Preface
The Chestnut Ridge region of
southwestern Pennsylvania—also known as
the Laurel Highlands or the Connellsville seam—stretches alongside the
Allegheny Mountains from Latrobe down to Uniontown, near the West Virginia
border. When I was a child visiting there in the 1970s, I thought of it as The
Land Where Nothing Has Ever Happened or Ever Will. But in truth, the region
has, over a span of 250 years, undergone an extraordinary metamorphosis,
shifting from dense wilderness to chaotic industrial hell before collapsing
into the exhausted Rust Belt desolation I knew so well.
As a gateway to
the Mississippi, the Allegheny region was, for early travelers, a primary river
and land route south into the Appalachians and north into Canada. Thus, it has
long attracted wanderers, pioneers, missionaries, immigrants, and schemers; and
its strategic importance made it a major battlefield during the French and
Indian War. Young George Washington, who suffered a spectacular defeat there
during the first battle of his career, returned to the ridge as an aging
ex-president, hoping to recoup what he’d lost in unprofitable land speculation.
In the 1840s, writing in his travel journal, Charles Dickens mused over the
cabins he saw clinging to the hillsides, wondering who might live in this
lovely, remote, alluring, mysterious place.
Humans have had an
incalculable influence on every inch of our planet, but their impact on the
Chestnut Ridge has been particularly brutal. The impetus behind the region’s
rapid shift from frontier to furnace was coal—not the hard, relatively
clean-burning anthracite coal of northeastern Pennsylvania and the western
states but the smoky, soft, polluting, bituminous coal that was the fundamental
ingredient in coke, fuel of choice for making steel. The coal beneath Chestnut
Ridge was key to the wealth not only of Henry Clay Frick, who controlled most
of the area’s coking operations, but also of Andrew Carnegie, who built U.S.
Steel on the back of Connellsville coke, as well as financiers such as Andrew
Mellon and Charles Schwab and transportation magnates such as the Pennsylvania
Railroad’s Thomas Scott.
Meanwhile, the
coke ovens burned. The miners carried their lunch buckets down the shafts, into
darkness. Children were born, and old men died. In Scottdale—my mother’s
hometown, and also Frick’s, a hamlet once known as Fountain Mills but renamed
in honor of Scott the Railroad King—I whiled away the summer climbing hay bales
and pitching bottles into the quarry and listening to my grandfather try to
cough up the coal dust trapped in his lungs. Meanwhile, Frick’s coke ovens,
cold and empty, crumbled into the roadside weeds. One might say that the land
was reasserting its claim to itself. But the scars—in stone, in flesh: even
then I knew they would remain.
**
The Historian’s Wife Describes the Appalachian Plateau (1930)
Dawn Potter
The Historian’s Wife Describes the Appalachian Plateau (1930)
Dawn Potter
Imagine a massive dining-room table
spread with a damask cloth whose starched
folds are difficult to climb. Once this table-
land was ironed smooth. Then up lurched
Chestnut Ridge, unruly as a soup stain
or a badly darned tear. In those days the sea
came and went, and came and went. When
the waters left, the table was the property
of trees and humid swamps and ferns as grand
as modern man though now he rules supreme.
Then the sea rushed back, and with it sand;
and again the waves fell back, again they streamed,
spoiling the ferns, rotting the trees and their fruit.
Meanwhile, time applied her bitter tinctures;
the careless sea swept in her dustpans of silt.
It was a vast tedium that contrived our future.
[Versions of these pieces appeared in Hawk & Handsaw: The Journal of Creative Sustainability, vol. 5 (2012)]
3 comments:
I love the preface and the poem, both. I am reading Grisham's Gray Mountain, also of the coal region (though Appalachia, not PA)--what devastation humans have wrought. As you say, the scars remain throughout.
Actually this region of Pennsylvania is classified as Appalachia. Geographically the region goes all the way north to New England, though culturally Penn. is the northernmost reach. The area I'm writing about is right on the WV border.
Hm, in that case (and thx...I am geographically challenged, for sure) you may want to read Grisham's novel. It's the legal side of the pillaging of the land and the people who live there.
Post a Comment