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Tragedy At Avondale by Robert P. Wolensky
Tragedy At Avondale by Robert P. Wolensky













Tragedy At Avondale by Robert P. Wolensky

In the last half of the 19 th Century, what is today the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton metro area became a thriving commercial and industrial center. Scranton was incorporated in 1866 and named after George Winfield Scranton, founder of the Lackawanna Iron and Coal Company. The Lackawanna River Valley was settled in the 1700’s. Scranton is the seat of Lackawanna County.

Tragedy At Avondale by Robert P. Wolensky

"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.The 16th Annual Conference of the Mining History Association was held in the Scranton, Pennsylvania area, June 16-20, 2005. He authored Report With Honor: The Civil War, 1861–1865, Volunteers from Luzerne and Surrounding Counties (2005), as well as a posthumously published volume, Anthracite Tears: Youth Mining Fatalities, Ages Seven to Eighteen, In Luzerne and Lackawanna Counties, 1870–1920 (2007), which documents the often dangerous work lives of young boys in anthracite mines. He worked as a truck driver for numerous construction companies, his last job before retirement being at the nuclear power station in Salem Township, Pennsylvania. Born in Larksville, Pennsylvania, he was a life-long resident of the Wyoming Valley. He was known as a leading anthracite preservationist and folklorist. Keating (1937–2006) was the founder of the Anthracite Living History Group in 2000, and the Avondale Disaster Site Preservation Committee in 2005.

Tragedy At Avondale by Robert P. Wolensky

He earned an undergraduate degree from Villanova University and a doctoral degree from Penn State University.Joseph M. He is also the director of the Northeastern Pennsylvania Oral and Life History Project. A native of the Wyoming Valley of northeastern Pennsylvania, he has authored and co-authored books on the Tropical Storm Agnes flood of 1972, the Knox Mine Disaster of 1959, and the ladies' garment workers industry in Pennsylvania between 19. Wolensky serves as Professor of Sociology and Co-director of the Center for the Small City at the University of Wisconsin–Stevens Point, and as Adjunct Professor of Sociology and History at King's College in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania.















Tragedy At Avondale by Robert P. Wolensky