Volume 44, Number 3
On the cover: Smoke pours from the No. 9 mine near Farmington, November 20, 1968, as a helicopter takes methane detections. Sadly, photographer Lawrence Pierce’s image is one of the most iconic in West Virginia history. Photo courtesy of Charleston Gazette-Mail Archives.
Published by the
STATE OF WEST VIRGINIA
Jim Justice, Governor
Randall Reid-Smith, Commissioner
Department of Arts, Culture and History
Stan Bumgardner, Editor
Kim Johnson,
Editorial Assistant
Jacob Hall Design
Publication Design |
Fall 2018
- 2 From the Editor
- 6 The Farmington Mine Disaste
- By Stan Bumgardner
- 19 The 1954 Disaster
- By M. Raymond Alvarez and
Stan Bumgardner
- 22 “Is your dad home from the mines?”
- By M. Raymond Alvarez
- 28 Two Reporters Recall That
- Infamous Morning
By John Veasey
- 30 Bob Campione
- By M. Raymond Alvarez
- 34 Healing Spirits
- By Rev. O. Richard Bowyer
- 40 The James Fork Church Journal
- By Rev. D. D. Meighen
- 46 Nurses at No. 9
- By M. Raymond Alvarez
- 52 Ken Hechler and the
- Farmington Widows
By Stan Bumgardner
- 58 A Rumbling Down Below:
- Miners for Democracy
By Christine M. Kreiser
- 69 Remembering No. 9
- By Francene Kirk
- 73 West Virginia Back Roads:
- Alasky’s: Another Name for Farmington
By Carl E. Feather
- 77 The No. 9 Memorial
- By John Veasey
- 80 Comfortably Numb
- By Stan Bumgardner
- Return to Goldenseal
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