Knox Mine disaster

Knox Mine disaster
Map of Knox Mine disaster showing inundated area and shafts used for escape and dewatering
Date January 22, 1959 (1959-01-22)
Location Jenkins Township, Pennsylvania, United States
Coordinates 41°18′29″N 75°49′23″W / 41.308°N 75.823°W / 41.308; -75.823Coordinates: 41°18′29″N 75°49′23″W / 41.308°N 75.823°W / 41.308; -75.823
Type Mine subsidence, Mining accident
Cause Mine shafts too close to waterway resulting in Mine subsidence and Mine flooding
Deaths 12

The Knox Mine disaster was a mining accident on January 22, 1959, that is widely credited with single-handedly killing the mining industry in the Northern Anthracite Region of Pennsylvania.

The Susquehanna River broke through into the many interconnected mine galleries in the Wyoming Valley between right-bank (west) town of Exeter, Pennsylvania and Port Griffith, left-bank (east) town in Jenkins Township, Pennsylvania, near Pittston. Mitigation efforts created several new islands between the two towns and altered the western-side flow of the Susquehanna around these.

Accident

The River Slope Mine, an anthracite coal mine owned by the Knox Coal Company, flooded when coal company management had the miners dig illegally out under the Susquehanna River. Tunneling sharply upwards toward river bed without having drilled boreholes to gauge the rock thickness overhead, the miners came to a section with a thickness of about 6 feet (1.8 m)35 feet (11 m) was considered the minimum for safety. The insufficient "roof" cover caused the waters of the river to break into the mine.[1]

It took three days to plug the hole in the riverbed, which was done by dumping large railroad cars, smaller mine cars, culm, and other debris into the whirlpool formed by the water draining into the mine.[1]

Twelve mineworkers died; 69 others escaped. Amedeo Pancotti was awarded the Carnegie Medal for climbing 50 feet (15 m) up the abandoned Eagle Air Shaft and alerting rescuers, which led to the safe recovery of 33 men including Pancotti himself.[2] The bodies of the twelve who died were never recovered, despite efforts to pump the water out of the mine. The victims were Samuel Altieri, John Baloga, Benjamin Boyar, Francis Burns, Charles Featherman, Joseph Gizenski, Dominic Kaveliski, Frank Orlowski, Eugene Ostrowski, William Sinclair, Daniel Stefanides, and Herman Zelonis.[3]

The Knox catastrophe was less deadly than the Twin Shaft disaster in Pittston in 1896, which claimed 58 lives.

Eventually, an estimated 10 billion US gallons (38,000,000 m3; 8.3×109 imp gal) of water filled the mines.

Aftermath and legacy

Ten people were indicted in the disaster's aftermath, including the mine superintendent, Robert Dougherty; owner Louis Fabrizio; secret owner August J. Lippi, who was also the president of District 1 of the United Mine Workers; and three union officials. Six served jail time.

January 22, 2009, marked the fiftieth anniversary of the Knox Mine Disaster, with an annual memorial mass at St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church in Pittston, Pennsylvania, and a ceremony held at the former St. Joseph's Catholic Church in Port Griffith, which is the site of a commemorative monument and a State Historic Marker erected in 1999 by the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission. The church was closed in May 2008 owing to a consolidation of area parishes and put up for sale in July 2008. The property was purchased on January 15, 2009, exactly one week prior to the fiftieth anniversary, by Susan Baloga and John Baloga, the grandson of John Baloga, one of the twelve miners who perished in the event. The property is now the site of Baloga Funeral Home. The fiftieth anniversary also included a special program at the Anthracite Heritage Museum in Scranton, which organized an annual program on the disaster in January.

  1. 1 2 Chris Murley (2005). "Knox Mine Disaster". Retrieved 29 December 2016.
  2. "Amedeo Pancotti, Pittston, Pennsylvania". Carnegie Hero Fund Commission. Retrieved 2017-09-27.
  3. David Pencek (1998). "Knox Mine Disaster". Times Leader. Retrieved 29 December 2016.

Further reading

  • Wolensky, Robert P; Kenneth C Wolensky; Nicole H Wolensky (1999). The Knox Mine disaster, January 22, 1959: the final years of the northern anthracite industry and the effort to rebuild a regional economy. Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission. ISBN 0-89271-081-0.
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