Happy International Workers’ Day! May 1st doesn’t just mark the first day of a new month–it's a global celebration of workers’ rights and solidarity! Here at the West Virginia Mine Wars Museum, we’re all about honoring these victories and sharing the stories behind them. We also know there’s plenty more to do.
Introducing our latest opening for an Oral Historian!
Women's History Month
ICYMI: We own our building!
Cataloging the Fred Barkey Collection
Celebrating Black History Month
Unearthing History: The Significance of Teaching the West Virginia Mine Wars
The Barrios Family of Spain and Red Jacket
In anticipation of a major announcement regarding our Teaching Trunks, we have some additional education resources we’ve been working on with Dr. Rebecca Bailey, author of "Matewan Before the Massacre," and her students at Northern Kentucky University to share today.
On This Day in Labor History, the year was 1921, Mingo County.
Sid Hatfield, Chief of Police in Matewan, West Virginia, stood trial along with 22 others for the murder of Baldwin Felts agent Albert Felts. The backdrop? The United Mine Workers' efforts to organize coal miners. Hatfield, a supporter of miners' rights, confronted Baldwin-Felts agents who were evicting union miners. A phony arrest warrant escalated into a gun battle, known as the Battle of Matewan, leaving 7 detectives, 2 miners, and the Mayor of Matewan dead.