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Rock-Fuel and Warlike People: On Mitch Troutman’s “The Bootleg Coal Rebellion”
Native son Jonah Walters finds something entirely too innocent about the tales told about the anthracite industry’s origins.
by
Jonah Walters
via
Los Angeles Review of Books
on
March 21, 2024
When Did Americans Start Using Fossil Fuel?
The nineteenth-century establishment of mid-Atlantic coal mines and canals gave America its first taste of abundant fossil fuel energy.
by
Livia Gershon
,
Christopher F. Jones
via
JSTOR Daily
on
October 11, 2023
When Coal First Arrived, Americans Said 'No Thanks'
Back in the 19th century, coal was the nation's newfangled fuel source—and it faced the same resistance as wind and solar today.
by
Clive Thompson
via
Smithsonian
on
July 5, 2022
partner
It’s Time to Ditch Coal, Not Clean It
In the 19th century, Americans abandoned one source of dirty energy. Can they do it again?
by
Raymond Malewitz
via
Made By History
on
July 26, 2017
Coal No Longer Fuels America. But the Legacy — and the Myth — Remain.
Coal country still clings to the industry that was long its chief source of revenue and a way of life.
by
Karen Heller
via
Retropolis
on
July 9, 2017
Remembering the Future
Climate change, colonization, and the Navajo Nation.
by
Hazel V. Carby
via
London Review of Books
on
March 27, 2024
Joe Manchin’s Deep Corporate Ties
An underexamined aspect of Manchin’s pro-business positions in the Senate is his early membership in the American Legislative Exchange Council.
by
Dan Kaufman
via
The New Yorker
on
October 26, 2021
The Singing Left
At a recent commemoration of the Battle of Blair Mountain in West Virginia, songs of struggle took center stage.
by
Kim Kelly
via
The Baffler
on
September 21, 2021
Coalminers and Coordination Rights
In the two decades before the Hepburn Act’s enactment, two entities vied for the right to coordinate the price and distribution of coal.
by
Branden Adams
via
LPE Project
on
July 15, 2021
America’s Conflicted Landscapes
A nation that identifies itself with nature begins to fall apart when it can no longer agree on what nature is.
by
David E. Nye
via
The MIT Press Reader
on
April 20, 2021
Solidarity Now
An experiment in oral history of the present.
by
Wen Stephenson
via
The Baffler
on
January 15, 2021
What Extremely Muscular Horses Teach Us About Climate Change
You can’t understand the history of American energy use without them. A new visual history puts them in context.
by
Robinson Meyer
via
The Atlantic
on
December 8, 2020
There Was Blood
The Ludlow massacre revisited.
by
Caleb Crain
via
The New Yorker
on
January 12, 2009
The Future Happens in Oakland First. That’s a Cautionary Tale for Global Cities
International trade boomed with the city’s early adoption of technological and economic changes, but Black neighborhoods became ‘sacrifice zones.’
by
Lois Beckett
,
Alexis C. Madrigal
via
The Guardian
on
March 22, 2025
partner
Why Trump Wants Greenland—And Why He Probably Won't Get It
He's not the first to set his sights on the island.
by
James Patton Rogers
,
Caroline Kennedy Pipe
via
Made By History
on
January 23, 2025
How “The Great Gatsby” Changed the Landscape of New York City
On Robert Moses, F. Scott Fitzgerald, and the culture of environmental waste.
by
John Marsh
via
Monthly Review
on
November 13, 2024
Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood
I’ve been going back to eastern Kentucky for over a decade. Since 2016, something there has changed.
by
Bradley Devlin
via
The American Conservative
on
April 22, 2024
The First New Deal
Planning, market coordination, and the National Industrial Recovery Act of 1933.
by
Sanjukta Paul
via
Phenomenal World
on
March 28, 2024
We Now Know the Full Extent of Obama’s Disastrous Apathy Toward the Climate Crisis
Obama’s official oral history contains new evidence of his indifference and foot-dragging on the most important issue of our time.
by
Nathan J. Robinson
via
Current Affairs
on
June 5, 2023
The Lost Promise of Environmental Rights
As environmental rights seem on the verge of a comeback, it’s worth remembering why they once seemed so promising, and why that promise remains unfulfilled.
by
Scott Wasserman Stern
via
New York Review of Books
on
March 15, 2023
The 50 Million-Year-Old Treasures of Fossil Lake
In a forbidding Wyoming desert, scientists and fortune hunters search for the surprisingly intact remains of horses and other creatures that lived long ago.
by
Richard Conniff
via
Smithsonian
on
August 23, 2022
The Radicalization of Clarence Thomas
His time working for Monsanto and other polluting industries helped make him the fierce conservative he is today.
by
Scott Wasserman Stern
via
The New Republic
on
August 13, 2021
A Century Ago, West Virginia Miners Took Up Arms Against King Coal
In 1921, twenty thousand armed miners in West Virginia marched on the coal bosses and were met with bombs and submachine guns.
by
Arvind Dilawar
,
Chuck Keeney
via
Jacobin
on
June 23, 2021
How Trees Made Us Human
More than iron, stone, or oil, wood explains human history.
by
Daniel Immerwahr
via
The New Republic
on
December 1, 2020
Oral Histories of The 1969 Cuyahoga River Fire
The events of June 1969 have come to define both Cleveland and the river. Some Clevelanders have a different story.
by
Rebekkah Rubin
via
Belt Magazine
on
June 3, 2019
partner
The Federal Government Subsidized the Carbon Economy. Now it Should Subsidize a Greener One.
Why the Green New Deal fits right in with America’s energy economy.
by
Ryan Driskell Tate
via
Made By History
on
April 26, 2019
Endless Combustion
Three new books examine how the rise of coal, oil, and gas have permanently remade our world.
by
Bill McKibben
via
The Nation
on
February 6, 2019
Two Hundred Years on the Erie Canal
A digital exhibit on the history and legacy of the canal.
by
Heidi Zimmer
,
Dan Ward
via
Digital Public Library of America
on
January 1, 2018
A Hillbilly Syllabus
“Some people call me Hillbilly, Some people call me Mountain Man; Well, you can call me Appalachia, ’Cause Appalachia is what I am.” —Del McCoury
by
Eric Kerl
via
ChiTucky
on
December 10, 2017
How the Benzene Tree Polluted the World
The organic compounds that enabled industrialization are having unintended consequences for the planet’s life.
by
Rebecca Altman
via
The Atlantic
on
October 4, 2017
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