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Loaded coal cars on the railraod.
Full loads of coal in train cars in front of the C.C.C. Preparation Plant in Fairmont, W. Va. Credit must be given to William Vandivert, 21 East Tenth St., New York 3, N.Y.
Postcard of an electric locomotive carrying coal and miners.
An electric locomotive carrying coal and miners outside of the mine.
The James Ellwood Jones ship being loaded with coal.
Coal barges being pushed on unknown river and unfilled barges just off shore.
Champion coal tow boat of the Pittsburgh Coal Co. on unknown river.
The National Steel Corporation ship,  operated by M.A. Hanna Corporation, on what is likely one of the Great Lakes. The boat was 690 feet long. Ernest T. Weir is written on the side of the ship. Reorder No. from creator is 29786-3.
Two towboats carrying coal on a scenic Appalachian river.
Pittsburgh Coal Co. towboat with a load of coal outside of an unknown city.
Pittsburgh Coal Co. towboat with a load of coal outside of an unknown city; R.J. Elinhart, Elizabeth, PA.
Hillman Barge and Construction Company. 175' x 26' x 11' all welded standard hopper barge. First of 30 for Pgh. Consol. Coal Co.
Pittsburgh Coal Co. towboat with a load of coal outside of an unknown city. Reorder No. from Judge is 31540-1.
Western Maryland coal car with man on board.
Coal train going past houses.
Filled train cars of the Western Maryland Train Co.
Loaded coal cars.  First car has 'No BRAKE' written on it.
Filled Coal car with houses in background.
A man walking along top of coal cars.
Western Maryland Coal Car No. 50519 with other cars in background.
Coal cars with a barn and houses in the background.
Scenic view of a community visible from the last Western Maryland coal car traveling past it.
Train car with bags of coal headed to Salaverry, Peru. Sent by the Davis Coal and Coke Co.
There is a man adjusting a crank on the coal car.
Car filled by the machine on the right.
Loaded coal cars outside preparation plant.
B&O coal train with a full load of coal.
Car No. 50519 and 16311 with others around them.
Trains next to some houses and a store with cars parked in front of it.
Filled coal car with houses visible in the background.
Coal cars at tipple being loaded with coal.
Chesapeake and Ohio Coal Cars after being filled.
A Chesapeake and Ohio coal car, corn shocks in the background.
Caption on back reads, 'White Oak Stove size is surely growing in popularity, and why not? It is an ideal size for laundries, bakeries, hot water heaters and similar uses. It is uniformly sized, free from slack and impurities and can be washed if desired.'
Caption on back reads, 'The most popular size smokeless coal marketed today is egg size and White Oak is proud of its egg coal. Neither too large, nor too small; perfectly screened and without a single impurity are reasons for the popularity of this wonderful domestic fuel. Note the even size of this egg coal as it is passing over the loading boom into the railroad car. Treated for dust if desired.'
Coal car at the No. 34 Mine.
Piles of coal with a filled coal car in the background.
This picture shows a days run of coal below Summerlee Tipple just before being moved by the railroad crews. Three cars of stove size, four cars of lump, four cars of egg and eleven cars of slack constitute the loading for the day.<br />Note how the cars are trimmed! What a neat appearance they present! Even the cars of slack are evenly loaded and trimmed. Careful inspection and frequent supervision accounts for results like the camera shows. Every attention is paid to the preparation and marketing of 'White Oak' coal. No detail is to small to receive our most careful attention. Conditions shown here prevail at all the White Oak Mines. Each and every car leaving a White Oak Mine is carefully inspected as loaded by an experienced and competent inspector; all impurities removed and the car fully loaded and properly trimmed just as you see them in this picture.
Chesapeake and Ohio and Virginian Coal Cars with a shed in the background.
A string of coal cars being loaded.
The acid test of coal preparation is to lift your boom to clear and direct the critical eye of the camera against your coal to determine whether or not you are loading your coal properly. This is just what the camera man did in this case. No previous warning or preparation, he just stopped at a tipple, asked the inspector to lift the boom and took this picture. Note again the firmness of this coal in the railroad car; not a trace of slack or impurities.
Coal car being filled with coal.
Close up of coal in a train car.
Chesapeake and Ohio Coal cars coming out of a loading dock at mine 207.
Chesapeake and Ohio Coal train cars in front of a community of houses.
Man riding in a coal car with loading facility in background.
Virginian and C&amp;O coal trains outside of a coal town.
Notice, Permission is granted to reproduce this photograph only on condition that each reproduction shall bear the following credit line: Photograph by Norfolk and Western Railway.
Champion coal
Coal cars run down the track in a preparation plant yard.
A pile of coal in a coal car.
Consolidation Coal Company Trucks and a crane on a bridge over piles of coal.
Coal barge on river being filled during a Consolidation Coal Co. Inspection trip.
Aerial view of Pierce, W. Va. Davis Coal and Coke Company.  Part of headframe, miner's houses, railroad tracks, and coal cars visibile.
Filled coal cars being driven out of mine during a Consolidation Coal Co. Inspection trip.
Miner operates a train of loaded cars from the Mathies Mine.
Miner drives a train of loaded coal cars from the entrance of Mathies Mine to the preparation plant.
Miner operates a train of coal cars loaded with raw coal departing from Consol Mine No. 32.
A miner operates a cart full of coal exiting the mine.
A miner operates a full coal cart down the track coming from Mathies Mine.
Picture was taken from the West Virginia Review, Vol. 4, Oct. 1926 - Sept. 1927. The article was titled 'Building a Mining Community' by C.A. Cabell, President of Carbon Fuel Company, April, 1927. The picture is on page 209, April 1927 issue.
1-Mining machine, electrically operated, 2. Electric locomotive and coal car train leaving mine, 3. Shaker screen for sorting coal according to size, 4. Coal powerhouse and tipple.
Railroad in front of a mining community.
Car filled with coal. 'Geological Survey'
Two dogs harnessed to coal carts. About 1890, Ohio Coal Mine. This photograph is the property of Pittsburgh Consolidation Coal Co.