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Omaha Steve

(99,780 posts)
Wed Apr 8, 2015, 02:58 PM Apr 2015

April 8, 1911 128 convict miners, mostly African-Americans jailed for minor offenses, were killed


http://www.workdayminnesota.org/history/04/08

Today in History, April 8th

April 8, 1911



A violent explosion ripped through the Banner coalmine outside Birmingham, Alabama; 128 convict miners, mostly African-Americans jailed for minor offenses, were killed. Unlike the Triangle Shirtwaist fire that occurred two weeks earlier, the Banner explosion elicited little attention or public sympathy. Although evidence clearly pointed to a dangerous buildup of methane gas in the mine, an Alabama commission placed the blame on the miners themselves. Most of the miners were prisoners leased to Pratt Consolidated Coal Company under the state’s notorious convict lease system. While many southern states leased convicts, Alabama’s program lasted the longest, from 1846 to1928.


April 8, 1952

President Harry Truman ordered the U.S. Army to seize the nation’s steel mills to avert a strike. The act was ruled to be illegal by the U.S. Supreme Court on June 2.



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April 8, 1911 128 convict miners, mostly African-Americans jailed for minor offenses, were killed (Original Post) Omaha Steve Apr 2015 OP
I can still "rent" a prisoner here. dixiegrrrrl Apr 2015 #1

dixiegrrrrl

(60,010 posts)
1. I can still "rent" a prisoner here.
Wed Apr 8, 2015, 03:50 PM
Apr 2015

Friend of mine got low cost prisoner labor to repair her hurricane damaged roof.

I don't drive the "4-lanes" ( freeways) anymore, but up to 1998, prisoners in stripes could still be seen picking up trash on the road,
and along county roads.

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