Almont North Dakota

1906     Centennial     2006

Strip Mining of Coal
by Leonard Olson

     One day in 1895 Frank Owens was walking down the creek near his homestead and saw some coal sticking out of the ground. He dug some of it and tried it in his fire. It looked like black shingles and burned like wood. Here was fuel to be had for stripping off a little dirt.
     As it was on Government Land, it was free to everyone to use for the uncovering and loading. Word of this free coal traveled fast. It was of such a fine quality that people came from many miles around to get it. Though on Government Land, it was known as the “Frank Owens Mine” because he had found it.
     Four years later Frank Owens traded his homestead to Tenius Ramsland for a team of horses and left the country without “proving up” on the place. Tenius was then only nineteen years old. He sold the buildings and fences for his investment and let it go, but always liked the location of the Owens homestead. In 1905, Tenius decided to file on a homestead of his own and filed on part of the former Owens homestead and adjoining land which contained the famous “Frank Owens Mine” where neighbors from the surrounding country had been securing their free coal for ten years.
     Soon an adjoining homestead was filed on by Carl Thor., One evening he said to his wife, “I’ve been wondering if coal like the Frank Owens Mine isn’t under our land too. I think tomorrow I will get a few guys together and see how deep it is and the space it covers.”
     Mrs. Thor questioned, “Well, how are you going to find out how much dirt is on top of the coal and how deep the coal vein is?”
“I think I will take a well digger and dig a hole, then let a guy go down with a light,” replied her husband.
     Well, the next day came. He rounded up some of his neighbors, got a well digger and started digging. After he got down there he measured the height of the coal, and took a sample of coal up with him. They had it tested and waited for the answer to come back. After they got their reply and found out it was very good coal, he got men together and some horses and fresnoes. Then the work started.
They started stripping off the dirt. They stripped off a little every day. They worked day after day until finally they got through. They they started to drill a hole with a hand auger. After they had the hole dug, they poured some blasting powder in. they put in the fuse and lit it. then it would blast the coal loose. Then they had to load it by hand into wagons. It had to be hauled to town with horses and it took hours just to get it to town.
     When they got to town they had to unload the wagons by hand into railroad cars to be shipped out. Then they had to go back after more in that slow fashion. For many years they hauled coal to town to be shipped to some other state with horses and wagons.
     There was one guy who hauled coal who always liked to haul just as large a load as he could get on the wagon. One time he put on such a big load the horses couldn’t pull it our of the mine. They had to hook on two more teams to get it out of the mine. He also liked to haul such overly big chucks and he always liked to come into town with these big chunks of coal so everybody could see him and they couldn’t understand how he could load them into the wagon. One day in the mine it took ten guys to put one chunk in his wagon. When he got to town he thought himself pretty big, but to his disgust no one saw him come in with that big chunk. When he got over to the coal car of the train he couldn’t get it unloaded. He had to walk down town to get some men to help him. He could only get seven men and they couldn’t get it unloaded. They worked for about an hour and a half to get it broken up in order to be able to lift it. After that he didn’t try to haul such big chunks.
     Then there was another guy who was pulling out of the mine when he tipped over. He got the wagon on its wheels, and then he had to load it up again. He went about five feet further and tipped over again. He had to hurry and load it up and get out of the way. He tipped over four more times in less than a quarter of a mile, but finally he got going and reached home with his load.
     One day it rained so bad they were unable to work. The mine got so slippery they couldn’t get out of the mine. It had quit raining before the next day so they started hauling again.
     The next day it was pretty muddy but they were making it. About the time they were going good one guy got stuck with a team and wagon. The horses went up to their bellies in mud and they couldn’t even move, so he had to go back to the mine and get one of the guys to pull him out.
     He said, “Can I get one of the guys to pull me out of the mud?”
     “How far are you?” one of them replied.
     “Just over the hill.”
     Okay. I’ll unhook my team and be right with you.”
     Well he got up to his wagon and hooked on to it. He could hardly budge it so they had to go back and get another team.
     They worked there about an hour before they got the wagon out. After that they didn’t have any trouble getting through. They only shipped about twenty tons of coal from Almont that year because of all the trouble they had getting started. They didn’t know much about mining that first year.
     The next year they started early and knew more about it so it didn’t take so long. They shipped coal from Almont quite a few years. Mr. Thor said the most he had ever shipped was forty five cars. And for a car load of coal he got only $1.75 for about three ton. compare that with today’s prices. There is a great change. Today you can get $3.50 per ton. Now you don’t have to do it by hand, although there are great expenditures for machinery.
     Compare all those old methods with the new methods. There is a great change today. For locating coal they use a core machine. The way that works is to drill down in the ground and the dirt comes up in a core form. Then the miner can see how much dirt there is and how much coal. They test on places, and then send sample of the coal to the capitol to be tested. Then they have to uncover it with the use of a bulldozer. It doesn’t take nearly as much time as it did with the old method. Today they can scrape off many feet a day. and the blasting method is very simple too. They have an electric drill that digs holes. A cap and fuse is put in the dynamite, and then the dynamite is placed in the hole. the fuse is lit and the dynamite loosens the coal. When they take a steam shovel and dump it into a screener that screens out the slack, stoker coal and chunks. The slack goes out one side, stoker coal out the other, and the chunks to out the middle. The trucks go right underneath. they they have a sizer which the chunks go though that makes them into different sizes. You can get six inchers, eight, ten, twelve, or any other size you want. It is nice for a stove to have a definite size of coal because it saves all the work of breaking up the chunks. Having it fit into the stove, you won’t have all the slack caused by breaking up the chinks. All you have to do is pick up a chunk and place it in the furnace. Another nice thing about small chunks is that some people may not have a very large space to throw the coal into the bin. By having a certain size it will save time and work of breading up those big chunks into smaller ones so it doesn’t make it so hard to handle. When you unload it from the truck you won’t have to break the chunks up.
     The shipping of coal today is very simple compared to a few years back. Today all they ever use is trucks. There is no use of team and wagon for hauling. Today all you have to do is back the truck under the loader and it loads your truck up. There is no need of loading it up by hand. Today there is nothing but stoker coal being shipped by trains. There are no chunks being shipped any more. When loading into the coal cars you don’t even have to unload it by hand. They have loaders that load right into the cars, all they have to do is dump the coal in the loader and go back after more. It doesn’t take nearly the time to load up and unload. Driving from the coal car to the mine doesn’t take hardly any time. You can go about fifty or sixty miles an hour. In the old days you could go only about two miles.
     Like Mr. Thor said, “There has surely been some changes today from years back in the strip mining of coal.”

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