I still remember my grandfather would have to walk 4-5 miles to work at the paper mill, and on his way there, he would pick up pieces of coal along the tracks that fell off the cars and he would set it aside in piles. When his shift was done at the paper mill and he would walk back to home, he would pick up the small piles of coal he made earlier that morning to bring home to the family for heating the house and for heating the stove to cook on.
@Logic-1012 жыл бұрын
“Where’s you get that Timmy?”…..”it fell off the truck ma, don’t worry about it”. Lol, jk, clever resourceful man. Should be darn proud.
@tymz-r-achangin2 жыл бұрын
@@Logic-101 Thanks for the cool comment, and yes sir, I am certainly proud of him still to this day and miss him and my grandmother very much. Their wedding picture even stays beside me on the night stand as a steadfast reminder for how a husband and wife were to support each other and their family Well hey hope you have a good night and hang in there considering the ludicrous stuff going on in our country.
@Logic-1012 жыл бұрын
@@tymz-r-achangin I purchased my grandfathers house and understand the pride in one’s family and their accomplishments. You hang in as well fine sir.
@lj62842 жыл бұрын
@@tymz-r-achangin Bless you and your family, wish you the best.
@tymz-r-achangin2 жыл бұрын
@@lj6284 Thank you for the kind reply and may God bless you and your family as well ....in fact may God bless our whole nation once again.
@johnchambers85282 жыл бұрын
As a state worker from Philadelphia I first got to see some of these massive buildings in my travel for my job. As noted most of them are now inactive since coal useage has dropped off. I grew up with coal heat when I was younger and did notice the difference in coal quality that we used to heat our house. A good load of coal resulted in a nice fine white ash. Coal with slate or other impurities did not burn as well and resulted with ash with lumps of unburnt coal attached to whatever the impurity consigned of. It is nice to see someone put up the history of the hard work that went into processing coal for consumption.
@JungleYT2 жыл бұрын
*I've never seen coal burn... Do you light it like wood and it just catches or what? I imagine the flame eventually sticks to it? Grew up in California in the 1960s and 70s...*
@leokarasinski42172 жыл бұрын
@@JungleYT you need a good fire to get it going. A good bed of hot wood coals will get it lit. Or a torch@ it takes a good bit of heat to get the coal going. In a coal stove it doesn't have much of a flame when the stove is properly set up. It just put off a warm glow and alot of heat.
@JungleYT2 жыл бұрын
@@leokarasinski4217 Thanks... I had a feeling it didn't light so easily. Amazing it become such a staple for heat. But it sounds like if added to an already going fire it works real good...
@leokarasinski42172 жыл бұрын
@@JungleYT yea once you get it going and in a good stove or whatever you are using. Keep it fed and it will stay lit and stay hot. It's crazy stuff. The energy density of coal is absurd. The only downside is all the crap that it gives off when burnt. That's why it's going away.
@JungleYT2 жыл бұрын
@@leokarasinski4217 Right... Thanks
@Javelina_Poppers2 жыл бұрын
In 1970 I started work at Magma Copper in Superior Arizona. I was assigned to the mill and crusher section and most new hires were "pickers" for a couple of weeks. All sorts of garbage comes out of a copper mine as the miners use the ore chutes as a garbage dump. Wood, broken "jacks" (sledge hammers) and lots and lots of blasting caps. As a picker you had to pull out as much as you could before it hit the jaw crusher. There was another picker before the Symons crusher to get what the first guy missed. The Symons crushed the ore into pea gravel size. Occasionally the first guy missed a sledge hammer head and it was important for the second guy to get it. If not, a sledge hammer head being bigger than pea gravel size makes a hell of a racket in the second crusher. They said you could hear it in downtown Superior when it happened.
@tetrabromobisphenol2 жыл бұрын
Insane that they didn't install a magnet or eddy currrent kicker as a last safety catch. Oh well, lots of companies then and now are pennywise and pound foolish.
@jgdooley20032 жыл бұрын
Were the blasting caps capable of exploding in the machinery if not handled carefully and go out in time???
@Javelina_Poppers2 жыл бұрын
@@jgdooley2003 Usually not because most of the caps that were missed were picked up by a magnetic drum roller on the conveyor belt. If one did explode, the machinery was so massive that it didn't affect anything.
@Javelina_Poppers2 жыл бұрын
@@tetrabromobisphenol There was a magnetic drum roller on the head of the conveyor belt that was great for picking up small blasting caps and small pieces of metal, but a 7 pound sledgehammer head would just sail past it.
@JungleYT2 жыл бұрын
@@Javelina_Poppers Always assumed blasting caps were paper...
@wmason19612 жыл бұрын
Just imagine the noise. It must have been horribly loud. At a time when going deaf was just considered "getting used to" the noise.
@mikewallace808710 ай бұрын
In my youth I worked a Wildcat grinder as an introduction . I went home with my ears ringing always . Thank God the advent of foam ear plugs was available . My hearing was salvaged and I can hear many thing people are not aware of.
@DevinHeida10 ай бұрын
At most you would take cotton balls and roll them into your ears. Doesn't work that well.
@markbroad1197 ай бұрын
A worse side effect is tinnitus. I deal with ringing in my ears all day every day
@WAL_DC-6B6 ай бұрын
At the railroad I worked at (now retired) we were sometimes required to watch a safety video. One regarding hearing protection was titled, "Hear Today, Gone Tomorrow."
@amareshroy77322 жыл бұрын
I am a 67y coal mine engineer from India.enjoy all coal mine related video of all country..can not forget joy and sorrow of the profession left 7y ago.
@InfectedChris2 жыл бұрын
My grandpa was a breaker boy and only those of us who grew up in NEPA regularly saw these old abandoned breakers and the culm banks that were never cleaned up.
@jasonrackawack93692 жыл бұрын
I had two Grandfathers who were miners as young kids in North Eastern PA, one was a breaker boy the other tended to the mules down in the mines.....the working conditions and the way the mining company treated its workers was hellish and unbelievably unbearable..
@billw12662 жыл бұрын
My late mother-in-law had a close friend, born in the early 20th century, who was a breaker boy in the Wilkes-Barre area. It was interesting to hear about his youth. He went onto Princeton.
@shawnpa2 жыл бұрын
I think coal mining is the top contender for most difficult job in America history.I heard miners had candles in their helmets for light. Industry was so dangerous in Pittsburgh around 1915 that on average ten people were killed weekly. It was either in mills or mines.
@jasonrackawack93692 жыл бұрын
@@shawnpa My Grandfather had told my Dad that the mules had really good memories, they would remember it if one of the men would mistreat them, and even a few days later if they passed by the same guy they would squash him up against the wall of the mine....he also said the bosses treated the mules better than the workers, they could get people to work get all day long but the mules cost them money to buy. If ever in North East PA and you get a chance to see the Eckley Miners village museum it is quite sobering how heartless the companies were, if a worker died on the job and lived in a company owned house the widow had 5 days to move out unless they remarryed to an existing employee of the mine. All the costs of the dynomite, wood to sure up the tunnels, tools etc was taken out of their pay checks and had to be bought through the company owned store. I cant believe what my families went through back then just to surrvive.
@JMD5012 жыл бұрын
@@jasonrackawack9369 ya my grandfather worked as a breaker boy like a mile from Eckley. They had it rough.
@TheEgg1852 жыл бұрын
This is exactly why I'm an Anti-feminist. Poor women couldn't work 😭 Poor women couldn't vote 😭 While males are so privileged 😭 Yeah, fuck off. 🙄 It was an extremely rough and dangerous world for men.
@reppilf97912 жыл бұрын
As someone who fell down a research rabbit hole and hyperfixated on breaker boys at two in the morning four months ago, it is absolutely AMAZINF that there’s a whole documentary on it. There was very little information on the internet on coal mines unless it was about the strikes, and every new website had a repeat of old information. Stoked when a friend sent this to me.
@loganbaileysfunwithtrains6062 жыл бұрын
I work at a coal processing plant in West Virginia it’s a mill that crushes coal into dust, it’s about the consistency of baby powder or women’s foundation, it’s used as filler in rubber, tar and other industrial applications. Depending on what brand your tires on your car are it might just have coal in them that was processed at my facility, ironically most big name foreign tire companies have more American made product in them then the national brands
@JoeRogansForehead10 ай бұрын
Do you have the tism
@christobrits11522 жыл бұрын
I live in South Africa, just as much coal mining activities here, I worked at a mine on the Swaziland boarder for two years, my brother's both ten years, my dad the same place 28 years . All of us are artisans, I luckily moved to a papermill in the same area. The mines are treacherous places to work 👌
@FarmerDrew2 жыл бұрын
🚂 On a side note, many of the Pennsylvania coal mines have been repurposed to grow mushrooms that are rich in protein and provide jobs to the local community 🍄
@whyjnot4202 жыл бұрын
The topic of repurposing mines is a fascinating topic in and of itself. Archives, science experiments, tourist attractions, even as you say growing mushrooms. (can't say I have heard of that particular one before, but it makes sense)
@FarmerDrew2 жыл бұрын
@@whyjnot420 I have grown mushrooms and many types of plants indoors. I have grown sweet peppers from seed to fruit in Solo cups under fluorescent lights. The stuff wants to grow if you provide the proper parameters. "Life uhh finds a way" 🤣 😂 I can foresee a future in which humans never leave the mines. All energy is harvested from the Sun to produce electrons that are channeled underground to grow food and purify water and produce hydrogen for utility engine purposes.
@whyjnot4202 жыл бұрын
@@FarmerDrew I have some experience growing mushrooms from spores indoors as well. Though forgive me if I do not go into detail as to what kind >_>. It really is amazing how much mushrooms want to just grow. Once they get a purchase, they don't let go. Though it was a bit of a pain learning how to get everything going without being overrun by penicillium. Not hard, just a pain. So yeah, not surprised in the least that people are using old mines for that. I have just never heard of that particular use before.
@acme_tnt87412 жыл бұрын
Are these anthracite or bituminous coal mines if you know the difference?
@The_sinner_Jim_Whitney2 жыл бұрын
@@whyjnot420 My problems were generally trichoderma or cobweb, occasionally bacterial contamination from an errant dog hair. If you do most of your growing during the season that produces your desired species' fruiting conditions, you can always simply take a contaminated substrate outside to finish. Yep, they want to grow. On damn near anything, for, um, certain species. (~);}
@jamessmith842402 жыл бұрын
My uncle used to work as a miner. He was picking up wooden chocks from a moving conveyor when he had an accident. The chock stuck in the convayor as he picked it up and the forward force of the moving belt pushed the chock upward with my uncle's hand holding the other end. His fingers was crushed between the chock and the rails which were above the belt. He said there was so much force that the wood split and the whole machine jammed up and he was stuck there. He lost one finger and half of another.
@bigpenny35092 жыл бұрын
Brutal
@BigBadLoneWolf2 жыл бұрын
i started my apprenticeship in 1976 in UK coal mines, and one of the first things we learned during our induction training, was ALWAYS pick up from the trailing edge
@jamessmith842402 жыл бұрын
@@BigBadLoneWolf It's funny you should say that. My uncle said the same thing! XD
@jamessurveyor48592 жыл бұрын
For anybody interested, the National Park Service established the Blue Heron Mining exhibit near Stearns, Ky. The original coal processing plant was refurbished and ghost buildings built to show how the old mine camp used to be. Just look it up online and maybe make a visit someday.
@jeffharper75792 жыл бұрын
Many years ago my wife at the time and I took the train to it . I wanted to go back but she didn't so one of my goals is to go back there.
@sherirobinson68672 жыл бұрын
I was at NRG coal plant outside of Rosenberg Texas several times, and the process is still much the same with better technology. It's pretty cool actually!
@ostracizedelite50962 жыл бұрын
I’ve worked in many of the coal wash plants (as we call them) in Queensland, Australia and also still very similar principles to this day. We also call them CHPPs (Coal Handling and Preparation Plants)
@harevalkyrie53732 жыл бұрын
Reminds me, my grandfather told me about his time at a coal plant. The train would come and mechanically be triggered to dump thousands of pounds worth. He remembered once a hitchiker mistakenly was riding along, and they frankly had no way to stop him from being crushed immediately by all the coal let alone the grinders past that
@chuckshartz27222 жыл бұрын
I heard that same story when I worked in the mines
@SanchoPanza-m8m10 ай бұрын
Big mistake. Served him right for riding without paying.
@frankpoperowitzmusic10 ай бұрын
I grew up in Wilkes-Barre, PA (just south of Old Forge). My grandmother's house was located near one of these old breaker buildings in Ashley. We used to sneak over the old slate left over coal mining mountains and into the building. Was abandoned for decades and it was a very scary place for a little kid. This was back in the late 70s. Coal mining was dead by that time in NEPA due to the mines flooding but it was still very much part of the cultural zeitgeist back then. All our grandparents worked in the mines etc. Video takes me back!
@newportpa679 ай бұрын
Likewise, I grew up in Glen Lyon in the 1950’s, mines & breaker were still operational. My aunt lived in Ashley.
@firstielasty1162 Жыл бұрын
I used to explore the St. Nicholas, the Huber, the Locust Summit, and other breakers here in PA. All gone now. Watched some of the disassembly of the Huber. Very sad to see. I'd call them pretty hazardous if you're not paying attention, or just aren't too bright. Sometimes saw kids in them..when parents are that careless, property owners and lawyers get nervous- probably part of the reason they're gone. All that I entered were steel structures, not wood. Although plenty of coal around on all floors to burn. Slowly. I really miss them..tried to bring friends, all were sort of amazed and fascinated, even if it at first sounded like a weird way to spend an afternoon. Something you'd never forget. An amusement park is a contrived waste of time compared to things like this! It seemed more correct to think of it as a large machine, covered to resemble a building from the outside, rather than a building containing machinery.
@FDNY1012022 жыл бұрын
Shout-out to Breaker Brewing Co. In Wilkes-Barre. Great beers, food, and history to be observed about Breaker Boys and coal in the tap room.
@ShaggyRax2 жыл бұрын
Sounds awesome
@newportpa679 ай бұрын
Don’t forget Gibbons beer & Stegmaier Gold Medal Beer, also in Wilkes-Barre. Actually, I graduated from Wilkes College.
@dianewilson55162 жыл бұрын
The way they processed coal on conveyor belts, reminds me of the conveyor belts in the fruit packing houses. My two aunt's, Elsie and Louise worked in the packing houses up in Sacramento while in their teens. I use to work in a industrial laundry in my early 20's, and they had conveyor belts in one laundry I worked at, it was called Hospital Linen Supply, and was on North Broadway here in Fresno, but it got torn down years ago when they put in the 41 freeway.
@coloradostrong2 жыл бұрын
No they didn't, and no you didn't. Stop with these tales. You made sambiches and pizza at Gordos Pizzaria. They fired you for eating the pizza before you served it. Then you copped a job in Peters Pet Shop sorting goldfish and turtles.
@mikek53222 жыл бұрын
Growing up I knew an old man in his 90s who was a breaker boy when he was young.
@darthmaul2162 жыл бұрын
Didn’t have all his fingers I’m guessing
@lincolnmaniac2 жыл бұрын
Got a ton of Anthracite coal today at superior coal processing and they seemed pretty happy.
@B-and-O-Operator-Fairmont2 жыл бұрын
Breakers were unique to anthracite country. In bituminous coal country, "Preparation Plants" are a lot smaller and perform many of the same functions to this day. Bituminous or soft coal is a lot easier to grind up into saleable sizes.
@chuckshartz27222 жыл бұрын
Did you work the Chessie System / B & O yard in Fairmont, WV? My dad used to take me to the roundhouse at Bellview and the beginning of the main yard near the high level bridge back in the early 80s when I was 5 and 6 years old. I used to climb up on what were mostly the Chessie "cats", and ones painted B & O and C & O, as I was ecstatic to actually climb onto a locomotive after only seeing them roar by the house blaring the horn at the crossing up until then Those days of when it was "railroading" sure turned over and died. Now, it's just a shipping company that spies on its employees
@B-and-O-Operator-Fairmont2 жыл бұрын
@@chuckshartz2722 No, that's just a handle I picked up because I was always interested in tower operations and dispatching. My late grandfather did work out of Fairmont as a trainman and conductor from 1943 to 1975.
@GScandale2 жыл бұрын
Awesome video I live maybe a 300 yards from where the Sibley Breaker used to be again great video.
@paulaschaffer24182 жыл бұрын
Hi from Keyser Valley
@GScandale2 жыл бұрын
@@paulaschaffer2418 Hi to you as well Paula.
@TheKrighter2 жыл бұрын
I live in Madrid NM, an old ghost/coal mining town that at one time had a breaker the size of the one featured here. There were both anthracite and bituminous, layered on top of each other. Many stories of mine explosions and accidents, with some of the dead buried in the old graveyard on the other side of town.
@loganbaileysfunwithtrains6062 жыл бұрын
We refer to these as tipples or preparation plants in the Bituminous coal regions in West Virginia and Kentucky. I work at a coal mill, we grind coal into powder in a similar consistency to talc or baby powder, and sell it to some big name tire and rubber companies, it’s absolutely filthy work, but it pays well and like the breaker in the video we suffered a fire that crippled the plant for almost a year. People don’t realize how hot coal can actually burn when it gets set off.
@flubber66672 жыл бұрын
When I was younger we lived by a cold breaker in Wilkes-Barre Pennsylvania what a big noisy building that thing was and like all the other ones they tore it down and funny as hell they put up a old age home there LOL great video brings back a lot of memories👍👍🇺🇲🇺🇲✌️
@chrisdietrich46272 жыл бұрын
I live in North East PA and this is some great history from our area! Thank you!
@sugargooslin64732 жыл бұрын
My dad went inside the coal mine when he was 12years old helping his dad load coal by hand
@claudiamann71112 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for all the wonderful videos you offer. I have learned so much.
@cultbender2 жыл бұрын
I used to paint coal breakers in HS in Schuylkill County. Was still fully operated by Readin Anthracite. Never actually worked on the coal but painting it was more than enough.
@tihspidtherekciltilc54692 жыл бұрын
Is that in Pennsyltucky?
@Whats-It-To-Ya2 жыл бұрын
I live in Coaldale Schuylkill County and I did some work as a project on the number eleven breaker on the Coaldale/Tamaqua border. I remember watching it burn back in the mid 90s
@whyjnot4202 жыл бұрын
I don't know if this is beyond the scope of this channel, but imo an interesting subject is the mining of lapis lazuli over the past 7,000 years. In Afghanistan the Sar-e-Sang deposit has been actively mined for all that time. I find it simply astonishing. (plus lapis lazuli is one of the most gorgeous stones the Earth produces) I know this channel mainly focuses on more modern US history, but maybe something like that would be nice to do. Just a random thought I had relating to mining while watching this video anyways. It's history afterall :D edit: typos
@aspensulphate Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the story. I have some Lapis jewelry, and it is definitely gorgeous!
@OffGridInvestor11 ай бұрын
It's a nice blue rock. Surprised it has been mined for so long
@SergeantExtreme2 жыл бұрын
For those who are wondering why these buildings are uniquely Pennsylvanian, according to geologists, Pennsylvania contains approximately 90% - 96% of the *entire world's* supply of anthracite coal.
@100pyatt Жыл бұрын
Yet there's virtually no coal mining happening in Pennsylvania anymore
@timothyhall861 Жыл бұрын
They are not unique to just Pennsylvania....I lived not 200ft from one growing up here in Southern West Virginia in fact the 18 mile valley I grew up in known as Buffalo Creek must have had at least 5 or 6....The newer ones were made out of steel instead of mostly wood and were known as Coal Tipples
@SergeantExtreme Жыл бұрын
@@100pyatt China will change that when they buy Pennsylvania during the US debt liquidation auction.
@phuturephunk Жыл бұрын
@@100pyatt Pennsylvania will produce around 40 to 50 million tones of anthracite and bitumen this year. Which is about normal. The Bailey mine alone produced around 37 million tonnes of Bitumen last year alone. The issue here is that we need a fraction of people to actually mine the stuff as opposed to a century ago. Don't get it twisted.
@OffGridInvestor11 ай бұрын
NO. Germany has a lot of brown coal. One valley in VICTORIA AUSTRALIA has the majority of the REMAINING worlds known brown coal reserves. I drive past them every second year and it's MILES long
@jeffrichards15372 жыл бұрын
In west Virginia these things were everywhere growing up. Most have fallen down or are covered in vegetation now.
@loganbaileysfunwithtrains6062 жыл бұрын
There’s still a few, a lot of the reason many don’t exist or are in operation is because they’ve centralized all mines to one big facility and the companies buy out the smaller operators and shutter the plants and keep them for tax write offs.
@merc-ni7hy2 жыл бұрын
the image @6;45 in the video ...is of the ST. Nickolas brake between Shenandoah and Mahanoy City ...it was THEE last one to stand ...there is a video of it on youtube of it being blown up
@leodavis75242 жыл бұрын
Great video I grew up in the coal regions, grandfather was a miner …Scranton area.
@harrier272 жыл бұрын
Same here, I can still remember the culm piles and breakers through out the area. Been out of the area for years, I still visit every chance I get. Great area and great people.
@choprjock2 жыл бұрын
@@harrier27 Culm piles are still easy to find.
@davidbudka12982 жыл бұрын
I was thinking these would be unique to Pennsylvania Anthracite country. Anthracite is an extremely hard coal, and needs to be crushed before it could be used in MGP gas generators or power plant boilers. It was the preferred fuel for Manufactured Gas Plants because of its few impurities. The use of Bituminous coal in MGPs would create a lot of waste and toxic byproducts.
@loganbaileysfunwithtrains6062 жыл бұрын
We have similar in WV in the bituminous coal, and I work at a crushing plant, it’s a big ball mill turning coal into powder.
@jerrykinnin79412 жыл бұрын
They turn it into COKE and use it in the steel mills. Cliffs(AK steel) in Middletown OH is rebuilding their Coke plant And there is a private Coke plant behind them on Yankee Rd. The US needs more Steel, Aluminum and other metal mills, Spar mines Coal mines and manufacturing plants in general. Less government. You don't work you don't eat mentality.
@aspensulphate Жыл бұрын
@@jerrykinnin7941 Government is a leech on the productivity of man. However legitimate its charter, it always grows to the point of oppression.
@belles_library2 жыл бұрын
One of the best channels on KZbin.
@___-yy8ud2 жыл бұрын
"Child labour laws are destroying our country" -Ron Swanson
@loganbaileysfunwithtrains6062 жыл бұрын
Children yearn for the mines, that’s why Minecraft is so popular
@jerrykinnin79412 жыл бұрын
@Esther Com rich me go to college Poor men go to work. After the 8th grade Schools teach the same thing unless your in Vocational school.
@jefferypease39202 жыл бұрын
What do you mean by that? No way children should be doing that kind of work
@EGarza-mk2mk2 жыл бұрын
And nobody got the Parks and Rec reference
@jerrykinnin79412 жыл бұрын
Well who else would fit in a 24" seam of coal 1 mile underground. Slinging a pickaxe sideways on their belly.
@vernwallen42462 жыл бұрын
Hats off too all coal miners.🗽👍😊
@robbiematney66612 жыл бұрын
Thank you sir
@chuckshartz27222 жыл бұрын
#eatshitbob
@charlesachurch72652 жыл бұрын
Great presentation thanks xxx
@danecrude2 жыл бұрын
in Alberta Canada there is still one privately owned coal mine that still use this process to mine and sell coal all across western Canada. I use about 2000 lbs to heat my garage.
@justmike29442 жыл бұрын
Hello from Wilkes-Barre , I'm the first generation that didn't have to go down .
@EinfachFredhaftGaming4 ай бұрын
2:30 if you ever feel useless..
@stantaylor3350 Жыл бұрын
Hello from ND. Our daughter and son in law moved to NH in 2011 so every June my wife and I travel through eastern PA. We have taken our time share week in several resorts in that area. We then travel around on day trips seeing tourist things. Took a canal boat ride, took an electric train ride into an old coal mine, went to that old coal mining town where The Molly Maquires movie was filmed in 1969. Bought the DVD at the gift shop and a book about that river that flooded the mine in april of 61. Went to the steam locomotive museum in Scranton also to Jim Thorpe. Every state in our great country has unique history. I went down 100 ft into an old gold mine in Colorado, I understand that there is a deeper tourist iron ore mine in Minnesota that one can go down into, thats on my bucket list. Great lakes bulk carriers are in several towns on our Great Lakes coast line, Cleveland, Ohio, Sault Ste Marie, MI, Duluth, Minnesota, ect. Ive even been on a WW2 submarine in Manitowoc WI. Also the Nautilus in Groton. So get out there and travel and see all these great attractions.
@RebeccaTurner-ny1xx2 ай бұрын
Coal mining is not a pleasant tourist attraction. It was, and is, a highly dangerous, dirty and unhealthy industry in its practices and products.
@evolveausevolveaus2 жыл бұрын
excellent vid, great info very precise !
@vesuviusjohn75582 жыл бұрын
Coal. Coal. Coal. Coal. I think I heard the word coal so often it stopped making sense. Great video.
@dihedraldesign79785 ай бұрын
Fascinating. Would love to see a video on the Huber Breaker! Remember driving by it as a kid. Something about "blue coal." So strange! Always wondered what it looked like inside.
@BruceBoschek9 ай бұрын
When I read "stay tuned for the answer" I leave immediately.
@anb74085 ай бұрын
Exactly! 5 to 20 minutes later, you finally get the answer! Unfortunately, I’ve long since closed out the video and gone elsewhere by then.
@mangamaster034 ай бұрын
I hate this style of video. It's only watchable at 1.5 or 2x speed, and it's still annoying.
@stevie-ray2020 Жыл бұрын
One factor presumably was the inconsistent grades of coal found in Pennsylvania, whereas coal-mines here in Australia have usually produced reasonably good quality coal, especially coking-coal, although Central Victoria yielded abundant quantities of the lower-grade brown coal up until the closing of the large open-cut mine and the power-station it supplied!
@OffGridInvestor11 ай бұрын
Those coal mines in Moe are STILL running and much of our power STILL comes from there. I drive past them every year or two going to my sisters place. ONE power station has closed or i scheduled to.
@michaelfields8793 Жыл бұрын
Good show! Now do one on the Marvine breakers in No. Scranton. PA., please.
@whyjnot4202 жыл бұрын
Unless I get to be the rich guy with a cigar who likes to twirl his mustache as the money comes pouring in, I want nothing whatsoever to do with mining. The people who willingly do that work are made of sterner stuff than I am.
@minuteman41992 жыл бұрын
Everything humans use started out being either grown or mined.
@drmodestoesq2 жыл бұрын
@@minuteman4199 What about fish?
@whyjnot4202 жыл бұрын
@@drmodestoesq Exactly, grown and mined might cover 2/3 of the stuff we use, but still leaves plenty out unless you play silly games with semantics.
@user-ellievator2 жыл бұрын
@@whyjnot420 Fish are mined. You never been to a fish mine?
@whyjnot4202 жыл бұрын
@@user-ellievator Sorry I don't play minecraft or animal crossing. :P
@2FRESH-4U2 жыл бұрын
We take so much for granted in this modern world what a bunch of madness our ancestors lived through
@loganbaileysfunwithtrains6062 жыл бұрын
Some still do, my coworker’s brother is working in 30in coal (about the distance between the bottom of your foot to your mid thigh, so low that when the shuttle brings them in they have to lay on their backs and the shuttle driver has to follow a line of chalk on the ceiling because it’s impossible to look forward, and as for myself I work in a coal mill, crushing coal into powder so everyone can have nice new tires and rubber compounds to keep the world’s industry moving
@Izzzzydorable10 ай бұрын
I live near Brownsville n there are remains of one of these still standing near by lol always wondered what it was used for. Fascinating
@looduselaps2 жыл бұрын
theres a huge cole braker musem in Estonia, i would reccomend people visiting it for more info.
@zephyer-gp1ju Жыл бұрын
Just thinking of a ten year old boy working in all that coal dust. A lot of those kids would take up smoking at an early age and then were sent to work in the coal mines when they were old enough. All that coal dust in their lungs. If an accident didn't get them, I bet a lot never made it to 40. I wonder if they ever learned to read.
@Delicious_J10 ай бұрын
Im from one of the most coal dependent areas of Britain (Lancashire) where we have over 500 years of coal mining history. Instead of coal breakers we employed Pit Brow Lasses (women, usually wives and daughters of the colliers) to sort the coal at the pithead using pickaxes and sorting the pieces by hand. They were a Lancastrian breed, they had them in the Welsh mines too but Lancashire was known in particular for their employ, and they were a curiosity for outsiders at the time, as they were probably some of the only women employed anywhere to wear trousers. This was for the sake of practicality (they worked outside in the cold all year round and the job was needless to say very dirty)They would wear them beneath their dresses along with a jacket and a shawl or headscarf. They terrified the higher classes, needless to say.
@Bertuslouw762 жыл бұрын
It’s sad to realise how little a human life was worth back in the day and how children were forced to work due to hard times.
@Drewsky8402 жыл бұрын
There are still millions on children forced to work all over the world. It has never stopped.
@kevinaguilar75412 жыл бұрын
Lol human life is still undervalued today.
@jerrykinnin79412 жыл бұрын
My wife loves reading little house on the prairie. But she won't give up her AC and cell phone and big city life. I hated high school I was bored. I'm not athletic but I'll work 70 hrs a week driving semi's. Child labor is a good thing. If not abused. I'd call it apprenticeship. And when they graduate by passing their Journeyman's test. They know a trade and trades are better than government Quacks.
@jerrykinnin79412 жыл бұрын
@@Drewsky840 it never will.
@Gyrocage4 ай бұрын
I grew up in an old coal company town in Western Pennsylvania and never heard the term “breakers”. Around here they seem to have been called “tipples”.
@jonb33112 жыл бұрын
The most valuable coal in British mines was large coal. This was used in the steam engines that powered trains, ships and factories. Miners were only paid for the amount of large coal they dug out. Small coal, despite being sold by the mine owners, was not paid for.
@bakedbean3711 ай бұрын
Should have left it down there and let the tight sods bring it up themselves. :-)
@Destiny1994ish5 ай бұрын
I am a caretaker my patient was a coal breaker in 1942 he was 5! often times they didn’t pay him at all! they were basically children slaves …my heart breaks for what he’s bin through and all the other children 🥺💔💔💔
@tkskagen2 жыл бұрын
It's always nice to learn something new, but this was a "borderline" grim one...
@loganbaileysfunwithtrains6062 жыл бұрын
Coal related industry is grim, its hot laborious dirty work but it pays well and its tradition at this point, it’s generational as well you follow your father in as your son will follow you in.
@joespratt41310 ай бұрын
I worked for a coal company that had a mine in KY that used slate pickers. Similar to ‘breakers’, these folks were not underground qualified and often if an employee couldn’t make it to work he’d send his wife to work his shift. This was in the 80’s.
@kerbalspacepolice24682 жыл бұрын
I live next to the Wyoming valley, up until 2008? Iirc, there was a huge breaker along I-81/309, I remember when they knocked it down.
@Logic-1012 жыл бұрын
Lived in eastern pa my whole life and didn’t realize these were unique to pa until my late 20s.
@zachwilson7682 жыл бұрын
I never heard of these extinct factories. They are magnificent in their complexity and size.
@gregkocher53522 жыл бұрын
I worked my last 10 years in a coal prep plant. Essentially it was the newest modern version of this equipment. That said, look at 4.00 minutes. When our crusher was broken we still ran the plant and had to sledgehammer slabs about the same size as the pic shows. 8 hours for hammer work was plenty for me.
@derekblue56812 жыл бұрын
Oh yes, this definitely needs to be an industry we need to bring back to its full potential. Sounds promising
@Desert-edDave Жыл бұрын
As opposed to any other industry which surely couldn't possibly succumb to greed and lacking oversight and regulation. 🙄 Oh, wait, that's happened to literally every industry. Try a little bit of critical thinking, you might just like it.
@OffGridInvestor11 ай бұрын
You go first
@explanoit2 жыл бұрын
Hello do you have more I could read about bodies being left in the machine until the end of the day?
@jonathantan24692 жыл бұрын
I got to see a new Coal Processing & Handling Facility that was recently commissioned in Australia. It does the breaking, crushing, sorting, cleaning, and final transfer of coal to railcars in a siding loop to be sent to the ports or industrial areas. Everything is fully automated. You only need a handful of workers to monitor the process in a room full of computer monitors & CCTV screens. And a team of engineers and technicians to do maintenence & fix any issues. Certainly no breaker boys, although we get heaps of interest from high school grads looking to get an upper 5-figure job scrubbing mancamp toilets or as kitchen-hands. The facility does around 10 to 12 million tons of coal per year... twice the total amount done by this breaker in its ~50 year history.
@mabamabam2 жыл бұрын
Only recently commissioned wash plants I can think of are Byerwen.
@loganbaileysfunwithtrains6062 жыл бұрын
Only 12 tons per year?? How does it manage to even operate or make money?, my plant is no hotshot but I can process 2 tons in an hour and can store 90 tons in my finished product silo
@jonathantan24692 жыл бұрын
@@loganbaileysfunwithtrains606 Whoops. I meant 'million tons'.
@loganbaileysfunwithtrains6062 жыл бұрын
@@jonathantan2469 oh, lol that sounds more reasonable lol
@mabamabam2 жыл бұрын
@@jonathantan2469 so which plant was it?
@brionfranks478 Жыл бұрын
My grandfather worked at the St Nicholas coal breaker in Shenandoah Pennsylvania.
@EileenPCarryEPC2 жыл бұрын
Great video, however, the last two breakers are no longer there.
@vassa19722 жыл бұрын
Interesting video
@jamesraymond1158 Жыл бұрын
Fascinating, especially the photo of the young coal pickers at 4:44. I had no idea that this was such a common practice. How is it done today?
@OffGridInvestor11 ай бұрын
All mechanically
@Dukers230010 ай бұрын
@@OffGridInvestor Nope. Electrically, hydraulically, and pneumatically.
@robbiematney66612 жыл бұрын
I’m a retired prep plant operator it is still brute work too this day.
@daskanguru1408 ай бұрын
It's insane what sacrifices were made to build the modern world
@laernulienlaernulienlaernu89532 жыл бұрын
I'm only just turned 40 but watching this makes me feel really old coz when I was a kid we still had coal fires, coal bunkers, coal men, coal mines! My kids probably don't know what coal is.
@t1e6x122 жыл бұрын
Who is cole?
@texaswunderkind Жыл бұрын
@@t1e6x12 My nephew. He just got married.
@t1e6x12 Жыл бұрын
@@texaswunderkind Please send him my heartfelt congratulations.
@Quonzer2 жыл бұрын
Child labor laws. They're kind of a big deal and super necessary.
@walter97242 жыл бұрын
My great grandfather was a child coal breaker in Cornwall in england and my grandfather worked in a coal mine here in Australia and my dad worked in one also (same mine as his father) but he was a teenager that had to work on mining machines but he was only there for a year before moving to another state
@OffGridInvestor11 ай бұрын
My great great great grandfather OWNED a coal mine in wales. One of his sons, that I'm a direct descendant of was CEO of a BIG gold mine in Bendigo that dug up about $350 million worth of gold. It's caving in these days and the government is trying to concrete those parts over. Needless to say, he was a powerful figure who once tried to cover up a family scandal by bribing cops and 2 newspapers and the 3rd newspaper wouldn't take the bribe and blew the lid on him.
@Dukers230010 ай бұрын
@@OffGridInvestor Well aren’t you a spicy little one-upper LMAO
@DiMaggio822 жыл бұрын
You should do one on the one in Ashley PA called blue coal were they painted it blue
@johnchambers85282 жыл бұрын
One of the reasons it was called blue coal is if you had a good coal fire going it would produce a nice blue flame coming off the coal pile. So that company used that name to signify that they sold high quality coal that produced that nice blue flame. The color was just a marketing angle they used to differ their good quality coal from other mines.
@danielbirch886810 ай бұрын
Got similar things all over the UK
@zenjon789210 ай бұрын
These men helped build America; don't forget that.
@christrotter30522 жыл бұрын
Pretty amazing stuff here
@MostlyPennyCat5 ай бұрын
The toxic mess that was the run off from the initial cleaning process would have been awful. And probably just drained into a river.
@philpots482 жыл бұрын
My g-father worked in the office of a anthracite coal company, he was in a film showing the coal being processed in the 1930s, explaining some of the sizes as Barley, Rice, Buckwheat, Pea and Egg, the trade mark was Blue Coal and they sprayed the coal in the hopper cars with blue dye as the hopper car was pulled out of the colliery.
@Desert-edDave Жыл бұрын
The words "Pennsylvania" and "Coal" in the same sentence needs to be punctuated with the word "Greed" and "Irresponsible" - they pretty much cornered the market on it.
@redmage7772 жыл бұрын
I think I saw one while passing though Youngtown Ohio... I know its close but still technically not Pennsylvania.
@loganbaileysfunwithtrains6062 жыл бұрын
Could it have been a barge loader?
@thedooktroops56082 жыл бұрын
I thought you were gonna say “5,260,855 tons of coal *per day* “ for a second 👀😂🫠.. Anyways, nothing quite like beating off a bunch of coal with likely a pickaxe, surrounded by coal dust with sparks flying at your feet. *Good thing coal is **_INflammable_** I guess!!!* *Edit before being “corrected” and possible berated lol:* _Yes, I do know that coal is not actually inflammable, but rather flammable due to its it’s ignition properties. Just randomly thought about an old ass episode of the Simpsons with a similar joke lol_
@jamiesuejeffery10 ай бұрын
Last year, I read a historical novel, "Coal River" by Ellen Marie Wiseman. It tells a painful tail of a Pennsylvania company town whose primary industry is coal mining and the plight of not only the woman protagonist, but the breaker boys. It is worth the read if you found this video interesting.
@hughmungusbungusfungus461810 ай бұрын
The thing that most people don't understand is that, for all those families who sent their children off to work, it was either do so or starve. I think it would be foolish to judge the 19th century by today's standards.
@tr1ppyh1ppy2 жыл бұрын
they look so cool i wish it were still there
@BryanTorok11 ай бұрын
So, how is coal processes and sorted now? While coal is used less in the USA, coal is still used in many countries and many of the USA mines, including some in PA and WV are exporting coal to other places where the people are happy to get it.
@GoodGuyGlennPresents2 жыл бұрын
I love your videos. You are a Jersey guy right?
@savage788210 ай бұрын
Used to work in one of these back in the 60s in Teufort county Arizona. As if the job itself wasnt dangerous enough, We used to get harassed by these groups of bumbling idiots shooting eachother for about 15 years straight.
@robertsmith18602 жыл бұрын
The processed coal was used by Utilities in their Manufactured Gas Plants. This continued the illnesses and pollution created by mining and processing of coal.
@jeffmiller31502 жыл бұрын
Which keep the lights on, cook meals and keep people warm.
@indyrock81482 жыл бұрын
@@jeffmiller3150 which is preferable to the smoke from wood fired in the urban environment.
@loganbaileysfunwithtrains6062 жыл бұрын
It’s still a lot less of an impact to the environment than say Three Mile Island would’ve been had the lid blown off her
@indyrock81482 жыл бұрын
@@loganbaileysfunwithtrains606 weirdly ewetube censured your comment. Algorithm is losing it.
@austinglennkimmel87192 жыл бұрын
There is no coal breakers from the 1800's left standing in in PA the last one standing was tore down in March of 2018
@drazzle6267 Жыл бұрын
This was my second work place ( back in the day).
@blackrocks84132 жыл бұрын
Pretty much half of my family worked in the mines, some in the breakers or around them. And of all of them and their friends and neighbors as well.... I never heard anyone says that the breakers or the mine or the strippings were 'horrific'. And most of them really like their jobs and went on to raise families and were quite happy.
@kevinaguilar75412 жыл бұрын
Your family might be the exception. In any case you should never come to the conclusion by just listening a very small sample of information.
@loganbaileysfunwithtrains6062 жыл бұрын
Same, only people that claim the work as horrific never did it, I’m sure people today look at where I work and think it’s horrific because it’s dirty, hot work because you get covered in coal dust and walk around in a 100F building
@jerrykinnin79412 жыл бұрын
Basically Education(book learned) is reading everyone's propaganda and taking it as FACT. That's why learning a trade is an honest job. Because 2+2 =4 Yellow and Blue make Green. If you avg 60 mph you can drive 600 miles in 10 hrs With an 11 hr drive time on a 14 hr shift clock. 2 drivers in one truck you can run Fresno to Boston in under 72 hrs.
@dcross63602 жыл бұрын
To make up for the past misdeeds of employing child labour, all children today should receive compensation
@docvolt52142 жыл бұрын
That doesn't make an ounce of sense
@dcross63602 жыл бұрын
@@docvolt5214 neither do other compensation efforts
@drmodestoesq2 жыл бұрын
Shouldn't those children who are now adults receive the compensation? Why would be give the compensation to a bunch of spoiled, fat video game playing kids of today?
@flarvin89452 жыл бұрын
@@dcross6360 what about the lost wealth do to discriminatory practices like redlining? Which directly effected individuals and their children alive today.
@dcross63602 жыл бұрын
@@flarvin8945 Where is the line that we draw on the crappy things our ancestors did to others in our extended human family? The point is, the ghastly things done in the past have made the present better because we learned and evolved. My point was tongue in cheek referring to those pushing for slavery reparations.
@johnpettipas37632 жыл бұрын
Very INTERESTING
@Valtrach2 жыл бұрын
Interesting and top quality. Thank you for your time and work.
@jocelynbey5944 Жыл бұрын
Yet another "historical" look at an industry that fails to appreciate history. My grandparents (circa 1885) had (a) no electricity, (b) no running water, (c) a dirt floor (d) not enough to eat. In a coal mining town you had all of these - your life was infinitely better, but yes the work was hard, especially compared to todays "work from home" culture. If you didn't wish to work, you were always free to go back to subsistence farming, and live without electricity, running water, a floor and enough to eat.
@sferg95822 жыл бұрын
Imagine how hard-up you'd have to be to take a job like that?
@TheDalhuck2 жыл бұрын
A lot of the time, jobs like that were the only jobs around.
@Scottocaster66682 жыл бұрын
It's more like how poor one is, and probably the lack of jobs at that time. Especially if you needed your kids to do that kind of work along side of you. They had to do it, or starve. Idk, just a thought.
@cdd42482 жыл бұрын
Hunger is a great motivator! I hate to be dramatic but our grandfathers (great grandfathers) built America out of blood sweat and tears.
@blackrocks84132 жыл бұрын
they weren't pantywaists like some today....
@loganbaileysfunwithtrains6062 жыл бұрын
A lot of immigrants migrated to the US just to work in the mines so it had to have been better than anything else available in Europe