MELISSA FARLOW_MM6773_996260-1.JPG
A worker sets fire to a home that is demolished to rubble as a result of mine expansion. As mountaintop removal mine permits allow the surface mines to expand, they often displace residents in their way. Dingess-Rum Coal Company served notice to Dehue residents renting old coal company houses, giving them 30 days to move.
Dehue, like dozens of other mining towns, was once a busy center of activity with a grocery, post office, theater, barbershop, pool hall, school payroll office, and Civic Club. These communities become ghost towns and over time are dismantled. Day lilies and fruit trees often mark the spot of leveled homes lining a road.
Dehue was located off Route 10 on Rum Creek south of Logan. It began in 1916 as a coal company town owned by Youngstown Mines Corporation. It existed as late as the 1970s, but the homes were never sold to private residents. Most houses were cleared and burned in 2000 and 2001.
- Copyright
- MELISSA FARLOW
- Image Size
- 8329x5872 / 27.1MB
- Keywords
- Contained in galleries
- Mountaintop Removal USA_National Geographic magazine 3/2006