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One of my
next jobs was for a coal mine in New Salem, North Dakota (1928). My earnings
were the mainstay for the family that winter.
I worked for a few days for free with
another miner to learn how to mine coal. We dug coal rooms working in about 5
inches of water most of the time. We wore the same dirty, crusty long-handled
under-wear, overalls and rubber boots every day. Each man had to get out 10 – 1
ton car loads of coal and a car of slack (fine powder) each day or you got no
bottom cut by a machine that night.
You had to lay a short length of
rail-track and bore the shot holes with a hand auger, make your black powder
shots and load the coal. The mule-skinner brought empty cars to the entrance
and pulled out the loaded cars. The mules lived in the mines until they had to
be changed.
I was only 17 years old, the youngest
miner ever there and maybe the poorest because of lack of experience. I would
almost always be last to ring for the pump-man to lower the cage 300 ft. to
haul me up to the shower room but I’d have my cut out.
We were paid .50 a ton for the coal
mined. The car of slack was free. We furnished the black powder, dynamite and
fuse. Our only light was a carbide lamp fastened to the cap on your head. It
put out about a 2 inch flame. Sometimes it would go out. No one but an old
miner knows what darkness is. You had to make your lamp work again in total
blackness. From then on you know no fear of anything.