Hostname: page-component-84b7d79bbc-lrf7s Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-26T18:49:23.311Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Immigration of British Coal Miners in the Civil War Decade*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 December 2008

Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Extract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

British coal miners immigrated to the United States in increasing numbers during the Civil War decade. Their movement from the collieries gathered momentum in the early war years and reached its peak in 1869. In 1862, almost all of the immigrants entering the United States who listed their occupation as “miner” were from Britain. As shown in the table, such men accounted for more than 73% of all immigrant miners in each of the following years of the decade for which data are available, with the exception of 1864. In 1870, the 57,214 British immigrant miners listed in the United States Census represented more than 60% of all foreign-born miners (94,719) in the country. The movement from Britain had already slowed when news of the American economic depression that began in 1873 reached the collieries in Britain, where an extraordinary demand for iron in the early 1870's had hiked coal miners' wages far above normal levels. However, when employment in the American coalfields was readily available in the 1860's and early 1870's, the risk involved in spending hard-won savings on the journey, which cost approximately £5 and took ten days by steamer, appeared reasonable. In comparison with other wage earners coal miners in Britain were relatively well-paid. They could, therefore, accumulate the cost of the trans-Atlantic passage during “good-times” at home.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Internationaal Instituut voor Sociale Geschiedenis 1978

References

1 Returns of the numbers of miners and quarrymen who left the United Kingdom in passenger ships in each year (1861 to 1872) [Parliamentary Papers, 1873, LXI], p. 37.Google Scholar

2 1,720 of the 1,731 immigrant miners in 1862 were from Britain. Ibid.; Arrivals by Occupation of Alien Passengers 1820–67 and of Immigrants 1868–70, Bureau of Statistics (Washington, D.C., 1891), pp. 582–83.Google Scholar Data for miners who emigrated from Britain in 1860 and 1861 are not available. For a discussion of the inadequacy of data on emigrants from Britain, see Jones, Maldwyn A., “The Background to Emigration from Great Britain in the Nineteenth Century”, in: Perspectives in American History, ed. by Fleming, Donald and Bailyn, Bernard (Cambridge, Mass., 1973), VII, pp. 2024.Google Scholar

3 These figures are for immigrant miners in all industries in the United States in 1870, including 17,069 men born in China or Japan. Miners of these nationalities were not found in the coalfields of the Midwest or East. Ninth Census of the United States: 1870, III, pp. 840–41.Google Scholar

4 Clapham, J. H., An Economic History of Modern Britain (New York, 1932), II, ch. IIIGoogle Scholar; Bowley, Arthur L., Wages in the United Kingdom in the Nineteenth Century (Cambridge, 1900), pp. 105, 107–09Google Scholar; Rowe, J. W. F., Wages in the Coal Industry (London, 1923), pp. 7273.Google Scholar

5 Thomas, Brinley, Migration and Growth, 2nd ed. (Cambridge, 1973), p. 96.Google Scholar

6 Hunt, E. H., Regional Wage Variations in Britain 1850–1914 (Oxford, 1973), pp. 7374.Google Scholar

7 Berthoff, Rowland T., British Immigrants in American Industry 1790–1953 (Cambridge, Mass., 1953), p. 52.Google Scholar

9 Wilson, John, Memories of a Labour Leader: The Autobiography of John Wilson, J.P., M.P. (London, 1910), p. 143.Google Scholar See note 103.

10 “In a great many cases [the emigrant] has friends already settled with whom he has been in correspondence.” Consul Harte, Glasgow, in United States Consular Reports, 1885, II, p. 971.Google Scholar

11 Thomas, Migration and Growth, op. cit., pp. 92–93.

12 See note 1.

13 For a discussion on the communication of craft skills see Harris, J. R., “Skills, Coal and British Industry in the Eighteenth Century”, in: History, LXI (1976), pp. 167–82.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

14 Andrew Roy, when mine inspector in Ohio, wrote: “Very few German miners ever emigrate to this country. […] Thousands of Germans work in the coal mines of the United States, but question them and you will find that they, with rare exceptions, never saw a coalmine in the fatherland.7rd; Sixth Annual Report of the State Inspector of Mines, to the Governor of the State of Ohio, for the Year 1881 (Columbus, Ohio, 1881), p. 40Google Scholar; National Labor Tribune, 12 07 1890, p. 2.Google Scholar

15 See Keuchel, Edward F., “Coal Burning Locomotives: A Technical Development of the 1850's”, in: Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, XCIV (1970), pp. 484–95Google Scholar, and Chandler, Alfred D. Jr, “Anthracite Coal and the Beginnings of the Industrial Revolution in the United States”, in: Business History Review, XLVI (1972), pp. 141–81.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

16 Hammond, J. L. and Hammond, Barbara, The Skilled Labourer, 1760–1832 (London, 1919), p. 13Google Scholar; Fynes, Richard, The Miners of Northumberland and Durham, 2nd ed. (Sunderland, 1923), pp. 235–37Google Scholar; Brown, A. J. Youngson, “Trade Union Policy in the Scots Coalfields 1855–1885”, in: Economic History Review, Second Series, VI (19531954), pp. 3940Google Scholar; Ashton, T. S. and Sykes, J., The Coal Industry in the Eighteenth Century (Manchester, 1929), p. 89Google Scholar; Miner and Workman's Advocate, 4 February and 25 March 1864; Sentinel (Glasgow), 20 08 1864, p. 5Google Scholar; Mining Journal, 23 06 1866, p. 400Google Scholar; British Miner and General Newsman, 27 September 1872.

17 Fynes, The Miners, op. cit., pp. 16–17.

18 Hallam, William, Miners' Leaders (London, 1894), p. 9.Google Scholar

19 Webb, Sidney, The Story of the Durham Miners (1662–1921) (London, 1921), pp. 5051.Google Scholar

20 Morris, J. H. and Williams, L. J., The South Wales Coal Industry (Cardiff, 1958), p. 238.Google Scholar

21 Fynes, , The Miners, pp. 234–35Google Scholar; Welbourne, E., The Miners' Unions of Northumberland and Durham (Cambridge, 1923), p. 21Google Scholar; Ashton and Sykes, The Coal Industry, op. cit., land and Durham (Cambridge, 1923), p. 21; Ashton and Sykes, The Coal Industry, op. cit., p. 89; Morris and Williams, South Wales Coal Industry, op. cit., pp. 238, 266–67; Machin, Frank, The Yorkshire Miners, I (Barnsley, 1958), p. 51Google Scholar; Report from the Select Committee appointed to inquire into the present dearness and scarcity of coal [Parliamentary Papers, 1873, X], qq. 5055, 5060.Google Scholar

22 National Conference of Miners, Proceedings, 30 August to 1 September 1875 (Glasgow, n.d.), p. 12Google Scholar; Wilson, John, History of the Durham Miners' Association (Durham, 1907), p. 10.Google Scholar

23 Welbourne, The Miners' Unions, op. cit., p. 21.

24 Hallam, Miners' Leaders, op. cit., p. 9; Miners and Workman's Advocate, 4 February and 25 March 1864.

25 Taylor, A. J., “The Miners' Association of Great Britain and Ireland, 1842–48: A Study of the Problem of Integration”, in: Economica, New Series, XXII (1955), pp. 4549CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Morris, and Williams, , South Wales Coal Industry, pp. 270–72Google Scholar; Evans, E. W., The Miners of South Wales (Cardiff, 1961), pp. 8889Google Scholar; Johnston, Thomas, The History of the Working Classes in Scotland (Glasgow, n.d.), p. 340Google Scholar; Fynes, , The Miners, pp. 179–87.Google Scholar

26 Cole, G. D. H., “Some Notes on British Trade Unionism in the Third Quarter of the Nineteenth Century”, in: International Review for Social History, II (1937), p. 8.Google Scholar

27 National Association of Coal, Lime, and Iron-stone Miners of Great Britain, Transactions and Results, Leeds, 9–14 11 1863, pp. 13.Google Scholar

28 See Erickson, Charlotte, “The Encouragement of Emigration by British Trade Unions, 1850–1900”, in: Population Studies, III (19491950), pp. 248–73.Google Scholar

29 Jones, “The Background to Emigration from Great Britain”, loc. cit., pp. 50–51.

30 Hobsbawm, E. J., Labouring Men (London, 1968), pp. 344–46.Google Scholar

31 Reid, Fred, “Keir Hardie's Conversion to Socialism”, in: Essays in Labour History 1886–1934, ed. by Briggs, Asa and Saville, John (London, 1971), p. 25.Google Scholar

32 Sentinel, 4 October 1862, p. 7.

33 Transactions and Results, op. cit., p. xviii.

34 Miner and Workman's Advocate, 8 08 1863, p. 5.Google Scholar

35 Transactions and Results, pp. 30–32.

37 See Taylor, “The Miners' Association of Great Britain and Ireland”, loc. cit., pp. 48–52.

38 Transactions and Results, pp. xvii–xviii.

40 Miner and Workman's Advocate, 11 July 1863.

41 Youngson Brown, “Trade Union Policy in the Scots Coalfields”, loc. cit., p. 36.

42 Sentinel, 3 September 1864, p. 6.

43 Workingman's Advocate, 2 November 1867.

44 Cole, “Some Notes on British Trade Unionism”, loc. cit., p. 10; Sentinel, 3 September 1864, p. 5; 17 September, p. 5; 17 December, p. 5; 10 February 1865, p. 5; 18 March, p. 5.

45 Sentinel, 17 December 1864, p. 5; 10 February 1865, p. 5; 18 March, p. 5.

46 Sentinel, 20 August 1864, p. 5; 3 September, p. 5; 17 September, p. 5; 17 December, p. 8. Peter Sinclair was the agent for British investors in the Illinois Central Railroad. He had returned to England shortly before the Civil War with 5,000 posters advertising land for sale along the railroad. When the war came, he was employed full time to explain the Northern cause to British workingmen. He was also an agent for the Foreign Emigrant Aid Society, established late in 1863, in Boston, by a group of manufacturers. In addition, he was recipient of “secret service funds” dispensed by the American Consul in London. Sinclair thus had several strings to his “agent's” bow. Erickson, Charlotte, American Industry and the European Immigrant 1860–1885 (Cambridge, Mass., 1957), pp. 331CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Gates, Paul W., The Illinois Central Railroad and Its Colonization Work (Cambridge, Mass., 1934), pp. 223–24CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Sentinel, 3 September 1865, p. 5.

47 Sentinel, 22 April 1865, p. 5; 29 April, p. 5.

48 Erickson, American Industry and the European Immigrant, op. cit., p. 8.

49 Sentinel, 23 November 1867, p. 6.

50 Ibid., 6 May 1865, p. 6; Wilson, History of the Durham Miners' Association, op. cit., p. 131; Iron and Coal Trades Review, 22 08 1879, p. 161Google Scholar; Fynes, , The Miners, p. 210.Google Scholar

51 Miner and Workman's Advocate, 4 February 1865.

52 Ibid., 11 July.

53 Ibid., 4 February.

54 Ibid., 19 March 1864; Fynes, , The Miners, pp. 235–36.Google Scholar Men in other skilled trades in a similar predicament also viewed emigration as a means of solving their unemployment problem. Miner and Workman's Advocate, 4 February 1864; Erickson, “The Encouragement of Emigration”, loc. cit., pp. 253–61; Gompers, Samuel, Seventy Years of Life and Labor, revised ed. (New York, 1957), p. 52.Google Scholar

55 Sentinel, 6 May 1865, p. 6; Workingman's Advocate, 2 November 1867.

56 Johnston, The History of the Working Classes in Scotland, op. cit., p. 340.

57 Sentinel, 18 March 1865, p. 5; Illinois, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Annual Coal Report, 1903, p. 140Google Scholar; Journal of United Labor, 1883, p. 485Google Scholar; Gutman, Herbert G., “Five Letters of Immigrant Workers from Scotland to the United States”, in: Labor History, IX (1968), pp. 384408.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

58 Clements, R. V., “Trade Unions and Emigration, 1840–1880”, in: Population Studies, IX (19551956), pp. 157–80Google Scholar; Sentinel, 20 May 1864, p. 5; 20 August, p. 5; Rules of the Miners' National Union, 1879, Webb Collection, London School of Economics and Political Science.

59 Brown, Youngson, “Trade Union Policy in the Scots Coalfields”, p. 39.Google Scholar

60 Hair, P. E. H., “Mortality from Violence in British Coal-Mines, 1800–50”, in: Economic History Review, Second Series, XXI (1968), pp. 548–60Google Scholar; MacDonagh, O. O. G. M., “Coal Mines Regulation: The First Decade, 1842–1852”, in: Ideas and Institutions of Victorian Britain, ed. by Robson, Robert (London, 1967), p. 69.Google Scholar

61 Boyd, R. Nelson, Coal Mines Inspection: Its History and Results (London, 1879), pp. 249–50Google Scholar; Morris, and Williams, , South Wales Coal Industry, p. 204Google Scholar; Hair, “Mortality from Violence”, loc. cit.; Fynes, The Miners, pp. 171–79; Independent (Sheffield), 5 07 1856Google Scholar, quoted in Machin, The Yorkshire Miners, I, op. cit., pp. 75–76.

62 Boyd, Coal Mines Inspection, op. cit., pp. 249–50.

63 The first coal-mine disaster in the United States occurred in September 1869 in the Avondale mine, Pennsylvania, when 179 men lost their lives.

64 Berthoff, British Immigrants, op. cit., p. 49.

65 Report from the Select Committee, op. cit., q. 4040.

67 Ibid., q. 4598.

68 Brown, A. J. Youngson, “The Scots Coal Industry, 1845–1886” (unpublished D.Litt. Diss., University of Aberdeen, 1953), pp. 193–95.Google Scholar

69 The Times, 25 11 1869, p. 7.Google Scholar

70 Report from the Select Committee, q. 4769.

71 Machin, , The Yorkshire Miners, I, p. 260Google Scholar; Berthoff, , British Immigrants, p. 52.Google Scholar

72 Sentinel, 14 12 1867, p. 6.Google Scholar

73 Ibid., 20 May 1865, p. 5.

74 Ibid., 20 August 1864, p. 5; 3 September, p. 5.

75 Ellison, Mary, Support for Secession (Chicago, 1972), pp. 28, 53.Google Scholar

76 Sentinel, 17 12 1864, p. 5Google Scholar; 18 March 1865, p. 5.

77 Wilson, , History of the Durham Miners' Association, pp. 131–32.Google Scholar

78 Welbourne, , The Miners' Unions, p. 213Google Scholar; Miners' National Association, Proceedings, 1874, p. 51Google Scholar; National Labor Tribune, 10 01 1874, p. 1.Google Scholar

79 Berthoff, , British Immigrants, pp. 5152Google Scholar; Erickson, , “The Encouragement of Emigration”, p. 252.Google Scholar

80 Berthoff, , British Immigrants, pp. 5354Google Scholar; Historical Encyclopedia of Illinois: Grundy County, ed. by Bateman, N. and Paul, S. (Chicago, 1882), pp. 798–99.Google Scholar

81 “It is hard to realize that from the country where so many thousands of our countrymen […] went only a few years ago, that emigration should be going on.” Sentinel, 24 03 1877, p. 4.Google Scholar

82 Welbourne, , The Miners' Unions, p. 213Google Scholar; National Labor Tribune, 31 12 1881, p. 5.Google Scholar

83 Sentinel, 12 10 1867, p. 5.Google Scholar

84 Letter from “An American Coal Digger”, in: Miner and Workman's Advocate, 27 02 1864, p. 7Google Scholar; letter signed “W.W.”, ibid., 29 July 1865, p. 7.

85 Letter from “An American Digger”, ibid., 13 February 1865.

86 Sentinel, 29 04 1865, p. 5.Google Scholar

87 Ibid., 3 September 1864, p. 5; Miner and Workman's Advocate, 13 02 1864, p. 7.Google Scholar

89 United States Consular Reports, 1885, I, pp. 594, 760, 792, 850Google Scholar; II, pp. 959, 970.

90 Report of the Commissioners appointed to inquire into the organization and rules of trade unions and other associations, Seventh Report [Parliamentary Papers, 18671868, XXXIX], p. 41.Google Scholar

91 See Erickson, Charlotte, “Agrarian Myths of English Immigrants”, in: In the Trek of the Immigrants, ed. by Ander, O. Frithof (Rock Island, Ill., 1964), pp. 5980.Google Scholar

92 Sentinel, 9 11 1867, p. 6.Google Scholar

93 Ibid., 29 April 1865, p. 6; 6 May, p. 6.

94 Ibid., 29 April, p. 6.

96 Wieck, Edward A., The American Miners' Association (New York, 1940), pp. 190–93Google Scholar; Weekly Advocate (Belleville), 25 09 1896, p. 10Google Scholar; Advocate (BeUeville), 30 08 1928, p. 1.Google Scholar

97 Advocate, ibid.

98 Yearley, Clifton K., Britons in American Labor 1820–1914 (Baltimore, 1957), p. 132Google Scholar; Berthoff, , British Immigrants, p. 92.Google Scholar

99 Yearley, Britons in American Labor, op. cit., p. 137; Roy, Andrew, A History of the Coal Miners of the United States, 3rd ed. (Ohio, n.d.), pp. 154–55Google Scholar; Journal of United Mineworkers of America, 18 10 1910, p. 1Google Scholar; Workingman's Advocate, 29 November 1873; Evans, Chris, History of United Mine Workers of America from the Year 1860 to 1890 (Indianapolis, Ind., 1918), I, pp. 29, 8384Google Scholar; Journal of United Labor, 06 1883, pp. 485–86.Google Scholar

100 National Labor Tribune, 15 07 1889, p. 2.Google Scholar

101 News (Joliet), 11 04 1901, p. 2Google Scholar; United Mine Workers of America, Official Report of the Tenth Annual Convention, 1899, pp. 27, 30.Google Scholar

102 Yearley, , Britons in American Labor, pp. 131–42Google Scholar; Berthoff, , British Immigrants, p. 92.Google Scholar

103 Wilson, , A History of the Durham Miners' Association, pp. 181–82Google Scholar; Bellamy, Joyce M. and Saville, John, Dictionary of Labour Biography I (London, 1972), p. 348.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

104 Free Press (Streator), 10 09, 1883, p. 2Google Scholar; Wilson, , History of Durham Miners, pp. 165–66Google Scholar; Welbourne, , The Miners' Unions, p. 181.Google Scholar

105 Yearley, , Britons in American Labor, p. 88.Google Scholar

106 United Mine Workers Journal, 8 October 1891, p. 4; Fuel, 4 April 1911, p. 887; Thomas Burt, JP MP, to J. E. Williams, 9 September 1918, John E. Williams Collection, Illinois State Historical Library, Springfield.

107 Chicago Tribune, 29 05 1892, p. 3.Google Scholar

108 Harvey, Katherine A., The Best-Dressed Miners (Ithaca, N. Y., 1969), pp. 8586Google Scholar; LeBaron, Wm Jr, The History of Will County, Illinois (Chicago, 1879), pp. 752–65Google Scholar; History of LaSalle County, Illinois (Chicago, 1886), pp. 593649;Google ScholarBlack Diamond, 15 12 1889, p. 311Google Scholar; Coal Age, VI (1914), p. 150Google Scholar; Fuel, 13 November 1906.

109 Sayles, Mary B., “The Keepers of the Gate”, in: The Outlook, 28 12 1907, p. 913Google Scholar; Robert Watchorn, “The Cost of Coal in Human Life”, ibid., 22 May 1909, p. 171; Roy, A History of the Coal Miners, op. cit., p. 273.

110 United Mine Workers Journal, 10 10 1907, p. 4Google Scholar; National Labor Tribune, 1 01 1881, p. 2Google Scholar; 12 July 1890, p. 2.

111 Major sources of data on these men were public records of births and deaths, manuscript population schedules, county histories, obituary notices published in trade and labor journals, and annual reports issued by the Illinois Bureau of Labor Statistics. For biographical sketches see Gottlieb, Amy Zahl, “The Regulation of the Coal Mining Industry in Illinois with Special Reference to the Influence of British Miners and British Precedents, 1870–1911” (Ph.D. Diss., (LSE) University of London, 1975), pp. 303–38.Google Scholar

112 Report of the Industrial Commission on the Relations and Conditions of Capital and Labor Employed in the Mining Industry (Washington, D.C., 1901), XII, p. 187Google Scholar; Harvey, The Best-Dressed Miners, op. cit., p. 86.