Poem immortalized a child mineworker lost in a disaster in 1871 | Coal Region

“Lurid, flashed the awful warning / Down the depths of Pittston’s gloom…”

In May 1871, tragedy struck the Knight Shaft near West Pittston, Pennsylvania, when fire swept through the colliery’s breaker, trapping miners underground as deadly gas filled the mine complex.

Among the victims was 11-year-old mule driver Martin Crahan, whose extraordinary courage became local legend in the Pennsylvania Coal Region. As the fire raged on May 27, Martin turned back from his escape to safety to warn the men still in the mine.

They refused to let him behind their barricade – built in desperation against the suffocating fumes. Denied shelter, Martin made his way to the underground stables, choosing to die beside the mules he worked with every day.

When rescuers finally reached him, they found the boy’s body there – his bravery immortalized in a poem written later that year. Nineteen other miners perished with him in what newspapers called a haunting echo of the Avondale mine disaster of 1869.

The poem, written by W.A. Peters for the Pittston Gazette, was shared in George Korson’s 1938 book about mining folklore in the Coal Region.


The Hero of West Pittston Mine

Lurid, flashed the awful warning

Down the depths of Pittston’s gloom;

Dirgeful, were the hissing fire-tongues

Ringing down the miners’ doom.

Crackling flames o’erhead, consuming

Fast, the avenue of hope,

As the noble boy stood yielding,

With his hand upon the rope.

Yielding to the noblest impulse

That e’er moved a boyish soul;

Yielding up himself forever

For those dust-grimed men of coal.

Yielding—every yielding—while

Up, in soul devotion,

Thought of self in love; that firm

Law of nature—his comrade went above.

Busy thoughts of home were crowding

O’er him in that inch of time,

But he went to his “Father’s business”

Like a hero, grand, sublime.

Went, in all his brave devotion,

Went, through simple love to tell

What we deem the noblest duty—

Man to man—and there he fell.

O ye angels of record in heaven!

O ye pens of mortality, write

Him a place on the roll of martyrs,

And clothe him in spotless white.

Raise, from the wreck of the body;

Raise, from the burning mine,

His heroic young spirit to heaven—

O Christ, for he is Thine!


Read more about mining disasters in Pennsylvania’s Coal Region

The Twin Shaft Mine Disaster | June 28, 1896

Avondale – The Coal Region’s deadliest mining disaster

“In the mines of Avondale” – A Coal Region ballad

The Stockton Cave-in Disaster | December 18, 1869


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