From Deseret News archives:

Memories — Communities come together to grieve over loss at mine

Published: Saturday, Aug. 18, 2007 12:31 a.m. MDT
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Communities began to come together Friday in the midst of their sorrow over three rescuers' deaths and uncertainties in the stalled underground rescue operations to find six trapped miners.

For those who remembered Dale Black, it was his legacy to come from generations of miners.

"This is all that we've known. Every generation there has been at least one miner," said Black's cousin, Azure Davis.

Black, a husband and father of a 17-year-old son and a daughter who has just gotten married, was one of the three rescuers killed Thursday evening in Crandall Canyon Mine while trying to save six others trapped following a collapse Aug. 6.

Family members Friday described Black as a "very rugged outdoorsman" whose passion was hunting. He was a hunting guide for Davis' father, and the two had planned to go out on the first day of bow hunt season for deer, which is today. This isn't the first mining tragedy in the Davis or Black families. Davis' father has been injured "quite a few times" while working in the mines, she said.

But what makes this exceptionally hard for the families was that Davis is also a cousin of missing miner Kerry Allred. Now her family is grieving for two men but holding out hope that one will still come home.

Black was fully aware of the potential dangers of the mine, she said.

"All the miners know exactly what they're getting into when they get into a mine," Davis said.

But even knowing that risk and knowing there's a possibility they might get hurt, it doesn't prevent the miners from doing their jobs.

"It's a way of life. It's a way of getting food on the table for the families," Davis said.

Davis encouraged the public to keep praying for the six miners, feeling positive that at some point the rescuers will "get a break."

· · · · ·

If you ask 5-year-old Bryton Kimber, her dad was a superhero.

"She said just the other day, 'My dad is like Superman, he just can't fly,"' said Kristen Kimber, Bryton's mother.

Many people considered Brandon Kimber a hero. Kimber was one of the three men killed Thursday night while trying to rescue six other miners believed to be trapped inside the Crandall Canyon Mine.

"We're just trying to do the best we can ... trying to get his funeral arrangements, trying to keep the kids as calm as we can," Kristen Kimber said.

Although they had divorced, Kristen and Brandon had remained friends. They had three children together including Bryton and twin boys Peyton and Paxton, both 4.

Brandon was a man who liked the outdoors, and recently he purchased a dirt bike, which had become his new passion.

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