Taken from JRE #2085 w/Charles Wesley Godwin: open.spotify.com/episode/50Kt...
Пікірлер: 1 400
@coaldigger19984 ай бұрын
Worked 45 years as a underground coal miner. You will never find a better group of men to work around. No matter what you had going on, they always had your back. Been retired for 3 years and still miss them ol boys.
@Brawlstriker894 ай бұрын
I think you’ll find that any job in which your life is in danger generally creates tight knit groups of people
@@JoshRichardson-es6vxWrong. I do. These men did a job that most couldn’t or wouldn’t do. Show some respect.
@adzyboi36014 ай бұрын
@@JoshRichardson-es6vx bro mad at life get help
@rockymtndieselrider11334 ай бұрын
Underground miner here. Sleeping in my car watching this right now and it's below zero degrees. Looking forward to be home, but then will be back here at the mine after one day off. As an underground miner in Colorado, thank you Joe. We need recognition. I do this for my family and to support my goals. For my country, for society to improve, and for my family. Hard life, I wish others could understand a fraction.
@tylerstickle29573 ай бұрын
What kind of employer makes their people sleep in their cars 😂😂
@georgeherbertmoonwalkerbush2 ай бұрын
Be glad you even have a job, wow you're a hero who should be worshipped
@danieldavison91382 ай бұрын
Thank you for doing what you do 👏
@Brawlstriker89Ай бұрын
You have to choose what you value most in life. Yes, giving your family security is a priority. But is it worth it if you never see them? I’m sure they’d rather have you there with them making memories than working OT to make sure they have their toys.
@StandefiantАй бұрын
@@georgeherbertmoonwalkerbush Because of miners you have electricity
@KeishaRaker4 ай бұрын
As a born and raised West Virginian, I have the highest respect to all coal miners. Such incredibly hard labor. We should all appreciate them more.
@trteeerryfse-wy2ww4 ай бұрын
Nothing is in west Virginia
@PokrPro214 ай бұрын
@@trteeerryfse-wy2ww Meth is still there
@justing65944 ай бұрын
@@trteeerryfse-wy2ww your absolutely right! So stay away. I love absolutely nothing.
@trteeerryfse-wy2ww4 ай бұрын
@@justing6594 stay away? Yeah no problem. I ran from that piece of shit.
@trteeerryfse-wy2ww4 ай бұрын
@@justing6594 nothing except drugs and child molestation. Have fun in West Virginia
@realrural78764 ай бұрын
I have worked in a coal mine for 22 years and love it. There are some great hard working people who work here with me too. The sad part is that politicians have vilified us and what we do.
@kellymc68124 ай бұрын
May God send you peace, joy and love!
@kellymc68124 ай бұрын
Thanks for what you do! My grandfather was a cool miner immigrant from Italy until he became a rancher. Haa as td working men made this country!
@viezeman4 ай бұрын
god is not real stop it@@kellymc6812
@swamygee4 ай бұрын
Which politician has vilified coal miner? can you provide an example?
@Fechual4 ай бұрын
How do you feel about all the promises Trump made to coal miners and your families?
@JohnReon4 ай бұрын
My Grand Dad, Dad and older brother were all coal miners back in Rachel West Virginia. They worked hard to see that I never had to work in the coal mines. Love and miss them so much.
@bretparker85334 ай бұрын
My whole family grew up in the Beckley area, i grew up in Chapmanville moved to NC in 98. My whole childhood at least once a year, someone I went to school with would either loose their dad or would nearly loose their dad to a mining accident.
@HunterFraley3044 ай бұрын
@@bretparker8533I live in beckley and it’s sad the area is full of drugs and violence.
assuming your brother isn't around anymore sorry for your loss.
@xprettylightsx37814 ай бұрын
@@HunterFraley304this country is being pushed towards annihilation from evil you’ll never understand or know exists.
@StonedApe934 ай бұрын
My great grandfather died from black lung after working coal in Elkins, WV. My grandfather hitchhiked to Texas when he was 13 to seek out a better life for himself and his future family. Forever thankful for that decision he made over 60 years ago
@LovelyLass-nb8op4 ай бұрын
My grandfather did the same thing from Wales. He lied and joined the UK navy at 16 fought in world war 1 then migrated to Australia
@benjaminneal4394 ай бұрын
Route 92 tough!
@user-xu7id6ib5n4 ай бұрын
@@LovelyLass-nb8opthat’s so cool. Our elders past story’s are underrated lol
@timedwards81714 ай бұрын
I was the first male in my family that didn’t have to go underground in the coal mine , and I have the men that came before me to thank for that
@JAGO_Tech4 ай бұрын
Same with chemical refineries for me. No mines here but Generations of men before me paved the way. Similar grueling blue collar work. Spent some time out there... enough to finish college.
@timedwards81714 ай бұрын
@@JAGO_Tech that’s our white privileged ancestors lol
@JAGO_Tech4 ай бұрын
@timedwards8171 my grandpa died, they couldn't believe he wasn't a Smoker. Lungs were black, never smoked. Hear the same about OG coal miners. HAHA! Yeah. Super privileged 👌
@ABagOfLag4 ай бұрын
@@timedwards8171 so the narrative goes, my grandpa worked long hours on a dock and then fought in WW2, seeing his friends die in the process. so much for privelege
@braidend43794 ай бұрын
@@ABagOfLag White privilege doesn't exist. Our ancestors didn't get anything handed to them, they worked for what we've now got. It would be wise for those proclaiming white privilege to understand this, maybe they can change the future for their descendants.
@IFIMTHEDEV1L4 ай бұрын
My grandpa was in Normandy in WW2, came back home to Morgantown, WV and worked in a coal mine for 30+ years. One of his sons just retired from being a coal miner. The amount of respect I have for people that risk their lives for this type of work is infinitely high. So awesome seeing him wearing a Morgantown, WV hat
@WestVirginiaRocker4 ай бұрын
Amen....TOUCHDOWN CITY.
@ngf50774 ай бұрын
Being a waitress is harder
@salohcin10134 ай бұрын
That’s awesome man, you must be proud of your grandpa! That’s a great legacy.
@batmansdad49784 ай бұрын
@ngf5077 you should write jokes for snl cause you're about as funny.. What an ignorant post.
@ngf50774 ай бұрын
@@batmansdad4978 try working as a waitress. It’s high pace and high stress. You would quit because it’s to hard for most people
@woodywoodstains99334 ай бұрын
My Dad worked in underground coal mines most of his life. He took me down into one as a twelve year old. Pretty intense environment to say the least. Saw the miner with the big teeth working, the hydro monitor and we eventually exited the mine on the conveyor belt, a massive no-no I assume but it was the a quick way out of the mine at shifts end. He is sadly trapped for eternity in the Pike River Mine in NZ with 28 other poor souls. It’s a hard knock life, that’s for sure.
@MajikJaxsin4 ай бұрын
Sorry to hear of your loss
@betterchapter4 ай бұрын
I see dedication and heart in those guys. Folks may never know the struggles or the sacrifices made just to make a living in a coal mine. A special breed. Love and respect
@hypnoticwar7404 ай бұрын
I got a cousin who works in a mine, one days some trucks were back up and he got pinned between them. There was so much pressure being put on his knee it literally exploded and he was bleeding out in shock trying to keep calm so no one else would flip out and wrapped his leg with his shirt. Applied pressure and appearently thats what saved his life was keeping his calm, he says if he didn't keep his calm he wouldn't of been able to wrap his leg up & probably would of bleed out before the helicopter got there because he had to be air lifted out.
@hubrisnaut4 ай бұрын
Luckily, I have the same disposition of not freaking out when bad shit goes down, every time it happened. As I look back it seems like I was and my memories are surreally calm as I did what was necessary. I don't know exactly why I am like that but I think it was because I grew up poor in the north with my great grandparents, as my parents worked our way out of poverty. How that is related is we were not far from starvation underlying life but my great grandparents (born in the 1800s) had a way of living on their farm that assured survival if you followed through. It's hard to explain.
@LizandTrent4 ай бұрын
No one is capable of understanding what these dudes go through. Mad respect
@BetaBuxDelux4 ай бұрын
Unfortunately, most people don’t care.
@TheQC924 ай бұрын
@@BetaBuxDeluxliterally who tf cares
@michaeldelarm16304 ай бұрын
A lot of people are super capable of it. Go live
@TheHarryDunne4 ай бұрын
My brother works in a coal mine and says they sleep a lot down there and it’s easy work. I was going to join him but didn’t want to live around hillbillies
@YOUARESOFT.4 ай бұрын
hey atleast you would know they werent soft liberals@@TheHarryDunne
@willthornsbury29134 ай бұрын
I'm a fourth generation coal miner myself. I spent a few years on the mines before joining the Air Force. Everything I do today is informed by my experiences as a coal miner. I prefer data mining today as a cyber engineer, but certainly coal mining gave me an appreciation for all the generations in my family before me and what they went through to scrape out a living for us.
@harlzberg60684 ай бұрын
there needs to be a similar veterans assosciation for miners, much more recognition needed for these brave souls.
@andrewbayram7654 ай бұрын
I'm in England. My Dad passed away recently. He worked on a farm from his mid teens into his 80's. He had so many stories and the scars and injuries to prove it. In his late 70s he had cancer for which he needed radiotherapy. He would book the earlest appointment the clinic had, have his treatment and then go do an 8-12 hour day depending on daylight. He worked so hard for so long. He loved the outdoors. His body did pay a price, I just hope mind is made of the same stuff. The guys and without being sexist because it is guys, these guys have something special within them.
@me5atworld4 ай бұрын
Why u talking about farming?
@melf_hunter4 ай бұрын
Sorry for your loss my man
@mariaribeiro89314 ай бұрын
- Your father was a good father for sure! I'm sorry !
Farmings a tough one too, and sexism isn’t relevant.. these men are incredible, and we need more of them.
@micknesbitt4224 ай бұрын
My Dad did the same. He had hands of leather. I was the first man in our family not to go down the mines. My Dad never forgot his 17 years on the coal face. He had some crazy stories. This made him and his pals real hard men.
@RatfromNadeaust4 ай бұрын
My respect for your father. Jobs/careers and sacrifices we forget that exist. Your father and those miners make America. Being born and raised in Los Angeles we don't think of miners, oil refineries yeah here and there.
@panamahank71084 ай бұрын
My dad just retired after 45 years underground. That's what I do now for work. I was a longwall shieldman for a few years, and now I do outby work at a room and pillar. If Rogan ever wanted to know how things used to be "in the old days" and how it's changed to today, my dad is the dude to talk to.
@katadam21864 ай бұрын
Record your dad… so people know the real deal
@raymondqiu82024 ай бұрын
Orrrr... You could record him as well so that his knowledge isn't lost to history. Doesn't have to just be joe rogan
@wvusmc4 ай бұрын
My father worked 40 years underground in a WV coal mine, Federal No. 2 the same mine he mentioned. No clue who this dude is but this story is pretty wild to see on JRE.
@RedSeal13244 ай бұрын
I commissioned and worked on a coal analyzer at Fed 2 back in the day.
@raymonddhedrick95874 ай бұрын
I worked at Fed 2 for 35 years, it isn’t the mine he was talking about. The mines were about 8 miles apart Fed 2 was an Eastern mine Blacksville 2 the mine he meant was a Consol mine. We were all UMWA brothers. Solidarity Forever.
@raymonddhedrick95874 ай бұрын
Asked if he knew Rhubarb?
@loribug124 ай бұрын
My Daddy worked in 28” coal. He said you had to eat lunch on your side. My Papaw worked as an electrician in the mines, Uncles & Great uncles all made their living in there too. Some of the hardest working men ever. I’m thankful for all those men who made this country the great place it is. Proud Logan county, WV resident. 💙💛 Mine wars were a big part of labor movement.
@greghaney5704 ай бұрын
I've mined coal for 23 yrs. I've worked in mines that were 27 inches high and mines that are 16 feet high. Born and raised in Eastern KY . I've worked in KY WV Illinois and Indiana. Most ppl don't know the life of a coal miner and what we would do for our families. Which is why we do what we do.
@burdinefox4 ай бұрын
Best compliment I can give my ex husband is how hard he worked for his family in coal mines. I can spot a roof bolter a mile away. Shout out to all UG miners. They have electricians and equipment operators under ground. Some mines have elevators you ride down two miles. To be a foreman you pretty much have to be able to run everything plus have electric cards. Have to have updated miner cards to go to work. the mines go up under the mountains. It's pretty wild. These guys are heroes in my book. I'm still not over watching my hometown destroyed over sanctions. So hard to recover even if they get back to work.
@nicolasortega98554 ай бұрын
My grandfather started working in the mines at 12, he was always a superhero to me.
@andron9674 ай бұрын
I never worked in coal. I have worked in hardrock and gilsonite. I had friends in coal who wanted to take me underground. I had an open invitation ti work in coal. The fire that wiped out part of Boulder Colorado was caused by a burning coal seam that ignited grass and surface structures in extremely high wind. A coal seam can burn for hundreds or even thousands if years. I was shown one and could see it glow. It is west of Grand Junction Colorado next to I70.
@awsambdaman4 ай бұрын
That’s awesome. Definitely gonna look that up
@jeremyp52104 ай бұрын
My father was buried in a coal mine accident and now lives in pain. He became part of the opoid epidemic that targeted miners from the 90s and was also conned into taking a settlement deal which made our lives very difficult.
@mochimilan4 ай бұрын
Can you explain how he was conned?
@firstlast82584 ай бұрын
@mochimilan can you?
@littlemoo524 ай бұрын
In case you were wondering: October Sky is based on the lives of four young men who grew up in Coalwood, West Virginia. Principal photography took place in rural East Tennessee, including Oliver Springs, Harriman and Kingston in Morgan and Roane counties. The film was a moderate box office success and received very positive critical reception; it continues to be celebrated in the regions of its setting and filming.
@chiefslinginbeef36414 ай бұрын
Great movie. I grew up around farmers in rural TN. These ppl keep our civilization moving but they are vilified now. Shame. I'm a factory worker and the politicians In cities and college young ones look down at us. They caused trump as they scream at the sky about him. They just needed to not forget us
@chexnfx71613 ай бұрын
I remember this movie as a kid. One of the good ones. Would be worth another watch as a 38 year old.
@jonathancary4 ай бұрын
Damn! Excited for more people to learn about Charles Wesley Godwin! One of my favorites! 🙌🏼
@TylerHelton134 ай бұрын
I worked in the mines for 9 years. Started right after high school. Worked 2006-2015. It was hard work but it also taught me to appreciate the job I have now. Teaches you what hard work is.
@mryman36564 ай бұрын
My granddad worked in a coalmine for 13 years, everyday for 12 hours, 3300 feet beneath the ground. Now he has still charcoal etched in his lungs. Still happy he is here though, those were real working men.🙏
@Matty-kelly4 ай бұрын
My granddad did 20+years, died in his 60s of a coal lung disease. Have a old black and white photo of him down deep in the mine. Told me many story's of it, sounded absolutely horrendous.
@babybluesky92384 ай бұрын
Glad I'm not a "real working man"
@yahyaozkan60354 ай бұрын
@@babybluesky9238why would you be glad about that lmfao
@miketoth83814 ай бұрын
Yeah we don't need men like you doing real men jobs. That's how America got to where it is right now falling apart @@babybluesky9238
@rogermarshall20374 ай бұрын
Mine died of black lung
@brooks91844 ай бұрын
Like many others in here, my grandpa was a coal miner in the beautiful state of WV. Absolutely loved it. Mom’s side of the family has deep routes in WV, out in the middle of absolute nowhere. Spent the best 5 years of my life in Morgantown. Go Mountaineers!
@KING_OF_FARTS4 ай бұрын
There's a coal mine that's been on fire since 1983 in Centralia PA. I've been there. You smell it all day & smoke comes out of the ground in different spots. Its a never ending burn that they can't figure out how to extinguish. Its out by Bloomsburg college. Centralia turned from a booming coal mine town to a ghost town almost overnight.
@williambillus12254 ай бұрын
Burning since at least 1962, not 1983. Today.. it’s hard to find to notice any smell, or steam/smoke coming out.and it’s not out by bloom college…it’s about 25 minutes south of Bloom..
@briceticker67214 ай бұрын
CWG is finally gonna blow up. Saw him in a venue of just 200 people and feel very lucky to have experienced that. Dude puts on a hell of a show
Came across Charles Wesley Godwin early in 2023, and he is an incredibly talented guy. I remember listening for the first time and being like "how is this guy not massive".. guess it was just a matter of time
@kevinnickel75294 ай бұрын
I just saw him open for Trampled by Turtles. I knew he was going to get big very soon.
@lklingin53294 ай бұрын
Morgantownian here….hes the hometown kid! It’s great to watch him finally make it. He deserves everything happening!
@davidsummers11244 ай бұрын
Crazy to hear about federal 2, my grandpa was mine rescue ar loveridge and federal 2 from 60s to 90s. My other grandpa worked security at federal 2.
@cathythompson68724 ай бұрын
My cousin, my grandfather and my great-grandfather worked in coal mines in southeast Ohio. My grandfather and his brother happened to be off work the day the Millfield mine exploded. Dozens of men were killed, one of the worst mine disasters in history.
@Bredgy10094 ай бұрын
My Great Grandfather, Grandfather and Father all worked in UK coal mines. My Great Grandfather died down a mine, my Grandfather died through bad blood circulation due to working in the coal mine and my Father had so many injuries he retired at 50. Luckily my Father is still going strong at 80 years old God bless. I have the great respect for coal miners.
@ryanhoffmann93414 ай бұрын
Just listening to the description of this is getting my anxiety going. God bless these MEN!
@Clawson_customs4 ай бұрын
I'm a coal miner in Utah and I have seen coal seams from 5 feet thick to 40 feet think and mines that are 20 miles of entry
@DeathValleyDazed4 ай бұрын
Are public tours of Utah coal mines possible?
@Clawson_customs4 ай бұрын
@DeathValleyDazed ya some mines do tours but it's mostly just for family members of employees or state politicians
@DeathValleyDazed4 ай бұрын
@@Clawson_customs Thanks for reply.
@johnnybrown7794 ай бұрын
My grandfather worked in mines in fife Scotland for over 40 years..he ended up being a mine (pit) trainer... retired in the 80s just before the strikes.
@murdieselКүн бұрын
I have quite few family who have passed from black lung in those mines! Their hard work kept me from being in those mines, god bless them!
@PureTruth19704 ай бұрын
My cousin works in a Zinc mine in Jefferson, Tn and he used to drive a Sandvik which is a low profile dump truck and he said it's max speed is 13 MPH and it would take him 45 minutes to an hour to get to some spots in the mine going wide open throttle! It's unbelievable how huge it is and how far/deep they actually go!
@andyh27834 ай бұрын
I knew two guys that prob worked at the same mine.....was it called Near Star
@PureTruth19704 ай бұрын
@@andyh2783 Yeah Nyrstar Coy mine! He said it's massive down there!
@andyh27834 ай бұрын
@PureTruth1970 yeah okay nyrstar....I'm from Ky bout two hours away from there
@PureTruth19704 ай бұрын
@@andyh2783 I'm from Kentucky also, grew up in Middlesboro!
@andyh27834 ай бұрын
@PureTruth1970 oh cool I'm from pike County KY
@pistol804 ай бұрын
My dad has been a drag line operator at an open pit mine for 40 years and is getting ready to retire this year. Working coal is hard work. It pays well but it's hard shift work and lots of hours.
@davidb99764 ай бұрын
They did it in drag? Wow progressive even back then
@dlmullins90544 ай бұрын
I was born in Southwestern Virginia in a coal camp. My father worked in the mines in the 40's, 50's and early sixties. I fully thought i was going to be a coal miner too, but due to strikes etc... my family had to move to Northern Virginia in 1964 on my twelfth birthday. Daddy then started working in construction and finally my parents were able to buy some land in Central Virginia where they built a house and raised hogs, chickens and a few cows. It was there dream come true and i am glad they were able to live their remaining years happy. I am also proud to be the son of a coal miner and a coal miner's wife. They were the salt of the earth. Thanks for this video. BTW, I have lots of cousins who still live in West Virginia. Not much mining being sone now and people really having it rough down there.
@tradingelk69144 ай бұрын
Nothing compared to being a stand up comedian, hardest job there is. Only a thousand of em'!
@timdow85894 ай бұрын
My dad worked in the uranium mines here in New Mexico in the late 70’s. I’ll remember those stories forever. I 100% respect my fellow hard working SOB’s! In memory of the hardest working man I’ll ever know, my dad. Love you dad we will meet again!
@TheHippieGunner4 ай бұрын
My dads generation was the first to not go into the coal mine, they went into the military and/or became truckers. My dad was a mechanic for the airlines, not to many people want to go into the mines, and for even more people, the mine is no longer an option. The poverty in steel and coal country is staggering, it’s not seen by politicians or ceos. If you care about our country, take a drive through Appalachia, and the mid west for that matter. Our nation needs help.
@danielclipper9314 ай бұрын
The coal and steel industry is almost the exact same story. I fear we have a lot more of that in our future with automation becoming so advanced.
@natsune094 ай бұрын
My great grand dad was a miner near Scranton, Pennsylvania. He died in a mine explosion. I've spent years trying to find out which mine, but no one who knows is alive. I can't find any paperwork as he didn't die in the mine, he was taken home and died at home. I am guessing the mine didn't official report it properly as he didn't die in the mine, but at home. This was the early 1900's.
@TheMhannah1004 ай бұрын
An uncle and cousin worked the mines in Kentucky. My uncle started after getting out of the Army in WW2. I had the chance to go to the entrance of one. This was a taller mine at I would guess 3-4 feet tall. The machines they drove in were wild. This short but wide truck. Mad respect for these men. I wouldn't want to even go in to check it out.
@jmaaybraak4 ай бұрын
My grandfather worked in places exactly like what he describes in southeastern Kentucky/northeastern Tennessee for the same company. Terrible stuff. Luckily, he was able to buy his own business after about 5 or 6 years. RIP Papaw.
@tomespinoza30214 ай бұрын
God bless the coal miners, I couldn't fathom doing that work. Peter Santanello posts when he visited Coal Country were excellent!!
@firstlast82584 ай бұрын
Gawd
@jopo79964 ай бұрын
Coal mining is terrible. I had a friend Derek, that lost his modeling gig and went to work the mines with his Dad. He had 'the black lung' after only a day!
@mcpeakpw4 ай бұрын
Dude, I spit out my lunch reading that. Took me a second. LOL.
@coomodus25924 ай бұрын
Mer MAN!
@joeogle76314 ай бұрын
Freaking hilarious
@nateg42364 ай бұрын
WV. Born and raised. Same as many others, alot of our family and friends were and still are miners. Risking life to support family and keel the world's lights on. God bless em all. 🙏
@T_CP4 ай бұрын
My grandfather & great grandfather worked in the coal mine in Kentucky in the 50's-60's. My great grandpa was completely crushed from a collapse killed instantly and his son had to clean up his remains and get him out to have a proper burial. A few years later my grampa got crushed by a trolly to the point they thought he would die on site. He broke every rib in his body and said his eyes were hanging out of his head, fortunately he survived he's was in the hospital for a little over a month and was almost good as new after recovery. He past away 2 years ago at age 78 which ain't too bad for a miner! I respect coal miners from the stories I was told as a kid, those men are built different than ordinary people. -thanks for reading a little piece of my family's story
@gigachoof4 ай бұрын
We need the Colter Wall podcast ASAP !
@goldminer834 ай бұрын
As a gold miner myself. I know for a fact big companies still put profit before safety all the time!!
@masonfabean59404 ай бұрын
I’m early af hello joe
@sherrynsnyder15834 ай бұрын
My dad born in 1902 started working in a coal mine in PA at the age of 9 yrs to help feed the kids. Same mine his dad was killed in.
@enriquegonsales39324 ай бұрын
I've been following Joe's updates on AWT77K, and it's fascinating how it might redefine our technological landscape.
@Adurite4 ай бұрын
Working in a Coal Mine is unironically one of the most tiring & difficult jobs you can work.
@JohnIsaacXIV4 ай бұрын
I work on an oil rig. Same thing too.
@alphaomerta94774 ай бұрын
Mans work!!!!💯💪🏾
@josephsalmonte49954 ай бұрын
@@KoopyspappyI was going to say that. 😂 Americans put ironic/ironically & sarcastic/sarcastically in every other sentence & it *never* makes sense lol
@rrt50004 ай бұрын
I was a coal miner. I worked NW colorado (20 mile), breifly Somerset County PA (Kimberly Run and Quecreek), Greene County PA (Emerald and then shortly Cumberland). I lost my job in 2015 after i got in an argument w the superintendent right when they were getting ready to lay people off. I became a nurse. Nursing is harder, I think. But the life of a coal miner is way harder.
@nathanbielecki33894 ай бұрын
Having worked UG at both a uranium mine and potash mine, and looking into the process of coal mining, man do I have respect for those miners. Safety now is insane in comparison to the time frame spoken off. Can’t even fart without writing a pre-op checklist.
@larrycable19484 ай бұрын
Western Coal Mines are generally surface mines and the seam size is huge compared to the WV, VA, Kentucky area. My buddy worked at an Underground Mine with a crew that pulled the pillars. When they were actively mined a seamed, section of the seam were left to hold up the mine roof. When the seam was worked out, his crew would go back into the mine and recover the coal that remained in the pillars. There were roof falls on the mining machines and would often take hours to dig them out. After if took about 12 hours to dig him out of his second personal roof fall, he found a job above ground.
@BrownBomber921814 ай бұрын
Retreat mining
@raymonddhedrick95874 ай бұрын
Colorado, Utah and parts of Wyoming all had UG mines
@larrycable19484 ай бұрын
@@raymonddhedrick9587 I understand that too, but 40% of US production is Wyoming and EIA list no active Underground Mines in the State. North Dakota, Nevada, New Mexico are all predominately surface mines. www.eia.gov/coal/annual/pdf/acr.pdf
@DemetriusLeggett4 ай бұрын
We are in such a different world because they did what was needed💪🏽✅
@curtissea53404 ай бұрын
Wha ... 😅 Now we got kids and old ladies mine for your kolbolt😂😂
@firstlast82584 ай бұрын
Speak for yourself
@DemetriusLeggett4 ай бұрын
@@firstlast8258 no, I think I’ll actually speak only speak for you, from now on🤌🏾😂
@bryant.62674 ай бұрын
I'm from WV and sometimes I ride through Welch and look how it used to be and how it is now. It's sad how the state has profited from coal and then let those towns get run down after the coal was gone. Joe, you should hook up with The Untamed guys, they hunt alot down in the coal towns on old mining property and have a look down there.
@maxr.mamint85804 ай бұрын
My cousin is on the Mine Rescue team, and was the guy who found the miners in the Sago mine, where they all passed except the 17 year old.
@jason78094 ай бұрын
Stories like these illuminate the contributions of the men who laid the foundations of modern society. Ironically, while they are often underappreciated, their efforts were essential to the creation and sustenance of the society that tends to look down on them.
@firstlast82584 ай бұрын
Gawd bless Murica 🤓 🖕
@DavidRichmond4 ай бұрын
1st and also a fellow West Virginia and a former coal miner from wheeling wv I worked for Murray Energy as a roof bolter! Hell yeah! Way to put WV on the map!’
@unclemandragon56704 ай бұрын
Aye I pumped some seals for y’all a few years ago. Shout out from Pike Co.
@DavidRichmond4 ай бұрын
@@unclemandragon5670 hell yeah!! I was at the McElroy mine Cameron portal! Good stuff man!!
@hannibalbrown4 ай бұрын
My Grandfather was a miner at Henderson Colorado he was the last miner in my family but he came from a long line of miners, Its such hard work and so underappreciated.
@firstlast82584 ай бұрын
Californiarado
@jdpaxton92934 ай бұрын
I’ve been on the surface of numerous mines across West Virginia and Kentucky for work and I still can’t figure out how these underground miners get around in low coal dragging their huge balls around with them all day. Much respect to you guys. Just from being on the surface and seeing some entry’s I know I never wanna go in one!
@FirstLast-gm7gh4 ай бұрын
Joe Rogan should start picking out a different job and interview regular people from a different place each time! A good way to give a voice to the people of this great country of ours!
@Oisink3d4 ай бұрын
Theo Von does this
@ricky30154 ай бұрын
As a UPS driver I’ll start😂
@Shy-Money4 ай бұрын
Basically like what Mike Rowe did with "Dirty Jobs". But more in-depth..
@firstlast82584 ай бұрын
Gawd bless Murica 🤓 🖕
@FirstLast-gm7gh4 ай бұрын
Im talking about people from all walks of life. From the common homeless man to the janitor at the courthouse. Lottery style!
@jopo79964 ай бұрын
Charles "Coal miners are strong men" Joe "Do you think a coal miner could beat a chimp in a fight?" Charles "What? No. I just meant...." Joe "Jamie, pull up hairless jacked chimps so Charles can compare, please."
@zeke71420034 ай бұрын
I'm originally from Morgantown. My granddad was a miner in the '30s and '40s and he told me the horror stories about the mines. He became company carpenter after experiencing his third cave in. He lived in a company house and shopped at the company store. The mine companies controlled everything. Mine safety has come a long ways since his days. My dad did not work the mines, nor my uncle.
@starwarsmcu-og61094 ай бұрын
My grandfather worked 32 years inside coal mines and drove a coal truck 12 more. Born in 1916 passed in 2007 miss him every day
@stop87384 ай бұрын
The company stooooooooore!
@chrystianmarrero4 ай бұрын
If not for this video, I never would've known that working in a mine was tough.
@lonestarfrog4 ай бұрын
I always thought it was like working at McDonald's, but thanks to this video, now I know!
@sebastianwhiteside59954 ай бұрын
That's because a lot of you don't chase big money lol. Coal mines and the oil and gas industry was some of the most lucrative business before Democrats fucked it up. Out of highschool I was making 160k a year in the oilfield.
@tommymack32104 ай бұрын
@@sebastianwhiteside5995oil and gas is still lucrative😂 At least in Norway.. 2 weeks on job 12 hours. 4 weeks vacation. Easily 90k $ salary yearly
@joshuad17164 ай бұрын
Tough is a dramatic understatement, this is the kind of work that will absolutely break most men
@brandonrox2214 ай бұрын
@@sebastianwhiteside5995dumb AF. Our nuclear plant provides many more jobs than our coal plant ever did. Thanks democrats
@Jactional4 ай бұрын
My dad has worked in a coal mine for 20 years.. he did it to raise me and I'll forever be grateful to him for that, he's the hardest worker i know.
@brendanjoelphotography4 ай бұрын
Anytime I hear or see anything about a coal mine, I immediately think of October Sky. Such a great film!
@stop87384 ай бұрын
The company stoooooore!
@trentmcclane.334 ай бұрын
Coal mining is so hard my grandfather told stories of mining coal and his buddies getting trapped in coal mines
@Somethingfishyinc4 ай бұрын
Many of my family worked in WV mines. My mom's dad was paralyzed neck down from a coal mine cave in. Think 7 kids in two bedroom home. Salt mines another one under the great lakes. Crazy stuff.
@paulsheehan90504 ай бұрын
My American uncle died along with others in a mine collapse in West Virginia in the late 70's early 80's
@hillbillytarzan4 ай бұрын
My dad, both grandpas, 4 or 5 uncles, many cousins and friends worked in the coal mines. There are just a few who still ave a job. After Obama and Biden, they’re almost all gone here. Just a few scattered over East KY, WVA and VA are barely going. Miles under mountains, walking and crawling around with a wheat lamp on their heads. My grandpa actually used carbide lamps when he first started in the 40s. Dangerous and bad for your health.
@djt85184 ай бұрын
Dude Reagan shut the mines down in the 80s I know I was working in the in mines in wv at the time
@iHaveTheDocuments4 ай бұрын
Joe has literally never had a real job and has been rich since 20 years old. Just remember that
@whysix34174 ай бұрын
If you get paid, it's a real job. Otherwise, you're just volunteering.
@jeffherringa47094 ай бұрын
In some old school buildings that are about 100-150 years old you can sometimes find soot or coal extract in the duct system. This is because they used to have coal burning furnace systems between at least 1875-1925 (sometimes later) until other heat or energy systems were installed. A woman at our local book store said her father was an engineer at a local school and he used to shovel coal into the school system furnace system until the day he retired. She said he worked from about the 1930's, 1940's, and 1950's until the early 1970's when they made the modern heating or energy system conversions in the school.
@710m4 ай бұрын
My papa recently passed away from lung cancer. He was a coal miner from age 10-19 in Martin, Kentucky (early 60s) until he was sent off to the Vietnam War where he was on the Cambodian border. theyd be attacked almost every night. He was there two years and was poisoned by Agent orange. 20 years would go by and skin cancer was rampant, he would beat that. Only for Lung cancer to get him at 72….Those mines caught up with him he said. God Bless all the Miners and Veterans….they put their livelihoods on the line for our luxuries in life. THANK YOU.
@the98themperoroftheholybri334 ай бұрын
Something not talked about is occasionally miners would go to the toilet on the conveyors, if you were unlucky you might find a turd from the previous guy working at a seam.
@wyattonthespectrum58534 ай бұрын
Lotta respect for men like this 1. Oil Rig Workers 2. Underwater Welder/repair 3. Loggers 4. Deep Sea Sailors 5. Coal Minors 6. Mid west ranch hands 7. Pipeliners
@David_DY4 ай бұрын
Former Coal miner here Checkin in!!! Shout-out to all my Brothers and Sisters!!!
@bezzarguy4 ай бұрын
My mom's family worked the coal mines in Harlan, Ky. in the 60s. They all moved to Detroit to work in the auto factories. Both are hellish jobs.
@rfehr6133 ай бұрын
I've been to Centralia 3 times. It's pretty wild. They even had to reroute the highway around the town cause the section through town was collapsing. I've walked the old highway and walked through the neighborhoods. There's steam vents all over. You can feel the warmth and feel the moisture on your hand by the vent. People have been dumping trash there for decades, and it all just slowly cooks itself. The ground surface isn't warm to the touch, only near the vents. But there have been local collapses. I think a few people have fallen in over the years. Bodies in the cemeteries burned up, some were relocated. The entire area is really unsafe just to walk around. The last few residents were forced out only a few years back. The only thing left in the town, ironically, is an active fire station (at least it was active last time I was there).
@mcgovernoutdoors334 ай бұрын
My grandpa started in the coal mines in WV at 12yrs old for 25cents a day! He worked in a mine till he got black lung and the dr told him move away from the mines and he packed up and moved to Florida. He started in the mines in the early 30’s
@anthonywells30884 ай бұрын
My grandfather was a cool miner on Cabin Creek in West Virginia. He got out and moved to Florida, so that his kids didn't have to work in the mines. This past fall I had the chance to hunt up at the head waters of Cabin Creek and near KFord where he worked.
@user-xd4cb1jz4v4 ай бұрын
I’m from east ky where the real deep mines are. I wish people like this talked about mines more and gave us the credit we truly deserve.
@cherylbaker91804 ай бұрын
I don’t understand the thumbs down because it takes a brave , hard working man to be a coal miner. WV is awesome!
@Inch424 ай бұрын
My dad has gone back to a mine, freaking loves it always been a hard worker.
@spongebobsucks124 ай бұрын
All yall seem like good guys and hats off to all of your dads and brothers and uncles who put blood in to go mine every day.
@codybailey51714 ай бұрын
Yea my pap in Northern West Virginia worked in a coal mines for 40 years right after getting back from Vietnam was a head mechanic for a few of the mines up there. Now my uncle's both still do it.
@deadheadwsp7054 ай бұрын
Need to watch this every morning before my 9-5 job. Makes me more grateful for what I do
@andrewbrown10673 ай бұрын
Love the hat.....Gene's Beer Garden....a true Morgantown, WV staple.
@nicholascollins98804 ай бұрын
I grew up 5 miles down the road from the Hobet Mine Strip Mine they are talking about. My Dad worked in the mines strip/underground for years and always told me that nobody has greater character and personality than an underground coal miner. Definitely a harder job than others.
@Rotnbully4 ай бұрын
My Dad…his 8 Brothers…his Dad and all his Brothers…etc. all worked the underground coal mines of Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, Canada from mid 1800s to the 1990s.
@volcanoimage3 ай бұрын
Great interview! I pass through Centralia twice a year. There are two areas of steam that still exist today. One just a few feet north of the St Ignatius Cemetery and an area of steaming cliffs just east of Centralia off of Big Mine Run Rd. I did carbon monoxide tests in both areas and no CO was recorded which means it is either residual heat or the fire is far away. There is another fire burning 2 miles east of Centralia too, just a mile west of Raven Run. It may or may not connected