From Deseret News archives:

Longtime miner tells what job is really like

Published: Sunday, Jan. 13, 2008 12:27 a.m. MST
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
Three decades ago, miner Terry Jewkes, then 24, was working 500 feet below the surface and 1,700 feet from the portal of the Kaiser Steel No. 3 mine at Sunnyside, Carbon County. An article published in this newspaper on Dec. 7, 1976, described what it was like:

Toward the center of the long wall, the 500-foot section that the continuous miner (machine) will work the rest of this year, four miners were struggling with the jacks that held up the roof.

As the machine sweeps through its route, huge jacks are inched forward into the new gaps it has made. Behind the men, the roof is allowed to collapse as the jacks are removed.

This particular stretch of roof had been especially troublesome for the last two days, more apt to drop rocks than most areas. So the propmen working on the jacks had a difficult time shoring up the metal canopies connected to the jacks.

One of them, Terry Jewkes, Sunnyside, clambered up between the canopy and the rock ceiling, prying loose slabs of rock. Then he came down, the jack was tilted, and a huge pile of rubble crashed from the roof.

"It's not normal for this rock. We're into some rock roll; it's giving us some deviations in the roof," said the foreman. "Got three men down the wall. ... "

The amplified telephone squawked a question, a blaring query about when the conveyor could be restarted.

Story continues below
"Right now they're in the process of attaching the roof, to re-establish the roof line," the foreman said. Then he said into the phone, "Boy, I'll prop some more jacks, and I'll turn you loose."

The artificial roof was 65 feet long, over 30 inches deep. Each canopy was about five feet long, and propped between it and the ceiling were wooden beams about a yard by a foot square.

As the miners tried to adjust the troublesome canopy, they would step back and rocks would creak and then fall in a heap. The rubble was eventually four feet deep. Fine, flying dust filled the air.

Finally the ceiling canopy was properly set, the foreman said, "Good job!" and said into the phone that the conveyor could be started.

Today, Jewkes is 55. He worked in the Kaiser mines for 23 years until they shut down.

"I wish they were still going," he said in a telephone interview. "I enjoyed the hard work."

He enumerated the jobs he carried out as a miner: a roof bolter, a certified corner man, a propman. As a propman he would pull out the shields and jacks, he said. As a corner man, he would "check for gas and rock dust."

"I had to make sure that the tailgate was pushed over," he said. The tailgate is the end of the conveyor belt that carries chunks of coal toward the mine entrance.

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

Image
Joe Bauman, Deseret Morning News

Coal miners walk from Carbon Fuel Co. No. 3 mine in 1976. At that time, miner Terry Jewkes was interviewed by the Deseret News deep inside the mine.

previousnext

Latest comments

the team with the national rep gets the nod of the also ran. Cougs get a...

Another sad case of foreign members exploiting their LDS connection for a...

Lobbyists shun ethics initiative

I am a contract lobbyist in this state and am so tired of Bob's one sided...

Letters: Democrats' ethics

so because the some democrat showed some poor ethics its alright for...

This is wrong. Instead of two Mid-majors being able to remain...

Scott, congratulations, you know something that 99% of the world's scientists...

Can't say I have much love for miles at the moment. I guess the road to mip...

Utah/BYU rivalry can be more civil

Why should fans improve behavior when the BYU administration refuses to...

What a Shame

Couldn't agree more with your article. Hope something comes of it on both sides.

Advertisements