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Berkeley Glass Sand Company
Berkeley Glass Sand Mine Explosion

Berkeley Springs, Morgan County, West Virginia
June 7, 1926
No. Killed - 6

On June 7, 1926, a crew mining for sand in Morgan County was preparing an explosion when a spark set off what the Berkeley Glass Sand Company maintained was dynamite. Others, though, claimed it was more dangerous black powder.  Six men were killed.

Their deaths inspired John Unger, a local blind singer, to write the ballad "The Miner's Doom," which was recorded in 1927 by early country music star Vernon Dalhart.

Sand mining first became a major industry in Morgan County after the Civil War due to the purity of the region's silica sand, which was used to manufacture glass.  In 1893, Henry Harrison Hunter of Berkeley Springs won a blue ribbon at the World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago for the quality of his sand.

The industry's modern era began in 1929, when the Pennsylvania Glass Sand Corporation built the largest and most advanced silica facility of its time.

Today, the Berkeley Springs plant is the core of the U.S. Silica Corporation, which has 21 locations across the country and employs about 200 at the Berkeley Springs mine, processing plant, and laboratory.  Source:  West Virginia Public Broadcasting
In the News
News icon The Richmond Item, June 8, 1926  PDF Format
News icon The Times Recorder, June 8, 1926  PDF Format


Video: Audio:
"The Miner's Doom" by Vernon Dalhart  🎵


The deceased:
  • Romanis Dawson
  • Irvin Henry
  • Emory Miller
  • George W. Miller
  • Oliver Moon
  • George Walls
Note:  This disaster is not included in the CDC/NIOSH mine disaster list, and is not found at the MSHA Fatality Archive Database.




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