Centralia 1947 Mine Explosion
Throughout the annals of the American industrialized age, countless tragedies have occurred within the workplace and these incidents have forced the public at large to consider the weighty issue of applying moral precepts to the realm of public administration. While the tomes of American jurisprudence are littered with examples of corporate enterprises and bureaucratic entities failing to uphold their basic responsibilities, perhaps no case has demonstrated the capacity to generate both outrage and activism as readily as The Blast in Centralia No. 5: A Mine Disaster No One Stopped. Authored by John Bartlow Martin, this seminal case study examines the unique confluence of internal and external circumstances which eventually resulted in the 1947 explosion of Centralia Mine No. 5, a catastrophe which claimed the lives of 111 coal miners. By carefully retracing the series of events preceding the actual explosion, including a history of the Centralia mine beginning with its opening in 1907, a cursory primer on the industry of coal mining, and a blow-by-blow recounting of the evasions, denials, and betrayals committed by the various bureaucracies charged with preventing such disasters, Martin guides the reader through the machinations of both private companies and public policymakers.
The most intriguing aspect of Martin's case study are found in his recreation of the measures taken by Driscoll O. Scanlan, the Illinois state mine inspector who thoroughly inspected the Centralia mining operation while doggedly pursuing his professional appraisal of the mine's flimsy safety record, which he believed made "Centralia No. 5 the worst in the district" (Martin, 1948). While Martine assiduously recreates the vast array of actors in what proved to be a farcical demonstration of public administration, with Scanlan's tireless efforts to alert proper authorities to the dangers...
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