Nick Pappas

Dawson miners remembered at centennial observance of 1923 disaster

By Nick Pappas / February 8, 2023 / Comments Off on Dawson miners remembered at centennial observance of 1923 disaster

“God bless their souls. May their memories be eternal.” With that, Bishop Constantine of the Greek Orthodox Metropolis of Denver concluded a solemn memorial service to mark the 100-year anniversary of the Feb. 8, 1923, mine disaster under sunny skies and springlike temperatures at historic Dawson Cemetery. One hundred and twenty miners lost their lives in…

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Carthage rescue mission went south fast for two Dawson miners

By Nick Pappas / June 1, 2021 / Comments Off on Carthage rescue mission went south fast for two Dawson miners

The news item couldn’t have been more innocuous. Thomas Brown and David Murphy of Dawson, N.M., who were in Albuquerque Monday, left for home by automobile yesterday. That snippet appeared in the Albuquerque Morning Journal on Feb. 27, 1918, sandwiched between word that Texas cattleman U. Keen was in town for a few days and…

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The day ‘Polly’ made her final run on the old Dawson branch line

By Nick Pappas / May 3, 2021 / Comments Off on The day ‘Polly’ made her final run on the old Dawson branch line

For first-graders from the Forrester Elementary School in Springer, New Mexico, this was no ordinary field trip. Teachers Genevieve Hoskins and Zella Young had something more imaginative in mind for their young charges that day than a traditional visit to a historical site or museum: A once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to make some history of their own.…

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For some, Dawson a ghost town in more ways than one

By Nick Pappas / April 5, 2021 / Comments Off on For some, Dawson a ghost town in more ways than one

Ghost town or a town of ghosts? When I began my research for an upcoming book about Dawson, New Mexico, my sole focus was on the former. After all, the earthbound story of the old mining town was scary enough: Two massive mine explosions 10 years apart. Nearly 400 men killed between them, the first…

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Dawson forever linked to Experimental Mine’s groundbreaking history

By Nick Pappas / March 1, 2021 / Comments Off on Dawson forever linked to Experimental Mine’s groundbreaking history

Industrial history was made yesterday at Bruceton. So began a front-page story in The Pittsburgh Post on Oct. 31, 1911, describing in painstaking detail the first public demonstration inside the U.S. government’s new Experimental Mine in Bruceton, Pennsylvania. Its purpose? To determine once and for all whether coal dust – in a mine absent of…

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The story behind Dawson Railway’s deadly derailment of 1922

By Nick Pappas / January 31, 2021 / Comments Off on The story behind Dawson Railway’s deadly derailment of 1922

Poor Frank Hinds never saw it coming. A longtime engineer for the El Paso & Southwestern Railroad, Hinds had no reason to suspect anything but a routine run when he pulled out of Dawson with carloads of coal ticketed for his hometown of Tucumcari. After all, trains had been making this 132-mile trip over the…

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Dawson, New Mexico

How a Prohibition-era, Dawson arrest reached the NM Supreme Court — twice

By Nick Pappas / December 21, 2020 / Comments Off on How a Prohibition-era, Dawson arrest reached the NM Supreme Court — twice

For Celestino Vincioni, selling grapes to mining camps during the early years of Prohibition must have felt like taking candy from a baby. Solicit orders for grapes. Deliver grapes. Collect payment for grapes. Repeat. What could possibly go wrong? Quite a bit, as it turns out, starting with a minor arrest that remarkably ascended to…

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Dawson’s 1920 mine disaster the most preventable of all

By Nick Pappas / November 18, 2020 / Comments Off on Dawson’s 1920 mine disaster the most preventable of all

For Dawson’s shot firers, nothing seemed amiss the night of April 14, 1920. The men entered mine Nos. 1, 2, 3, and 6. They set their explosives. They exited to await detonation by an electric shot-firing system. All in accordance with company rules; all in accordance with New Mexico mine regulations. So how did five…

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Canary in coal mine

The time ‘a canary in a coal mine’ meant exactly that

By Nick Pappas / October 19, 2020 / Comments Off on The time ‘a canary in a coal mine’ meant exactly that

Who hasn’t heard the expression “a canary in a coal mine”? Today, the phrase generally refers to a person or object equipped to detect danger at the earliest possible moment. But not long ago the words held a more literal meaning, reflecting the use of canaries in coal mines to detect whether the air was…

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What’s an opera house doing in the middle of a New Mexico coal town?

By Nick Pappas / September 21, 2020 / Comments Off on What’s an opera house doing in the middle of a New Mexico coal town?

For a New Mexico coal town forever linked to two of the deadliest mine disasters in the nation’s history, Sept. 28, 1907, is remembered as a much happier occasion. On that night, 1,000 people –– 20 to 25 percent of the town’s population – came out to patronize a new business venture in downtown Dawson.…

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