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At around 11:30 AM on January 22, 1959 the Susquehanna
river broke throughout the thin rock roof of the River
Slope Mine, Knox Coal Company. The hole was an
estimated 150 feet in diameter, funneling in 10
million gallons of water and ice like a bathtub drain.
By the afternoon plans to seal the breach were already
in effect. One of the railroad tracks above were cut
and bent towards the river. Over 50 Coal Hopper cars
were pushed into the breach by a diesel locomotive
from Pittston. Over 400 mine cars were dumped over the
bank into the hole but the water just kept rushing
right in. Thousands of bails of hay and hundreds of
railroad ties were also added. Culm, dirt, and rock
barely stopped the river. Finally they diverted the
river around Wintermoot Island by building dams at
both ends of the island. Once they pumped the water
out between the dams the size of the hole was evident.
Tons of clay and rock were poured into the hole and a
concrete cap was placed on top of the opening. They
then pumped much of the water out of the mine to look
for the 12 missing miners. No bodies were ever
recovered. How could this tragedy have happened? The
original plan was to keep 50 feet of rock and coal
between the workings and the river bottom. The Knox
company wanted this to be lowered to 35 feet. Mine
inspectors deemed this ok as it would be sufficient to
stand up to the river. At this point the seam of coal
sloped up towards the river in what is known as an
anticline. Company owners kept pushing the miners
closer and closer to the river bottom until the rock
could no longer support the river. At the point where
the river broke through the rock was only 5 to 6 feet
thick! This disaster ended deep mining in the Wyoming
valley as almost all of the coal company’s mines connected
- Chris Murley