Pennsylvania Anthracite Coal Miners: Self-Representation and Memorialization

Methodology

    During the summer of 2016, after researching ten monuments in my hometown of Shamokin, a small anthracite coal region town in central Pennsylvania, I discovered a lack of representation of Shamokin’s coal mining heritage throughout its urban spaces. Considering coal was the main production of labor for decades, there are no public monuments dedicated to its most influential contribution to the world.

Thus I wanted to explore how other anthracite coal regions are displaying their heritage and any commemorations that are uniquely specific to a certain town. I undertook researching ten monuments that depict representations of coal miners and their heritage throughout different PA anthracite regions, thus discovering how this important heritage is depicted and its impact on the public memory of a town.

I archived meticulous data on each monument: date erected, location, geo-coordinates, sponsor/benefactor, sculptor, cost, materials & measurements, and the newspaper article of when the monument was erected. After gathering this information, I visited each monument to take photographs and experience the distinct urban spaces.

Then, I began piecing together my research on the digital site, Scalar, scalar.usc.edu. I decided to use Scalar in order to create a digital book that would walk the reader through the history of the ten monuments in a plethora of ways. I used the carousel widget of scalar to create a photo gallery of all of the pictures I had taken of a monument. If you click on the image, it will send you to a new tab with a bigger photo size. I then annotated three different monuments showing their representation for the coal region, and in some cases, how Shamokin could create something similar.

I made a timeline to show the historical arc of the monuments over time during the deindustrialization period of anthracite coal mining. There is a static map image that displays the monuments spatially, thus revealing that the northern anthracite region has more representation, as of now.

Overall, I created a digital database curating ten monuments and analyzing their symbology and significance to the anthracite region. Also, by critiquing their urban spaces this illuminated how Shamokin has the potential to represent their coal mining heritage. It is evident that Shamokin has plenty of advantages and opportunities to exemplify its coal region heritage, especially by incorporating the history of the Glen Burn Colliery. This digital database is not an exhaustive list of monuments in the anthracite coal region of PA; however, it is to be a genesis of a much larger digital archive intended to establish a connection with a town's history and heritage through public monuments.

This page has paths:

  1. The Pennsylvania Anthracite Coal Region Tyler Candelora

Contents of this path:

  1. Timeline