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

In May 1871, fire swept Pittston’s Knight Shaft. Eleven-year-old mule driver Martin Crahan turned back from safety to warn miners, was refused behind their barricade, and chose to die beside his teams. Nineteen others perished. A poem immortalized his courage in the face of a disaster similar to one that ravaged Avondale, PA two years earlier. Read the full story.

Massive political rally in Pittston, PA for Abraham Lincoln | November 1864

1864 presidential election street violence Pittston PA Luzerne County Jake Wynn Public Historian Civil War

On the eve of the 1864 election, thousands jammed Pittston, PA for a Union rally - bands, parades, a cannon, and a “perfect jam” on the streets. Cheers for Lincoln, a speaker's biting wit, and street violence with pistols and brick-bats flying. Read the full story.

Miner smiles as he receives his pay check during World War II | 1942

Mineworker smiles as he receives his paycheck at an anthracite mine in West Pittston, Pennsylvania during World War II

A 1942 photo captures a coal miner’s joy as he collects his paycheck in West Pittston, PA during World War II. Learn how miners balanced booming wartime demand with labor strikes, Federal seizure of mines, and a landmark UMWA settlement in 1943. Read the full story.