| Anthracite Miner Monument |
Henry Clay Monument |
|
Anthracite coal miner bronze statue is
centerpiece for the mall. Schuylkill Mall, Interstate 81 at Exit 36, Frackville.
|
Erected in 1855 after Senator Clay's death.
Popularity as a trade protectionist won him praise of anthracite
industrialists. South Centre Street, Pottsville.
|
| Coal Miner Statue |
Ginder Monument |
 |
Coal miner with safety lamp depicted in larger than life size. Intersection of Routes 901 and 209 south of Minersville. |
|
Ludlow Park, Summit Hill erected in 1941 east of the old
abandoned Sharp Mountain quarry. In 1991 the Pennsylvania Historical Museum
Commission dedicated it as a historic marker.
|
| Huber Coal Breaker |
Miner's Monument |
|
Original breaker that is a monument to the region's
robust past and readily visible from I-81 and Route 309 in Ashley.
|
A unique depiction of the Wyoming Valley miner along with
a strikingly large piece of anthracite. Located at intersection of Main
St. and Kennedy Boulevard, Pittston.
|
| John Mitchell (1870-1919) |
Pennsylvania Anthracite Coal Miners Memorial |
|
As a United Mine Workers president, he organized
the miners into a unified force that altered the anthracite industry and
solidified the labor movement. Buried at Cathedral Cemetery, Scranton.
Marker at Courthouse Square, Scranton.
|
A superb and moving tribute
to the miners who toiled in the anthracite field. It includes a collage of
scenes. Located at S. Main St., Forest City.
|
| Pennsylvania Anthracite Miners Memorial |
 |
|
Erected in 1997 and dedicated to
Pennsylvania's anthracite miners. Sculpted relief depicting mine-era
scenes. Washington and Main Streets, Shenandoah.
|