Three mineworkers were killed in their makeshift coal mine when the roof caved in during a 1934 mine accident.
“Bootleg” mine disaster in Wiconisco Township, Pennsylvania killed three miners | 1934
Three mineworkers were killed in their makeshift coal mine when the roof caved in during a 1934 mine accident.
These 1938 images show dancers on the floor at Shenandoah's Maher's Dance Hall during the Great Depression.
Explore 1938 photographs of a coal miners' beer party in Shenandoah, Pennsylvania, captured by photographer Sheldon Dick. Delve into the social life of miners like Joe Gladski, a Maple Hill Colliery worker and United Mine Workers leader, highlighting the Coal Region's culture during the Great Depression. Read the full story.
These 1938 photographs by Sheldon Dick show a landscape destroyed by mining and the efforts of local residents to survive the Great Depression.
In Tracy Campbell's 2020 book, the author uses the examples from the anthracite coal fields to show how our national myths about World War II often miss the mark.
This photograph of Mount Carmel, PA in reveals the physical and economic gloom that hung over the anthracite coal fields during the 1930s.
Sheldon Dick photographed damaged homes in Gilberton, Schuylkill County in 1938.
In November 1938, the Pittston Gazette published an editorial calling for a reconsideration of America's strict immigration policies.
The Lykens Standard voiced support for President Herbert Hoover and called the campaign against him illegitimate.
Photographer Sheldon Dick made a visit to the Coal Region in 1938 to document scenes of life and work in the mining towns of northern Schuylkill County. On an evening during his visit, Dick made a swing by a bar room in Gilberton, Pennsylvania and snapped three photographs that bring the setting to life. The … Continue reading Scenes in a Coal Region bar room – 1938