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Hawks Nest Tunnel disaster

Coordinates:38°07′20″N81°07′42″W / 38.12222°N 81.12833°W /38.12222; -81.12833
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1930-35 industrial disaster in West Virginia, U.S.
Hawks Nest Tunnel disaster
Grave site
Map
Date1930–1935
LocationGauley Bridge, West Virginia
Coordinates38°07′20″N81°07′42″W / 38.12222°N 81.12833°W /38.12222; -81.12833
Causeoccupationalsilicosis
Deaths476 to 1,000 (estimated)
New River canyon near Gauley Bridge

TheHawks Nest Tunnel disaster is one of several names applied to a large-scale incident of occupationallung disease in the 1930s resulting from construction of the 32-36-foot-wide[1]Hawks Nest Tunnel nearGauley Bridge, West Virginia, as part of ahydroelectric project. Another name is the "Hawks Nest Tragedy."[2] The loss of life is considered to be one of the worstindustrial disasters inAmerican history.[2]

The disaster's roots lay in the push to have enough hydroelectric power for a metallurgical plant in Boncar, later named Alloy, WV. It involved one of the country's largest corporations, Union Carbide and Carbon Company, and occurred during the early years of the Great Depression. The primary actors, in addition to Union Carbide and Carbon Company, were Rinehart and Dennis, a regional construction company, and thousands of people searching for work. In the end, the estimate is that 4800 men (1700 White and 3100 Black) worked on the project, but only 738 White men worked underground.[3] Many of the Black men were migrating from the South.[2]

The general causes for the disaster were a push for speed, which led to the majority of the drilling being done dry, rather than wet, and a lack of concern for employee safety. This lack of safety led many laborers to becoming ill with silicosis, many of whom died.[1][2][3] Many of the supervisors also became seriously ill, to include more than 40 supervisors by 1934.[3]

The many cases of illness and death led to publicity, 538 lawsuits and a Congressional investigation in 1936.[1] The resulting publicity reached the general public and led to socially-minded artists such asMuriel Rukeyser, taking an interest in it. Rukeyser visited in 1936 and published her book of poems,The Book of the Dead, in 1938.

In the past two decades, however, the disaster has once again become a subject for study. A resident of the region, Patricia Spangler, publishedHawk's Nest Tunnel: An Unabridged History (2008), and Cultural Resource Analysts, conducted a cultural historic survey for the Hawks Nest-Glen Ferris Hydroelectric Project.[4] In addition to the scholarly work, this disaster has led to the creation of a site focused on the names of those who died[5] and works of nonfiction, art, and film (see Catherine V. Moore, Raymond Thompson, and David Kelley).

Background

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The hydroelectric project began in 1927, when Union Carbide and Carbon Company, later shortened toUnion Carbide, created a wholly owned subsidiary, the New Kanawha Power Company. The name "Kanawha" comes from the Native American tribe whose land the project would be built.[6] The Kanawha River, a tributary of the Ohio River, is West Virginia's largest inland waterway (96.5 miles), begins near the town of Gauley Bridge,[7] but it did not have the speed to create hydroelectric power.

The plan was to divert water from the fast-flowingNew River through Gauley Mountain to generate hydro-electric power generation at a plant inAlloy, West Virginia. The additional advantage of this tunnel was that it had a downward angle of 162 feet.[3] The power station would be run by the Electro-Metallurgical Company (Union Carbide’s manufacturing subsidiary).[8]

The project came to employ nearly 3000 men, with three-fourths of them African-American. The first step was to construct a dam immediately belowHawks Nest to divert water from New River near Ansted, West Virginia into the tunnel. The water would then re-enter the Kanawha River nearGauley Bridge leaving a section known as "the Dries" in between. Beginning on March 31,1930, its contractor, Rinehart and Dennis, the lowest bidder among 35 and one of few large enough to tackle this project,[6][9][3] began construction of the 3-mile (4.8 km) tunnel carrying the river under Gauley Mountain.[3] They had two years to complete the project.[10] According to records, the workers created between 250 and 300 feet of tunnel per week.[3]

Workers

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Facing widespread unemployment during theGreat Depression, the men came to West Virginia to dig the tunnel. Even though the nearly 80% of the people of Fayette County, where the project was located, were white, the majority of the workforce hired were Black.[11] Their wages were in scrip, which meant they had to use the company store, and their pay was at a lower rate than the white workers.[12] Still, they were happy to have work, and the pay. One worker, Shirley Jones, who at 18 was expecting to make good money and return home to wed, said, “Think of it, honey. A job! Twenty-five cents an hour, 12 hours a day. That’s—why, that’s $3 a day! We’ll be marryin' soon, honey.” He was the first to die.[13]

They worked ten- to fifteen-hour shifts using drills and dynamite to mine sandstone composed primarily of cementedquartz (silica) sand. Once Rinehart & Dennis learned that the tunnel's route would be through a vein of high-quality silica used to make ferro silicon, a component used to make steel,[10] the situation for the workers became even less stable because the owners wanted both speed and a process to extract and save the silica rather than diminish its presence.[12] The silica, as much as 300,000 tons per day,[11] saved Union Carbide "millions of dollars."[14]

As a result, again, according to transcripts from a Congressional Inquiry in 1936, workers were not given any masks or breathing equipment to use while mining; the company chose not to use "wet drilling," a type of drilling that removes harmful dust.[15] Some reports claim the silica turned drinking water white.[16] Black workers told Congress in 1936 that they were denied breaks and even forced to work at gunpoint by "shack rousters" or individuals who served as law enforcement.[17][10] One worker recalled in a 1936 newsreel that, ""Each and every day I worked in that tunnel, I helped carry off 10 to 14 men who was overcome by the dust."[17] The workers also pointed out that management wore safety equipment during inspection visits.

The results of the practices encouraged and sometimes required by Rinehart and Dennis led to the project being completed more than twice as quickly as original projections.[17] A secondary result, also due to the practices, was the workers' overexposure to silica dust; many workers developed pulmonarysilicosis (fibroid phthisis), a debilitating and incurable disease that ultimately causes fibroids to grow in the lungs and patients suffocating. According to the Union Carbide report, 80 percent of the workers became ill, left the workplace, or died within six months.[18]

A large number of workers eventually died from silicosis, in some cases within a year. There are no definitive statistics as to the Hawks Nest death toll, partially because many African-American workers from the southern US returned home or left the region after becoming sick, making it difficult to calculate an accurate total.[19] Union Carbide estimated the number of deaths at 109, which is the number documented in an onsite historical marker. A Congressional hearing in 1936 placed the death toll at 476.[20] Martin Cherniak, a physician who published a history of the event, put the number at 764.[2] Other sources estimate the number of deaths between 700 to over 1,000 deaths among the 3,000 workers.[21]

Legal trials and government investigations

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The tragedy led to two major trials and a congressional investigation, yet even today, neither Rinehart & Dennis (still in operation) nor Union Carbide admit any guilt or responsibility.[22]

In 1932, the first legal claim leading to a trial came from Cora Jones who filed a suit against Rinehart and Dennis after her husband and three sons died. Overall, there were 538 lawsuits filed, requesting a total of $4 million. The trial ended in 1933, after hearing nearly 170 witnesses. The jury could not make a decision, and the victims ended with a small settlement of $130,000; lawyers took their 50%.[23]

1936. House of Representatives Committee on Labor summarized their findings by saying "the tunnel was begun, continued, and completed with grave and inhuman disregard of all consideration for the health, lives and futures of the employees. That as a result many workmen became infected with silicosis; that many have died from the disease and many not yet dead are doomed to die.[24] Union Carbide and Carbon Company responded with a report.[25]

Regulatory legacy

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This paragraph is an excerpt fromN95 respirator § Early US respirator standards.[edit]

Prior to the 1970s, respirator standards were under the purview of theUS Bureau of Mines (USBM). An example of an early respirator standard, Type A, established in 1926, was intended to protect against mechanically generated dusts produced in mines. These standards were intended to obviate miner deaths, noted to have reached 3,243 by 1907. Prior to theHawks Nest Tunnel disaster, these standards were merely advisory, as the USBM had no enforcement power at the time.[26] After the disaster, an explicit approval program was established in 1934, along with the introduction of combination Type A/B/C respirator ratings, corresponding to Dusts/Fumes/Mists respectively, with Type D blocking all three, under 30 CFR 14 Schedule 21.[27]

Hawks Nest workers memorials and gravesites

[edit]

In 1986, West Virginia placed a historical marker, a three-foot sign, at the site.[3] The marker, atHawks Nest State Park,, reads:[28]

Construction of nearby tunnel, diverting waters of New River through Gauley Mt for hydroelectric power, resulted in state's worst industrial disaster. Silica rock dust caused 109 admitted deaths in mostly black, migrant underground work force of 3,000. Congressional hearing placed toll at 476 for 1930-35. Tragedy brought recognition of acute silicosis as occupational lung disease and compensation legislation to protect workers.

In 2009, another memorial to the Hawks Nest workers and their gravesite was installed at 98 Hilltop Drive inMount Lookout, nearSummersville Lake andU.S. Route 19 (38°14′04.24″N80°51′09.22″W / 38.2345111°N 80.8525611°W /38.2345111; -80.8525611). The site is located several miles from Martha White’s farm atSummersville where many of the black miners were buried, since they were not allowed to be buried in "white" cemeteries.[29] The location of the site was rediscovered with help ofWest Virginia State University professor Richard Hartman, after local couple George and Charlotte Yeager spearheaded effort to build the memorial in 2009. The Memorial was dedicated on September 7, 2012.[30]The memorial, unmarked for 40 years, sits whereDepartment of Highways reburied the bodies of about 48 miners while wideningU.S. Route 19. The text reads:

This Memorial honors an estimated 764 tunnel workers who died from mining a 3.8 mile tunnel through Gauley Mountain to divert water from the New River to a hydroelectric plant near Gauley Bridge in 1930–31. The tunnel cut through almost pure silica in some areas and exposed the unprotected workers to silica dust that quickly caused acute silicosis, a fatal lung disease. This is considered America's worst industrial disaster. Workers in the tunnel were primarily migrant workers, mostly black, who were paid a few dollars per day. When they became sick, many were driven out of the camps to die elsewhere. Those African Americans who died in the camps could not be buried in local "white" cemeteries. A few were sent by rail back to their families. More were taken at night under the cover of darkness to Summersville and buried unceremoniously on a farm. Later these graves had to be moved to widen US Route 19. The remains were disinterred in 1972 and transported several miles to the present site. The decomposed remains were placed in child size coffins and reburied here, resulting in about 48 small grave depressions seen at this grave site.

An online site, Hawk's Nest Names, is also a place to learn more about who was killed as a result of this disaster.[31] The site also contains a 1936 report from Union Carbide and Carbon Company, focusing on accident and mortality data and miscellaneous data on silicosis.[32]

Cultural references

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  • 1936: Under the pseudonym of "Pinewood Tom,"Josh White wrote and sang "Silicosis Is Killing Me" (1936), describing the plight of the miners.[33] An article about this song is available in the Internet Archives.[34]
  • 1938:Muriel Rukeyser wrote a poetry sequence,The Book of the Dead, about this disaster, which can be found in her collection of poems:U.S. 1 (Covici and Friede, 1938).
  • 1938:Vladimir Pozner'sDisunited States (chapter "Cadavers, By-products of Dividends"), Seven Stories Press, 2014 (Les Etats-Désunis was originally published in French in 1938)
  • 1941:Hubert Skidmore, a West Virginian, immortalized the tragic events from the common man's perspective in his bookHawk's Nest (originally published in 1941). This book followed the fictional accounts of several tunnel workers and their families. Skidmore wrote the book only a few years after the incident and likely used direct sources for his story development.
  • 1998: The tragedy was included inSaints and Villains, a 1998 novel byDenise Giardina.
  • 2001: Hawks Nest is also mentioned in a section entitledDying for a Living: The Hawk's Nest Incident in the bookTrust Us, We're Experts (2001) bySheldon Rampton andJohn Stauber.
  • 2016: "The Book of the Dead," an essay by Catherine V. Moore with Photos by Lisa Elmaleh.
  • 2024:Appalachian Ghost: A Photographic Reimagining of the Hawk's Nest Tunnel Disaster by Raymond Thompson, Jr.
  • 2025: David Kelley's film,The Book of the Dead.[35]

See also

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References

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  1. ^abc"'A tragedy worthy of the pen of Victor Hugo': the Hawks Nest Tunnel disaster".WBOY.com. 2024-09-03. Archived fromthe original on 2024-09-09. Retrieved2025-12-01.
  2. ^abcdeCherniack, Martin (1986).The Hawk's Nest Incident. Yale University Press.ISBN 978-0-300-04485-0.
  3. ^abcdefghSpencer, H. W. (2023)."HAWKS NEST TUNNEL DISASTER".Professional Safety.68 (2):42–47 – via JSTOR.
  4. ^Hunter, W. M. (2013)."A CULTURAL HISTORIC SURVEY FOR THE HAWKS NEST–GLEN FERRIS HYDROELECTRIC PROJECT (FERC PROJECT NO. 2512), FAYETTE COUNTY, WEST VIRGINIA"(PDF).SHPO Map Site. Charleston, WV: West Virginia State Historic Preservation Office. RetrievedDecember 1, 2025.
  5. ^"Hawk's Nest Names".Hawk's Nest Names. Retrieved2025-11-28.
  6. ^abNeal, Shannon (2025-08-23)."Environmental Justice and the Alloy in Muriel Rukeyser's The Book of the Dead (1938)".ISLE: Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment.doi:10.1093/isle/isaf068.ISSN 1076-0962.
  7. ^"Kanawha River Watershed"(PDF).West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection. Charleston, WV: Department of Environmental Protection.
  8. ^Ryoo, Gi Taek (2021)."The Systemic Nature of Environmental Disaster: Muriel Rukeyser's The Book of the Dead".Mosaic: an interdisciplinary critical journal.54 (3):123–141.doi:10.1353/mos.2021.0031.ISSN 1925-5683.
  9. ^Engineering News-Record [Hawks Nest contractor replies]. 1936. pp. 261–262.
  10. ^abcCrandall, William "Rick"; Crandall, Richard E. (2002)."Revisiting the Hawks Nest Tunnel Incident: Lessons Learned from an American Tragedy".Journal of Appalachian Studies.8 (2):261–283.ISSN 1082-7161.
  11. ^abDayton, Tim (2003).Muriel Rukeyser's the Book of the Dead. University of Missouri Press. pp. 18–19.ISBN 978-0-8262-6314-8.
  12. ^abWills, Matthew (2020-10-30)."Remembering the Disaster at Hawks Nest".JSTOR Daily. Retrieved2025-11-25.
  13. ^""1500 Doomed": People's Press Reports on the Gauley Bridge Disaster".historymatters.gmu.edu. Retrieved2025-12-01.
  14. ^Deitz, D. (1990). "I think we've struck a gold mine." A chemist's view of Ha Nest".Goldenseal (Fall):42–47 – via Google Scholar.
  15. ^Tales, Bryn (2017)."Salvaging the Symbol in Muriel Rukeyser's The Book of the Dead".Comparative Critical Studies.14 (2–3):323–346.doi:10.3366/ccs.2017.0242.ISSN 1744-1854 – via EBSCO.
  16. ^"The Book of the Dead".Oxford American. Retrieved2025-11-28.
  17. ^abcLancianese, Adelina (January 20, 2019)."Before Black Lung, The Hawks Nest Tunnel Disaster Killed Hundreds".National Public Radio. RetrievedJune 5, 2020.
  18. ^"Union Carbide Reports".Hawk's Nest Names. Retrieved2025-11-28.
  19. ^Keenan, Steve (April 2, 2008)."Book explores Hawks Nest tunnel history". The Fayette Tribune. Archived fromthe original on April 7, 2008. RetrievedNovember 25, 2008.
  20. ^"Hawk's Nest Tunnel Disaster". West Virginia Department of Culture and History. Archived fromthe original on 2025-01-21. Retrieved2008-11-25.
  21. ^Spangler, Patricia (February 19, 2008).The Hawks Nest Tunnel. Wythe-North Publishing.ISBN 978-0-9801862-0-8.
  22. ^"The Book of the Dead".Oxford American. Retrieved2025-11-28.
  23. ^Spencer, H. W. (2023)."HAWKS NEST TUNNEL DISASTER".Professional Safety.68 (2):42–47 – via JSTOR.
  24. ^House, United States Congress (1935).Hearings. U.S. Government Printing Office.
  25. ^"Union Carbide Reports".Hawk's Nest Names. Retrieved2025-11-28.
  26. ^Howard W., Spencer."The Historic and Cultural Importance of the HAWKS NEST TUNNEL DISASTER"(PDF). American Society of Safety Professionals.
  27. ^Spelce, David; Rehak, Timothy R; Meltzer, Richard W; Johnson, James S (2019)."History of U.S. Respirator Approval (Continued) Particulate Respirators".J Int Soc Respir Prot.36 (2):37–55.PMC 7307331.PMID 32572305.
  28. ^"Hawk's Nest Tunnel Disaster". West Virginia Department of Culture and History. Archived fromthe original on 2025-01-21. Retrieved2008-11-25.
  29. ^"Hawks Nest Workers Memorial and Grave Site". Retrieved3 April 2021.
  30. ^"Hawks Nest Workers Memorial and Grave Site".theclio. Retrieved3 April 2021.
  31. ^"Hawk's Nest Names".Hawk's Nest Names. Retrieved2025-11-28.
  32. ^"Union Carbide Reports".Hawk's Nest Names. Retrieved2025-11-28.
  33. ^White, Josh (1936).""Silicosis is Killing Me"".YouTube. RetrievedNovember 28, 2025.
  34. ^"PopMusic: Silicosis is Killing Me".the2x2project.org. Archived fromthe original on 2015-10-04. Retrieved2025-11-28.
  35. ^"RIPRAP: A screening and conversation with David Kelley".UCI Claire Trevor School of the Arts. 2024-04-30. Retrieved2025-12-01.

External links

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Additional sources

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Hunter, W.M. (2013). A cultural historic survey for the Hawks Nest—Glen Ferris hydroelectric project (FERC project no. 2512), Fayette County, West Virginia (Contract Publication Series 13-289). Cultural Resource Analysts Inc. https://bit.ly/3JgXz9A

Krishna. (2010, March 30). Hawk’s Nest Tunnel disaster, WV: Worst industrial disaster in U.S. history. Corporate Crimes. http://bit.ly/4017AxC

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