On
December 8,
1981,
13
coal miners lost their lives as the
result of an
explosion at the No.
21 Mine,
an underground coal
mine near Whitwell,
Tennessee
.
The mine was owned by the Tennessee Consolidated Coal Company and
operated by a subsidiary, the Grundy Mining Company.
An
U.S.
Mine Safety
and Health Administration investigation determined that the
explosion occurred when a miner's
cigarette lighter ignited a pocket of
methane gas. Investigators found the mine
operator at fault for failing to adequately
ventilate the mineshaft, failing to
evacuate workers from an area with high
methane levels, and failing to effectively enforce regulations that
banned
smoking materials in mines.
U.S. Report Says Lighter Caused Fatal Mine
Blast,
The New York
Times,
May 5,
1982
In the 1983 settlement of a
lawsuit, the
mine owners agreed to pay a total of about $10 million to the
survivors of ten of the 13 miners who were killed. The No. 21 Mine
closed in 1997.
References
- Mine Safety and Health Administration - Historical
Data on Mine Disasters
- Survivors Get $10 Million In Tennessee Mine
Blast, The New York Times, February 19, 1983
- Life Through a Child's Eyes, The Nantucket
Independent, October 24, 2007