Workers from the Kentucky Coal & Coke Mine of Echols, Kentucky pose in front of a building. Most of them wear overalls and hats with lights attached and a number of them have a metal pail nearby which may hold their lunches. One man is smoking...
A group of miners, both black and white, from St. Bernard Coal Company at Martins Gap in Christian County, Kentucky. Some of the men are sitting on mules in the back row, and a few have dinner pails.
Large electric motor with freight cars filled with coal attached to it inside a mineshaft. . A man stands between the motor and first car, possibly on the back of the motor. Wires run across the ceiling. The shaft is supported by large wood...
A railroad exits a mine in snow-covered woods. Three mules stand on the tracks harnessed to a line of four small carts filled with coal. Eleven men stand near the carts and two men stand on a hill above.
A group of men in miners' hats with headlamps pose with a mule pulling a low cart of coal along a railroad track that exits the mouth of a mine in the snowy woods.
A group of men standing around a row of cars filled with coal at St. Bernard Coal Company in Christian County, Kentucky. The mine face or entrance is in the background.
Men at St. Bernard Coal Company in Christian County, Kentucky stand on the second story of the structure and near the mule-drawn wagons in front of the building, and one perches on a carload of coal stationed on the railroad tracks adjacent to the...
Miners at St. Bernard Coal Company in Christian County, Kentucky, posed near a row of cars filled with coal from the mine and flanked by men on horseback.
Determining the mechanical properties of the spine is a significant step in understanding the behavior of the spine under normal conditions. Although a limited amount of data for cyclic loading is currently available, the tests are not completely...
A crowd of over forty men, some of them holding tools or buckets, stand in front of a coal tipple attached to the front of a simple, dark wood building. Two piles of ladders with another ladder in the middle lie on the ground in front of the crowd.
The Louisville Leader was an African-American newspaper published from 1917 to 1950 by I. Willis Cole in Louisville, Kentucky. This issue says Vol. 15. No. 49. but is actually Vol. 15. No. 48. This issue is twelve pages. There is a portion missing...
The Louisville Leader was an African-American newspaper published from 1917 to 1950 by I. Willis Cole in Louisville, Kentucky. This issue is six pages.
The Louisville Leader was an African-American newspaper published from 1917 to 1950 by I. Willis Cole in Louisville, Kentucky. This issue says Vol. 29. No. 36. but is actually Vol. 29. No. 39. This issue is four pages.
Politicians; Political corruption; United States. Congress;
Congressman Romano L. (Ron) Mazzoli, interviewed by Kevin Collins on May 25, 2010 as part of the Romano L. Mazzoli oral history project. This is the fifth of 17 interviews conducted with the Congressman, who represented the Third District of...