Working Class Rhetoric: An Exploration of The Mining Rhetoric of Southeast KansasMain MenuThe History of Mining in Southeast KansasThe Hearl Maxwell CollectionThe Hearl Maxwell Collection"Us" vs "Them"Alexander Howat vs John L. LewisMiners Starve, Idle, or WorkingPoverty ReductionUnion Relationship Rhetoric and BrotherhoodThe Amazon ArmyDisability in the MinesJennifer Katzerc3846a5de27f6c938df2d2f8dec5cd07e2a0aed1Tara Yarnelleb1fae02665d887569eb6cabee2c4ae5a342e3fdGlenn Storeya721f873184f60b148d53d11dc3860bca0bd8535
PBS filming brings historic Amazon Army back to life
1media/amazon army.jpg2016-04-14T11:29:04-07:00The Amazon Army11image_header2016-05-21T13:59:14-07:00Feminism in the 1920’s was booming in America. It reached into almost every walk of life, and every socio-economic class. The coal mines of Southeast Kansas was no exception. While women were rallying for the fight to vote and fair labor standards, the mining women were getting their say as well. On December 12, 1921, a group of fed up women who were wives, sisters, mothers and friends of the coal miners took the mines to task for using “scab” employment to keep their mines open during strikes. These women effectively shut down the mines for three days and brought mining to a standstill at over 60 mines. They were known as “The Amazon Army”