nice album La Roux free hot The Last House on the Left best album Pop - Various Artists buy hit (500) Days of Summer get Ocean Eyes melodies CD avi The Wrestler best hot Here We Go Again buy DIVX WWE: Allied Powers - The World's Greatest Tag Teams free music Pixie Lott free 2012: Science or Superstition DIVX

Bell County Kentucky Coal Camp E-mail

These pictures were all taken towards the end of 1945 in Bell County Kentucky. They show a brief view of life in a Coal Camp. There were literally hundreds of camps just like these spread out through out the Kentucky Highlands. Life was hard, short and difficult for the families that retrieved millions of dollars worth of coal from the mountains. Unfortunately, for the families of the miners and for the region as a whole, the profits went to interests outside the region. Large mining concerns stole the coal from the hills and gave almost nothing in return.

 

 

A new miner’s camp in Bell County Kentucky from the turn of the 20th Century.
A miner’s camp in Bell County Kentucky after fifty years of neglect.
Mr. and Mrs. John Whitehead with their children and grandchildren. Photo taken in December 1945, at Four Mile in Bell County, Kentucky. Mountain Families were always large.
 Children washing their hands in the house of Mrs. Leanore Miller, widow of a miner at  Four Mile in Bell County, Kentucky.
A miner comes home from work.
 A miner’s home. This one is better than most with its “newspaper” wallpaper. Notice the advertisement for home remodeling.
Another miner’s home. This one is more typical of the miner’s homes of the era.
 One room school house.
Children walking on railroad track. Railroads were a main way to get around in the coal camps.

 

For those wanting to see what a came would have looked like, visit the Barthell Mining Camp. The recreated camp is located just 7 miles west of Stearns, Kentucky off of Highway 742. The camp has variety of exhibits and offers a coal mine tour that will take you 300 feet into the mountain. For those looking for more information about Kentucky Coal Camps, the Coal Education website is probably the best around.