Note: The Rootsweb Mailing Lists will be shut down on April 6, 2023. (More info)
RootsWeb.com Mailing Lists
Total: 1/1
    1. Re: [MO-STLOUIS-METRO] Re: Underground Mines of St. Louis
    2. ShowMeMule
    3. Mike, Unfortunately the photocopy of the map is kind of fuzzy, and there is no coordinates. Someone would have to visit these points and record coordinates on a GPS. I would be willing to do it but I don't have a GPS receiver. Scott K. Williams ----- Original Message ----- From: "Mike Flannigan" <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Sunday, May 22, 2005 4:04 PM Subject: [MO-STLOUIS-METRO] Re: Underground Mines of St. Louis Very nice. Thanks for posting that. Any chance you have lat/long locations for the mine entrances? I plan to cross reference this by name with my material to see if there is new information here. I suspect there is. Mike Flannigan [email protected] wrote: > Subject: Underground Mines of St. Louis > Date: Sat, 21 May 2005 22:32:23 -0500 > From: "ShowMeMule" <[email protected]> > To: [email protected] > > Quite some time ago sombody inquired about clay or coal mines in St. Louis. Their ancestor was a miner if I recall correctly. > > I can across a pretty comprehensive listing of 80 or so underground clay and coal mines under the City of St. Louis (a few in the > county as well). Its pretty interesting to see we have entire blocks that have mines beneath the surface. Most of them were dug > out using vertical shafts 40-100 ft. deep. This explains why we have so many bricks in this city. We have abundant fire clay > deposits so mines riddle our underground. Some of the old bricks we find today bear the names of the various clay mines (like > "Laclede" or "Evans and Howard"). > > In some areas of the city, there are mine shafts even inside the basements of the houses. That could be a source of free air > conditioning if one looks to the bright side of the matter. Other shafts dot beneath alleys and roadways. Some blocked up by brick > and others simply by timbers. The "Dogtown" area and South St. Louis contain the largest acreage of underground mines. (There is a > mine beneath the St. Louis Zoo and another beneath Deaconess Hospital). A lot of the area north of Watson Road, between Gravois and > Kingshighway is underlaiden by vast pillared rooms that interconnect from one to another. One mine was accidently opened during the > widening of Gravios in 1930. > > There is much we don't know as most mines were never mapped. Many are only known by the approximate location of its entry shaft. > They date anywhere from the 1820's to up in the 1940-50's when the last of them were mined. I posted a listing on the web at: > http://www.usgennet.org/usa/mo/county/stlouis/underground_stl.htm > > or go to my main page and follow the link. > > Scott K. Williams, > History's Time Portal to Old St. Louis > http://www.usgennet.org/usa/mo/county/stlouis/ ==== MO-STLOUIS-METRO Mailing List ==== NOTICE: Posting of virus warnings, test messages, chain letters, political announcements, current events, items for sale, personal messages, flames, etc.(in other words - spam) is NOT ALLOWED and will be grounds for removal. Consideration for exceptions, contact Kathleen Burnett [email protected]

    05/23/2005 01:24:06