Inscription
Coal was discovered in the St. Charles area in 1896. On this site in 1917 the Robert Gage Coal Company sunk a shaft two hundred feet beneath the surface. The main entry off the shaft was about three miles long. At times, the mine employed as many as four hundred men, who worked in pairs. In 1919 a miner earned sixty to seventy cents per ton.
After undercutting and blasting coal from seams twenty-two to sixty-four inches thick, miners shoveled it into cars that were pulled by mules and electric motors to the cage, where it was lifted up the shaft to the tipple. It was then sorted, weighed and loaded into railroad cars. The highest grade of bituminous coal in Michigan was mined here until 1931, when the shift to other fuels and competition from higher grade coal in other states made it necessary to close.
Location
Sources
More markers in Saginaw
Saginaw Club
Saginaw, MI
Organized April 18, 1889, the club’s membership was comprised of most of the leading business and civic figures of Saginaw.
Saginaw Post Office
Saginaw, MI
In 1889, at the urging of Saginaw Congressman (later governor) Aaron Bliss, the Congress appropriated one hundred thousand dollars for...
Presbyterian Church of South Saginaw
Saginaw, MI
Begun in 1865 as a Sunday school for children of this area, the Presbyterian Church of South Saginaw was formally organized on November...
First Presbyterian Church
Saginaw, MI
The Reverend Hiram L. Miller and twelve others founded this church, the first in the Saginaw Valley, on March 1, 1838.
Saginaw Oil Industry
Saginaw, MI
“Oil men optimistic as first well shot, shows results,” reported the August 29, 1925, edition of the Saginaw News .
