Global Information Lookup Global Information

Harwick Mine disaster information


The Harwick Mine disaster was a mining accident on January 25, 1904 in Cheswick, Pennsylvania, some sixteen mi (26 km) north of Pittsburgh in the western part of the state. The blast killed an estimated 179 miners and 2 aid workers.[1][2] The disaster ranks among the ten worst coal mining disasters in American history.[3] One community especially impacted was the Hungarian community in Homestead, Pennsylvania. Fifty-eight of the members of the First Hungarian Reformed Church of Homestead—a full third of the congregation—died in the explosion.[4]

Coal was mined by compressed-air machine, blasted down with dynamite. Ice accumulation in the air shaft restricted ventilation which caused a buildup of methane gas. At 8:15 am, workers blasted down dynamite which ignited the methane. Coal dust suspended in the air assisted the explosion in traveling throughout every region of the mine. In addition to interior devastation, the force was so powerful that it wrecked the exterior of the shaft.[5]

Of 175 mine workers underground at the time, the single survivor was the severely burned 16-year-old Adolph Gunia.[6] Other casualties included Daniel A. Lyle and the mine engineer Selwyn M. Taylor, who both gave their lives in rescue attempts after responding to the scene.[7] Greatly touched by Taylor's and Lyle's sacrifice, Andrew Carnegie had medals privately minted for their families, and within two months had established a $5 million Carnegie Hero Fund as a result.[1]

The mine was owned by the Allegheny Coal Company.[8]

  1. ^ a b "History / Carnegie Hero Fund Commission". History of Carnegie Hero Fund Commission. Carnegie Foundation. Archived from the original on 2014-05-24. Retrieved 2014-12-24.
  2. ^ "Cheswick Mine Disaster Growing" (PDF). The Homestead News-Messenger. Homestead & Mifflin Township Historical Society. 1904-01-26. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-06-19. Retrieved 2014-12-24.
  3. ^ "CDC - Mining - Coal Mining Disasters: 1839 to Present - NIOSH". www.cdc.gov. Archived from the original on 2013-01-15.
  4. ^ Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, 9/12/2004
  5. ^ Roderick, James E. (1905). "The Harwick Explosion". Report of the Department of Mines of Pennsylvania Part II Bituminous (PDF). Harrisburg Publishing Co., State Printers.
  6. ^ Transactions of the American Society of Civil Engineers, Volume 52 (1904), by American Society of Civil Engineers, page 552
  7. ^ Pennsylvania Disasters: True Stories of Tragedy and Survival, by Karen Ivory, pages 47-48
  8. ^ Washlaski, Raymond A.; Washlaski, Ryan P. "Harwick Mine". Archived from the original on 2013-06-10. Retrieved 2014-12-24.

and 9 Related for: Harwick Mine disaster information

Request time (Page generated in 0.8431 seconds.)

Harwick Mine disaster

Last Update:

The Harwick Mine disaster was a mining accident on January 25, 1904 in Cheswick, Pennsylvania, some sixteen mi (26 km) north of Pittsburgh in the western...

Word Count : 405

Mining accident

Last Update:

Fraterville Mine disaster in Fraterville, Tennessee January 25, 1904: 179 miners and two aid workers were killed in the Harwick mine disaster, Harwick, Pennsylvania...

Word Count : 10004

List of disasters in the United States by death toll

Last Update:

This list of United States disasters by death toll includes disasters that occurred either in the United States, at diplomatic missions of the United States...

Word Count : 1823

Marianna Coal Mine disaster

Last Update:

"Remember when: Harwick mine explosion killed 179 miners and 2 rescuers". Trib Live. "Naomi Mine Victims.; Thirty-four Dead in Pennsylvania Disaster -- 28 Found...

Word Count : 224

Carnegie Hero Fund

Last Update:

attempts following the Harwick Mine disaster in Harwick, Pennsylvania, just outside Pittsburgh, on January 25, 1904. The disaster claimed 181, including...

Word Count : 892

Federal Mines Safety Act of 1910

Last Update:

Prevention Of Mine Explosions: Report and Recommendations - Bulletin 369" (PDF). USGS.gov. U.S. Government Printing Office. "All Mining Disasters: 1839 to...

Word Count : 629

April 1904

Last Update:

Carnegie, inspired by the self-sacrifice of rescuers after the Harwick Mine disaster in January, established the Carnegie Hero Fund. At Huffman Prairie...

Word Count : 15971

January 1904

Last Update:

arrived at the Harwick Mine on January 26 in response to a call for rescue workers, spent that afternoon and most of the night working in the mine. He returned...

Word Count : 15700

Deaths in February 2020

Last Update:

cancer. Naeemul Haque, 70, Pakistani political advisor, blood cancer. Amie Harwick, 38, American therapist, homicide. Rudy Hayes, 85, American football player...

Word Count : 14857

PDF Search Engine © AllGlobal.net