West Virginia Public Broadcasting

W.Va. Mine Wars Class Offered to Teachers

The West Virginia Mine Wars is a period of our state’s history that until around the 1980s was often censored or left out in classrooms across the state. But a new class through Shepherd University’s Lifelong Learning Program will offer tools for history teachers in West Virginia and beyond.

Coal Country Tours is a company that hosts individuals on trips to southern West Virginia. The history of the mine wars is something owner and tour guide, Doug Estepp covers during the trips.

Starting next academic semester, Estepp will get the word out to even more folks with a class through Shepherd University.

“I grew up in Mingo County in a family of coal miners,” Estepp said, “My family didn’t talk about it; my grandfather didn’t talk about it, they would just kind of brush it off when I would see little hints, I would see stories about tent colonies and strikes, and they just didn’t want to talk about it, and people, that was kind of the way people reacted all around the state.”

Estepp’s class is designed for teachers to learn about the mine wars and get the tools they need to bring the stories into the West Virginia History class.

Quick Facts on 2016 W.Va. Mine Wars Class:

Estepp says there will be projects and reading assignments for the class, and the first assignment will be to watch, “The Mine Wars” on PBS’ American Experience, which premieres the same day as the first class.

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