Sixteen Tons
Author: Kevin Corley
Synopsis: Sixteen Tons carries you down into the dark and dangerous coal mines of the early 1900s, as Italian immigrant Antonio Vacca and his sons encounter cave-ins and fires deep below the earth’s surface. The dangers above ground are equally deadly, as the men and women battle gun thugs, corrupt sheriffs and crooked politicians at Virden, Matewan and Ludlow in an epic struggle to form a union and make the mines a safer place to work. While teaching history in Christian County, Illinois to many of the descendants of the coal mine wars, historian Kevin Corley mined the rich archives of the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum to portray the lives of mining families during those turbulent times. The oral histories and interviews of surviving miners that he collected were used by Carl Oblinger to write Divided Kingdom, a history of the coal mine wars, which was published in 1991, and are the basis of his novel.. Kevin’s words bring to light the dreams and aspirations of the men, women and children who lived our labor history This is a part of American history that needs to be remembered.
Author: Kevin Corley
Synopsis: Sixteen Tons carries you down into the dark and dangerous coal mines of the early 1900s, as Italian immigrant Antonio Vacca and his sons encounter cave-ins and fires deep below the earth’s surface. The dangers above ground are equally deadly, as the men and women battle gun thugs, corrupt sheriffs and crooked politicians at Virden, Matewan and Ludlow in an epic struggle to form a union and make the mines a safer place to work. While teaching history in Christian County, Illinois to many of the descendants of the coal mine wars, historian Kevin Corley mined the rich archives of the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum to portray the lives of mining families during those turbulent times. The oral histories and interviews of surviving miners that he collected were used by Carl Oblinger to write Divided Kingdom, a history of the coal mine wars, which was published in 1991, and are the basis of his novel.. Kevin’s words bring to light the dreams and aspirations of the men, women and children who lived our labor history This is a part of American history that needs to be remembered.
Author: Kevin Corley
Synopsis: Sixteen Tons carries you down into the dark and dangerous coal mines of the early 1900s, as Italian immigrant Antonio Vacca and his sons encounter cave-ins and fires deep below the earth’s surface. The dangers above ground are equally deadly, as the men and women battle gun thugs, corrupt sheriffs and crooked politicians at Virden, Matewan and Ludlow in an epic struggle to form a union and make the mines a safer place to work. While teaching history in Christian County, Illinois to many of the descendants of the coal mine wars, historian Kevin Corley mined the rich archives of the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum to portray the lives of mining families during those turbulent times. The oral histories and interviews of surviving miners that he collected were used by Carl Oblinger to write Divided Kingdom, a history of the coal mine wars, which was published in 1991, and are the basis of his novel.. Kevin’s words bring to light the dreams and aspirations of the men, women and children who lived our labor history This is a part of American history that needs to be remembered.
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Extra
AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka. Read Pres. Trumka's remarks, click here...
Watch United Mine Workers of America President Cecil Roberts reading AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka's praise of Kevin Corley's historical Sixteen Tons at the AFL-CIO headquarters in Washington, D.C. for their monthly book talk about labor.
Listen to author Kevin Corley talking about the coal mine wars at the AFL-CIO book discussion in Wash., DC.
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This is a novel about immigrant workers set in American a century ago. It is an important story that comes to us at a critical time. Kevin has written a book that is full of historical insights. Although it is a work of fiction it is artfully grounded in thorough research including interviews with and recollections of people who lived through the events Kevin discusses.
It is great to see this material in a novel because Kevin’s words bring to light the dreams and aspirations of the men, women and children who lived our labor history. They traveled across oceans of water and over expanses of land. They dug and blasted deep into the earth. They endured cave-ins and hard manual labor, sometimes in coal mines only three-feet high. In fact, the descriptions of the mine work itself is fascinating because it is written so anyone today can get an understanding of the miner’s work day back then. It wasn’t easy but it was work for people who needed it.
Kevin’s book covers another important and too often overlooked aspect. The unionism and extreme backlash against any and every form of solidarity. This is part of American history that needs to be remembered.
A lot of this is heartbreaking and should break hearts. Company gunmen hounded and killed men, women and children for no crime other than trying to earn a living. Yet there were far more crimes perhaps less dramatic in scope but just as devastating. I’m thinking of the casual story in the novel as related by a shift boss about a man whose long legs were caught in a roof fall. One leg was cut off above the knee. After the amputation the boss joked, “The miner is now better in the lower tunnels.”
I’m proud the AFL-CIO is hosting a discussion of this novel and I’m glad it is part of the AFL-CIO book series. I hope the novel reaches a broad audience.
Kevin’s words bring to light the dreams and aspirations of the men, women and children who lived our labor history… This is part of American history that needs to be remembered.
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THE SOUNDERS - Examines what the work conditions of coal miners was like in the first quarter of the 20th century by listening to the accounts of the mine workers themselves. Click here...
DISASTERS - Looks at two coal mine disasters that had profound effects on the development of the United Mine Workers of America. Click here...
GUNFIGHTS - The events of West Virginia in 1920-21 are every bit as exciting and powerful as anything that occurred in the American West of the 1800s. The number of workers joining the UMWA during this time period was largely determined by the gunfight at Matewan and the Battle of Blair Mountain. Click here...
MASSACRES - We will look at two very different massacres that took place and attempt to get into the mindset of both the victims and those who did the killings.
DIVIDED KINGDOM - The United Mine Workers of America are challenged for representation of America's coal mine workers by a new union called the Progressive Mine Worker's of America. Borrowing from Carl Oblinger's 1991 book of the same name we look at the Christian County Coal Mine Wars from 1932 to 1933. Click here...
BLACK LUNG - After reading Sixteen Tons, renowned registered respiratory therapist Kevin Shrake offered us a keen insight into the effects of coal dust on the lungs of pre-1960 coal miners. Click here...
For more about the author, Kevin Corley, Click here...
For reviews on Sixteen Tons Click here...For more on the history of coal miners and a study guide for teachers and students, click here...