Past-E-Mail: Cam Notes - 2007: September: Sep 09-07 |
By Charlie H., Eagle River, MI on Sunday, September 9, 2007 - 06:06 am: As you may have heard, our friend and colleague Kevin Musser passed away this week. Kevin was webmaster of CopperRange.org, and a frequent contributor to our weekly Shoebox Memory feature. He had a way of engaging web viewers in each picture, transporting us to the past. Following is a reprint of comments on the first picture above "Painesdale Crew", which appeared on a Sunday four years ago this month... |
By Charlie H., Eagle River, MI on Sunday, September 21, 2003 - 08:06 am:
Among these rugged men of the mines, Mark Suokas has three relatives: Uncle Rudolph Suokas, second from the left, Grandpa Peter Suokas on the far right, and Great-grandfather Richard Kauppi next to Peter. CopperRange.org's webmaster Kevin Musser dates this Shoebox Memory around 1936. Painesdale Mine and Shaft was featured this month on PBS, in the weekly Michigan Magazine.
Do you suppose the gentlemen on far left and right are eating pastys?
It is staggering to me how much of their lives was spent underground.
My Father and both Grandfathers worked at the Sunday Lake Mine in Wakefield. It was tough work, under terrible conditions. People today would not belive what a Miner went through to raise a family.
NOTICE SHADOWS PRODUCED BY SEPERATE LIGHT FROM OUR RIGHT. ; OLD TYPE PHOTO--YEAR?
I just read a great book--_The Journal of Otto Peltonen_ by Wm Durbin. It is a kids' book (4th-6th grade maybe?) about an immigrant boy in Hibbing at the turn of the century and how the mines controlled their lives. The accidents he describes are terrible. Even the families above ground in the location houses were at risk for death and dismemberment. Very compelling and makes me thankful for my cushy life today!
These are some of the people that built America. A tip of the hat to them for all they have given us. I have no miners in my family's past, but both my great-great and great-grandfathers were teamsters in the lumbers camps down on the AuSable. Every time I drive past the miner's statue in Houghton, I think about those hard working men and silently say thanks to them for making my life easier through their labor. If you're from a mining family, be very proud.
Thanks Kevin for another great photo memory. Thanks also for all the hard work you do in helping Painesdale Mine & Shaft in their efforts to save a piece of history. The thought behind this effort is to save this monumental building to honor all those who worked in the mines to provide a living for their families. To those who gave the supreme sacrifice, their lives, we plan to place a plaque in the shafthouse as tribute. The conditions they worked under would probably be considered grossly inhumane by today's work conditions. Every time I enter Champion #4 as a tour guide, I am in awe of those men.
Hi All,
I too think of how much time the miners spent underground. They probably went to work in the darkness of the a.m. and came up late in the day as it was getting dark again. Not the summer months but fall and winter. There must have been a lot of depression. Also, I have heard horses were brought underground to the mines to work and were left down there so they never ever got to see light again. Is this true?
My Grandfather told me that when he was 14 years old he worked in a mine as "mule starter". He said the mules came underground young and were brought back to surface only when they were dead.
My grandfather and father worked the coal mines in Southern Illinois. Grandpa spent many years as a ferrier, shoeing the mules that worked down in the mines. The mules lived underground for their entire life. It is hard to understand what the miners went through then and even now in some areas of America. Coal or ore...it was a horrible life.
Thanks Kevin, for sharing today's picture.
Does anybody know where I can find more pictures of the Painesdale mine workers circa 1928 - 1932? My Grandfather Matti Leppanen was killed in a mining accident in 1934 in Painesdale and I have very few pictures of him or of his life in the mine. What a rough way to make a living. I sure respect the miners who spent all those years underground to support their families.
My first question is which shaft is in the picture?
Wonderful fond memories of Painesdale.Spent a few summers there with the Stienen grandparents.Dad
Troll with connections;
Isn't it amazing what life was like back then! Myself, I can hardly stand to be in a room with no windows for a few miniutes! My grandpa "Red" Slattery was recognized for working over 50 years in the C&H mill in Hubbell. Heard the story about one worker who fell to his death into a hopper of hot slag! There was danger everywhere in those days.
My grandfather, Christopher Rowe, was a miner in several mines in Amasa from 1900 to 1915. (Cornishman who came to Norway in Dickinson County as a child of 6 with his parents). Then he became an accountant and worked above ground for the mines. My grandmother (Ida Maude Simons)grew up in Calumet (Osceola Township). I don't know if any of her relatives were copper miners or not. It certainly does look like a tough life.
Pretty neat stuff! I just moved only a stone's throw from the mine, in Painesdale, last week:)
marc - painesdale, |
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