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Joe Dawson

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Joe Dawson

Birth
England
Death
24 Aug 1894 (aged 18–19)
Franklin, King County, Washington, USA
Burial
Black Diamond, King County, Washington, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Age 19, Nationality-English, Single w/parents & three sisters.

"On August 24, 1894, 37 miners die fighting a fire in the Oregon Improvement Co. coal mine at Franklin {Washington}. The following day, a coroner's jury rules that the fire was caused by "party or parties unknown" who "did willfully, knowingly and maliciously cause said fire with intent and purpose to do great injury and damage to the lives of the miners and property of the Oregon Improvement Company." The Seattle Post-Intelligencer reported, "few can be found here who are not in hearty accord with it."

The fire itself might not have had a fatal effect except for the combination of two unrelated factors. A worker shut down a fan that supplied air to the different levels, and a gas tester, John K. Johns, searching for his miner son, opened a door from another area thinking it would drive the smoke out. This changed the air flow and trapped the miners between two walls of smoke, approximately 1,300 feet below the surface. Johns was found with his son in his arms. Both were dead. The miners were apparently building a "stopping" or bulkhead to seal themselves off from the fire and smoke when they were overcome.

Oregon Improvement Co. superintendent Theron B. Corey (1846-1909) traveled from Seattle by train to supervise the recovery of bodies. The firm paid for all the burials and contributed $4,000 to a fund for the support of widows and orphans. Approximately, $2,000 was raised in contributions from citizens in Seattle and from the mining communities.

Franklin was located in the Green River Gorge, approx 1.6 miles east of Black Diamond."

Seattle Post-Intelligencer, August 25, 1894
Age 19, Nationality-English, Single w/parents & three sisters.

"On August 24, 1894, 37 miners die fighting a fire in the Oregon Improvement Co. coal mine at Franklin {Washington}. The following day, a coroner's jury rules that the fire was caused by "party or parties unknown" who "did willfully, knowingly and maliciously cause said fire with intent and purpose to do great injury and damage to the lives of the miners and property of the Oregon Improvement Company." The Seattle Post-Intelligencer reported, "few can be found here who are not in hearty accord with it."

The fire itself might not have had a fatal effect except for the combination of two unrelated factors. A worker shut down a fan that supplied air to the different levels, and a gas tester, John K. Johns, searching for his miner son, opened a door from another area thinking it would drive the smoke out. This changed the air flow and trapped the miners between two walls of smoke, approximately 1,300 feet below the surface. Johns was found with his son in his arms. Both were dead. The miners were apparently building a "stopping" or bulkhead to seal themselves off from the fire and smoke when they were overcome.

Oregon Improvement Co. superintendent Theron B. Corey (1846-1909) traveled from Seattle by train to supervise the recovery of bodies. The firm paid for all the burials and contributed $4,000 to a fund for the support of widows and orphans. Approximately, $2,000 was raised in contributions from citizens in Seattle and from the mining communities.

Franklin was located in the Green River Gorge, approx 1.6 miles east of Black Diamond."

Seattle Post-Intelligencer, August 25, 1894


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  • Created by: Heidi
  • Added: Jul 7, 2008
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/28104568/joe-dawson: accessed ), memorial page for Joe Dawson (1875–24 Aug 1894), Find a Grave Memorial ID 28104568, citing Black Diamond Cemetery, Black Diamond, King County, Washington, USA; Maintained by Heidi (contributor 46998541).