Hi Karla,
It is so good to hear from you. Your Dad's e-mail is ........... neil...@verizon.net
I would like to share a story with you about the mines that I remember. When I was about 14 years of age I remember Loretta Cemetery being on fire.
It lasted for days, maybe even weeks. My two sisters are burried there and we were very concerned that it would spread to our cemetery plots.
Loretta Cemetery is located above Arlington Heights Projects. You can reach it by going straight back Spring Street. That entire area is undermined.
The section of the cemetery that was burning was a very old section and perhaps no one was living that could be notified. We watched from a safe distance as the graves collapsed and the ground caved in. It smoltered for a long time until the rains put out the fire.
I will forward this to your Dad. It is very interesting. Thank You very much.
Love,
Rosie
----- Original Message -----
From: "Karla Voigt" <karla...@verizon.net>
To: fore...@comcast.net
Sent: Sunday, October 11, 2009 9:21:28 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
Subject: Fw: [CarrickPA] Re: What's really under our houses? The "Coal Road."
Hey Rosie. This is for my dad. I just don't have his e-mail right now. I am at home and I have his e-mail at work. I was just wondering if he knew anything about the mines in Carrick or Mount Oliver. I have been getting into the history of this area and thought maybe he (or you, or Grandma Voigt, or Aunt Audrey) would have anything to share about the history of the mines.
I miss you two. Love you both. --Karla
----- Forwarded Message ----
From: Greenbandman <jru...@yahoo.com>
To: carr...@googlegroups.com
Sent: Friday, October 9, 2009 10:31:30 PM
Subject: [CarrickPA] Re: What's really under our houses? The "Coal Road."
Thank you so much for this reply. Your mother was a wise woman and perhaps she knew all about the voids under our neighborhood. Wouldn't it be even more interesting to open up "Coal Road" and travel through our underground world? What mysteries would we discover? Who would we find?
From: Karla Voigt <karla...@verizon.net>
To: carr...@googlegroups.com
Sent: Friday, October 9, 2009 9:17:46 PM
Subject: [CarrickPA] Re: What's really under our houses? The "Coal Road."
Thank you so much for the history. I love hearing stories like this. I've lived in this area all my life (actually grew up on Parkwood Road) and I love it. My mother always worried about us kids playing at the bottom of our backyard because she thought the ground might cave in from the mines below. Thanks again.
From: Greenbandman <jru...@yahoo.com>
To: carrick listserve <carr...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Friday, October 9, 2009 1:27:11 PM
Subject: [CarrickPA] What's really under our houses? The "Coal Road."
Historical Salutations from the Carrick Overbrook Historical Society:
It's time for Carrick-Overbrook-Mt. Oliver-South Side Historical Trivia!
"I'll be takin' the Coal Road shortcut to the South Side!" Do you know where the "Coal Road" is? Do you know why those railroad tracks were on South 21st. Street on the South Side?
That lonesome, ghostly, mysterious locomotive and grinding noises you hear at night this Halloween might be actually coming from under your house! We all know that our neighborhood is undermined but do you really know how much? This is an excerpt from the Wikipedia article on our own Keeling Coal Company mine site, now Volunteer's Fields between Newett and Colerain Avenues.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keeling_Coal_Company"Coal
Road"
"After the coal was removed, the mine became part of an underground
transportation system to transport coal from the South Hills to
industries along the Monongahela river. The "coal road" passed under
three hills, under Mount Oliver, Pennsylvania, then a trestle over a
ravine at the present location of Parkwood Road, then under the hill
topped by Fort Jones, later St. Joseph's Roman Catholic Church[2] and
St. Clair Village, then over another ravine at the present-day Wagner
Street, to re-enter an underground mine section in Carrick near where
Bruner Street is today.[3][4] This mine connected with the Bausman
Mine in Spiketown, now Carrick, and was still operational in 1899.[5]
Coal was tranferred from Spiketown to the mine entrance on St. Patrick
Street by a steam locomotive that ran undeground.
The coal from the
mine was transferred to a narrow gauge railroad that ran down the
middle of South 21st Street from an inclined plane railroad.[6][7]
Although the incline is no longer in existence, its site is occupied
by South Side Park, which was also a location of a Sankey brick works.
When the enginehouse of the coal road burned shortly before the
expiration of Keeling's lease on the mine, the lease was not renewed;
At about the same time, the Pittsburgh and Whitehall Railroad obtained
an easement adjacent to the track in the center of South 21st St.[8]"
Now you know!
John Rudiak