Bullpush Hollow

A Story of Miners and Their Families in the Coal Camps of West Virginia and the Mine Wars of the Early 1900’s.

A Struggle for Freedom

Bullpush Hollow

Bullpush Hollow

A Story of Miners and Their Families in the Coal Camps of West Virginia and the Mine Wars of the Early 1900’s.

A Struggle for Freedom

Bullpush Hollow–An Online historical Graphic Novel

Launching with new strips updating twice weekly starting April 7th 2023!

MAPS

Source for base map: West Virginia. State Road Commission 1919

If you will take a map of West Virginia , you will see that it is much like the map of any other State…One can easily imagine the life that goes on in these towns as being the same that goes on in small towns everywhere. He can imagine people owning their own homes, following a variety of occupations, attending to their own little affairs, and sharing in the town’s common activities. He can imagine them acting like the independent citizens of other communities. But he will be mistaken. 

Nothing of the sort goes on there. In the coal mining fields of West Virginia…the dots on the map do not stand for towns in the ordinary sense. They do not indicate places where people lead an interrelated, many-sided, and mutually dependent existence. They stand for clusters of houses around a coal mine. They indicate points at which seams of coal have been opened, tipples erected, and coal has been brought forth as fuel. True, people live here, but they live here to work. The communities exist for the coal mines. They are the adjuncts and necessary conveniences of an industry. 

— Winthrop Lane, 1921 in Civil War in West Virginia — A Story of the Industrial Conflict in the Coal Mines

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