Posted By: 330-Trapper
Old History photo 378 - 10/02/25 08:58 PM
![[Linked Image]](https://trapperman.com/forum/attachments/usergals/2025/10/full-1790-270485-1000024679.jpg)
Belgian coal miners emerging from the depths after a hard day’s work. (1920s)
Posted By: charles
Re: Old History photo 378 - 10/02/25 09:13 PM
[spoiler][/spoiler
I expect they smell bad. Fresh air will help.
Posted By: panaxman
Re: Old History photo 378 - 10/02/25 09:21 PM
Omg, tough conditions there!
My back aches seeing this pix.
Posted By: Brian Mongeau
Re: Old History photo 378 - 10/02/25 11:29 PM
Nothing scary about that!
Posted By: beaverpeeler
Re: Old History photo 378 - 10/03/25 01:14 AM
A lot of Swedes (including some of my kinfolk) were strike breakers for the coal miners on strike back in the day. Mine never even knew they were strike breakers, got the job offers coming off the boats.
Posted By: elsmasho82
Re: Old History photo 378 - 10/03/25 01:26 AM
I remember reading about “buttons down the back” where miners would get in tight places and scrape their backs up on whatever was holding up the tunnels. How awful
Posted By: Dan Barnhurst
Re: Old History photo 378 - 10/03/25 01:42 AM
That is the new image in my head of what Hades would look like!
Posted By: Bigbrownie
Re: Old History photo 378 - 10/03/25 02:52 AM
We had a 660 foot ride down at the Newfield Mine, near Monroeville, where I worked in the 1980s. I was on the straight midnight crew….and in the winter, we had to ride on the top of “cage” and chip ice the length of the shaft. The worst part was that the elevator ran in the intake air course. There was over 100,00 CFM of freezing air blowing down past you. Two guys could only last a couple minutes on top, then you had to climb back into the elevator through a door in the ceiling. It’s hard to describe that kind of cold. Never experienced anything like it since.
Posted By: g smith
Re: Old History photo 378 - 10/03/25 03:49 AM
Times are tough here now in the USA duh
lots of miner like that up here in the u p of Michigan , in the 1880 - 1930,