Breaker Boys

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  • čas přidán 5. 01. 2010

Komentáře • 148

  • @marcoceccarelli6415
    @marcoceccarelli6415 Před 6 lety +81

    My grandfather died in the coal mines. It was an Archibald Pennsylvania. He was an immigrant from Italy. A true American

    • @robertgorham3755
      @robertgorham3755 Před 4 lety +6

      My dad's father died coal mining when my dad was around high school age..they were from Wilkes- barre PA

    • @leighahmke
      @leighahmke Před 4 lety +9

      My great-grandfather was a breaker boy at Maple Hill near Shenandoah, PA. My family was from Lithuania. He nearly died in two accidents as a grown man at the same location. He quit the mines after the second accident. Sadly, he still died of black lung decades later.

    • @fixedthrower5064
      @fixedthrower5064 Před 4 lety +2

      Rip

    • @andyandcallie
      @andyandcallie Před 4 lety +5

      My grandfather was killed in a mine collapse, too. May they sleep peacefully.

    • @debradowling800
      @debradowling800 Před 4 lety +4

      @@leighahmke my family was Lithuanian from Shenandoah also. My great grandfather died in the Ellen Gowan mine and my uncle had to go to work to support the family, he was ten years old. The last name was Odietus. Three out of six of my uncles died of black lung after they all fought in WWII. It truly was the greatest generation.

  • @stevent9179
    @stevent9179 Před 4 lety +19

    Boys with the faces of combat veterans.....

  • @ginathegreat3858
    @ginathegreat3858 Před 5 lety +37

    3:03 That look of total hopelessness is heartbreaking. He looks like he's dead inside.

  • @headron66
    @headron66 Před měsícem

    I had two great grandfathers who were killed down the pit and my lovely Da died at sixty three from pit related disease. I have total respect for every boy, man and pony that worked down those black holes.

  • @KB-hx3px
    @KB-hx3px Před 3 lety +12

    My grandfather was lucky. Despite what his family wanted, he left home to attend college, eventually leave PA behind in 1944, for Los Angeles. He built a good life in Hollywood as an Engineer and rarely traveled back to visit.

    • @JT-bc5cd
      @JT-bc5cd Před 15 dny

      And look at LA now… he amongst all the other deracinites laid the foundations for that filthy city

  • @CH-zc3cq
    @CH-zc3cq Před 5 lety +19

    Some of my Irish ancestors worked the PA coal mines. No disability and food stamps back then.

    • @MyNewChanel1
      @MyNewChanel1 Před rokem

      ​@Carlos R He means that in the good old times...

    • @CH-zc3cq
      @CH-zc3cq Před rokem

      @Carlos R What is the question? Is it is whether slavery is good or bad?

    • @grailness1085
      @grailness1085 Před měsícem +1

      That made them tough, can't have people that will stand up against a tyrannical government

  • @philadelmar
    @philadelmar Před 11 lety +41

    I think the history of the breaker boys and the lives of coal miner's families needs to be retold often.It was horrific! To me this was not much different than slavery. Being from Pennsylvania, the history of the coal mining community is especially important to me.

    • @CH-zc3cq
      @CH-zc3cq Před 5 lety +4

      Slavery had and still has a lot of forms.

    • @wowcool8749
      @wowcool8749 Před 4 lety +1

      True, I only heard of it today on a Joe Rogan clip.

    • @sheilasmith3801
      @sheilasmith3801 Před 2 lety +2

      @Carlos R enslaved people were not paid, terrorized and brutally beatened. These working conditions were deplorable, it was dangerous, but it was not slavery

    • @easyriderrider4580
      @easyriderrider4580 Před rokem

      Yeah and Not Every Slave worked the fields. Sometimes they had Black Masters, as well.

    • @easyriderrider4580
      @easyriderrider4580 Před rokem

      Very similar in that your chances of actually getting away from the Mines. When White People didn't have Black's to beat on, they went right to the Irish and Scottish people, Next. This only happened more as you went North because, well, it was a couple degrees colder and they couldn't really grow large amounts of cotton there, I guess, lol.

  • @carolalexander4261
    @carolalexander4261 Před 4 lety +12

    MY DAD WORKED IN THE MINES AT 12...HE SAID THEY WANTED SMALLER BODIES TO BE ABLE TO REACH IN THE CORNERS AND GET MORE COAL.....HE WOKED FOR 22 YEARS,,,THEN LEFT AND WORKED ON THE RAILROAD....HE DEVELOPED BLACK LUNG.

  • @ChiefCowpie
    @ChiefCowpie Před rokem +5

    My Grandfather, George McKinley worked at a LackawannaCoal Company breaker until the continued hauntings of a fellow worker’s ghost after he was killed from dangerous conditions compelled him to quit.

  • @asmxh
    @asmxh Před 2 lety +7

    Anybody who has the ignorance to complain about labor unions need to watch videos like this.

    • @wildflower7975
      @wildflower7975 Před rokem +1

      💯

    • @yesindeed2151
      @yesindeed2151 Před 11 měsíci +2

      Unions were a good thing back then. Todays unions have become bloated gangs good only for making themselves money.

  • @cheyennebrown7102
    @cheyennebrown7102 Před 7 lety +31

    there were cases where people fell in the conveyor belt and they were sucked into a giant coal bin and many died from that as well. It's so sad to know that kids at the age of just 5 were working in these conditions.

  • @grailness1085
    @grailness1085 Před měsícem

    Back in the good old days...

  • @jvonschilling
    @jvonschilling  Před 14 lety +12

    It's from a documentary released in 1984 -- "America and Lewis Hine." There's a VHS of it that came out in 1996, but it's hard to find a copy of it.

  • @bethwilliams3949
    @bethwilliams3949 Před 5 lety +13

    An acquaintance of mine lost a little brother at the Shepton Mines. He was a breaker boy, and his arm got caught in some pulley...and was ripped off his body. He bled out and died in about a minute. He was really young...under ten years old.

  • @96actress
    @96actress Před 12 lety +12

    I will always love the kids who throughout their childhood had to work to survive and to help their families survive. You all will live forever in out hearts.

    • @fauxmanchu8094
      @fauxmanchu8094 Před 7 lety +7

      96actress In those times poor families would have 10 or 12 children n used them as slave wage earners. They used their kids like farm animals.

    • @EgirlPoke
      @EgirlPoke Před 4 lety

      Faux Manchu my grandma had r4kids who helped on the farm in the late 1900s, they all went to colleges and graduated. My dad is one oof the sons and bought the farm.

  • @amyjacquelineg.9541
    @amyjacquelineg.9541 Před 4 lety +27

    These breaker boys break my heart. How did they survive ? Just children. No gloves. How cheap could these Cole billionaires be? In humans.

    • @amyjacquelineg.9541
      @amyjacquelineg.9541 Před 4 lety +5

      They weren’t looked as human. Just money making labour. 😥

    • @Juan-nq7wb
      @Juan-nq7wb Před rokem +4

      Most likely typed this comment on an iphone too, kids in china going thru it right now making apple and nike products

    • @samuelmartinez4819
      @samuelmartinez4819 Před rokem

      Honestly it's not like there was anything else to do, the kids were probably illiterate, aside from going to church and maybe school now and than you just kinda sat around. Maybe had a radio or some board games but other than that you just worked to kill time no matter how old you were lmao

    • @calebgregg9900
      @calebgregg9900 Před rokem +1

      Sad thing is 9/10 breaker boys didn't survive

    • @TheOriginalShoneBoyOnYT
      @TheOriginalShoneBoyOnYT Před 9 měsíci

      @@Juan-nq7wbidc about them

  • @the10thman87
    @the10thman87 Před 3 lety +5

    This is the old America. You worked or you starved. Period.

    • @MyNewChanel1
      @MyNewChanel1 Před rokem +2

      Not when you were born into better circumstances though.

  • @debradowling800
    @debradowling800 Před 4 lety +9

    And this was supposed to be a better life they came here for. Heartbreaking.

    • @Hudini12345
      @Hudini12345 Před 2 lety +1

      It was better. My family, those who stayed in Ireland, died in the famine in the 1840's. My GR-GR (GR) Grandfather immegrated to the US then along with half the population of ireland who didn't die. . My father and his father before him worked in the mines. My father was a breaker during the depression. He dropped out of school in the 8th grade to help support his family. He got out of the mines by being drafted for service in World War II and Korea and making the Army his new home. Everyone else who stayed in the mines lived but barely until the 1970's when the coal fields of Pennsylvania died.

  • @577buttfan
    @577buttfan Před rokem +1

    All this hard work toil and madness built this beautiful country.

  • @jnr2349
    @jnr2349 Před 4 lety +12

    The early days of capitalism

    • @orangeytrain8878
      @orangeytrain8878 Před 3 lety

      J N using this to support why capitalism is bad?

    • @orangeytrain8878
      @orangeytrain8878 Před 3 lety

      If so this is past capitalism, not present capitalism

    • @hibye7385
      @hibye7385 Před 2 lety +3

      @@orangeytrain8878 Child labour still exists in many countries today. Especially in periphery countries that supply abundant cheap labour. Just because something cannot be seen by you, that does not mean it doesn't exist.

  • @karielyagosto2608
    @karielyagosto2608 Před 3 lety +6

    This is just very sad 😢😢 I kinda regret searching this up to understand it better for a school assignment 😭😭😭😭

  • @Lockemeister
    @Lockemeister Před 12 lety +6

    I read that a lot of the Breaker Boys got hunchbacked from sitting hunched over all day everyday.
    People would joke and say. "That boy has a good hunch"

  • @ohmeowzer1
    @ohmeowzer1 Před 5 lety +9

    God Bless that man ..omg

  • @jenniferg.1169
    @jenniferg.1169 Před 3 lety +4

    I have read children were seen as little adults and it was only recently childhood is considered a notion...

    • @MyNewChanel1
      @MyNewChanel1 Před rokem

      And they're still somewhere. In some places kids simply cannot afford... "being kids".

  • @sands7779
    @sands7779 Před 2 lety +2

    from the UK, the testimony gathered by Lord Ashley for the commission of inquiry into the conditions of workers in the coal mines may be of interest. As a result, the Mines Act of 1842 prohibited the employment in of all women and boys under ten in underground mines.

  • @riffmaster5805
    @riffmaster5805 Před 2 lety

    the true BRAVE HEARTS

  • @EgirlPoke
    @EgirlPoke Před 4 lety +2

    I cant believe youi made this!

  • @beatrizmedrano2129
    @beatrizmedrano2129 Před 8 lety +5

    Hello, I wanted to know if I had permission to use your video on the interview but I wanted to edit it for my stepson's history fair project. It can't be more than 4 minutes so I need to edit it. thank you.

  • @a.u.positronh3665
    @a.u.positronh3665 Před 3 lety +2

    It is crazy that young people had to suffer to get flammable rock

  • @jamesbrennan7057
    @jamesbrennan7057 Před rokem

    I remember my great great uncle used to tell me stories of this

  • @CaptScrotes
    @CaptScrotes Před 5 lety +17

    It's never been about black vs white or men vs women. It's always been rich vs poor.

  • @maryl2188
    @maryl2188 Před 12 lety +3

    1911 south Pittston Pa., we have a town called Pittston here in Luzerne county. Do you know where this is from?

  • @MultiWayland
    @MultiWayland Před 3 lety +1

    this is so sad ( god bless them ) all

  • @postmodernmining
    @postmodernmining Před 10 měsíci

    Just look at em oppressing the whamens.

  • @fenandocastanonmanrriquez591

    Fueron grandes chicos

  • @sudorights
    @sudorights Před rokem +3

    They stopped doing it to our kids and now it’s done in the mines of Africa. Same thing!

  • @kevincorcoran6493
    @kevincorcoran6493 Před 3 lety +2

    Is that Jason Robards doing narration?

  • @edwu8253
    @edwu8253 Před 7 lety +2

    i was very spoiled growin up in nj

  • @erin19030
    @erin19030 Před 11 měsíci +1

    My male ancestors all began their lives in this country under the boot of american corporate greed.

  • @VintageCartoonBuff
    @VintageCartoonBuff Před 14 lety +2

    When was this video made?

  • @frezericks
    @frezericks Před rokem

    What is this a clip from?

  • @JohnMFlores
    @JohnMFlores Před 7 lety +1

    Wow. Who is the photographer?

  • @ursulasmith6402
    @ursulasmith6402 Před 2 lety +1

    Just horrible, those poor children.

  • @alison1107
    @alison1107 Před 7 lety +2

    Hi, I just wanted to say that I found this video extremely helpful and enlightening. A friend and I are creating a National History Day documentary on a similar topic, would it be okay to use some footage from this video?

  • @Hist0ry_Enj0yer
    @Hist0ry_Enj0yer Před 3 lety

    2021?

  • @ursulasmith6402
    @ursulasmith6402 Před 7 lety +3

    horrible, what that man and the others had to endure. i can't even imagine that. now kids kill , do drugs, complain, cut school.

  • @MrYpink
    @MrYpink Před 10 lety +4

    Can someone help me by telling me one of the boys name ?

    • @noR10swDBaur
      @noR10swDBaur Před 8 lety +4

      They have no names, they have all been forgotten now. They worked their lives away and never asked for acceptance, because they knew they were accepted.

    • @erin19030
      @erin19030 Před 6 lety +2

      Patrick Brennan

  • @bobzurunkle1860
    @bobzurunkle1860 Před 8 lety

    My family on my fathers side were miners in Domany near Reschitza Romania. Does anyone here have family that mined that part of Banat? im interested in what you know about the miners and families there.

  • @_Mike23
    @_Mike23 Před rokem

    All these kids look like there in their 40s. Man that’s crazy….

  • @andyandcallie
    @andyandcallie Před 4 lety +6

    Black lung anyone?? Can you imagine what that coal dust did to these boys' undeveloped lungs? And the poor horses and mules. I feel even worse for them. God, I hate people.

    • @debradowling800
      @debradowling800 Před 4 lety +2

      You feel worse for a fucking mule? Three of my uncles died in those mines. Doubt my grandmother worried about a mule as she buried her children.

    • @andyandcallie
      @andyandcallie Před 4 lety +5

      @@debradowling800 I definitely feel worse for the horses and mules. Humans were there by choice. Animals were innocent victims, enslaved. My grandfather and plenty of uncles died in the mines and yes, I still feel worse for the animals. And no of course your grandmother didn't worry about the animals because people are disgusting that way.

    • @debradowling800
      @debradowling800 Před 4 lety +2

      The fact that childrens lives mean so little to you speaks volumes. Get help, you are a very sick girl.

    • @andyandcallie
      @andyandcallie Před 4 lety +2

      @@debradowling800 I don't like humans. I've already said that. But I value ALL life--unlike you. You are the one who is "sick." I hope you don't have any pets.

    • @orangeytrain8878
      @orangeytrain8878 Před 3 lety

      youcanttunafish bruh you dislike humans because of what some rich people did a hundred years ago, I just guess your an edgy teenager

  • @samuelmartinez4819
    @samuelmartinez4819 Před rokem

    Idk I don't really see a problem I mean this is what everyone did back than, you worked. There wasn't tv or internet or even board games except cards. You would go to church and work or school sometimes. There was literally nothing else to do especially in those small ass towns.

  • @ohmeowzer1
    @ohmeowzer1 Před 5 lety +3

    Poor little kids how horrible

  • @miyubail
    @miyubail Před 9 lety +2

    What does feminism got to do with mining laborers?

    • @CH-zc3cq
      @CH-zc3cq Před 5 lety +1

      Well, no women were working the mines, but children did.

    • @lianelaskoske4397
      @lianelaskoske4397 Před 4 lety

      Had nothing to do with feminism. Women were needed working in the home, cooking, cleaning, sewing, etc.

    • @CH-zc3cq
      @CH-zc3cq Před 4 lety +1

      @@lianelaskoske4397 I don't see any connection with children's or women's rights. Harsh realities. Life was never easy for any family member.

  • @fixedthrower5064
    @fixedthrower5064 Před 4 lety +3

    1:53
    Is this for kids

  • @yvonnerousseau2238
    @yvonnerousseau2238 Před 6 lety +3

    Humans. -_- I'm ashamed.

    • @orangeytrain8878
      @orangeytrain8878 Před 3 lety

      Yvonne Rousseau your ashamed at the entire human race for what some rich dumbasses did nearly a hundred years ago

  • @justawokedude8155
    @justawokedude8155 Před 3 lety

    This is after the fall of grad tartaria they killed us off and only children survived

  • @lilrancher7418
    @lilrancher7418 Před 5 lety +1

    Was good

  • @erin19030
    @erin19030 Před 11 měsíci

    My great uncle Andrew died from a fall of coal at the #9 mine in Lansford, Pa. His wife and children with all their belongings were cast into the street and made homeless by Asa Packer coal baron of the Lehigh Coal Company.

  • @user-bo8eq7ki5w
    @user-bo8eq7ki5w Před rokem

    Не знаю , можно ли ставить "Laike" под этим видео......

  • @suckit.77
    @suckit.77 Před 4 měsíci

    So much for that whole "white privilege" thing...

  • @bill-nj6fc
    @bill-nj6fc Před 2 lety +1

    oh well someone had to do it

  • @ralphmalph6824
    @ralphmalph6824 Před 4 lety +2

    Make America Great ...Again?

  • @guuskurstjens8825
    @guuskurstjens8825 Před 3 lety +1

    Minecraft