In 1902, Rev. John McDowell set out to describe what life was really like for the boys of Pennsylvania’s Coal Region. He knew it firsthand. His story followed a child’s journey from the breaker—where nine-year-olds sat in clouds of dust picking slate from coal—to the mines below, where men faced danger every day for barely a dollar a shift. It’s a stark look at the world that shaped generations of families in the anthracite fields—where childhood ended early, and few miners lived to grow old. Read the full story.
“These boys are in constant danger” – A description of the child laborers of the Coal Region | 1902