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  2. Jeffrey Manufacturing Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeffrey_Manufacturing_Company

    In 1878, Jeffrey partnered with F.C. Sessions to purchase the patent and other rights to the coal cutting machine from Lechner, and they formed the Lechner Mining Machine Company to produce it. [3] The Lechner machine used a chain drive for the coal cutting heads and was the first practical coal cutter.

  3. Central Ohio Coal Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Central_Ohio_Coal_Company

    From the 1960s to the late 1980s, the company employed nearly 1,000 people in southeastern Ohio, [4] producing up to 1.7 million tons of coal annually. [5] Today, it is still one of the major employers in Morgan County, Ohio , [ 6 ] although its high-sulfur coal now spurs little demand. [ 7 ]

  4. 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.

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  6. Pomeroy, Ohio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pomeroy,_Ohio

    After viewing his coal land purchased in Massachusetts in 1804, and the fertile fields of the county he deemed it “a good healthy place to live, and with proper management a bright industrial future.” He established the Pomeroy Son’s Company and sent his son-in-law Valentine B. Horton, to develop coal and other industrial possibilities.

  7. Milo-Grogan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milo-Grogan

    Milo-Grogan is a neighborhood of Columbus, Ohio.The neighborhood was settled as the separate communities of Milo and Grogan in the late 1870s. Large-scale industrial development fueled the neighborhood's growth until the 1980s, when the last factories closed.