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  2. H.A. Baxter Coal Company Historic District - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/H.A._Baxter_Coal_Company...

    Freshwaters Coal and Supply operated here from 1945 to 1959. Coal usage declined through the 1950s as natural gas replaced it for heating buildings. In 1959, Freshwaters Feed and Grain Company moved to this location from downtown. They continued to offer coal for sale into the early 1970s, and they were the last business in Washington to do so. [2]

  3. Black Heath - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Heath_(Chesterfield...

    Black Heath was a house and coal mine located near the present day Midlothian area of Chesterfield County, Virginia.The Black Heath coal mining enterprises were operated intermittently from the early 1780s until 1939 and were most notably run by the Heth family from 1795 until 1840, who also built the mansion house in the early 1800s.

  4. Coal House (Williamson, West Virginia) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coal_House_(Williamson...

    The bituminous coal was quarried as blocks and dressed as stone using 65 tons of coal from the nearby Winifrede Seam. At the time of its construction it was the only coal building in West Virginia. The house was designed by architect Hassel T. Hicks [2] of Welch, West Virginia and supervised by David M. Goode. The coal masonry was varnished for ...

  5. Wentworth Woodhouse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wentworth_Woodhouse

    The objective was the mining of a large part of the estate close to the house for coal. This was an area where the prolific Barnsley seam was within 100 feet (30 m) of the surface and the area in front of the Baroque West wing of the house became the largest open-cast mining site in Britain at that time: 132,000 tons of coal were removed solely ...

  6. Coal merchant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coal_merchant

    According to J. U. Nef, the term "coal merchant" originally meant "the owner, or part owner, of an east-coast collier [ship]; but in the eighteenth century the word was applied to all kinds of London coal traders, including small retailers", while the shipper came to be called a coal dealer, although the terms were "seldom applied consistently" in this period.

  7. Lusk Home and Mill Site - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lusk_Home_and_Mill_Site

    He dug a coal mine to heat his house. Lusk built a gristmill in 1826 with a foundation of stone-cut stone. A horizontal waterwheel was powered by water diverted by a dam down a race. A settlement grew around Lusk's house and mill, until a Sugar Creek flood on New Year's Day, 1847, washed away every building except Lusk's brick house. Salmon ...

  8. James W. Walter Sr. - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_W._Walter_Sr.

    James W. Walter Sr. (September 18, 1922 – January 6, 2000), of Tampa, Florida, United States, was a home builder who started Jim Walter Homes and Walter Industries, now doing business as Walter Energy, Inc., a leading producer of metallurgical coal for the global steel industry, in 1946 with $1,000 he borrowed from his father.

  9. Coal mining in Plymouth, Pennsylvania - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coal_Mining_in_Plymouth...

    About 1806, Abijah Smith came to Plymouth from Derby, Connecticut, intending to mine, ship, and sell coal.Smith and Lewis Hepburn, his business partner, bought a 75-acre plot (Lots 45 and 46 on the Plymouth Township Warranty Map) on the east side of Coal Creek, and in the fall of 1807, Smith floated an ark down the Susquehanna River loaded with about fifty tons of anthracite coal, shipping it ...