About This Book
A reporter documents life and death in the coal pits, using on-the-ground observation and testimony to portray a recent catastrophic explosion that renewed public attention on long-standing dangers. The account details descent into cramped, wet galleries, the constant menace of firedamp and collapse, and the physical and economic toll on workers and their families. It depicts communal mourning rituals, the poverty of widows and orphans, small handcrafted memorials, and local demands for safer conditions and shorter hours. Interweaving vivid scenes with appeals for technical and social reform, the piece insists that repeated, smaller tragedies require lasting preventive measures.
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