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#mining

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Today in Labor History August 21, 1920: Ongoing violence by coal operators and their paid goons in the southern coalfields of West Virginia led to a three-hour gun battle between striking miners and guards that left six dead. 500 Federal troops were sent in not only to quell the fighting, but to ensure that scabs were able to get to and from the mines. A General Strike was threatened if the troops did not cease their strikebreaking activities. This was just 3 months after the Matewan Massacre, in which the miners drove out the seemingly invincible Baldwin-Felts private police force, with the help of their ally, Sheriff Sid Hatfield. 1 year later, Sheriff Hatfield was gunned down on the steps of the courthouse by surviving members of the Baldwin-Felts Agency. News spread and miners began arming themselves, leading to the Battle of Blair Mountain, the largest armed insurrection since the Civil War and the largest labor uprising in U.S. history. Over 100 people were killed in the 5-day battle, including 3 army soldiers and up to 20 Baldwin-Felts detectives. Nearly 1,000 people were arrested. 1 million rounds were fired. And the government dropped bombs from aircraft on the miners, only the second time in history that the government bombed its own citizens (the first being the pogrom against African American residents of Tulsa, during the so-called Tulsa Riots).

The Battle of Blair Mountain is depicted in Storming Heaven (Denise Giardina, 1987), Blair Mountain (Jonathan Lynn, 2006), and Carla Rising (Topper Sherwood, 2015). And the Matewan Massacre is brilliantly portrayed in John Sayles’s film, “Matewan.”

Read my history of the Battle of Blair Mountain here: michaeldunnauthor.com/2024/04/

#workingclass #LaborHistory #mining #strike #union #westvirginia #matewan #BattleOfBlairMountain #uprising #civilwar #GeneralStrike #tulsa #massacre #racism #books #fiction #film #writer #author #novel @bookstadon

Urban mining eases the critical minerals crunch

Let’s talk about urban mining. I don’t mean troops of bohemians engaged in city-fied spelunking as they trek through sewers and other underground spaces. No, I’m talking about real panhandlin…
#Japan #JP #JapanNews #China #EnvironmentMinistry #InternationalEnergyAgency #Metals #minerals #mining #NationalInstituteforMaterialsScience #news #rare-earth #recycling #waste
alojapan.com/1351009/urban-min

alojapan.com/1351009/urban-min Urban mining eases the critical minerals crunch  #China #EnvironmentMinistry #InternationalEnergyAgency #Japan #JapanNews #Metals #minerals #mining #NationalInstituteForMaterialsScience #news #RareEarth #recycling #waste Let’s talk about urban mining. I don’t mean troops of bohemians engaged in city-fied spelunking as they trek through sewers and other underground spaces. No, I’m talking about real panhandling — the extraction of valuable mat

Continued thread

If you're from around here, you may know that "we" had to construct "the tallest bridge in Minnesota" up north when mining expansion affected the old highway route.

'Back in 1960, Minnesota made a deal with U.S. Steel. The state signed a private easement agreement with the company to expand Highway 53 to four lanes between Eveleth and Virginia.

'But U.S. Steel kept the mineral rights to the iron ore underneath the highway.

'Per the agreement, if the ore was needed prior to 1987, U.S. Steel would move the highway at its cost. After 1987, it was the state's responsibility.'
mprnews.org/story/2017/09/15/n

MPR News · 'Engineering marvel': New bridge brings excitement to the Iron RangeBy Dan Kraker