Mining Life was Tough
Respectfully submitted by Rosanne LaRosa Mortlock June
14, 2005
According to Las Animas County Ghost Towns and
Mining Camps, by F.
Dean Sneed, mining camp towns were built and maintained by the coal
companies. Houses and general stores were provided for the miners families.
Churches, schools, barbershops, hotels, and saloons thrived. However,
many mines paid their laborers with scrip which could only be used
at eh camp stores, leading to the saying, “I owed my soul to
the company store”. My cousins who had lived in Colorado said
that their parents felt like indentured servants.
Working conditions for coal miners were generally unsafe. Many attempts
to unionize workers led to bloody conflicts. The infamous Ludlow Massacre
in 1914 took place not far from Aguilar and Hastings, where the LaRosa
and Cuca families lived at various times during this period of time.
They most certainly had to be involved somehow, either as strikers
or sympathizers, in this significant event of the United States labor
movement.
Over 90% of the 12,000 miners in Las Animas County went on strike
in 1913 for improved safety conditions and union recognition. Mine
owners expelled miners from their camp homes. The United Mine Workers
of America set up a dozen tent cities for these strikers on land the
union had leased, where they lived for 14 months while the union tried
to negotiate a contract. I never heard specifically that the LaRosas
or Cucas lived in the tent cities, but they did tell of the violence
and bloodshed that occurred.
A monument stands in memory of 121 men who lost their lives in the
Hastings mine explosion of 1917. Ignazio Messina, also from San Biagio
Platani and a friend of Grandpa Raffaele LaRosa, lost his life in that
disaster. A family story has it that Grandpa Raffaele didn’t
go to work that day at the Hastings Mine because he had an infection
in his eye. How provident.
Hastings had been a bustling town with three general stores, a Catholic
church, an opera house, bakery, two barbers, hotel/boarding house,
numerous saloons and a public school. Raffaele’s brother Ignazio
LaRosa set up a music department in Hastings for the mining company
to promote dancing for sociability in the camp town.
Valdez, a mining camp town for the Frederick Mine, had at its peak
in 1921, two general stores, a saloon, two schools, a hotel/boarding
house, a restaurant, a YMCA, and a movie theatre.
Most of the mining towns were bulldozed when mining lost it’s
importance in the mid 1920s because the coal companies didn’t
want to pay taxes on the houses. Some houses were actually sold for
$2 per room and moved to Trinidad. Just a few footers of ruined buildings
remain in most of the coalfields that are now overrun by cattle and
rattlesnakes.
The town of Aguilar established in 1894:it was not a mining camp.
Before becoming a hangout for miners and bootleggers, Aguilar was a
quiet village of sheep and goat herders. It continued to live on even
after most of the miners left the area.