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Butte
By the 1880s, the great American West was not a matter of
cowboys, Indians, mountain men, and explorers, but in fact, a land
largely urban, largely industrial, and riven with many of the same
problems that assaulted the industrialized east. The mining industry,
probably more than any other single industry was designed specifically
to get into the West, find what resources it had, dig 'em out, leave a
wreck behind, and get out and move on someplace else."
T. H. Watkins
Butte, Montana, was always a mining town. It had been born
during a gold rush in the 1860s and was given a second lease on life
with a silver strike in the 1870s. Then, in 1881, 300 feet below the
ground, miners made an even more important discovery -- the largest
deposit of copper the world had ever seen.
It was just what the new electrical age required: copper for
conductors, machines, wires. By the mid-1880s, Butte's
mines were yielding almost 2,000 tons of silver and copper ore every
day, well over a million dollars every month. Its citizens boasted they
lived on the "richest hill on earth."
"Butte had a kind of collective energy that I suspect no
other western town could have matched. The mines never closed, the bars
never closed, certainly the red light district did not close. I've
always thought of it as an eastern town, as a misplaced eastern town, a
kind of downsized Pittsburgh located in the middle of The Rocky
Mountains."
David Emmons
Most of the Butte miners were Irish, but there were also Finns
and Japanese and Italians, Croatians, Mexicans and Swedes -- 38
different nationalities in all, so many that the "No Smoking" signs in
the mines had to be printed in fourteen languages.
All the men were working steadily toward one goal: take as
much ore as possible from the mines 4,000 feet below the surface. It
was the most dangerous job in America. In the hot, airless tunnels,
temperatures stayed above 90 degrees all year round. Mine shafts
collapsed or caught fire. And there was the perpetual threat of
silicosis, caused by inhaling dust, which tore at the miners' lungs and
led thousands to die young from pneumonia and tuberculosis.
"The elevation to ground level in the middle of a Butte
winter was the cause of great elation among the school children of
Butte, because men being raised from a hundred degree mine would be
covered with sweat, and as they reached the surface, as their
sweat-drenched work clothes would strike 40-degree-below air, they
would disappear in a plume of evaporation. So the school children used
to gather on the hillside and watch the men raised, and it was their
afterschool pleasure to watch them literally disappear in this cloud,
this puff of smoke."
David Emmons
In approaching Butte I marvelled at
the desolation of the country. There was no greenery of any kind; it
had all been killed by the fumes and smoke of the piles of burning ore.
Bill Haywood
Just four trees survived within Butte itself, and all the
nearby hillsides had long since been stripped of wood to fuel the
smelters that roared on, all day and all night. Thick, reeking smoke
hung perpetually over the city and the raw-boned mining settlements
around it -- Cabbage Patch, Anaconda, and a place called Seldom Seen.
"Butte had an air pollution problem that was such that it
would be literally dark at noon. The prevailing winds usually would
carry the smoke away. But in dead air conditions Butte was literally
obliterated. It disappeared from view."
David Emmons
"Much of mining that goes on in the West today is still
operating under a law signed by Ulysses S. Grant called the General
Mining Law of 1872, which was designed specifically to encourage mining
in the West. It encouraged exploitation. It literally gave away
enormous chunks of American land at almost no price. Imposed no restrictions on how the mines would be
developed, required no reclamation work afterwards, no monitoring of
whatever acids and other garbage might get spilled into the local
watertables, and gave away, no one even knows how much, precisely, gold
and silver, with no royalties paid to the government at all. The West
is a fairly fragile environment. Unlike the well-forested East, the
scars last longer, the damage is of a longer duration. And yet, we
still continue to use the West the same way, as if what we did was
impermanent. But in human terms, it is not impermanent at all; it lasts
a very long time. Generations."
T. H. Watkins
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