A photograph of gas lines in Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania | 1970s

In June 1979, cars lined up for blocks at gas stations near Pottsville, PA as fuel shortages spread across the nation. Drivers waited for their assigned day under the odd-even rationing system. This photograph captures the frustration and uncertainty of the 1970s energy crisis. Read the Full Story.

A year after the invasion | How a Pennsylvania newspaper reflected on the Iraq War in 2004

“So why did we invade Iraq?” That blunt question appeared in a Pottsville, PA newspaper editorial one year after the invasion in 2004. Written as the war’s first justifications were already unraveling, it captured the uncertainty many Americans were beginning to feel. Two decades later, that war's impacts still resonate as a new conflict has begun. Read the Full Story.

Peter W. Sheafer | Mining surveyor and engineer in Pennsylvania’s Coal Region

From Bear Gap to the Mahanoy Valley, Peter W. Sheafer's mining surveys shaped where mines were sunk and towns were built. Read the Full Story.

From Northern Ireland to Pennsylvania’s Coal Region | 1845

In December 1845, as famine loomed in Ireland, a Pottsville newspaper advertised ship passages from Londonderry to Philadelphia. It’s a small notice that reveals how Irish migration began to reshape the Coal Region - and how welcome later turned to backlash. This story traces that turning point. Read the full story.

A sailor from Pottsville, Pennsylvania describes the racism he faced in the US Navy during World War II

In 1943, Charles H. King left Pottsville to fight for democracy. Instead, he found segregation, humiliation, and hard truths about race in the U.S. Navy. His memoir captures the moment he realized who he was in a divided America, and why that awakening shaped his life. Read the full story.

“A heroic soldier” – A moving obituary for Major Joseph Anthony | 1885

Major Joseph Anthony 96th Pennsylvania Civil War Williamstown PA Coal Region

Major Joseph Anthony, an Irish immigrant and revered Civil War veteran, survived grievous wounds at Chancellorsville only to succumb to their effects in 1885. After the war, he helped shape anthracite mining in Williamstown, Pennsylvania, earning lasting admiration for his bravery and leadership. Read the full story and a moving obituary for this Civil War veteran.

A view of Pottsville from Coal Street | 19th century

Taken in the late 1860s or early 1870s, this rare photograph looks across Pottsville at a city in transition—before its skyline fully took shape. From Coal Street, familiar landmarks reveal how power, industry, and ambition shaped the town we know today. Read the full story.

Economic conditions in the Coal Region in the 1920s and 1930s provide warning for today | Article

In the late 1920s, coal companies promised modernization. Instead, centralized breakers closed collieries and hollowed out towns like Mahanoy City and Shamokin. Jobs vanished and communities unraveled. In my latest article, I trace that collapse and ask what it warns us about warehouses, automation, and data centers today. Read the Full Story.

An anti-aircraft gunner from Schuylkill County writes home | February 1945

In February 1945, a Schuylkill County anti-aircraft gunner wrote home from France, describing daily life near the front as the war neared its end. His letter offers a view of war-time service far from home. Read the full story.

An Irish immigrant’s letter from Pottsville, Pennsylvania | 1832

Pottsville, PA in 1833 from Library of Congress

In February 1832, an Irish newcomer named Patt Gildea sat down in Pottsville, Pennsylvania and tried to explain this strange new country to his brother back in County Mayo. Fresh from Quebec, Montreal, New York, and finally the booming Coal Region, he laid out wages, work, land prices, and daily life in blunt, practical detail — good prospects for single young men, hard choices for families. His letter, later published in an Irish newspaper, offers one of the earliest on-the-ground views of Pottsville’s “Coal Rush” from the eyes of an immigrant still figuring out if he’d made the right move. Read the full story.