The Illustrated History of the Cherry Mine Disaster of 1909

2,155.00

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Product Description

November 13, 1909 was like any other day for the 480 men who went into the coal mine at Cherry, Illinois, to begin another day’s work. The mine at Cherry was just a few years old, and it was considered the safest mine in America. However, within hours, a fire in the mine would take the lives of 259 men and boys. It would make widows of more than 100 women and orphans of 500 children. Eight days after the fire, twenty men emerged in a miraculous tale of survival. The Cherry mine disaster remains the third worst coal mining disaster in United States history. But it brought about sweeping reform. It changed child labor laws in America and it resulted in the first workmen’s compensation laws. This disaster was a bonanza for a number of local photographers, and the several hundred picture postcard views they produced provide a valuable visual account of this terrible event. This book provides the most comprehensive collection of these photographs which document this American tragedy.

Review

“The way Ridings lays out the story gives the reading an almost chilling “in person” view of the events as they unfold.
Also, I’ve read (and written about) other books by Ridings, so I expected plenty of detail. And the detail was grim, heartbreaking, inspiring, and full of heroism.
Grim because the details of how one becomes trapped in a mine – and dies in a mine fire – are straightforward and stark.
Heartbreaking when you read about the loved ones who gathered at the site during the rescue attempts and later fighting the establishment to take home two fans (you’ll see).” The Herald-News

About the Author

JIM RIDINGS has written twenty-five books of Illinois history, and several have won awards from the Illinois State Historical Society. He was presented with a Studs Terkel Award from the Illinois Humanities Council in 2006. Ridings worked as reporter for daily newspapers in Ottawa and Aurora, Illinois, and he won more than a dozen awards for investigative reporting at both newspapers. His most significant books have been Small Justice, Len Small: Governors and Gangsters, Wild Kankakee, County West: A Sesquicentennial History of Western Kankakee County, and Cardiff: Ghost Town on the Prairie.

The Illustrated History of the Cherry Mine Disaster of 1909
The Illustrated History of the Cherry Mine Disaster of 1909

2,155.00

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