Summary: Systemic Inequality In Harlan County

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Harlan County Coal: Systemic Inequality in Underfunded Appalachia. Lydia Klinger HIST 3900: History Through Film Dr. David Castle April 24, 2024 At the heart of America stands the working class, the blue-collar men and women who uphold the entire economy with their bare hands. Yet, however hard these workers bleed for the rest of society, those in power have historically ignored their basic labor rights. Such is the story of Harlan County, USA, a documentation of the strong-willed, Appalachian coal mining community of the same name. The film details the miners’ violent and long battle for rights throughout a labor strike in the 1970s. Filmmaker Barbara Kopple records intimate footage beyond the picket lines to capture the spirit …show more content…

The threat of gunfire loomed dangerously over every demonstration. The fear and violence evoked at these events were reminiscent of the 1930s to some protesters, when the community was known as “Bloody Harlan” because of another aggressive strike period. The last fight for workers’ rights took place in the trenches of the Great Depression and resulted in great unrest comparable to the 1970s strike. The members of Harlan County held on to this strife, making solidarity against corporate oppression a generational inheritance. Several individuals cite stories from the past as motivation for their struggles. My grandfather was a coal miner and belonged to the union, the UMW. He died with a black lung. I can remember sitting around when we were younger and him talking about being on picket lines and organizing. That was mostly what we talked about.Things that happened on the picket line and things that the company did to you.I began to hate the company, seemed like I just always did. I knew they were enemies.When I watched him die and suffer like he did with that black lung disease, I knew that something could be done about it. I told myself then, if I ever get the opportunity to get those coal operators, I …show more content…

The essay “Catastrophe in Coal” from author Irving Bernstein’s The Lean Years investigates several areas devastated by the Depression. Bernstein deconstructs similar unionization efforts across several coal mining hubs in 1930s America. In those days, mining dominated the lives of thousands, with the companies dictating all aspects of workers’ lives. They provided decrepit housing and meager salaries, yet the miners had no better choices for their families. The United Mine Workers attempted to spread their union into mining counties who had yet to organize. Given the high unemployment rate and weak economic security, unions created solidarity amongst the working class struggling for better wages and conditions. The task proved to be more difficult than anticipated. Miners fighting for labor rights under unionization were considered radical, rebel groups in the eyes of the oppressive companies. Destitution varied throughout Appalachia. West Virginia saw worse fates than even the pitiful conditions in Harlan County that drove miners to crime after the mining companies punished their strike efforts with evictions and employment terminations. Petty theft turned to gun violence, yet the relentless operators squashed the miners’ rebellion, and unionization failed. Although initially unsuccessful, “Catastrophe in Coal” does provide evidence that the 70s unionization efforts in Harlan County, USA, had

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