Justice in the Coalfields

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Appalshop

Appalshop

Ай бұрын

Anne Lewis. 1995. 3/4" U-matic.
Justice in the Coalfields demonstrates how current labor law has crippled the collective bargaining power of unions and weighed the scales of justice against working people. The documentary follows the 1988 United Mine Workers strike against the Pittston Coal Company that followed the expiration of their contract and Pittston's termination of the medical benefits of 1,500 pensioners, widows, and disabled miners. Justice in the Coalfields documents the community-wide outrage that Pittston's violation of a long-standing social contract ignited. The film captures events in southwestern Virginia - the heart of the strike and a right-to-work state - showing hundreds of state troopers escorting “replacement workers” through the picket lines. The film captures union members, their families and friends responding with mass civil disobedience that resulted in over 4,000 arrests, as well as state and federal judges reacting with injunctions and fining the UMWA more than $64 million. These events are given context through conversations with the rank-and-file, a federal judge, a public interest lawyer, the coal company president, and the public affairs director of the National Right to Work Committee for a clear-eyed look at the strike's social, cultural, and economic impact on coalfield communities.
“A compelling, timely, and important documentar. A must-see for anyone interested in one of the most important labor struggles of recent years.”- George Meany Center for Labor Studies
“A provocative program that should be seen widely … a lawyer cannot come away from the film without some sense that the issues of justice and and law are ambiguous, that justice and law are at best distant cousins.”- Washington and Lee University
“Excellent organizing tool, especially for bringing disparate groups together.”- West Virginia Civil Liberties Union
“After witnessing this spectacle of pain and hardship, one wonders why there isn’t more violence on the part of the workers and the mountain people of the coalmining region.”- University of Minnesota
All films in the Appalshop collection are protected under Title 17 of the United States Copyright Law. The unauthorized distribution or public performance of copyrighted works constitutes copyright infringement under the Copyright Act, Title 17 U.S Code Section 106(3)-(4). This conduct may also violate the Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works and The Universal Copyright Convention, as well as bilateral treaties with other countries that allow for protection of Rights Holder copyrighted works even beyond US borders. To receive rights for public performance of our works, including educational or institutional licensing, please contact Appalshop Sales to complete the purchase at 606-633-0108 or sales@appalshop.org.
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Пікірлер: 300
@curtvona4891
@curtvona4891 Ай бұрын
I was a union coal miner from PA. Some of our local members and I went down to Pittston. It was an honor to support the workers. Thank you for this.
@coalminersdaughter
@coalminersdaughter Ай бұрын
God bless you for coming down here in ‘89!
@curtvona4891
@curtvona4891 Ай бұрын
@@coalminersdaughter We were treated very kindly. It was a great experience. Take care.
@appalshop
@appalshop Ай бұрын
Thanks so much for your story! It makes our work more meaningful. --Rachel
@curtvona4891
@curtvona4891 Ай бұрын
@@appalshop Thank you for all you do!
@Rick-kk4yy
@Rick-kk4yy Ай бұрын
Gail Gentry the first person in this video is he related to Tim Gentry of Gentry and son's trucking ?
@barnacles62
@barnacles62 24 күн бұрын
My great great grandfathers come from Bohemia in the late 1800s. They were sworn in and went to Baltimore Md. to work textiles. They saved and then bought land on the eastern shore to farm because in Bohemia all you could do id lease land. It led to my grandfather which farmed, worked the water haul seining, oystering and crabbing. He bought one of the first corn pickers in the area and people hired him to cut their crops. He later bought a tavern and my grandmother, and aunts and an uncle all worked it. I don't remember a lot of what he said, but I'll never forget him telling all us grandkids one Christmas after a cousin told him all he wanted to do was work the water, but it was starting to look bad, but he was NEVER leaving the eastern shore. He said I'll tell you as my grandfather told me, geography does not feed your family. If you live in a place that does not serve you, leave, because it's a big world and somewhere out there will. NEVER put all your eggs in one basket, if you drop it or its stolen, all's gone. He used the advice of Einstein, insanity is trying the same thing over and over, and expecting different results. I have lived his words, and I have let places and jobs go, but it has always been better for me....
@user-xd1gt9if2v
@user-xd1gt9if2v 21 күн бұрын
Wow awesome
@bobbystruggle3658
@bobbystruggle3658 23 күн бұрын
Not a coal miner by any stretch of the imagination but as a 30 year machinist this is crazy, we’re talking about some of the hardest working people and totally deserve to be compensated by these companies. This is a perfect example of greed for profit instead of taking care of the people responsible for it, I know all the Machinists I’ve talked to stand by y’all brothers.
@howlinwulf
@howlinwulf Ай бұрын
Corporate greed has spread everywhere. No mom and pops stores we are ruined.
@dmcnamara9859
@dmcnamara9859 25 күн бұрын
Don't forget Walmart started from nothing. Mom and pop stores have failed in this country because they failed to recognize private sector economy is driven on price/ customer service. The small pop/ mom that still thrive offer alternating near loss leader products for sale to drive traffic and customer service.
@T-mu2hk
@T-mu2hk Ай бұрын
When you threaten a man's livelihood and expect he won't become violent you are either a fool or evil take your pick.
@burtbrooks7731
@burtbrooks7731 Ай бұрын
Amen to that 💪
@joesanders652
@joesanders652 Ай бұрын
I got a question was the lines not stopping the truckers from making a living ? I dont know i think its just a hard matter for all
@T-mu2hk
@T-mu2hk Ай бұрын
@joesanders652 yes goes for anyone threaten their livelihood and then depend on their self discipline when they see their children going without you are an idiot. A man will bear singally what he will never bear for his children.
@endzonebob
@endzonebob 22 күн бұрын
Not either or..they are evil fools.
@pondzischeme6430
@pondzischeme6430 22 күн бұрын
History of black America
@user-xc5es2ut7t
@user-xc5es2ut7t 24 күн бұрын
Miners set the stage for this nation's growth. They were treated like disposable tools by the companies as they risked their lives EVERY DAY to get the job done. From this U.S. Marine.......I offer EACH OF YOU a firm hand Salute and thank you.
@Slick-vo9hp
@Slick-vo9hp 21 күн бұрын
Great country am I right? sad that it gets worse by the day, country is on the decline on every level and front and there’s no end in sight, all while the population is either brainwashed and complacent with what’s happening or the other half is to scared or ignorant to try and fix things.
@garymanning62
@garymanning62 20 күн бұрын
Hazard ky. I seen it with obunga. Now obiden.
@garymanning62
@garymanning62 20 күн бұрын
Well its dixies turn now. Smike.
@secretstravel
@secretstravel 19 күн бұрын
Firm handshakes all around.
@tomarmadiyer2698
@tomarmadiyer2698 18 күн бұрын
​@@Slick-vo9hptake hope. The kids are alright. They're smarter than we give them credit for.
@727Md-The-Eastside-Duck
@727Md-The-Eastside-Duck 28 күн бұрын
Not a miner but us IBB Boilermakers have always stood with our UMWA brothers & sisters. IBB local 533 Hagerstown, Maryland.
@BndK44
@BndK44 25 күн бұрын
17:44….. I don’t know if anyone will read this or even comment. I was the trooper on the left that comes into the picture. I’m last seen at about 17:53. I was a 21 year old rookie at the time and only out of the academy for 3 months. This was the last thing I wanted to be involved in. I talked to a senior trooper and explained to him that both my father and grandfather were miners and I just couldn’t be here. Luckily I was sent back to my station and troop. The way the miners were treated by the VSP still sickens me to this day.
@Michael_Chandler_Keaton
@Michael_Chandler_Keaton 24 күн бұрын
At least you had some kind of heart. Hope you kept that during your career and weren't a jackboot thug.
@CreakyCricket
@CreakyCricket 24 күн бұрын
You did good.
@gabrielwatson7721
@gabrielwatson7721 23 күн бұрын
Thank you for your service and integrity, Sir. You picked the right side of Justice at that time. No one can fault a man for standing up for what he believes in. I thank your family for helping to carry this Great Country on their backs. 🙏👍💪
@MrCtsSteve
@MrCtsSteve 23 күн бұрын
Good on you 👍
@klmullins65
@klmullins65 22 күн бұрын
No animosity brother, you were doing your job, like a soldier does. Iʻm sure there were plenty of your fellow Troopers whoʻs hearts were conflicted over what was going on.
@joelmcfarland5153
@joelmcfarland5153 24 күн бұрын
Simple question: “Which side are you on?” ✊
@AsphaltMan11
@AsphaltMan11 23 күн бұрын
In 1989 I was on my way to Marine Corps boot camp, I was out of options, I was married with a child and couldn't find a job bagging groceries, I lived in So. WV, heart of the coal fields and couldn't buy a job, this was the worst time period since the formation of the UMWA, and it's never been the same, talk to boys who worked at Patriot Coal, history repeats itself. Side note: I was blessed enough to know Elaine Purkey personally and sang with her on several occasions, sadly she's went home to be the the Lord, she was Union til the day she died.
@coalminersdaughter
@coalminersdaughter Ай бұрын
Thanks so much for making this available! My Dad was 1 of the 99 at Moss 3. I was in the UMWA student auxiliary during the ‘89 strike. One of the best real life educations I ever received.
@appalshop
@appalshop Ай бұрын
You're very welcome! Thanks so much for sharing your story--it makes our work so much more meaningful. --Rachel
@Joey-hd6lh
@Joey-hd6lh 24 күн бұрын
My father was also one of the first ones to go into moss 3 prep plant. His name was Rick Blaylock, we lived in Boone county,WV
@coalminersdaughter
@coalminersdaughter 23 күн бұрын
@@Joey-hd6lh I remember that last name. I am sure my Dad and your Dad met!
@Joey-hd6lh
@Joey-hd6lh 23 күн бұрын
@@coalminersdaughter Yes, I'm sure they did.
@SongsForLifeLLC
@SongsForLifeLLC 22 күн бұрын
My dad was part of the Dirty Dozen, the first 12 that went in The Moss 3 Brigade. Solidarity forever! Thank you for sharing. I have the plaque that was given to him and the others who were part of the Dirty Dozen.
@tomphillips2608
@tomphillips2608 Ай бұрын
Grandfather was a union coal miner in Pa. Died early with 1/16 lung capacity. My mother and my two Aunts had to supplement his care as his benefits were whittled away. Now, I'm a retired union grocery worker. 45 years at Safeway. If the Kroger -Albertsons merger goes through, my healthcare benefits and pension will go into some rich crooks stock fund.
@deborahchesser7375
@deborahchesser7375 Ай бұрын
It’s hard to believe that it’s legal to take benefits away from people that worked their lives away for these greedy companies.
@lewiemcneely9143
@lewiemcneely9143 Ай бұрын
@@deborahchesser7375 The 'govmint' is the best at that of everybody!
@mazzy_moon3061
@mazzy_moon3061 Ай бұрын
my mommy was apart of the senior class who protested in front of clintwood court house, she told me about it my whole life growin up. i’m so so glad i’ve got video footage of it now
@appalshop
@appalshop Ай бұрын
It's always amazing for us to hear stories of seeing family in our footage. Thank you for sharing! --Rachel
@gailgentry9629
@gailgentry9629 Ай бұрын
I can't believe that was over 36 years ago .Thanks to Anne for making this film.
@phoenixarizona8441
@phoenixarizona8441 Ай бұрын
Crazy I'm 36 April 1st 1988
@phoenixarizona8441
@phoenixarizona8441 Ай бұрын
My great grandfather was a cole miner my grandpa has a picture of him and his union in front of the mine hanging in the dining room thanks for sharing
@TAllyn-qr3io
@TAllyn-qr3io 25 күн бұрын
“Right to Work” - U.S. right-to-work laws do not aim to provide a general guarantee of employment to people seeking work but rather guarantee an employee's right to refrain from being a member of a labor union. Corporations and other employers use it as: if they have a right to work…then we have the right to fire them. All it is happens to be anti-union and make sure people know which side has the power.
@PatrickBaptist
@PatrickBaptist 17 күн бұрын
I love having the right not to be FORCED into a union or pay union dues, I keep to keep more of my check. I wouldn't care live in a state that wasn't otherwise. Unions have made sure to run jobs off to other countries.
@howlinwulf
@howlinwulf Ай бұрын
I love our country life!!! Im proud of you boys, nerves of steel!!!
@robertesposito9871
@robertesposito9871 28 күн бұрын
Two jobs I would never consider 1) a coal miner 2) Bearing Sea Crabber
@rabbit9360
@rabbit9360 26 күн бұрын
U could still be a male giggalo!
@Brando-UK
@Brando-UK 25 күн бұрын
If you lived in this area and wanted your children to have a better life and your wife able to not work and stay home and raise your kids and have a comfortable life you may revisit what you wouldn’t consider.
@lockandloadlikehell
@lockandloadlikehell 24 күн бұрын
Bering*
@mikebuzzard2926
@mikebuzzard2926 28 күн бұрын
If the police arresting people on the picket line are just doing their jobs as they are told to do, lost their Healthcare or wages were cut, how would they react?
@alwaysready4017
@alwaysready4017 26 күн бұрын
It’s apples and oranges. One is always going to be their because it’s tax dollar and the other is a private faction that has ti make money to operate . They should have joined the police or military.
@eatassonthefirstdate
@eatassonthefirstdate 25 күн бұрын
lol they would cry and beg the public for money, the public that they harass and literally extort 😅
@thenonchalant172
@thenonchalant172 12 күн бұрын
Call it your job don't make it right boss
@coltonbunch16
@coltonbunch16 22 күн бұрын
My grandfather was born in 1910 and worked in the coal mines his entire life. He ended up dying from blacklung. He tried to get benefits so he didn't have to worry about his wife and 8 kids. He died with nothing except worry. My grandmother got his black lung check after he died. I'm happy she at least got help, but I wish he had the peace of mind before dying at 59 years old.
@mascara1777
@mascara1777 18 күн бұрын
I'm so sorry 😢
@TheMountainman211
@TheMountainman211 29 күн бұрын
Solidarity forever
@andrewdickerson849
@andrewdickerson849 24 күн бұрын
Solidarity forever!
@MistaTea247
@MistaTea247 24 күн бұрын
Wish politicians would look out for miners not just minors on an island somewhere
@Dr_GraysGhost_420
@Dr_GraysGhost_420 23 күн бұрын
One backs the Unions.. one doesn’t.. I’m sure you like the one that hates unions
@MistaTea247
@MistaTea247 23 күн бұрын
@@Dr_GraysGhost_420 I’m sure you like teacher’s unions.
@Dr_GraysGhost_420
@Dr_GraysGhost_420 21 күн бұрын
@@MistaTea247 I didn’t know they had unions
@MistaTea247
@MistaTea247 21 күн бұрын
@@Dr_GraysGhost_420 if you’re serious, I’ll leave it at the fact that just like every government program that never goes away is an easy target for exploitation. God bless.
@MistaTea247
@MistaTea247 21 күн бұрын
@@Dr_GraysGhost_420 what if I told that you the teachers union is the biggest union in North America.
@uglahhmane
@uglahhmane 23 күн бұрын
Absolutely incredible documentary. Thank you for sharing.
@loganbaileysfunwithtrains606
@loganbaileysfunwithtrains606 Ай бұрын
And the union did nothing for my grandpa when he died, career coal miner, loyal to the union, died of a heart attack and because that wasn’t a job related death they took his pension and pocketed it.
@boknows3841
@boknows3841 Ай бұрын
These people don't know what hard times are. It's because of what my grandparents did 70 years ago that you have what you have today. And these G.D. kids gives it all up just for another $1 in their paycheck an hour. And when you get sick and when you get ol, you will understand what gave up and why it was so important. The company will replace you with a Machine that doesn't eat, drink, or have kids. The poor become poorer and the rich people just get richer and the chosen few that gets a job in the mine forget about the people who sacrificed to get what they got.
@loganbaileysfunwithtrains606
@loganbaileysfunwithtrains606 Ай бұрын
@@boknows3841 unions don’t care about anyone just as the company doesn’t
@justing6594
@justing6594 27 күн бұрын
Neither one exists without the worker! 🤷‍♂️
@esquad5406
@esquad5406 Ай бұрын
Federal officers used as STRIKE BREAKERS! In Kentucky if you work as a strike breaker you never carry a badge the rest of your life.
@JayZee-lo8qy
@JayZee-lo8qy 27 күн бұрын
Maybe 100 years ago. They can stomp us all they like now. Cops do dirty shit on the usual and as soon as they’re caught they just get shifted to another department. We have no rights anymore or have you not realized the Patriot Act was passed two decades ago now? Notice there are few unions anymore, all those jobs got shipped off to other countries where they don’t have labor laws. Why do you think we don’t have mining, manufacturing, oil drilling, small business???? It’s because you democrat voting morons thought you were going to get something for free or make more money, all you did was lose everyone’s jobs. All you did was put yourself out of work. We are a nation of slaves now. Elections are rigged, media is complete propaganda. It’s over. It’s been over. The US as we knew it died long ago
@PaintballerChastO
@PaintballerChastO 24 күн бұрын
My grandfather was apart of the strike and my grandmother was arrested with the other wives blocking the entrance to the mine.
@burtbrooks7731
@burtbrooks7731 Ай бұрын
Man oh man that’s some beautiful bluegrass pickin❤❤❤
@jimsnyder6187
@jimsnyder6187 28 күн бұрын
God Bless All Union Workers. God Damn All Right to Work Laws!!!!!!
@terrybennett5576
@terrybennett5576 Ай бұрын
I've worked both union & non union throughout my 66 years, without union representation workers are just an unnecessary evil to the companies/ corporations/ business. We are expendable without proper compensation without unions.
@klmullins65
@klmullins65 22 күн бұрын
My maternal great grandfather, Simeon Acuff Keller, was the UMW President of District 19 (Tennessee and Kentucky) during the 1910s -1920s, probably the most thankless job in America at the time, apart from being an actual coal miner, which my paternal grandfather and great grandfather were, right there in S.W. Virginia. My grandfather was injured when a huge rock fell on him in the Stonega Mine in Virginia, but he did recieve some money that he was able to put to use to help support his family. My great grandfather died not long after being severely injured in the mine…I believe he was struck by a rail car or something, i canʻt quite remember right off top of my head. My family was 100% miners and shiners!
@audreyboggs5809
@audreyboggs5809 Ай бұрын
Love the videos, thank you
@appalshop
@appalshop Ай бұрын
Glad you like them! --Rachel
@moeji1
@moeji1 24 күн бұрын
Southwest Va., Northeast Tennessee, Western N.C., and Southeastern Ky., are the stepchildren of each of their States.
@coalminersdaughter
@coalminersdaughter 21 күн бұрын
Truth!
@terryt2728
@terryt2728 17 күн бұрын
You're just going to leave WV out like that??
@Arginne
@Arginne 14 күн бұрын
Yea, Appalachia…
@bradforddeel1299
@bradforddeel1299 22 күн бұрын
I was a kid living in Haysi when this happened, but my father was a miner with black lung disease who passed away few yrs before this went down. I remember picking up jackrocks all the time lol.
@deathbeforeslavery3582
@deathbeforeslavery3582 15 күн бұрын
I grew up in southern West Virginia during this time and I can remember how the miners would throw jack rocks in the road and throw lit road flares into loaded train cars to keep the company from running coal during the strike.
@DOWNTOWN_AUDIO
@DOWNTOWN_AUDIO 16 күн бұрын
I was a construction worker for 5 years until i injured my shoulder at 18. Manual labor is a good way to make a good living in canada, oilfield, construction, logging, etc. I cant work now, and the company fucked me over and got away with it. I could live with the anger inside of me if i thought i could carry on living. But i cant tolerate doing nothing. I have too much time to reflect.
@MatthewCaudill
@MatthewCaudill Ай бұрын
I watched a documentary that y’all made a few years ago that I would love to have a link to. I believe it was called “blood stained coal”. It was about the scotia mine explosion disaster. If there’s anyway I could have a permanent copy of that, I would love that!! Thanks.
@appalshop
@appalshop Ай бұрын
@MatthewCaudill Sure thing! That was a film made by youth in our 2000 cohort of the Summer Documentary Institute. Here's the link: kzbin.info/www/bejne/oZfWZKJ9aZqlbNUfeature=shared --Rachel
@bretmartin2826
@bretmartin2826 Ай бұрын
I worked underground for 15 yrs. Mentioning going union was a big no no
@deborahchesser7375
@deborahchesser7375 Ай бұрын
The way the coal companies exploited the miners and the land is just sickening.
@rabbit9360
@rabbit9360 26 күн бұрын
You wanted to keep using electricity…..that’s where it comes from son.
@deborahchesser7375
@deborahchesser7375 26 күн бұрын
@@rabbit9360 industry would have had a hell of a time producing anything without power generated from coal. Where were they going to get electricity from ?
@rabbit9360
@rabbit9360 26 күн бұрын
@@deborahchesser7375 coal powers the world baby!
@deborahchesser7375
@deborahchesser7375 26 күн бұрын
@@rabbit9360 hell yeh, has for years and still does way more than the EPA want’s to admit. I road into a deep mine on the Jeep once, man that roof going by your head from 6” away is crazy. You stick your arm out or god forbid your head ? That’s all she wrote. it’s claustrophobic as a Mofo in there too, man I’ll never go back in one. And to think those guys do it day in day out
@deborahchesser7375
@deborahchesser7375 26 күн бұрын
@@rabbit9360 I did haul it for a few years until it faded away, along with a lot of driving jobs. I gotta admit driving that Mack during those mid 80’s summers was a hell of a good time and a huge learning experience. That straight pipe sounded good singing it’s song.
@affalada6868
@affalada6868 19 күн бұрын
Im a 24 year member of the ibew and i remember years ago we were struggling to fund our pension due to new federal regulations and then were begging for 5 dollars a year raise and medical kept going up. And my BA stood up and told the body we would take a pay cut before we cut benefits owed to our retired brothers! Families live together stand together and die together!!!
@ftargr
@ftargr 19 күн бұрын
thank you
@learningguitarmwl3223
@learningguitarmwl3223 22 күн бұрын
My grandpa and my dad both died from black lung, working in the mines of Southern West Virginia. I went to school and got my miners card. Couldn't get a job back then ,the mines were booming so most didn't want red hats which were new guys who had never mined. So I never tried again
@starwarsmcu-og6109
@starwarsmcu-og6109 21 күн бұрын
My Papaw was a UMWA organizer and member from around 1932-33 until he passed in 2007. He was born in 1916 worked 32 inside and drove a coal truck 12 more. Remember this strike my Papaw hated that company man Odom.😂😂 Lee Co.Virginia says hello
@bensanders7392
@bensanders7392 Ай бұрын
How much salary did a coal miner make( in the south) in the 1980s, as opposed to a miner in the north where there are still unions and union shop/ membership requirements as condition for employment?? Was it enough to get by in those days or to live comfortably in the 1980s....
@TheCfrazier
@TheCfrazier 24 күн бұрын
Great-grandson of a Logan County Wv coal miner here.
@swordstoplowshares628
@swordstoplowshares628 24 күн бұрын
So am I. Mom was born in Chapmanville.
@TheCfrazier
@TheCfrazier 23 күн бұрын
Howdy, my dad grew up in the rock house in Logan and my mother was born Welch. My Great Grand Father was the first Black man buried at Madison cemetery.
@user-dt2wv4nh1c
@user-dt2wv4nh1c 23 күн бұрын
Same here, Wyoming county WV
@coronavirusjones321
@coronavirusjones321 Ай бұрын
I remember the strikes at pittston and the other mines in 88-89 the Virginia state police were running roadvlocks because they hired scab truck drivers to haul coal. This was on 60 minutes I recorded it. I love the bond the mountain folk have. I'm a born and raised Virginian.
@johncothren8861
@johncothren8861 Ай бұрын
They did the same in Britain, coal miners going to support a strike. The government set up a perimeter of roadblocks, miners were identified by the scars on their hands having coal dust tattoos were turned away.
@user-xn1mp1wq3r
@user-xn1mp1wq3r Ай бұрын
I worked for clinchfield coal company yellan branch my dad worked
@Halcyon1861
@Halcyon1861 23 күн бұрын
I'm from North Carolina and I would never live in Virginia. I have various reason here's one of them. I worked with a retired Virginia State Police for 10 years. He told me that on Memorial Day weekend when they set up their speed enforcement, they had a quota. The quota started at one mile per hour over the speed limit and for every mile per hour over the speed limit there was another one to check off. One mile per hour over the speed limit...
@Arginne
@Arginne 14 күн бұрын
Good bro. I live in Florida now where the road laws aren’t enforced and it’s terrifying. At least they enforce sh-t in Virginia so it’s not a lawless sh-thole like Florida. Also, no one asked for your opinion or asked for you to live there 😂 *no one asked* I literally never once saw a crime perpetrated in Virginia and the law did not fck around!
@RunIt615
@RunIt615 24 күн бұрын
My pappaw homer huffstutler worked those mines for 40 years starting in the 1930’s. Wise Co VA
@MrCtsSteve
@MrCtsSteve 23 күн бұрын
Solidarity forever.
@ChudActual
@ChudActual 19 күн бұрын
My grandpa was one of the troopers there he used to talk about how much he didn’t want to be there.
@davidarnold9117
@davidarnold9117 24 күн бұрын
NALC Branch 389, Letter Carriers stand in solidarity with all union brothers and sisters.
@robertorrison6664
@robertorrison6664 Ай бұрын
I was there with Johnny Cox
@billbrown6487
@billbrown6487 Ай бұрын
This is no different but on a much smaller scale of self checkout at stores! It’s big brother cutting cost to put more money in their pockets while the man that is working to make them their millions is kept a pauper
@justing6594
@justing6594 27 күн бұрын
Yup! And everybody gripes about it. And says there not gonna use it. Then time passes on and it's normal now and people use them.
@billbrown6487
@billbrown6487 26 күн бұрын
@@justing6594 not me brother! I’ll never use them.
@BlackMan614
@BlackMan614 8 күн бұрын
The story never told is the UMW had bled the system dry during decades of labor agreements with the BCOA. By the time the 90s, coal prices had declined to the point where it just wasn't profitable and the companies were saddled with legacy costs which they could not afford. Bankruptcy was really the only option. Soon after the strike, PIttston sold off all of its coal properties. Could have saved themselves the drama by just shutting down and selling off the assets. I guess give them some credit. They broke one of the most corrupt unions in the history of organized labor.
@christophereichten9005
@christophereichten9005 24 күн бұрын
Nowadays all you good mountain would run anyone out of the county that even spoke of a union. Your fathers would hate you.
@ClockworkGFX
@ClockworkGFX 23 күн бұрын
They've forgot where they came from and now the boomers and GenXers that take the blood and tears that their daddies and granddaddies spilled for them for granted are trying to sell their soul for a fleeting chance at fools gold they'll never get.
@user-um5or4bu5g
@user-um5or4bu5g Ай бұрын
awesome
@alphonsotate2982
@alphonsotate2982 Ай бұрын
My heart and love go to these people "they keep our lights on ' '
@CraigStCyrPlus
@CraigStCyrPlus 20 күн бұрын
Bascom. What a name.
@jerrycarmody6717
@jerrycarmody6717 21 күн бұрын
What was the reason a lot of them were wearing camo?
@printisdead1983
@printisdead1983 18 күн бұрын
As a kentuckian who moved to Virginia for a couple years, i came runnin back Virginia work laws are GARBAGE ,thing is, now our Commonwealth is now adopting their ways, in fact they passed a bill in kentucky to where they arent obligated to give you brakes by law anymore it was carrol county VA sylvatus my ex girlfriends grandfather was a coal miner and i think he was a lead union person or something, the way she talked he was some big wig it was interesting
@boknows3841
@boknows3841 Ай бұрын
Workmen compensation would have to pay you for the rest of your life. Union benefits UMWA would have to take care of you because one crooked coal operator is not the whole industry. It's your buddies that will suffer the most. My grandfather's worked for R&P coal since they were 8 years old The child labor laws were a joke. When my grandfather broke his back and couldn't work he had to go on relief. In the 70s when they came out with the black lung my grandfather didn't want it because he thought it was just another forum of public assistance. My grandparents went thru he'll. After a lifetime of work and service in two world wars my grandfather died in 1987 with 17000 in a box and half of a old coal mining company house and if it was not for black lung he would not have had anything. Working the high coal never paid anything except just enough money to live.
@youngolf1
@youngolf1 24 күн бұрын
The shame of Right to Work….pathetic
@TheREVIEWGUY1-ip1wm
@TheREVIEWGUY1-ip1wm 23 күн бұрын
Agree it's disgusting right to work states Oklahoma,Texas,Kansas, Mo,Texas,most disgusting
@randomoldguy3967
@randomoldguy3967 25 күн бұрын
The owners only know one way to run a mine..no union protection, lax safety standards, low pay, and no insurance.
@Jay-xe6jf
@Jay-xe6jf Ай бұрын
I worked underground too
@boknows3841
@boknows3841 Ай бұрын
If you think that these miners have it rough today. Just remember that the first two PA state troopers to die in Pennsylvania died one mile away from my house in Florence/ Anita PA. The black hand society killed them because the miners here didn't take any guff. Everyone got screwed when they closed the mine and re opened it non union. Owed my soul to the company store. I just baked Pagac. Pagac is bread dough and cheese and potatoes with bacon grease and butter. It's what you made when you had no money and no food in the cupboard. No one makes it anymore because people have money now. Everyone misses eating it but no one will pay you to make it for them because they ate it for free when they were kids and their parents had to pay the bill or stand in line for the government cheese. How, many of you even know what government cheese is?
@Geloskeelo
@Geloskeelo 25 күн бұрын
Government cheese is nasty would never touch it again. At the time it was like gold.
@briargoatkilla
@briargoatkilla 25 күн бұрын
Half this country lives on government cheese.
@bvillebobcat4305
@bvillebobcat4305 18 күн бұрын
Evil people and their money…. thats all they care about is money. Not whats right, only money. What a sad life that must be.
@johnnorman7708
@johnnorman7708 Ай бұрын
Ludlow. Never forget.
@leonardryan8723
@leonardryan8723 Ай бұрын
Hear a song 🎶 Celtic Thunder Working man and Whiskey 🥃 in the Jar 🫙 go with the coal 😊.
@user-zd9ex2bn7q
@user-zd9ex2bn7q 21 күн бұрын
This is all the results of living in a fallen world God bless them
@printisdead1983
@printisdead1983 23 күн бұрын
Ive been tryin to find the Internet version of this applshop for a long time did it used to be called something else i think it had another name i just kept seein it on ket all the time and love ever doc they make
@Doug-oh2jy
@Doug-oh2jy 19 күн бұрын
Same here. We watch every Appalshop documentary we could get on KET.
@printisdead1983
@printisdead1983 18 күн бұрын
@@Doug-oh2jy it was like whitesshop or something I know it's in whitesburg
@lewiemcneely9143
@lewiemcneely9143 Ай бұрын
The folks did what they needed to do. NO, there is no justice for the little man..........YET, but it's on the way.God is still on the throne.
@Eastky23wildlife
@Eastky23wildlife Ай бұрын
My dad was union and my grandfather was non union.
@Tennessee_Jon
@Tennessee_Jon 27 күн бұрын
As a member of IUOE local 25 I’m not much to happy with having to spend money but when a dredge goes on the rail for repairs they keep me working either decking on a tug or welding on another dredge. So it’s kinda mixed feelings about unions.
@affalada6868
@affalada6868 19 күн бұрын
Ask a man for a job If he says no Ask the man for bread If he says no TAKE THE BREAD HE HAD THE CHANCE TO DO WHATS RIGHT
@millierockin1949
@millierockin1949 17 күн бұрын
"The major battlefront in Appalachia has been the coal mines. Since the mines first opened, the minors have been engaged in a fierce and bitter conflict with the coal companies, their political lackeys their gun thugs and sometimes the UNSA military. There have been numerous deadly battles and many outstanding proletarian heroes like Mother Jones and Harry Simms, have arisen. The Appalachian Proletariat, as it's history shows, has always been willing to pick up the gun to protect what belongs to it, and this militancy continues today!"
@alwaysready4017
@alwaysready4017 26 күн бұрын
Why do people think a private company owes them a job?
@paladin556
@paladin556 25 күн бұрын
I don't get it. Damn this company for giving us low pay and bad benefits. Then the next sentence is those are our jobs. We will fight for them. Lol. I'm in a Union and they hold me back. They have their place in some circumstances but overall I could do without them.
@user-be1zj7qe6x
@user-be1zj7qe6x 24 күн бұрын
Private company needs workers to make money and it’s the only job that pays a livable wage in the area
@ricksmith9256
@ricksmith9256 18 күн бұрын
Because the system is made in such a way that you must be a consumer with some form of income in order to get basic necessities. If you don't have a job then you can't survive. In the same way, if people don't survive then they can't spend their incomes on the products and services offered by the aforementioned companies who use all the consumers' time and labor. The companies don't owe them a job technically. But they have made circumstances where they are the only game in town so what are you gonna do? Become amish and be totally self-sufficient to survive? Yeah sure, everyone is gonna get right on that... so we are expected to make an income to feed ourselves and pay taxes and give all our money to these giant corporations, but they don't owe us anything? Even though we are the source of all their labor and revenue? Sounds like we are getting raped.
@beaugodwin7306
@beaugodwin7306 15 күн бұрын
If all these great men knew the whole south was right to work now days they'd roll over in their grave!
@OliverDiGeronimo009
@OliverDiGeronimo009 Ай бұрын
Lots of cool old stuff here. How old are most of these films?
@appalshop
@appalshop Ай бұрын
We've been around making movies since 1969 with 55 years worth of movies - Aaron
@OliverDiGeronimo009
@OliverDiGeronimo009 Ай бұрын
@@appalshop wow. Is this channel for archive purposes?
@jeremylamovsky3669
@jeremylamovsky3669 24 күн бұрын
My family used to mine in the British owned mines in Wales. Had a relative get killed. Owners gave his wife the equivalent of $25 bucks and evicted them from their company-owned home. Came over here...and went back to mining 😂. Palmyra, Ohio.
@robertdavis6708
@robertdavis6708 20 күн бұрын
38.00 scabs talking smack against the UMWA unions. I worked in a steel mill that shut down in 2005 because of a union disagreement. We always figured out a fair contract and life went on. But this company had Scabs-R-Us contacted in advance to take our jobs. All this stoppage to break our benefit package. Our union members paid in a 1,350,000,000.00, that's right, billion dollars for our retirees benefits. Our Steel Mill co. squandered millions of dollars buying corporate jets and blowing money buying insurance companies. And a Company that went bankrupt. When was the last time one heard of an insurance co. going bankrupt? These companies in the USA do not care for any employ after they are maimed and crippled from hard back braking work.
@TheREVIEWGUY1-ip1wm
@TheREVIEWGUY1-ip1wm 23 күн бұрын
Right to work states keep the little man down.disgusting
@Pinman376
@Pinman376 22 күн бұрын
I was an underground miner I was a shooter man then went on a roofbolter.
@htchd1htchd149
@htchd1htchd149 21 күн бұрын
What's even sadder those miners that paid into it still lost their benefits ain't no unions in southern wv now the mines can't get anyone to work offering awesome benefits, pay no one wants to do it cause they now they'll just get massed layoffs, a man don't want to destroy their body doin that work ,then I the back of their mind wondering if their gonna have a job ,much less retirement everyday, people don't trustem anymore so guess what they've done in the past is bitin em n the ass now
@terriecotham1567
@terriecotham1567 Ай бұрын
I remember a few years back those in DC were slapping each other on the back after passing a new bill into law. It gave Tax breaks or cash helping busness move out of the US. They prase and bragg how this was going to give jobs to people and rase there stander of living and how they would be able to buy US made goods. It seem like win win for the US people and the people were new plants would be build. But did it as how many little towns have become gost towns due to places moving out of the US and paying less to have the itam made. Then shipping it back to sell to the US people. And claming it was a win win seems to fall a little short when it comes to dumping the US worker Then paying those people less than a US worker was paid.
@joeysingletary2943
@joeysingletary2943 21 күн бұрын
A movie was made about this holly hunter was in it and Ted Levine
@Brando-UK
@Brando-UK 25 күн бұрын
UMWA may have won the battle with the Pittston strike but in the end they lost the war. This strike is when Cecil Roberts became known and eventually become UMWA National President. He thought the UMWA had the same power today as they did back then. Ask the UMWA what happened to them in Alabama when they went up against the Warrior Met Coal. The UMWA got their backs broke in that one. Stayed on strike for 2 years with the end nowhere in sight and Cecil sent a letter to Warriors president saying they would go back to work with no new contract. I guess the slogan “1 day longer” didn’t apply in this strike.
@printisdead1983
@printisdead1983 18 күн бұрын
42:51 im pretty sure thats the same lawyer from the qild and wonderful whites of west Virginia, its like 20 to 25 years later hes older and has a mustache, im pretty sure thats him
@MrCtsSteve
@MrCtsSteve 23 күн бұрын
Right to work for less
@georgeedwards5468
@georgeedwards5468 18 күн бұрын
Right to work should be illegal all over. These suits make me sick they don’t mind living the life of Riley off the broke backs of miners
@aaronjarvenpa1743
@aaronjarvenpa1743 Ай бұрын
Right to work doesn’t work and there pay is shit compared to union workers pay is .
@coleaydeesixxx
@coleaydeesixxx 24 күн бұрын
Derkie White Castle from Boone County, WV city of Bim is a famous legendary coal miner.
@Jimmy-Legs
@Jimmy-Legs 25 күн бұрын
Where are all the anti union folks at.
@aaronjarvenpa1743
@aaronjarvenpa1743 Ай бұрын
Union coal workers still are the lowest payed workers of all Union workers. I would find new work
@htchd1htchd149
@htchd1htchd149 21 күн бұрын
Unions are a joke I know cause I'm I one of em lol ,we'd be much better off gettin the actual wages that's in the contract and investing ourselves and gettin our own medical whatknot then let them they keep takin more and more out n losing it ,then if ya ask em how the hell my retirement lose money when the market at record highs its funny and sad all the money I'm puttin in ai t gonna be there when I need it .
@mikephalen3162
@mikephalen3162 22 күн бұрын
These guys hurt themselves, voting for Reagan and Trump.
@bjellison905
@bjellison905 18 күн бұрын
You know nothing you speak of. Obama almost killed the industry which was his plan. Trump rescued it. Reagan rescued the whole country. As a miner i can present you the number of production and price per ton under those surrounding the 2 you mentioned.
@user-xi8qf6id5n
@user-xi8qf6id5n 17 күн бұрын
You’re so right Joe Biden is definitely for the working class white man huh? He’s definitely helping them out every day with this low inflation and interest rates man it’s a great time to be a working class American right?
@midwayfarms
@midwayfarms 9 күн бұрын
Well that's funny Obama destroy the coal industry thousands of people lost their jobs
@alwaysready4017
@alwaysready4017 26 күн бұрын
Good thing about America is if you don’t want the job then go find something you do.
@JohnDoe-mx3vg
@JohnDoe-mx3vg 28 күн бұрын
Remember before the Union when everything was made in the United States? Then came along the expensive lazy Union worker an companies moved out of the U.S.A.😅😅😅😅😅
@briargoatkilla
@briargoatkilla 25 күн бұрын
Exactly. Union labor is the main killer of American industry.
@scoutandastir
@scoutandastir 24 күн бұрын
😂😂
@justing6594
@justing6594 27 күн бұрын
Thouse scabs justifying working in the mines infuriates me. But Odem and Trumka have passed. Trumpkas son works for the government. He started 5he natural gas stove controversy.
@marshallapplewhite47
@marshallapplewhite47 24 күн бұрын
This is why I'll never join a union.
@benbailey2037
@benbailey2037 Ай бұрын
How could you do it. 30:11. I still use this symbol. In 2024 As a trucker it not only makes 4 wheelers look at you funny . but others wathching. Ohhh. I remember that symbol. Does anyone know how and when that motion . came to be?? It meant big trouble when i was little sorry not symbol. I mean gesture
@vsetkoumiera7683
@vsetkoumiera7683 Ай бұрын
What symbol ?
@benbailey2037
@benbailey2037 Ай бұрын
That gesture. Ok not a symbol sorry
@tedbell4416
@tedbell4416 Ай бұрын
​@@benbailey2037 means shame on you right?
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