Coal is a rock-like substance from the ground. It’s a fossil fuel, like oil and gas. When you burn coal, heat and energy are released.
By the time Albert was born, coal was changing life in America. It was fueling the new trains speeding across the country. It was powering enormous new ships. During this time, thousands of coal mines were blasted into the ground. Some of these mines were 1,200 feet underground—as deep as the Empire State Building is tall.
Mining coal was a difficult and dirty job. Day after day, miners blasted through rock and then cut out the coal with heavy tools. They shoveled the coal into little metal cars and used mules to pull the coal cars along metal tracks.
And it wasn’t only grown men who toiled deep inside the mines. In the early 1900s, thousands of children like Albert worked alongside the adults. Since 1885, the United States government had required children to be at least 12 to work in a mine—but these laws were frequently ignored.
Albert and Richard probably felt proud to work at the mine. Their father had died a few years earlier, and it was their responsibility to help support their mother and younger sister.