The Hard Life of Working in a Coal Mine
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Top Comments (10)
I have worked in a coal mine for 22 years and love it. There are some great hard working people who work here with me too. The sad part is that politicians have vilified us and what we do.
Worked 45 years as a underground coal miner. You will never find a better group of men to work around. No matter what you had going on, they always had your back. Been retired for 3 years and still miss them ol boys.
My Grand Dad, Dad and older brother were all coal miners back in Rachel West Virginia. They worked hard to see that I never had to work in the coal mines. Love and miss them so much.
As a born and raised West Virginian, I have the highest respect to all coal miners. Such incredibly hard labor. We should all appreciate them more.
I was the first male in my family that didn’t have to go underground in the coal mine , and I have the men that came before me to thank for that
Underground miner here. Sleeping in my car watching this right now and it's below zero degrees. Looking forward to be home, but then will be back here at the mine after one day off. As an underground miner in Colorado, thank you Joe. We need recognition. I do this for my family and to support my goals. For my country, for society to improve, and for my family. Hard life, I wish others could understand a fraction.
My grandpa was in Normandy in WW2, came back home to Morgantown, WV and worked in a coal mine for 30+ years. One of his sons just retired from being a coal miner. The amount of respect I have for people that risk their lives for this type of work is infinitely high. So awesome seeing him wearing a Morgantown, WV hat
My great grandfather died from black lung after working coal in Elkins, WV. My grandfather hitchhiked to Texas when he was 13 to seek out a better life for himself and his future family. Forever thankful for that decision he made over 60 years ago
I'm a fourth generation coal miner myself. I spent a few years on the mines before joining the Air Force. Everything I do today is informed by my experiences as a coal miner. I prefer data mining today as a cyber engineer, but certainly coal mining gave me an appreciation for all the generations in my family before me and what they went through to scrape out a living for us.
I've mined coal for 23 yrs. I've worked in mines that were 27 inches high and mines that are 16 feet high. Born and raised in Eastern KY . I've worked in KY WV Illinois and Indiana. Most ppl don't know the life of a coal miner and what we would do for our families. Which is why we do what we do.
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Top Comments (10)
I have worked in a coal mine for 22 years and love it. There are some great hard working people who work here with me too. The sad part is that politicians have vilified us and what we do.
Worked 45 years as a underground coal miner. You will never find a better group of men to work around. No matter what you had going on, they always had your back. Been retired for 3 years and still miss them ol boys.
My Grand Dad, Dad and older brother were all coal miners back in Rachel West Virginia. They worked hard to see that I never had to work in the coal mines. Love and miss them so much.
As a born and raised West Virginian, I have the highest respect to all coal miners. Such incredibly hard labor. We should all appreciate them more.
I was the first male in my family that didn’t have to go underground in the coal mine , and I have the men that came before me to thank for that
Underground miner here. Sleeping in my car watching this right now and it's below zero degrees. Looking forward to be home, but then will be back here at the mine after one day off. As an underground miner in Colorado, thank you Joe. We need recognition. I do this for my family and to support my goals. For my country, for society to improve, and for my family. Hard life, I wish others could understand a fraction.
My grandpa was in Normandy in WW2, came back home to Morgantown, WV and worked in a coal mine for 30+ years. One of his sons just retired from being a coal miner. The amount of respect I have for people that risk their lives for this type of work is infinitely high. So awesome seeing him wearing a Morgantown, WV hat
My great grandfather died from black lung after working coal in Elkins, WV. My grandfather hitchhiked to Texas when he was 13 to seek out a better life for himself and his future family. Forever thankful for that decision he made over 60 years ago
I'm a fourth generation coal miner myself. I spent a few years on the mines before joining the Air Force. Everything I do today is informed by my experiences as a coal miner. I prefer data mining today as a cyber engineer, but certainly coal mining gave me an appreciation for all the generations in my family before me and what they went through to scrape out a living for us.
I've mined coal for 23 yrs. I've worked in mines that were 27 inches high and mines that are 16 feet high. Born and raised in Eastern KY . I've worked in KY WV Illinois and Indiana. Most ppl don't know the life of a coal miner and what we would do for our families. Which is why we do what we do.