Final Thoughts

WEST VIRGINIANS ARE ACCUSTOMED TO COPING WITH THE HARD KNOCKS LIFE DEALS THEM. THEIR ADVERSITY BUILDS STRENGTH AND CHARACTER, AND IT NO DOUBT IS THE CORNERSTONE OF THEIR LIVES.

This early aerial shot of the Dehue tipple was taken by civil engineer, Carl Paller who worked for Youngstown Sheet & Tube Company from 1927 to 1944. However, Dehue got its start in 1916 when Rum Creek Collieries & By-Products sank a shaft and built surface buildings in the hollow along Rum Creek. Dehue was named after D.E. Hewitt who operated a large band mill in the vicinity. I am sure some of the timber used to build the houses came from the bare mountain behind the houses in this picture. It was typical for mining towns to build wood-frame houses for miners to rent around or near the tipple where they worked. In 1920 the coal lease and mining plant at Dehue were purchased by the Sheet and Tube Company of America that was headquartered in Chicago. In 1923 the mine became part of the Youngstown Sheet and Tube when they bought Steel and Tube.

The largest building in this photo was a boarding house for miners which was called the Club House. Fanny Perry-Bailey started taking in boarders to make ends meet when she became a young widow. Her husband, Clarence was injured in a roof-fall in the Dehue Mine. He died the next day on January 18, 1934 at age 43 leaving her with seven young children to raise. Her first boarder was Taylor Adams followed by Earl Hatton and (my dad) Emmett Riggs. She later moved into the Club House, and it became known as “Bailey Boarding House”.

(e-mail from Rex Bowman) – Richmond Times – Dispatch – Friday, October 27, 2000 – Ma’am: Hello, my name is Rex Bowman, I’m a reporter for the Richmond Times-Dispatch in Virginia. Could you PLEASE GIVE ME A CALL as soon as possible? I am working on a story touching on coal mine disasters and I believe you might be the only person who can help me. Thanks, Rex

I returned Mr. Bowman’s call, and he wrote this story which was published in the Richmond Times-Dispatch.

TRAPPED MINERS REACH OUT TO LOVED ONES REX BOWMAN TIMES – DISPATCH STAFF WRITER

Trapped in darkness, struggling for air but resigned to death -what do you write to your loved ones at such a moment?

Dying under those grim circumstances, some have written tender, assuring words to their mothers, vowing to see them again in Heaven. Some have scribbled terse notes declaring how and where they should be buried. Others have penned short but intense love letters to their wives.

Lt. Dmitry Kolesnikov, a Russian sailor trapped in the destroyed nuclear submarine Kursk, was among those whose final thoughts turned to his wife, writing a note to her as he took his last breaths following the Aug. 12 disaster, Russian naval officials disclosed Thursday.

Kolesnikov’s letter, not all of which has been made public, is a rarity in the annals of maritime disaster, because most sinkings occur too rapidly to give sailors time to compose letters.

But a world away from the Barents Sea where Kolesnikov and 117 others died, in the coalfields of Appalachia, there have been men who knew what the young Russian sailor felt in his final moments. Hundreds of US. miners have died in mine collapses and explosions through the years, and a few were able to write notes as they huddled in destroyed mines, waiting to run out of air.

Take, for instance, J.L.. Powell, a Tennessee miner who died in the Fraterville Mine disaster of 1902. Trapped with a few other miners, he wrote to his wife: “Dear Ellen, I will have to leave you in bad condition. But dear wife, put your trust in the Lord to help you raise my little children. Ellen, take care of my litle darling Lillie. Ellen, little Elbert [also in the mine] said he believed in the Lord. He said he was saved if we never see the outside again. He would meet his mother in heaven if he never lived to git out. We are not hurt bad, only perishing for air. There is but few of us here. I don’t know where the other miners are at. Elbert said for you all to meet us in heaven, All the children meet us both in heaven.”

Dolores Riggs Davis, an Ohio historian who specializes in mining disasters, said the need to write a farewell note is an impulse probably shared by anyone trapped and dying, whether in a coal mine or a submarine.

“I’ve seen my share of these letters,” she said. “People desperately want to reach out to a loved one. They’ll tear scraps from paper bags to write a note. They want people to know what they were feeling when they died.

“And though it might be grievous to read at first, I think it would give loved ones comfort down through the years.”

Davis has a copy of a letter written on March 8, 1960, by trapped miner Josh Chafin Jr. to his wife. The letter, found in Chafin’s hand when crews pulled his body from the Holden Mine in West Virginia, reads: “Mable, I love you more than you will ever know. Take care of the kids and raise them to serve the Lord.”

Another one, found on E.W.. Hopps in a McDowell County, W.Va., mine in January 1940, reads: “If we don’t make it out, darling wife, please take my body down home and have Rev. Spears to preach my funeral.”

Hopps’ widow took her husband’s body to his boyhood home in Jackson, Ohio, where the Rev Spears preached a sermon over his grave, Davis said.

Harry Beech, trapped with Powell in the Fraterville mine, wrote this to his wife: “Alice, do the best you can. I am going to rest. Goodbye Alice. Elbert said the lord had saved him. Do the best you can with the children. We are all perishing for air to support us. But it is getting so bad without any air.

“Charlie said for you to wear his shoes and clothing. It is now 1-1/2 o’clock. Marvell Harmon’s watch is now in Andy Wood’s hands. …Raise the children the best way you can. Oh how I would love to be with you. Goodbye to all of you. Bury me an Elbert in the same grave. Tell little Ellen goodbye. Goodbye Ellen. Goodbye Horace. We are together. It is now 25 minutes after 2 o’clock. A few of us are alive yet, Jacob and Elbert.OH GOD FOR ONE MORE BREATH.”

Carl Fritts, of Snellville, GA., said the letters from Powell and Beech gave him goosebumps when he found handwritten copies of them in his grandmother’s photo album in her Tennessee home years ago.

“I thought they were tremendously touching,” Fritts said. “They really make you think what it must be like, when you’re trapped and you have to think about what you have to say.”

Near Beech and Powell in the Fraterville mine, according to the 1907 book “History of the Coal Miners,” dying miner Jim Herman wrote: “Dear darling Mother, Brother and Sister, I have gone to heaven. I want you all to meet me in heaven. O dear friends, don’t grieve for me for I am in sight of heaven. O dear Sarah, stay at Fathers or your Fathers. Pay all I owe if possible. Bury me at Pleasant Hill if it suits you. If not bury me anywhere it suits you all. Bury me in black. This is about 1-1/2 o’clock. So good bye dear darling father.”

Following the 1926 explosion in West Virginia’s Fairmont Mine, where 24 miners died instantly and another 70 were entombed, Scottish immigrant and miner H. Russell Erskine survived long enough to write three notes, said local researcher Mike Pennington.

The first note said: “At peace with God. -H. Russell.” The second one read: “Dear Mary: Tell Father I was saved. -H. Russell.” And the third and final one said: “We do not feel any pain. Try to stay in the U.S.A. Love to the kids.”

Bill Derenge, trapped and dying after the Layland Mine exploded in Fayette County, WV, in 1915, scribbled a note intended for all his friends. A copy of the letter kept at the Craft Memorial Library’s Eastern Regional Coal Archives in Bluefield, W .Va., reads in part:

“We are all still alive but not knowing [how] long God will spare me so dear friends should it be Gods will that I must die you will find on me a Gold watch and a purse with $10 and 90 cts and the rest of my belongings is at G John Souls house such as trunk and clothes So please notify my father and restore everything safely to him So God being my helper I will close.”

Powell Harmon, another victim of the Fraterville mine disaster, wrote simply: “Dear Wife and Children -My time has come. I trust in Jesus. He will save. It is now ten minutes to 10 o’clock, Monday morning, and we are almost smothered. May God bless you and the children, and may we all meet in Heaven. Good-bye till we meet to part no more.”

Raymond R. Simmons April 18. 1907 – December 24, 1948

Raymond Simmons was laid to rest at the Memorial Park Cemetery at McConnell. It was promised by owners of the cemetery that a percentage of money paid for the grave plots was to be set aside to forever provide perpetual care of the graves and grounds. The cemetery became so neglected that many people moved their loves-ones to other cemeteries. There was a Black and a White cemetery at Dehue, but both have been lost forever. The White Cemetery was located on the mountainside up Magazine Hollow. I remember picking pawpaws around the headstones when I was in grade school. When I put together the Dehue History Book in 1994 only one headstone remained, and it had slipped off the hill onto the road. Time had eroded the inscription making it difficult to read.

MARIA BERTALAN
b. 1886
d. April 1, 1929
BEKE HAMVAIRA

Mrs. Arthelia Mills said she sat on her front porch and watched helplessly as the Black Cemetery vanished before her eyes. Men with heavy equipment were cutting timber just above the small cemetery. Suddenly dirt and stone came crashing down the mountainside leveling all the headstones and graves with tons of debris. There are no known records of either cemetery. Sadly many other grave sites of men who lived and died in the bowels of the earth have suffered the same fate.

10 thoughts on “Final Thoughts”

  1. my grandfather was killed in a mine by falling slate in 1938. he was a supervisor.
    his family lived in Lorado from around 1920 to 1940. his name was walter lebetz…

  2. Its a shame that the two cemeteries in this story
    disappeared.

    The following link will take you to a story about a
    Crystal Block family who won a judgement from
    General Pipeline Construction & Equitable Production.
    Both companies destroyed 14 family graves.

    Does anyone know the history of the Crystal Block Coal
    & Coke Company & have any photos of Crystal Block
    or the coal mine to share with this website?

    1. Bob,

      I’ve looked at a 1953 map (updated in 1955) of a Crystal Block Coal & Coke Mine #4 in the Upper Cedar Grove seam which was opened about ¾ mile up on the right side of Conley Branch of Island Creek. A tipple was shown near the mouth of Conley Branch.
      The mine was fairly large and mined the area between Conley Branch and Left Fork of Island Creek and all of the watershed area of Dempsey Branch. There were several cut-out openings in Conley Branch, Dempsey Branch and Left Fork which were probably for ventilation or drainageways although it is possible some were used as portal areas.

      It appears that this mine was on a large mineral lease and was constrained by property lines. However, there appears to have been some secondary mining on a small area of mineral owned by Crystal Block Coal & Coke. That area (about 250 acres) was located on the left side of Left Fork and a small strip along Island Creek below Left Fork. That area was mined through the leased area.

      A note on the map indicates that there was an airshaft to a lower seam that went through Crystal Block’s Upper Cedar Grove seam and their mine likely used that airshaft too. The airshaft was up on the mountainside between Dempsey Branch and Left Fork. It is possible that it was a small diameter (few feet) borehole rather than a typical large diameter construction. I don’t have any information as to who did the lower seam mining.

      I’ve looked at a 1931 era map of a Crystal Block Coal & Coke mine located onTug Fork River near the village of Sprigg in Mingo County. That mine is a small mine in the Alma coal seam.

      The West Virginia Geological Survey of 1915- Logan and Mingo Counties lists two Crystal Block Coal & Coke mines near the village of Rawl in Mingo County, one on Dick Williamson Branch in the Coalburg seam and one in the Buffalo Creek seam about 1.6 miles northeast of Rawl.

      Owing to the activities of Crystal Block in Mingo County in 1915, it appears that their history began there many years before their activities in Logan County.

      1. Douglas, many thanks for the info.
        You are a wonderful asset to this
        website.

        I was hoping that someone might
        have some photos of Crystal Block
        & the coal mine.

        Also the info about the coal mine
        being in Rawl helps with my family
        history as my Dad Joe Sr. was born
        there. My grandfather Balazs Piros
        was a coal miner so he might have
        worked in the coal mine.

        My grandmother Vilma Piros did
        run a boarding house in Rawl.

        1. Was this mines known by any other name? My dad died n 2013 at the age of 91. He retired from Island Creek# 29 n Holden WV, after 41 yrs.! His name was Virgil Baird, and he was 1 of the hardest working men, I’d ever sern! He worked on the tipple, dropping cars, and it was only the last 1-2 yrs., before he retired..that it wasn’t done manually! So, i was just wondering if this mines ever went by another name? Thank you!

          1. Douglas Dempsey

            Angela,

            It is unclear if you are asking about “another name” of the “Crystal Block” or the “Island Creek #29 Mine”.

            Crystal Block had mines in different seams. It appears that their largest mine was also known as “Crystal Block No. 10 Mine”

            Island Creek #29 Mine was located on Rockhouse Fork of upper Mud Fork. In the late 1960’s, there was some limited amount of “truck mining” done in the old works of Island Creek #29 Mine by Jamey Coal Company which, as I recall, was one of Carl Dickenson’s operations.

  3. This is a wonderful history of Dehue WV.
    Should be on Facebook.

    The gravestone of Maria Bertalan who was
    born in Hungary means Beke ( Peace ) &
    Hamvaira ( for her remains ).

    1. Research found at familysearch.org shows
      that Maria was married to Mike Bertalan.
      Both of them were born in Hungary.

      Mike was a coal miner born in 1878.

      Mike and Maria had two children,
      Maria born in 1906 and James in 1909.
      Both born in WV.

      Since no other records were found about
      the family one might think that Mike went
      back to Hungary to live after Maria died
      in 1929.

  4. patsy abbott brewster

    I am one of ten children of gene and june kinney abbott thank you for this site it brings back a lot of good and bad memories of growing up as a coal miners daughter at dehue you do not have that family feeling in your life like we had growing up but we are all still family just the same keep in touch memories are good to have

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