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historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM2AHC_winifrede-mine-conveyor_Lynch-KY.html
This conveyor, installed in 1968, transported coal at a rate of 500 tons per hour from the Winifrede mine borehole (1800 feet underground in No. 31 mine) to the 2300 ton silo at the tipple. Three entries in No. 31 mine were rehabilitated in 1968…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM2AHB_history-of-lynch_Lynch-KY.html
To build the town and mine support facilities Bog Looney Creek was rerouted and over one mile was walled with local quarried native sandstone. Among the structures chronicled here, the coal company constructed six miles of concrete paved streets…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1TWS_to-honor-the-black-coal-miners-historical_Lynch-KY.html
To Honor the Black Coal Miners and Keep Their Legacy Alive The Black Coal Miner was recruited by International Harvester and U.S. Steel to work and live in the coal camps of Benham and Lynch. They came in search of a better life, better schools,…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1TWR_lynch-colored-high-school-west-main-high-school-historical_Lynch-KY.html
(Side One) This brick facility was built in 1923 by the United States Coal and Coke Co., then leased to Lynch Colored Common Graded School District. Students from Benham and Lynch enrolled in the high school. The first four graduates received the…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1TWQ_lynch-historical_Lynch-KY.html
Built by U.S. Steel Corp., 1917-25, this was largest company-owned town in Kentucky through World War II. Crucial need for steel during WWI led to founding of town, site of millions of tons of high-quality coal. With largest coal tipple then in ex…
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