Thunder In the Mountains: The West Virginia Mine War, 1920-21

Thunder In the Mountains: The West Virginia Mine War, 1920-21

by Lon Savage
Thunder In the Mountains: The West Virginia Mine War, 1920-21

Thunder In the Mountains: The West Virginia Mine War, 1920-21

by Lon Savage

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Overview

The West Virginia mine war of 1920–21, a major civil insurrection of unusual brutality on both sides, even by the standards of the coal fields, involved thousands of union and nonunion miners, state and private police, militia, and federal troops. Before it was over, three West Virginia counties were in open rebellion, much of the state was under military rule, and bombers of the US Army Air Corps had been dispatched against striking miners.

The civil war began in the small railroad town of Matewan when Mayor C. C. Testerman and Police Chief Sid Hatfield sided with striking miners against agents of the Baldwin-Felts Detective Agency, who attempted to evict the miners from company-owned housing. Thunder in the Mountains was the first book-length account of this crisis in American industrial relations and governance, much neglected in historical accounts.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780822971429
Publisher: University of Pittsburgh Press
Publication date: 09/11/1990
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 216
File size: 5 MB

About the Author

Lon Savage (1928–2004) was a native of West Virginia. He worked in journalism for a decade before taking a job as assistant to the president of Virginia Tech, where he worked for twenty-three years.

Table of Contents

Contents
Foreword
Introduction
Acknowledgments
1. “On to Mingo”
2. Everyone called him “Sid”
3. The Battle of Matewan
4. “We have organized all the camps”
5. “The most complete deadlock of any industrial struggle”
6. “It's good to have friends”
7. “Our citizens are being shot down like rats”
8. “… to clean up Mingo County”
9. “You saw nothing wrong in that?”
10. “Don't shoot him any more!”
11. “There can be no peace”
12. “We'll hang Don Chafin to a sour apple tree!”
13. “No armed mob will cross Logan County”
14. “It's your real Uncle Sam”
15. “By God, we're goin' through”
16. “We wouldn't revolt against the national guv'ment”
17. “The thugs are coming”
18. “There was a different feeling”
19. “I, Warren G. Harding … do hereby command”
20. “Bring your raincoats and machine guns”
2l. “Bullets were hissing back and forth”
22. “Things slacked off after we ate”
23. “These strange new craft”
24. “The miners have withdrawn their lines”
25. “It was Uncle Sam did it”
Epilogue
Notes
Bibliography
Index
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