■——— "staEl-ISHED SEPTEMBER 19, 1878. Coal Glen Mine Gives Up Dead fifty- three Bodies Taken From 111-Starred j Chatham County Mine—Last One Rescued Saturday Afternoon After Four Days 0 f Nerve-Wracking Toil. --QIC SERVICES 1 GIVEN by miners _ •state and Nstion Rush-, • -y y ec3 to -Scene —San-1 Lcgloit Auxil-j ■ ? d Cross and Other j Croaipt Vt'lth Aid in 1 P/V-. / ! jV,\ trEill. Ua.-i- •> Nation o 2 Hundreds 1 _ n mine gave up its fifty - e tiirelay evening. V. a . the mine to such an j L y;j lvscurers we.lo 1 j cea-e the search, but ,t fifty-three was the I . 11 taken. . ..wing is a list of -the vie-j White. Anderson, F. S. Anderson, 1 kutin, D. J. Wilson, C. V. Joe Hudson, Claude Wood, er, *J. E. Laubscher, A. L. A. L. Holland, Sam Napier, es, J: B. Curd, C. B. Da vy. E. Bylerly, Hollis Richard- Imuben Chambliss, Thomas Cot on, H. C. Hall, Dan Hudson, W. E. Dillingham, W. D. Dillingham, H W. Sullivan, N. E. Johnson, C. L. Wood, Lee Buchanan. Colored. Will Irick, Arthur Poe, Jas. Wright, T. D. Wright, James Williams, John Burgess, John f w, Charles Wat* son, David Bc._ June Cotton, Jini Spruill, John Alston, Henry Alston, | Lige Hill, Russell Wright, Wesley K. Harward, Robert Williams, Albert Holly, T. N. Wright, Wade Wilson, Lee Hodges, Will Moore, Wilson Chesney, Manly Lambert, Isaac Kayes, Jim Nabors. Four days of incesant and nerve racking toil on the part of the heroic rescuers came to an end Saturday night, when, despite the rising wa ters, every nook and corner of the : mine had been explored and the last body of the 53 victims of the death- I ■ealing blasts of Wednesday’s disas- J ter had been brought to the surface. ! From the erstwhile peaceful and J I -PPy little mining community near score bruised, broken and ! bod bodies of formerly contented j Industrious men have been rushed i 0 morgue, and to burial far and j ' >rth and south, east and west, j ns bore the dead and the heart • loved ones. Five found their | I mg place in the little Farjn h yard, while here and lower Chatham, family grounds show new-made and ( , homes are sad : Hardly yet has the pub ; by the bulk of the tragedy, ‘ to concentrate- its interest -thy upon the individual :i sorrows, but to many a parents, wives, and chil oers and sisters—the great ; centered in the sudden ■ of just the one life, or, cases, os with the Hudsons, several of the family. A Halcyon Scene, m v\ ednesday morning and as- , U'Ual precautions fifty-three j - meri with individual electric j -aming upon their heads, had j a-towed by the yawning black- j * mine. Another day of hon- ! v>as un der way. Above ground activities were in progress; lL en tilating fan hummed - assuring a constant supply of . ie men below; the pow kanolass gave its intermittent T hauled out of the bow : arth load after load of nderground wea]tll) and gent - 7 -ing empties gliding over the san > • black maw; a (1 a^ove the miners lay a - field of cotton and here and yonder were dotted the cottage j homes with wives, mothers and sis- J ters about their humdrum daily tasks, j It was only another day, such as liun- j dreds before when toilsome hours’ were followed by the evening meal, rest, and recreation. The casual tour -Ist would scarcely have dreamed, un told, that hundreds of feet below Ins very road three-score labored by the light of flashing electric torches, u was a kalycon scene, but one de -1 stined to instant shift. Death-Dealing Blasts. Destiny had strtfek. With the roar ■of a nvicane rushed yellow fumes A allowed by black smoke from the Su y L . Nafer will be known just what v.-a happening below, or how or why 1,12 fatal blast. But, above, it first | flazed 1 and then galvanized into ac tion the men who knew too well the significance' of the blast, i Young Howard Butler, the manag er, kyt his head. His first thought was : or the fan, which was discovered humming its saving song and giving hope of early riddance of fumes be low. Eis mxt was for the help of the experienced men in the Cumnock mine. Then, accompanied by Joe Rich ; ardson, a machinist, lie plunged in ito the shaft; Claude Macnerson, j weighman, and K. R. Scott, lamp man, followed. It was easy near the blast he did not feel the fu.l force, he and Richardson made their way pn ; hindered by any debris. The air was heavy but not utterly oppressive. Six Men Found. At the entrance of the second cor ridor to the right they found six men, but dazed-and. bruised. These the two intrepid explorers dragged into the main shaft, where the air current was more effective. One of the six men was Richardson’s own brother. Turn ing from the main shaft and still ex amining the wiring and testing the air, he searched through windings I and turnings for more men, but found none. “By that time,” related Butler to re j porters as he lay stretched out on a sofa in his own home, bruised and I with dust-clogged lungs, “Joe Rich ardson had got away somewhere and 1 I couldn’t find him. I thought I had better get back, to the top to get work started to bring those six men out.” But before he reached the main I shaft, the second blast came. Os that blast he did not feel the full ofrce, he j says, and thinks it was quite distant from him. Having reached the. main shaft as- j ■ ter the second explosion he was mak- ! I ! ing his way upward when he heard " J the third explosion behind him and ! flung himself fiat upon the ground. “It sounded like a tornado,” was the best description the young man could > give. Thus w r rote cne of his interviewers ' i for the Greensboro News: “The rushing wind swept over his I prostrate body, 'hurled it forward and . up the shaft, tossed it around, batter- i eel it and filled it wuth dirt and dust J and sand and rock, ripped his cap from his head,, his lamp from around i the forehead, his very glases from his : eyes, and left him almost uncon scious. Literally Crawled Friom Mine. All this the listeners dragged from Butler slowly and by piece-meal. He wasn’t talking much about it unless 1 you questioned him closely. But some how as you heard him talking you saw him staggering ahead. On hands and knees he crawled the remainder ' of the way to the mouth of the mine. “The last 200 feet took me 45 min- j utes,” somebody said, he mentioned, almost casually. ‘I didn’t know how long it was. I guess I didn’t know any thing much but to keep on climbing.’ Somebody asked him how be felt ‘ He thought a moment. Then he, said: “Did you ever drve into the water and hit flat on your belly ? WMI/ tha£s PITTSBORO, N. C., CHATHAM COUNTY, THURSDAY, JUNE 4, 1925. DEATH OF MR. MADDOfc lterns of News From Mon J|e That Will Interest Recort£ Readers. p K* Moncure, June I.—Miss r Womble and Mr. Ralph Crutchi 1 motored to Raleigh Monday. Mrs. J. E.. Cathell has returned fib 1 Fredericksburg, Va., where she tended the commencement of the college from which her daug(U ter, Miss Virginia, graduated. ! Mr. Evan Ray has gone to Peak, S. C., where he has obtained a posi tion with Phoenix Utility Co. Mr. and Mrs. D. R .Perkins are with us in Moncure again. We are glad to have them. They are boarding with j Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Wicker. Messrs jW. A. Moneyhan and Bruce Spivey ; are also at Mr. Wicker’s. | Miss Amey Womble, daughter of ; Mrs. S. W. Womble, who graduated at Davenport College, returned heme last week. She was valedictiorian of her class. 1 Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Davis and daughter, Mary Louise, of Raleigh, N. C., spent Sunday with Mrs. S. V. Holt. Mr. and Mrs. Russell Evington, of Smithfleld, also Mr.a nd Mrs. Lee (Continued on page four.) j / " “ ' I Thomas Montreviiic Aland Passed Away On Tuesday i . i the way 1 feel all over.’ But when a . 1 physician came in, the youngster turn . ed his head and said cheerfully : enough, “Hello, Boc, I’m getting along j . all right.” . i That interview was given Wednes , day afternoon. Afterward young But- : . ler was threatened with pneumonia ! and was taken to a Sanford hospital. . | He is back home now and practical ly recovered from his harsh experi », 7 .: once. , The News Spreads. , The news of the disaster was her alded far and near. Sheriff G. W. . Blair hastened to the scene, swore in j twenty or more special deputies, and j has remained in complete control of . | the situation, experiencing little, or no i difficulty in maintaining the very [ best order and keeping the area about i the slrcft clear of the thronging . crowds. { The news was flashed to the Gov ernor, who dispatched Gen. Van Metts to the scene and stood in readinesij „' to call out roops if there should bag . 1 occasion for it. 1 Fort Bragg was alert. Gen Bow-J ley himself w r as absent in the extreme eastern part of the state, but the rr*yfl jor next in command, hastened ffira ambulance corps, two lorries of siw i diers, stretchers and other parapher nalia. | Washington heard and acted. A supply car with experienced men and material from West Virginia arriv |ed 24 hours after the explosion. A similiar party hastened from Bir mingham, Ala. j But the promptest assistance came from the Cumnock mine, three miles | distant, miners of brown experience | and courage, and from Sanford, where the hospital corps and the Am erican Legion Auxiliary responded immediately—surgeons, nurses and supplies. The Red Cross, too, got into action. | In the meantime, and for the next two days ,the roads were thronged i with automobiles whizzing to the j scene of tragedy from points near and remote. The narrow roads were | dust-clouded. That there was no col ! lisidn is notable. For half a mile cars i were parked as at a monster county fair. Thousands and tens of thousands I of people visited the spot. Flocks of j newspaper reporters sped thither and camp.ed. The wires were kept hot; fast automobiles conveyed written copy to Raleigh and Greensboro. Sanford was bombarded with calls from* afar for the latest news. The office of the Carolina Coal Company was converted into a reporters’ ren oezvous and work shop. Soft drink and hot dog stands sprung up and did ■ a flourishing business and even the case and cold drink stands in Pitts boro boast a booming trade last week. Grief-Stricken Families. The most distresing sight was that of the awed and grief-stricken wives, children and parents, waiting in stoic al silence at first with hope that their (Continued on Page 8.) LOWER CAPE FEAR HELPS, j Sent S6O For Relief of Miners, Another Contribution to Fol low—Local News. Brickhaven, June 1. — Messrs J. C. Seawell and W. J. Hannon spent the I week-end at their homes near Car- j thage. Mr. O. C. Kennedy accompa nied his sister, Mrs. W. O. Mills, and niece, Mrs. Johnson to Carthage Sun day to attend the home-coming day exercises at their old home church. Mrs. E. C. Mims is spending this week at Pinehurst with her daughter, i Mrs. Atleigh Hannon. Mr. Jas. F. Johnson, of Raleigh, was a business visitor last week. He j was accompanied by his mother who J holds a eontroling stock of the Cher- ■ okee Brick Co. While here Mr. John- j j son and Mr. Kennedy motored to the j Carolina mine. Mr. Kennedy gave a , vivid account of the horrors and suf- | sering among the miners. It seems help is needed and needed badly. Personal aid is there but financial aid is lacking. Over sixty dollars have been raised by the lower Cape Fear people, and this section will send an- j other contribution this week. If any- j - one wishes to contribute, any amount, , small or large, will be eargeriy receiv (Continued on Page 5.) Prominent Citizen and President of Farmers Rank Passes. j Mr. T. M. Eland died Tuesday ev ening at Watts Hospital, Durham, where he was taken ten days ago for treatment and probable operation, j The result of the earlier diagnosis ’ was reported to be that Mr. Bland was suffering from the after effects j of influenza, but it seems that a later | diagnosis placed the trouble in the ; gall bladder, and an operation was performed Wednesday morning. The patient was seemingly recov ering satisfactorily from the opera tion, but in the afternoon a turn for the worse occurred and he rapidly sank till he passed away in the early evening. t The b*. dy was brought home that | night and the burial occurred yester day afternoon at Gum Springs Bap tist church between Pittsboro and YMoncure, by the side of his first wife. «The funeral was conducted by Rev. i&T, J. Howard, of Chapel Hill, and Wmj&cG. W. Perry, of Weldon. A large of friends and relatives were to pay their last respects to jjpbeir irisrd and kinsman. W: TMr.'Bla I was 73 years of age. He was reared in the eastern part of the ; county. His first wife was Miss An- L nette Poe, who bore him eleven chil \ dren, of whom eight are living.. After . her death he married Mrs. Fannie i Hatch, who survives him. Os this . | marriage there was no child. Mr. Bland began life as a poor boy but by honest efforts succeeded -in J amassing a considerable fortune. He , has been president of the Farmers Bank since its organization. .‘j Mr. Bland’s outspokenness some-' [ times made an unfavorable impres [ sion upon people, but those who knew } him had admired him greatly. He was a most liberal man, but did not pa rade the fact. Many a poor person has been the recipient of his bounty with j ,j no hint of its source. Thus an old citizen summed up his characteriza j tion of Mr. Bland a few days ago: j “There was no man in the community j who would more readily help the poor and do it oftener.” Also “uncle”'Tom! Leach, who lived near him, says that he was the kindest neighbor he ever had, and that he had helped many colored folk. On a Christmas a year, or two ago he sent a sack of flour to | every colored preacher in Pittsboro. lAn instance only of his kindly and liberal disposition. Mr. Bland has reared ti family of children that do him honor. The liv- : ing are Mrs. W. H. Cox, of Laurin burg; Mrs. M. M. Guinn, of Pittsboro; | Mrs. D. D. Guinn, of Lamar, S. C.; Miss Mary Bland, of Pittsboro; Mrs. 1 B. W. Gilmore, of Pittsboro; J. T. Bland, W. F. Bland and C. E. Bland, of Pittsboro. He is also survived by one brother , William F. Bland, of Apex, Rt. 4 and one sister, Mrs. G. W. Ellington, of Clayton. To the bereaved wife and children The Record expresses the heartfel* sympathy of the community. • HISTORICAL SKETCH OF COAL MINING IN DEEP RIVER SECTION (By Walter D. Siler.) The tragic disaster at the mine of the Carolina Coal Company at Farm ville in this county, whic occurred last week, has focussed for the time be ing public interest in a section and i an industry, that for many years seem to have been forgotten by the outside world. However, authentic rec ! ords disclose the fact that coal was | discovered in the immediate vicinity ; of the recent catastrophe more than one hundred and fifty years ago, and being mined, in a small way, if ' not prior to, certainly during the Revolutionary war. John Wilcox, a prominent and influ ential citizen of Chatham ,and its first representative in the Colonial Assembly, owned the lands in the vi i cinity of the mines now operated both Iby the Carolina Coal Company and ! the Cumnock property prior to 1775, 1 and operated a blast furnace in the neighborhood of Gulf, where coal was then produced. General Green, as his army marched through this section, i after the battle of Guilford Court ! House, impressed or took a quantity of iron from the Wilcox furnace, and 1 as late as 1830, the records show that ! his estate was endeavoring to collect ! pay therefor from the Federal gov ; ernment. It is historically interesting I to note that the Wilcox furnace and j mining machinery were set fire to and [ destroyed by Fanning’s Tory ban i dits in the colsing days of the Revo ’ i lution. | Colonial and State records recount , | instances where citizens filed peti- tions with the Governor and the War < * Board asking for exemption from mil ’ i itary and militia duty upon the x 1 ground that they were necessary la ' j borers at the Wilcox furnace and ' i mine. In a letter written by Professor I Olmsted from Chapel Hill, in 1820, ~ he says: / r “We have it in ourpporerw r er to r say that coal has been diiscovered in this section, and that a bed of - - considerable extent has been op ened not far from Gulf pn Deep • River* “It is about 50 years since this coal bed was first discovered. Mr. Wilcox, an enterprising gentle man, proprietor of the Old Iron „ Works at Gulf, took some pains to have it opened, and to intro > duce the coal into use. “ It, (the mine near Gulf) was ) known in the Revolution, and a ' Report made to Congress, res : peering it, is still extant.” . j Peter Evans, who then owned the i plantation in the great northward | bend of Deep River, including the vil ; lage now known as Cumnock, began ; mining coal on his property there, then called Egypt, about the year 1830. 1 In the year 1851, the Egypt plan tation was sold to L. J. Haughton and I Brooks Harris. Soon afterward, Har | ris acquired the Haughton interest, | and in the year 1853 sank the Egypt shaft, which was the most important single piece of development work un dertaken in the Deep' River Coal fields prior to Hie Civil war. This j shaft pierced the Cumnock coal bed at a depth of* 430 feet, but continued to a depth of 460 feet. After chang | ing hands for several times, in the year 1854, the Goovernor’s Creek Steam Transportation and Mining j Company, became the owner of the present Cumnock property, and oper ated this mine until after the Civil War, when the name of the corpora tion, by an ordinance of the Constitu ' tional Convention of 1886 was chang ed to the “Egypt Company.” H. M. Chance in his report on North Carolina Coal Fields to the Department of Agriculture, (1885,) says of the Deep River Coal fields: “Coal was dug from open pits for black-smithing in the Deep River coal field early in this, if not in the last century, but no systematic attempt was made to open the field for market until the slackwater improvement of Deep River. The next attempts were made upon the completion of the railroad from Fayetteville J to Egypt and Gins. * Operations were most actively pushed in the period immediately preceding the Civil War. During the war coal was mined at Farmville (pres ent Carolina Coal Company mine,) Egypt, (present Cumnock - j mine,) Gull, (present Deep Riv er Coal Company mine) and the ’ Evans piece, and shipped by riv er to Fayetteville and Wilming ton, where it was used by block ade runners.” Following the Civil War, the Cum-, nock property had a checkered his tory; ownership frequently changed, and no one appeared to be able to operate it at a profit. In 1870 the mine was closed down and remained, Hooded until the year 1888, when it was re-opened and operations again commenced. From then until the year 1902, the holding corporation manag ed by Samuel J. Langdon and Samuel 1 A. Hensey, experienced many rnisfor , tunes; was involved in much litiga i tian growing out of the personal dis-» ?• ferences of these financiers and mine 5 j operators, and suffered from two most , disastrous explosions, one of which tj occurring in the year 1835, resulted 7 in the loss of more than forty lives l and another in the year 4900 when t more than twenty operatives were t killed. These explosions and added - financial difficulties necessitated the l closing down of the mine about 1902, 1 and it remained under water until I 1915, when it pased into the handa -| of the Norfolk-Southern Railroad - 1 Company, and was rehabilitated un der the name of the Cumneek Coal " Company. The output secured by tho - operations of this company was used r for railroad purposes. In September - \1922, the property was purchased s by the Erskine-Ramsey Coal Com - pany, and since that time has been d , operated by that corporation. [ Os the three separate developments r in present or recent operation, the 6 j Cumnock mine, the Carolina Coal ! Company, and the Deep River Com pany’s location is the property upon which coal was first or jg+ inally known as the mine,” and while the Qarolina Coal Company did not begin operations at Farmville until 1921, coal had been produced there in a small way since the early days, Sbd for many years the father of our-popular eotmtyman, Mr. R. R.- Seagroves, supplied a considerable lo cal demand, and shipped to Various points in the state coal mined £r?T& this location. The original Cumnock was called’. LaGrange, but was changed to Egypt, due to the fact that Peter Evans, the owner of the farm was a large pro -5 j ducer of corn, and so many people t journeyed to his plantation to pur-^ - j chase this grain, that Peter Smith, & 1 Scotchman, spoke Os their going down > to “Egypt to get corn, and the owner ■ -was so pleased w:‘th the remark that j he afterward called his place Egypt* The name Gulf was given to the l early settlement at a sharp bend of ■ Deep River ,by boatmen who found > there an unusually deep portion of ' | the river between shallows formed ' by the dikes where they cross the • stream. Within the years intervening be-* i tween the time when John Wilcox be i gan the first development more than a century and a half ago, and the: present, disappointment, financial dis ■ aster, tragedy, and romance and in trigue have all mingled with efforts of the ambitious spirits, who have sought to bring the hidden treasures of the Deep River Coal Fields to the light of day, and a true history of this section, penned by a capable wri j ter, would be more interesting than a , popular novel. CORONER’S INQUEST. Coroner Geo. H. Brooks, with a jury composed of R. M. Gorrell, J. F. Thomas, R. Campbell, R. Desem, H. Dixon, J. Wren, held an inquest at Coal Glen rendering the only possible verdict. The list of the dead in the story of the disaster is furnished by; 1 Coroner Brooks and should be correct. copelandTjones. Mr. Frank L Copeland, son of Mr. W. A. Copeland, and Miss Beulah Jones of Hadley township, were mar ried by ’Squire Blair Sautrday. happy young couple, we understand, will live with the groom's parents, near Moores Bridge. NUMBER 52.