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Arizona Pioneer & Cemetery Research Project

Internet Presentation

Version 020110AH

 

By Allan Hall

APCRP Historian - Author - Certified Coordinator

 

A Short History of Mine Accidents and Fatalities: 

1912 through 1930

 

The office of the State Mine Inspector was created by the Arizona Constitutional Convention and came into being on May 15, 1912.  One of its duties was to file annual reports on the state of mining activity, including a summary of ore production, mine inspections, accidents and fatalities.  Because the reporting period was from December 1 to November 30, the annual report for 1912 covered a period of only six and one-half months.  During that span of time 33 serious injuries and 28 fatalities occurred in the mines.  The first full year of reporting was in 1913, which saw 70 serious injuries and 66 fatalities.

 

How one injury qualified as “serious” and another injury might not, could have been a bit too subjective for the young legislature, and the Mine Inspector’s office corrected this deficiency the following year. The public began to see just how dangerous it was to work in mines – or at least in some of them.

 

By the end of the ninth year of record-keeping (1920), 561 fatalities and 7119 injuries had been reported. The potential for injury or death was, it seemed, everywhere. A random sampling of fatalities from this period is listed below. The cause of death is given verbatim from the annual reports.

 

 

Name

Cause of Fatality

Mine

Ramaldo Carillo

While blasting a round of holes he had difficulty in lighting the last hole and the first hole exploded while he was still at the last.

Detroit Copper

Roy Jacobson

Crushed by cage and then fell down shaft.

Copper Queen

Augustine Camache

Overcome by gas, fell in water and drowned.

Little Daisy

Teolindo Estevez

Drilled into a missed hole.

Gold Road

P. Padillo

When going off shift he went through No 3 stope where blasting was going on.  First round of holes had gone off and as he started going through this stope the second round went off.

Vulture Mines

Charles Jenkins and Agapito Gutierrez

Failed to open air valve after blasting and Gutierrez was overcome by gas.  Jenkins went down to rescue him and was also overcome.

Arizona Copper

Francis L. Dupen

Fell off a cage to about 350 feet below.

Miami Copper

Moises Lastra

Was being lowered in a bucket when the engineer noticed the bell cord shake and stopped the bucket.  Went down to investigate and found Lastra’s body at the bottom of shaft.

Detroit Copper

Jose V. Garcia

While climbing into car, came in contact with trolley wires.

Arizona Copper

W.M. Roberts

Stepped on cage while in motion.  He was caught between cage and station bar, and almost decapitated.

Calumet & Arizona

Joe Pianti

Fell from 500 foot level to 800 foot level.

Iron Cap Copper

E.E. Sargent

Crushed between (ore) car and timbers.

Iron Cap Copper

Batiste Guizzetti

Sufficated in raise. (note misspelling)

Inspiration Consolidated

E. A. Stevens, T.  Sandovol and A. Cardello

Repairing bulkhead at fire.  Burned.

Arizona Copper

Frank J. Perks

Caught by flywheel and drawn through base of engine and flywheel.

Walnut Creek Mining

 

A careful review of the injuries and fatalities shows that the difference between the quick and the dead was often only a matter of inches or seconds. 

To be sure, some of these incidents were the result of carelessness by the victim or fellow worker; but the lack of safety training, the use of unsafe equipment, dangerous procedures and the ineffective shoring of underground spaces were unquestionably major factors.

 

The top ten causes of death in Arizona mines from 1912 through 1920 include:

 

  1. Falling rock or timbers: 168 deaths resulted from miners being struck or crushed by falling rock (not cave-ins). This includes rocks, boulders and slabs falling from the roof or side of a stope or drift, rocks falling down chutes or raises, falling timbers, or similar circumstances
  2. Fall of mine worker: 104 deaths came from falls by miners. This includes falling out of cages or buckets that were being raised or lowered in a shaft, slipping and falling into shafts, winzes or down ore chutes, or being knocked off a piece of equipment and falling.
  3. Explosions of powder or dynamite: 70 miners were killed during this period by premature or delayed explosions. Many of these can be attributed to defective fuses.
  4. Crushed by equipment: 64 deaths resulted from the mine worker being crushed by equipment. This includes derailment of trains or ore cars, being caught under or run over by engines, being crushed between two ore cars, between a moving piece of equipment and a tunnel wall, or by a cage or bucket in a shaft.
  5. Cave-ins: 36 fatalities resulted from the complete collapse of the roof and/or walls of a stope or drift. Death may have been caused by crushing or suffocation while buried under debris.
  6. Missed Hole: 28 miners were killed when they drilled or picked into a hole that had been charged with blasting powder or dynamite. In these cases, the charge had not exploded when all of the holes were set off.
  7. Electrocution: 26 fatalities came from contact with bare electrical wires. Typically, these deaths were from contact with an overhead trolley wire.
  8. Suffocation: 15 miners died from suffocation caused by gases, unventilated spaces after blasting, dust, or having been trapped in a confined area.
  9. Falling equipment: 11 miners were killed by buckets, cages or other equipment that fell down a shaft, striking them.
  10. Air blast: 5 fatalities occurred in a single incident involving an air blast. Details are not available, but this may have been a concussive shock wave.

 

The remaining 34 fatalities were caused by collisions (4), steam or gas explosions (3), fire (3) and a variety of decidedly bizarre accidents, including one miner who was impaled on his pick. In the ten years that followed, from 1921 through 1930, another 357 miners would die in accidents and 6,388 would be injured. Not surprisingly, the major causes of death did not change appreciably in that decade. The total reported deaths and injuries for the period between May 15, 1912 and November 30, 1930:  918 fatalities and 13,507 injuries.

 

 

Figure 1 Mine Fatalities

 

 

The graph titled “Mine Fatalities” illustrates both year to year (red line) and cumulative (blue line) deaths during this period. If the death toll seemed to moderate in the years leading up to 1930 it was due more to a decrease in the number of men employed by the mines rather than to substantive improvements in safety.

 

 

Figure 2 Trend of Incidents

 

 

In fact, the rate of injury and death (as a percentage of the work force) would usually spike in years that experienced a sharp reduction in the number of mine workers, as the graph titled ‘Trend of Incidents” illustrates in Figure 2. For example, notice the sharp drop in mine workers from 1919 through 1921 (the solid black line). During this period the rate of accidents and fatalities (red line) was significantly above the 17 year trend. The year with the highest rate of accidents was 1921, when 9.2 percent of the workforce (531 out of 5749 men) would be killed or injured. The year with the lowest accident rate was in 1917, when 4.69 percent (1080 out of 23,001 workers) incurred injuries or death.  The two years of 1912 – 1913 are omitted because the total number of injuries was not included in annual reports.  The general trend (green line) shows that the rate of injury and death declined over 17 years to about five percent of the total workforce.

 

By comparison, the most recent statistics (2004) show that 0.718 percent of all mine workers (surface and underground) experienced work injuries during the reporting year. This represents 97 out of 13,499 workers and includes rock, sand and gravel quarries. Only 23 men were employed in underground workings. [1]

 

Although reporting was mandatory after Statehood, it does not mean that all accidents were reported by the mines or tabulated by the Mine Inspector. On May 17, two days after the Mine Inspector’s office was established, Francisco Vargas fell into an open cut at the Coronado Mine, suffering a concussion and drowned. His death was not reported. Was this an oversight? Perhaps - but there was ample time to collect this statistic before the end of the reporting period. [2]

 

The worst disaster to occur at the Coronado Mine also went unreported. A derailment at the Coronado Incline took nine lives at 4:00 pm on August 13, 1913, but was not included in the statistics for that year. The baby gauge locomotive was transporting ore and workers from the Matilda Shaft to the top of the Incline, which gained 1,500 feet of elevation over a distance of only 3,300 feet. Death certificates indicate the men were thrown from the car(s) and crushed.[3]

___________________________________________________________________________________________________

[1] There were 96 injuries and one fatality in 2004.  The Annual Reports of the State Mine Inspector can be accessed at: http://azmemory.lib.az.us/cdm4/document.php?CISOROOT=/statepubs&CISOPTR=4191&REC=3

 

2There had already been six fatalities at the Arizona Copper Company workings between January 1 and May 13, 1912.  These were not reported because they preceded creation of the State Mine Inspector office.

 

3 William Schafer, Mining Engineer; Gleaner Cardwell, Electrician; John McCann (Scotland), Machinist Helper; Clifford Johnson, Engineer; Edgar Jones, Machinist; Pedro Oropesa

 

Another unreported incident occurred in 1923 and involved the unhealthy combination of stupidity and greed. Seven miners, whose names are not recorded, sneaked into the Vulture Mine at night to engage in personal enrichment.

 

If you are not familiar with hard rock mining terminology, a stope is the open chamber that remains after valuable ores have been removed. Stopes could become quite large if the ore deposit was substantial. If the native rock was of sufficient strength the chamber would not be reinforced with timbers for reasons of economy. Instead, the stope would be supported by columns of native rock. The larger the stope was the more columns were needed to prevent collapse. 

 

The seven larcenous workers planned to chip away some of the rich gold ore in the columns and make their escape with as much fortune as they could load onto a dozen burros. The column or columns they selected that night must have been particularly rich in gold. In their greed they removed so much ore that the entire stope collapsed; killing them and the burros. Their grave marker is a very large depression on the surface known as a glory hole.

 

Without mandatory reporting one can only speculate about the statistics of death and injury between the 1850’s and 1912. One thing is certain: The big mine operators - some of whom are listed above – favored profitability over safety in the extreme. Their hiring practices and the methods they employed in underground operations guaranteed, and even exacerbated, unsafe conditions. Moreover, the number of hard rock mines in Territorial Arizona far outnumbered surface operations.

_____________________________________________________________________________________

(Mexico), Laborer; Julian Rico (Mexico), Laborer; Castante Cordedecia (Italy), Baker; Gisseppe Masoco (Italy), Baker. 

 

Arizona Pioneer & Cemetery Research Project

Internet Presentation

Version 020110AH

 

WebMaster: Neal Du Shane

 

n.j.dushane@comcast.net

 

Copyright ©2003-2009 Neal Du Shane
All rights reserved. Information contained within this website may be used
for personal family history purposes, but not for financial profit or gain.
All contents of this website are willed to the Arizona Pioneer & Cemetery Research Project (
APCRP).

 



[1] There were 96 injuries and one fatality in 2004.  The Annual Reports of the State Mine Inspector can be accessed at: http://azmemory.lib.az.us/cdm4/document.php?CISOROOT=/statepubs&CISOPTR=4191&REC=3

[2] There had already been six fatalities at the Arizona Copper Company workings between January 1 and May 13, 1912.  These were not reported because they preceded creation of the State Mine Inspector office.

[3] William Schafer, Mining Engineer; Gleaner Cardwell, Electrician; John McCann (Scotland), Machinist Helper; Clifford Johnson, Engineer; Edgar Jones, Machinist; Pedro Oropesa (Mexico), Laborer; Julian Rico (Mexico), Laborer; Castante Cordedecia (Italy), Baker; Gisseppe Masoco (Italy), Baker. 

 

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