners back in 1907 in Monongah, West Virginia.)

Proceeding west on 595, our next stop today is Haydenville. Just after crossing over Route 33 but before entering town, notice the lock and ditch for the Hocking and Columbus Canal. The canal and, later, the railroad, were absolutely critical to the region’s economic development.  All of the little mining towns we’ve driven through this morning were once linked to the railroad, a key outlet not only for coal but also the bricks that were manufactured in southeastern Ohio.  Haydenville was a company town until 1964, making it the last of the company towns in Ohio.  Many of the buildings in this town are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.  In addition to the linear design, Haydenville conformed to the stereotypic company town image in other ways as well.  This is especially true with respect to segregation according to ethnicity and economic class.

Turning east on Route 33 we will, if time permits, turn right on Route 691. Out the right side of the bus, we’ll see more evidence of past mining, including another abandoned drift mine. Much of this coal was mined in the 1950s and 1960s. As we wind around on Route 691, I’ll point out areas where strip mining occurred about forty years ago. We’ll make a brief stop near the old landfill – a spot where we can scramble up a small embankment and gaze down at a “high wall” that has now filled with water.  We’ll pick up Poston Station Road, pass the site of an old power plant, and then pop out on Route 682 in the Plains. Then it’s back to Athens and OU!

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50 Most Hazardous Waste Sites in US Get Stimulus Funds for Cleanup

Pulled from Tree Hugger: http://www.treehugger.com/files/2009/04/50-hazardous-waste-site-epa-cleanup.php

The EPA announced that 50 of the most polluted, most hazardous waste sites in the country will be cleaned up, thanks to $582 million in stimulus funds. Each of the sites is heavily contaminated with mining waste, out-of-control landfills, and chemical spillage—just to name a few. As you might recall, Superfund cleanup was one of the green projects included the stimulus–here’s how it’s going to help.

Waste Site Cleanup
Four of the waste sites, or Superfund sites, are going to get dangerously contaminated soil removed from hundreds of residential lawns, according to the AP.

The stimulus funds are also going to get 180 families access to clean drinking water—after decades of going without. From the AP:

“Up to $25 million will connect 180 houses in southeastern North Dakota to public drinking water. Their wells were tainted with arsenic from bait applied to control grasshoppers in the ’30s and ’40s. The people who live there have been supplied with bottled water since their wells were contaminated.”

Yet another project involves the dredging up of contaminated mud from the harbor in Bedford, Massachusetts—a project that was estimated to take 38 years without renewed funding.
In many of the sites, cleanup efforts had already been underway but were halted last year due to a lack of funding. Others still were planning on running out of funding this year, before the stimulus swooped in to clean up the day.

Stumbling Superfund
All this stimulus money going to help Superfund waste sites helps draw attention to another issue: the program is hopelessly underfunded. The tax on hazardous chemicals intended to keep it afloat was cut off by Congress in 1995. Since then, the program’s budget has shriveled, and hundreds of hazardous waste sites have been left a mess.

Obama plans to reinstate the tax in 2011, which would generate around $1 billion annually for the program. Perhaps then hazardous waste sites won’t have to languish for decades—posing health threats to those who live nearby in the process.

More on Hazardous Waste Sites
EPA Reforms Rule on Hazardous Waste , Boosts Recycling
EPA Gets Coal Ash Hazardous Waste Regulation Do Over in Obama Administration

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extrACT

MIT Media LabCAST:

extrACT is a group of software tools being developed for use by communities affected by extractive industries.

For more information visit: http://lrc.media.mit.edu/

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