Review: When the Government Sent a Photographer To Document Living Conditions in Coal Towns
Russell Lee's 1946 photographs shows the squalor coal miners and their families lived in before mechanization.
The best antidote for politicized nostalgia that hails an imagined idyllic yesteryear full of abundant blue-collar jobs? Taking a good, hard look at how those workers actually lived.
"Power & Light," a temporary exhibit at the National Archives Museum in Washington, D.C., displays dozens of pictures taken in 1946, when the federal government dispatched photographer Russell Lee to document living conditions in coal mining towns across Appalachia. What he captured is not glamorous or desirable. One family documented by Lee's photos paid $7 per month ($124 in today's money) for a home with no running water. They shared an outhouse with "four or five" other families.
They weren't unique. Electricity and indoor plumbing are rare sights in the photos. Only half the mines even had washhouses for the workers at the end of their shifts.
Nowadays, even after recent declines, America produces more coal than it did in 1946 while employing about a third as many miners. Those who still earn their living this way have far safer, cleaner conditions. Mechanization may have eliminated some jobs, but it also lifted families out of a squalor that seems almost unbelievable today.
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They shared an outhouse with "four or five" other families.
Portland has human feces being deposited all over its public spaces, essentially one big ginormous outhouse.
I lived in a place for 2 years with an outhouse, no water, electricity and heat from a woodstove. Got the water from a spring. It's not as bad as you might think it was except the outhouse at -35 wasn't a place you spent a lot of time reading.
People have not had electricity and running water for much longer than we have had it.
Lots of people lived this way, even the wealthy didn't have electricity and indoor plumbing until the early 20th century. Really has nothing to do with coal miners in particular. The house my mother grew up in in northern Michigan still had a pump handle over the kitchen sink in the 50s and a pot bellied coal stove to heat the whole house.
I heat with free-range, locally sourced organic wood. Also have a hand pump on the well, but as a backup.