The Hawk's Nest Tunnel Disaster

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  • Опубликовано: 10 фев 2025
  • Hawk's Nest is in the mountains of West Virginia, not far from Fayetteville. From there you have a lovely view of the New River as it curves around the mountains before joining with the Gauley River to form the Kanawha River.
    It's also the site of one of the worst industrial disasters in not just Appalachian history but in American history.
    Today we tell that story.
    (Steel furnace stock footage provided by Videvo, downloaded from videvo.net)
    www.storiesofappalachia.com

Комментарии • 33

  • @Cake41579
    @Cake41579 Год назад +12

    My great grandfather worked in this tunnel and he told stories about the gruesome conditions that the men were subjected to to. One that stands out the most was how he stated that the men were dying at such a fast rate, the company would wait until they had a full panel truck of dead men before taking them to the graveyard in summersville where they still reside today.

    • @marksaunders713
      @marksaunders713 11 месяцев назад +1

      I'm in absolute shock that companies produce stone that contain this material still!

    • @alejandrovillalta2811
      @alejandrovillalta2811 5 месяцев назад

      @@marksaunders713yea yea they still produce and ship asbestos products all around the third world countries

  • @nickmullins5349
    @nickmullins5349 Год назад +19

    I hate how everyone uses "Industrial Disaster" like it was an accident. It was manslaughter perpetrated by actual people who were seeking profits for themselves and their investors at the cost of human lives.

  • @normsweet1710
    @normsweet1710 Год назад +6

    I’m glad you told this story, I’d never heard of this …….

  • @twocyclediesel1280
    @twocyclediesel1280 Год назад +13

    Hundreds dead? What did they care, they got their tunnel. Water pumps spraying down the dust as they worked….too expensive. Just be thankful you have a job, right?
    Unbelievable

  • @repairdrive
    @repairdrive Год назад +5

    Good video. Straight facts like these are what some people want to keep out of our schools.

  • @jbtalking
    @jbtalking 7 месяцев назад +1

    My great-grandfather was there in 1935. He had a background in the steel industry, so I am almost sure he was there to get the steel mill ready. I know he left in 1936 because my grandmother was born in NC. Later he worked on at least one dam for the TVA.

  • @PetraKann
    @PetraKann 2 года назад +10

    Bhopal Disaster in India was also due to Union Carbide mismanagement.
    Estimated death toll: 20,000

    • @StoriesofAppalachia
      @StoriesofAppalachia  2 года назад

      Yes, it was. A tragedy in both places..

    • @sd906238
      @sd906238 Год назад +4

      Not really. The Indian government owned 49% of the chemical plant. Union Carbide owned 51% of the plant. The Indian government did this so if there was ever an accident they could then blame Union Carbide. The Indian government allowed slums to surround the plant even they knew the dangers to people living around the plant. Why? Because they didn't care about their own people. India had a growing population and needed fed. This is why they needed the insecticides to prevent crop loss due to insects.

    • @PetraKann
      @PetraKann Год назад

      @@sd906238 Why does Union Carbide operate one of their plants differently in another country compared to the same plant built in the USA?
      Why did Union Carbide apply lower safety standards to this particular facility compared to an identical facility operated in the USA?
      Why did the Union Carbide CEO (Anderson) flee India to the US soon after the disaster occurred never to return or answer questions related to this "accident"?
      Stop calling it an "accident" - it was not an accident.
      This criminal incident lays solely on the shoulder's of the Union Carbide Board and it's culture of greed, arrogance and elitism. It's not the first time Mr vd805327

    • @JohnDavies-cn3ro
      @JohnDavies-cn3ro 8 месяцев назад

      @@sd906238 And the poor were probably mostly low caste 'untouchables' who didn't matter - plenty more where they came from.

  • @Lafuerza_V
    @Lafuerza_V 5 месяцев назад

    Great video, Sad story

  • @earlljrquesenberry4826
    @earlljrquesenberry4826 9 месяцев назад

    I went to college at West Virginia Tech at Montgomery WV. I know of the story of the tunnel filled with silica dust.
    The silica sand was so pure that it was collected and used for NASA and others to produce special glass.

    • @StoriesofAppalachia
      @StoriesofAppalachia  9 месяцев назад

      Very cool! I hadn't heard that part of the story or we'd have included it. Thanks!

  • @JohnDavies-cn3ro
    @JohnDavies-cn3ro 8 месяцев назад +1

    |I'd never heard this story before, although I know Hawks Nest from the 'New River train', and the song about the wreck of the 'Sportsman' express. Sounds like an unlucky place. Over here in GB I think we call the disease pneumosilicosis - very much a miner's illness, be they coal, tin or slate. The brutality of the company owners at this time was appalling, both here and in the US - and of course their innate racism made it all the worse.

  • @barbaramichiels5503
    @barbaramichiels5503 2 года назад +3

    Deplorable!

  • @mildredrharmon4032
    @mildredrharmon4032 2 года назад +2

    Horrible…😡 guarantee some of these workers where my ancestors! 💔😢

  • @daniellassander
    @daniellassander 10 месяцев назад +1

    Adjusted for inflation $1600 1930 is $30k today. Im not condoning their actions in any way.

    • @Lithdren
      @Lithdren 10 месяцев назад +1

      Ahh, twice the current yearly salary of a minimum wage worker. Yes, such heartfelt support to those families who lost loved ones.

  • @liqhuggs5393
    @liqhuggs5393 Год назад

    Temble building

  • @hauntedmoodylady
    @hauntedmoodylady Год назад +4

    Interesting story, I suggest you do some research on the times prior to the US War between the States when there was a tunnel building Northern States who had the wealth to build tunnels through mountains, under rivers or for what ever the requirement may be. Northerners were aware of blacks in those days, in fact objective history proves that the first slave owner in the New England states was a black man himself. Well, guess what happened when the Northerners approached the Southern slave owners with the proposition of contracting the use of their slaves to build tunnels. The Southern slave owners flatly refused the proposition, they valued their slaves they did not want to risk their injury, or death. Well, what they hell, how were the tunnels to be built?? The solution was an easy one. The big moneyed Northern industrialists would herd up the Irish. No one considered the Irish to have any value, many of the Irish, a very large proportion were indentured servants, yes in the 19th century. They worked for 0 pay for only the food, and clothing they may consume. I recommend that story for you..