Let us remember our heritage
I grew up in the Coal Region of Pennsylvania and always
enjoyed listening to the Mining legends and the stories of the Miners. I heard
the stories mostly from my grandparents and the miners' widows. They told me
about the various mining communities that once made up the coal region. The
mining communities of yesteryear are what gave the region its rich character
and history.
I graduated from Shenandoah Valley High School in 1981 and
moved away from the area after college. I lived in various places over the
years, primarily out of state, and I always ran into people who had relatives
from the coal region or were good friends of someone from the area.
When I drive around my hometown, I remember the fun I had in
my youth and how much different the town was back in the 1970s. I can also not
forget West Coal Street, where my grandmother once lived, and the old Italians
sitting on their porches watching over the children while they played on the
street. I have noticed that many of the homes in Shenandoah have been boarded
up.
There are also more vacant lots in town than when I was a
teenager. I was shocked to see the dilapidated condition of my old High School
(J. W. Cooper building). The building's windows are smashed out, and there are
large holes in the outer walls. The old Library building next door has been torn
down along with part of the town’s history. The Wilson building across the
street from the old library has also been torn down. I was also shocked to see
the horrendous condition of my old grade school (Jefferson building) only half
the building is standing. My old Junior high school (Roosevelt building) is now
an apartment building.
I can remember when I worked as a lifeguard at Sandy Beach.
Sandy Beach was a dam near Shenandoah where in the summer months, a lot of the
teenagers liked to go and swim. It was also a great place to park your cars and
hang out in the evenings. Sandy Beach is no longer open, it was closed in the
early 1990s, but during the summer months when I was in high school, I worked
there as a lifeguard.
One day in the summer of 1980, when I was coming home from
work, I noticed this little old lady pushing an ACME cart full of groceries.
Something compelled me to give her a hand, so I stopped and told her I could
help her. There was something familiar about her, and she was a little shocked
when I began to push her cart. I asked her where she lived, and she told me
South Jardin Street.
“That is
pretty far,” I said to her.
“If it
is too much for you,” she said, “I could take it the rest of the way.”
“It is
pretty far for you to be pushing the cart,” I said to her, laughing.
“I have
been pushing groceries for many, many years.” She said while looking at me with
a smile on her face.
She told me then that she was 89 years old and had lived in
town her whole life. We started a conversation, and she began to reminisce
about the town. She pointed to a home on South Jardin Street and said, “You see
that house? That was the first house on this block to get a telephone. Years
ago, people could not just buy a phone. They had to lease it from the phone
company.” She said, “everyone on the block, including myself, put our money
together and leased one phone, which everyone shared. The woman in that house
left her door unlocked all day and all night so that people could take turns
using the phone. When the phone rang, the people in that home took messages and
would deliver the messages to the people living on the block. There was a
tablet next to the phone, and we would mark our name, the date and time, and
who we called so that when the phone bill came, we could pay for the call.”
She pointed to another house on South Jardin Street and
said, “You see that house? That was the first house on the block that had a
television. People would bring food to that house every night, and everyone
would share food and watch television. They would watch 15 minutes of news
because that was how long the news was on back then. We would get updates on
the Korean War. That family’s son and my son fought in the Korean War. My son
was given a purple heart because he almost died after getting wounded by the
Chinese who were helping the North Koreans fight the Americans. After the news,
we would share food and homemade wine. We would then watch "Milton
Berl," or the "I Love Lucy show," or the "Sid Caesar
show," or the "Honeymooners," every night we were there.” She
laughed and said, “We would sit and watch a blank screen and wait for the News
to come on. The family who owned the television never had to cook because so
many people brought food to share with everyone else.”
The old woman’s home was beautiful, and she had
old-fashioned furniture I noticed an old Radio that was probably used back in
the 1920s. I asked her if her radio still worked, and she said, “it sure does.”
She had one of those old-fashioned Cast-iron sinks in the Kitchen. Everything
in her home seemed to be from a different era, but you felt comfortable because
you felt as if you were seeing a house preserved as a piece of history. She sat
me down at her kitchen table, poured me a tall glass of orange juice, and put
her groceries away. I got up and started looking at old photographs on the
walls. She pointed to an old photo and told me that the people in the picture
were her parents. She told me that her home had been in her family since the
1870s and that her parents came from Poland. She said she was the youngest of
four, the baby in the family, and the only girl. She told me that her Father
and three brothers once worked in the coal mines. The photographs reminded her
of how hard her parents worked to provide for her and her brothers. She told me
a story of how when she was a little girl, she couldn’t speak English, and her
teachers thought that “I was so dumb in school,” she said.
She reminisced and told me how hard her Father and three
brothers worked in the coal mines. She told me how her Mother worked in a
factory, cooked and sold food, baked and sold bread, and made and sold homemade
wine to get by and earn extra money so that, “Me and my three brothers could
have a better life,” she said. She showed me an old photograph from a photo
album of her stomping grapes for the homemade wine in a large barrel. The
photograph was taken when she was seven years old, and we laughed at the
picture.
She told me how her Father was killed in the mines when she
was nine years old and how the miners came to her home to tell her Mother about
the terrible mining accident. She told me how her Mother collapsed to the floor
upon hearing the news and the miners, with tears in their eyes, helping her
Mother as she wept and sobbed uncontrollably. Her Father was laid out in the
living room, and she explained how the miners dressed in their Sunday suits
came to pay their last respects. Her Father only had one suit that he wore
every Sunday to Mass at Saint Georges Church; that was the suit he was buried
in and she remembered clinging to her Mother's arm at the cemetery the day her
Father was buried.
Her earliest memory was her Father reading a book to her
every night that was written in Polish. Her Father brought that book with him
to America, and she remembered her Father told her that his Mother had asked
him why he was bringing that book to America, and he told her in Polish,
"for the Children, Momma."
She quickly began to tell me about the book, and I was glued
to her every word. I sat and listened to her at her kitchen table and continued
drinking her orange juice. She said the book was about a baker who baked bread
for orphans at an orphanage in Poland. The baker in the story placed small
loaves of bread next to the orphans’ beds at night, and in the morning, he
would tell them that an angel placed them there because the angel was watching
over them and making sure they never went hungry. In the same story, the baker
tells the children that the angel is with them because they have a special
mission in life and that they only have to believe in their angel, and
everything will be alright. The baker also told the children the story of a
donkey that complained about how hard his life is and that no one cares about
how hard he works. He complained the whole time he carried this woman who was
pregnant on his back along with her husband. At the time, the donkey didn’t
know how important his mission in life was until he witnessed the birth of the
baby Jesus.
She said that she searched for the book after her Father’s
death and cried when she could not find it, and she remembers her Mother
searching for it. Her Mother, with tears in her eyes, told her in Polish when
she was a little girl, “it will show up you will see.” The old woman said to me
that years later and a few days after her Mother died, the Book mysteriously
showed up in a drawer in her old bedroom. She told me that her Mother, for
years after her Father’s death, could hear her Father hanging up his mining
equipment each evening except for Sundays. She said that her Mother heard him
hanging up his mining equipment as if he was getting ready to wash up for a hot
meal. Her Mother also told her family years after his death that she could
still feel his presence in the house and him lying next to her at night.
She told me how her parents came to America and that during
their voyage from Poland, they were not allowed to mingle with the second or
first-class passengers, and they had to remain in the bottom section of the
ship for the entire voyage. Her Mother was pregnant at the time with her first
child, and she prayed that her child be born in America so that he or she could
have a better life and future as an American.
In New York City, they were at the mercy of kind families
from Poland that took them in and taught them the ways of large city life. The
simple things we take for granted were difficult for them, such as getting on a
bus, riding a trolley, and purchasing food. Her Mother would become confused
with the American currency and, at times, was taken advantage of with
purchases.
They lived in New York City for a short period, and having
little educational skills and not knowing the English language made finding
employment virtually impossible. Her Father heard about Pennsylvania's coal
mines, so he and his wife and newborn son traveled to Shenandoah, where he
obtained employment as a coal miner. He would rise in the morning six days a
week before the sun would rise and enter the Coalmine, and in the evening after
the sunset, he would leave the mine and ride the trolley for a single penny
from the Maple Hill colliery to Shenandoah. He would hop off the trolley and
wash the coal dust down with a cold mug of ice-cold beer at one of the numerous
bars in Shenandoah. There were three or four bars on every block, and every
ethnic community in the coal region had their own bars and Taverns. Many of the
bars had old pianos, and the Miners sang the songs they learned in their native
countries prior to immigrating to America. She told me that her Father would
occasionally play an accordion for the patrons in the bars he frequented. He
would entertain them covered in Coal dust and still wearing the mining
equipment that was leased to him from the mining company. She told me that her
Mother would not start cooking until her Father arrived home and washed up and
the entire family, out of respect, ate with him.
She said that her parents had it tough financially because
after the mining company made their deductions from his pay for leasing his
equipment and for the other items, such as the blasting powder that he had to
purchase from the company store. He was lucky if he cleared 50 cents a week.
The Mining companies owned many of the Miners' homes and charged the Miners
rent. If a Miner was killed in the Mine and his widow was unable to pay the
rent, the Mining Company would evict her and her family. Many families took in
boarders and washed the boarders' clothes and fed them. In every ethnic
community throughout the coal region, many of the miners' wives turned their
Kitchens into little restaurants. People came into their homes and paid the
miners' wives to cook a meal for them. The miners' families did this to keep up
with the rent and help make ends meet.
She said that her family looked forward to Sundays because
they attended Saint Georges Church in Shenandoah, and after the Mass, the
Miners and their families would gather at various homes where they shared food,
played music, sang songs, played various games, and told mining stories to
their children and what their lives were like in the old country prior to
immigrating to America.
Being a miner was a dangerous occupation, and the miners
quickly learned that the mules in the mines were more valuable to the mining
companies than the miners. The Mining companies saw the Miners as expendable
labor. The Miners dealt with cave-ins, gas explosions, mine flooding, and many
miners died and suffered physical ailments from breathing in the coal dust. She
told me her three brothers died from black lung and other complications from
breathing in the coal dust.
I also learned that she was married twice, that her first
husband died from Influenza, and that he was Italian. She said that she could
remember when the Italians built Our Lady of Mount Carmel Church in Shenandoah
in 1914. She said that on Sundays, the Italian Miners and their families would
gather at the Glovers Hill Park on Coal Street, which was called the Little
Italy of Shenandoah. On Sunday afternoons during the summer months, the
families shared food, played music, sang songs, played various games, and told
mining stories to their children about their lives in the old country before
immigrating to America. She said she could remember the first Italian festival
in Shenandoah, which has become a tradition. Every July since 1914, the
Italians carry a statue of the Blessed Mother through the streets of
Shenandoah, and the Italians pin money on it for good luck.
She told me that she used to work in the old Shenandoah
library built in 1874 by civil war veterans. She explained to me that she was
working there during WW 1, and that is where she met her second husband. Her
future husband would write letters home from the war to his Polish Mother, and
his Mother could not read or write and only understood Polish. Her future
husband's Mother would bring the letters written to her in English to the
Library.
She said, “My Mother could talk in Polish and English, and I
would read the letters to her, and she would explain what the letters said in
Polish to my then-future husband’s Mother. It was from reading his letters that
made me fall in love with him. He looked forward to reading my letters back to
him, and I couldn’t wait to receive his letters. When the war ended, he walked
into the Library in his uniform, and I took one look at him in that uniform. We
got married three weeks later. After the war, he worked for the Yuengling
brewing company, and we had four children.”
She told me with tears in her eyes that her husband died in
1961 and that she outlived two of her daughters and three brothers. Her two
sons are working and living in New Jersey as High School teachers. I told her
that I am sure they are great teachers for having her as a Mother.
After receiving a hug from her, I simply left her home and
returned the ACME cart to the grocery store. I never learned her name or when
she passed away, but the memory of my experience with her will never fade. Her
home is now boarded up like many other homes in the coal region. I wonder what
happened to all those great antiques that filled her home. Perhaps her sons or
grandchildren have them in safekeeping.
She reinforced just how many hardships the miners and their
families faced. I also realize that they did not immigrate to our country to
become coal miners. They became coal miners and made the sacrifice so that
their families could have a better future. They made their living in life and
what they gave to their families and communities made their life worth living.
They also made little financial gains in life, and the less they made was less
that they were able to save. The Miners' families, however implicitly
understood that you could save anything in life but life itself, and they
determined their life’s worth by what they gave to others.
Their highest reward in life did not come in material
wealth, but rather their highest reward was achieved by how well they developed
in life. They did not strive like fools for the possessions they did not have,
but they wisely developed what they already possessed within themselves.
The miners and their families understood that it takes a
village to raise a child, and they brought a part of their villages from their
native countries to Shenandoah and the Pennsylvania coal region as a whole. It
was also their ethnic values in the mining communities that were instilled in
the children within those communities, and they, in turn, instilled those
values in their children and their neighbor’s children. Those values are in the
root of our family tree, and those same values are the nourishment that must
continue to strengthen our family for future generations.
The miners and their families worked under immense pressures
and just as diamonds are made under pressure so to have the pressures of the
coal region strengthened their family bonds and made the individual characters
within the mining communities shine like diamonds. You cannot judge a person's
character in times of comfort and convenience. You can only see the true
character of an individual in times of challenge and controversy. You can also
gauge the true character of a person by how well they reach out to help those
of the least influence. The miners helped those in need in their communities
without the expectation of receiving anything in return because it was simply
the right thing to do.
I learned such a valuable lesson from that woman in the
summer of 1980. I learned that not all history is learned from history books.
One of the greatest gifts we can give children is stories that instill a
greater appreciation of their heritage and family history. They, in turn, will
keep the coal miner’s history alive when they tell their children the same
stories. The stories of how the miners immigrated to America and settled down
in the Pennsylvania coal region so that their children, grandchildren, and
their grandchildrens children can have a better life as Americans.
The miner’s greatest achievements in life were all the
subtle altruistic acts of kindness that they bestowed on the people within
their communities. Their greatest gifts were not of gems and flowers but of
loving thoughts because the love they had for their families and community were
the enlightening words of the soul more precious than the diamonds and gold of
the world.
Always with love,
Thomas F. O’Neill
(800) 272-6464
Yahoo Screen Name for chatting online: introspective777
E-mail: introspective7@hotmail.com
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