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Legion Memorial Library - Mellen

Hard Coal: Last Of The Bootleg Miners

Book Cover
Average Rating
Publisher:
Kanopy Streaming
Pub. Date:
2015
Language:
Undetermined
Description
A fatal mining accident in the hills of Pennsylvania, the subsequent suicide of the mine's owner, and the forced abandonment of eight of the last 12 surviving anthracite mines in the United States. These are the recent plagues that have defined the once proud and prosperous tradition of anthracite coal mining. They are also the tragedies that have prompted the drastic transformation of our feature documentary film, Hard Coal: Last of the Bootleg Miners. These family-owned mines, which were built by hand generations ago, had fallen into near extinction. The miners we interview have provided ample evidence that the federal government, through the Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA), is orchestrating a deliberate crusade to push these "mom-and-pop" mines out of business so that multi-national energy corporations can appropriate the miners' land. Although it was mine owner Pete Shingara who told our film cameras in 2005, "(The government) won't take me out of here in handcuffs. They'll take me out in a coffin," it was his friend, mine owner David (Stu) Himmelberger, who executed that promise after his friend and employee, Dale Reightler, was accidentally killed at work in October 2006. We also explore what will likely happen if/when energy monoliths commandeer Pennsylvania's relatively eco-friendly anthracite industry by adding some heart wrenching comparisons to the bituminous strip-mining industry in Virginia and West Virginia, where mountain top removal has replaced mining . Hard Coal: Last of the Bootleg Miners explores the near eradication of this group of hard-working Americans who merely wish, as their fathers and grandfathers before them, to provide for their families while helping their country develop a sustainable energy policy. They don't want welfare. They don't want prison. They don't want to die in an accident or by their own hands. They just want to mine the anthracite whose veins run deep through their native soil.
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Grouping Information

Grouped Work IDfdfea73f-3905-06b0-c423-122d9248ecd4
Grouping Titlehard coal last of the bootleg miners
Grouping Author80
Grouping Categorymovie
Grouping LanguageUndetermined (und)
Last Grouping Update2024-05-02 10:38:12AM
Last Indexed2024-05-19 06:05:54AM

Solr Fields

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0
accelerated_reader_reading_level
0
auth_author2
Brodzik, Marc
author2-role
Brodzik, Marc,filmmaker
Kanopy (Firm)
display_description
A fatal mining accident in the hills of Pennsylvania, the subsequent suicide of the mine's owner, and the forced abandonment of eight of the last 12 surviving anthracite mines in the United States. These are the recent plagues that have defined the once proud and prosperous tradition of anthracite coal mining. They are also the tragedies that have prompted the drastic transformation of our feature documentary film, Hard Coal: Last of the Bootleg Miners. These family-owned mines, which were built by hand generations ago, had fallen into near extinction. The miners we interview have provided ample evidence that the federal government, through the Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA), is orchestrating a deliberate crusade to push these "mom-and-pop" mines out of business so that multi-national energy corporations can appropriate the miners' land. Although it was mine owner Pete Shingara who told our film cameras in 2005, "(The government) won't take me out of here in handcuffs. They'll take me out in a coffin," it was his friend, mine owner David (Stu) Himmelberger, who executed that promise after his friend and employee, Dale Reightler, was accidentally killed at work in October 2006. We also explore what will likely happen if/when energy monoliths commandeer Pennsylvania's relatively eco-friendly anthracite industry by adding some heart wrenching comparisons to the bituminous strip-mining industry in Virginia and West Virginia, where mountain top removal has replaced mining . Hard Coal: Last of the Bootleg Miners explores the near eradication of this group of hard-working Americans who merely wish, as their fathers and grandfathers before them, to provide for their families while helping their country develop a sustainable energy policy. They don't want welfare. They don't want prison. They don't want to die in an accident or by their own hands. They just want to mine the anthracite whose veins run deep through their native soil.
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Movies
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eVideo
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fdfea73f-3905-06b0-c423-122d9248ecd4
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2024-05-19T11:05:54.568Z
lexile_score
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literary_form
Other
literary_form_full
Other
publishDate
2015
publisher
Kanopy Streaming
recordtype
grouped_work
title_display
Hard Coal: Last Of The Bootleg Miners
title_full
Hard Coal: Last Of The Bootleg Miners
title_short
Hard Coal: Last Of The Bootleg Miners

Solr Details Tables

item_details

Bib IdItem IdShelf LocCall NumFormatFormat CategoryNum CopiesIs Order ItemIs eContenteContent SourceeContent URLDetailed StatusLast CheckinLocation
kanopy:kan1124950kan1124950KanopyOnline KanopyeVideoMovies1falsetrueKanopyhttps://northernwaters.kanopy.com/node/124951Available OnlineKanopy

record_details

Bib IdFormatFormat CategoryEditionLanguagePublisherPublication DatePhysical DescriptionAbridged
kanopy:kan1124950eVideoMoviesUndeterminedKanopy Streaming20151 online resource (streaming video file)

scoping_details_mellen

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kanopy:kan1124950kan1124950Available OnlineAvailable Onlinefalsetruefalsefalsefalsefalse