In the latter part of the 19th and early part of the 20th century, the fuel that fired and financed the Industrial Revolution was coal, hard coal or anthracite which was found exclusively in a roughly 485 mile square area of northeastern Pennsylvania and soft coal or bituminous found in eastern Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Kentucky, Alabama, Arkansas, Illinois, Wyoming and Colorado. Many of our ancestors mined that coal or worked on the railroads that transported it.
By the beginning of the 20th century, over 90% of all coal production in the anthracite area was controlled by seven or eight railroads whose majority stock was owned by a small group of financiers in New York and Philadephia under the influence of John Pierpont Morgan. The history of the coal owners from the opening of the anthracite fields in the 1820s until the 1920s reflected a strong anti-union attitude. Once the first miners of Welsh, Scotch and German ancestry made waves about organizing, the operators capitalized on the potato famine and brought in the Irish. And when the Irish began to grumble, they brought in emigrants from Eastern Europe and Italy.
My grandfather, Giuseppe Epifano, was one of them. He was the youngest of five brothers who all came to the Carbondale/Scranton area in the northern anthracite fields of Pennsylvania to work in the mines. Only the eldest brother, Antonio, continued in the mines. My grandfather and his other brothers, Leopoldo, Angelo and Saverio, left mine work for other employment, my grandfather as a laborer and then a hostler helper with the Delaware & Hudson Railroad which generated the majority of its revenue from the transportation of anthracite. The brothers emigrated from San Mango d'Aquino, a small town in Catanzaro, and followed many others from San Mango who settled in northeastern Pennsylvania, principally in the Providence and Green Ridge sections of Scranton. So many Sanmanghesi emigrated to Scranton that they formed the San Mango Mutual Aid Society in 1926 which celebrated its 80th Anniverary last year. I'm sure there are other towns in Italy which likewise saw a preponderance of emigrants to a coal mining area. In checking ship manifest records for another member whose ancestors emigrated from San Giovanni in Fiore to Harrison county, West Virginia, other passengers were found from the same town traveling to the same area.
My interests in the history of coal mining, unionism, and the local history of northeastern Pennsylvania has helped give a more human touch to my genealogical research and made me more sensitive to the sacrifices my grandparents made for their children and ultimately myself.
For those of you who have ancestors who settled in a coal mining area and are interested in finding out more about what life was like and the struggle for dignity, there are a couple of movies I'd suggest.
The Molly Maguires detailing the 1870s conflict in the southern anthracite fields of Pennsylvania.
Matewan detailing the bloody conflict in Mingo county in the early 1920s when coal operators brought in Italian and Black American miners to break a strike.
Both of the above movies have some historical inaccuracies but nonetheless give an accurate portrayal of working and living conditions as well as the sometimes violent tactics employed by operators and miners.
Harlan County USA an early 1970s documentary by Barbara Kopple detailing the unionization efforts of miners at Duke Power mines in Kentucky.
Although my expertise, if you will, is in the history of northeastern Pennsylvania, I'd be happy to take a stab at answering any questions relative to coal mining as well as make particular book and online resource recommendations.
I'll be adding a post later with a few book recommendations.








