Here are some excerpts:
Page 1 –LENAPE INDIANS IN COALDALE AREA-- “When the
Lenape Indians scampered, in their eager chase after the deer and bear,
over that part of St. Anthony’s wilderness, which is now embraced in the
town of Coaldale and its confines, their lithe limbs, we fancy, could
have been put to few severer tests than that of scaling the steep slopes
of Locust Mountain, as we view it from the windows of St. Mary’s
Rectory. What an entrancingly beautiful prospect that of the mountain
and Panther Creek must have afforded before and, indeed, for many years
after Philip Ginter kicked up that hard, black substance that afterward
proved to be “stone coal’.”
Page 2 – FLOCKS OF WILD PIGEONS AND CHINESE PHEASANTS
IN COALDALE DURING CIVIL WAR--“…a trustworthy narrator, still living,
informs us that whole flocks of wild pigeons were common enough in and
about early Coaldale, and he tells with much relish how, in his
boyhood—the years of the Civil War—he and his companions were wont to go
not far from their home near the present Water Street, look for a hole
in the snowy crust, thrust in a hand, and pull forth in triumph, amid
vigorous, fluttering protests, a Chinese pheasant…”
Page 4—THE EARLIEST HOUSES IN COALDALE—“The beginnings
of Coaldale are dead and literally buried, for the earliest houses lie
under the culm bank near the Coaldale Colliery…In 1846 six double houses
were built in a row at a point just west of the old tunnel, and nearby
was a mule stable with a yard. Here dwelt with their families the
toilers in the early coal operations hereabout, and here were born and
lived for some time few of the later estimable residents of Coaldale,
among them parents or grandparents of men and women who have won an
honored name among us…The houses were built of rough-boards, and it is
hard to say whether they were one story or a story and a half, for the
upper portion boasted no such superfluous adornment as a window…But,
small though these houses were, great was the chimney, built of rough
stones and taking up in its diameter a too generous share of the living
space below, yet providing an immense and cheery fire-place …It is
related that as the culm began to accumulate and draw near these humble
cots, one of the dwellers there would stretch a plank from an embankment
to the edge of the great chimney of his house, and down the chimney
would crash several great chunks of virgin anthracite to the fire-place
below. The name of this early exponent of efficiency and eliminater of
waste motion was David Hoben, grandfather and great-grandfather of the
esteemed parishioners of to-day.”
Pages 5/6— COALDALE TEACHER “SPIKER” KENNEDY, A “MAN
OF BLOOD AND IRON”—“In 1848, other families came and settled in similar
homes on Old Street, now First Street and on Water Street. A little
later came Centreville, on the high road to Summit Hill, over which the
heavy stage would pass in each direction twice a day…The children of the
families of lower Coaldale received their meagre education, the best
their times and circumstances could afford, in the old one-room school
house, still standing on First Street, North of Phillips Street…The
earliest teacher was one Cyrus Steele, of whom tradition says that he
was a kindly man…But his successor, one by the name of Kennedy, and
irreverently dubbed by his charges, ‘Spiker,’ was a man of blood and
iron…’Spiker’ was an outspoken advocate of the Solomonesque doctrine
about sparing the rod and spoiling the child. Indeed, he out-Solomoned
Solomon, for his rod bore the proportions of a limb of a tree, which
reposed in full view of every luckless urchin who might show signs of
restiveness.”
Page 10—“OLD COALDALE” AND “NEW COALDALE”—“New Wales,
or New Coaldale, came into being on what is now known as Ruddle Street,
being so named as to distinguish it from ‘Old Coaldale’ on First Street
and Water Street. The Ruddle Street houses were put up in 1868 and
1869. A post office came in 1871, with Charles F. Goslie as the first
postmaster. Bull Run had come into being in 1864, the year of the
(Civil War) battle from which it takes its name, and Gearytown two years
later, taking its name from the governor of the state, John W.
Geary.”
Page 17—"FOUNDING OF COALDALE HOSPITAL—“The second of
these great works was the founding of the Panther Creek Hospital, now
the Coaldale State Hospital. Everlasting credit for the bringing into
being of this blessing to the entire valley must be given to a young
citizen and devoted parishioner of St. Mary’s, John McElhenney (who was
the Father of the later Coaldale teacher, Miss Mary McElhenney), a local
official of the Mine Workers’ Union, who is described in the papers of
the time as ‘one hundred pounds of bone and muscle and 1000 pounds of
hustle’…The institution was erected and opened to receive patients on
Monday, July 11, 1910, but, in the inscrutable ways of Divine
Providence, Mr. McElhenney had died a year before this
realization.”