47 Down: The 1922 Argonaut Gold Mine Disaster
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More About This Title 47 Down: The 1922 Argonaut Gold Mine Disaster

English

O. Henry Mace has written on western history and has put together collector’s guides on both early photographs and Victoriana.

English

Preface.

Acknowledgements.

Chapter 1. The Greatest Fear.

Chapter 2. Like the Frames of a Movie.

Chapter 3. Their Worst Enemy.

Chapter 4. A Meeting of Minds.

Chapter 5. The Cream of the Crop.

Chapter 6. In Her Dark Frightened Eyes.

Chapter 7. Disappointments and Conflicts.

Chapter 8. Undercover Work.

Chapter 9. Breakthrough.

Chapter 10. The Hand of Fate.

Chapter 11. They Have Risen.

Chapter 12. Bound for the Same Place.

Chapter 13. Pointing Fingers.

Chapter 14. The Cause and the Cost.

Chapter 15. A Dynamic Conclusion.

Bibliography.

English

This volume details the fire in the main shaft of a Jackson, Calif., Argonaut gold mine, which trapped 47 miners 4,650 feet below ground in the summer of 1922. It took rescuers three weeks to get to where the miners were trapped by the fire as family members and friends, co-workers, the press and countless Americans awaited word of the foregone conclusion. Mace researched the mine fire for seven years; his dedication pays off in a well-rounded examination of the fire and the mining industry. Even without coming to a conclusion about which rescue plan would have given the miners the best chance of survival, he thoroughly explores the scientific and structural implications of each course of action complete with diagrams, technical data and testimony from those involved. Though Mace never really steps outside the facts long enough to capture the experience of the trapped miners, his intimate portraits of the miners’ families, mine employees and, especially, journalist Ruth Finney, explore the countless ways the mining disaster changed those who were close to it. Mace also smoothly connects the fire and the mining town of Jackson with bigger Am erican and world affairs like the war in Europe, immigration, Prohibition, advances in communication and the growth of women’s rights. Mace may not have hit the “Mother Lode,” but his tireless digging has certainly uncovered a forgotten nugget of Californian and American history. Photos. (May) (Publishers Weekly, April 26, 2004)

"Mace researched the mine fire for seven years; his dedication pays off in a well-rounded examination of the fire and the mining industry…he thoroughly explores the scientific and structural implications of each course of action complete with diagrams, technical data and testimony from those involved…his intimate portraits of the miners' families, mine employees and, especially, journalist Ruth Finney, explore the countless ways the mining disaster changed those who were close to it. Mace also smoothly connects the fire and the mining town of Jackson with bigger American and world affairs like the war in Europe, immigration, Prohibition, advances in communication and the growth of women's rights…his tireless digging has certainly uncovered a forgotten nugget of Californian and American history." (Publishers Weekly)

"Mace's "47 Down" is the riveting account of this tragedy and it has the same emotional impact of the recent best-seller "The Perfect Storm." Mace writes with taut prose, grabbing his reader by the collar… Drawing on newspaper accounts, diaries, government reports and official documents, Mace captures all of the drama and heartbreak of this event. This book is exceptional historical reporting and highly recommended." (Tucson Citizen)

"O. Henry Mace’s recently released book, 47 Down: The 1922 Argonaut Gold Mine Disaster in my words is... a damn good read! Wading in a calm little pond, by the time you’re in up to your ankles you find yourself pulled in by the quicksand of the story." (Amador Ledger-Dispatch)

"Mace has researched the subject so well that you will think that a mining engineer has written the tragic story of "47 Down". Not only does he do a remarkable job of making the reader feel and understand this colossal tragedy that captured the attention of all America, but he also does a great job of capturing the culture of the "tramp" hard-rock miner of the day." (Richard L. Bullock, D. Eng., P.E, Mining Engineer)

"A gripping mystery story: Will the men trapped deep underground in a mine by fire be reached by rescuers in time? And why do these mining disasters occur, and reoccur, in our nation's history?"
—Gerald M. Stern, author of The Buffalo Creek Disaster: How the Survivors of One of the Worst Disasters in Coal-Mining History Brought Suit Against the Coal Company And Won

"Most disaster books are predictable and dry, but O. Henry Mace's 47 Down, the story of the 1922 Argonaut mining tragedy is, quite simply, one of the best disaster books to come along in years. Mace's taut, lyrical, intelligent prose combined with his thorough research, and his film director's eye for detail and focus, make 47 Down as compelling as The Perfect Storm and as memorable as Young Men and Fire. Mace takes the reader inside the Argonaut mine shaft and doesn't let go. This is a necessary book."
—Denise Gess, author of Firestorm at Peshtigo

"This is as much a story about journalism as the mine disaster that claimed 47 lives. Women reporters assigned to chronicle the human side were called "sob sisters" for their ability to evoke emotion with words. O. Henry Mace pays tribute to the tenacious and creative Ruth Finney, whose storytelling skills framed the story for decades after her passing, and established her as one of the early giants among women in journalism."
—Eleanor Clift, contributing editor, Newsweek

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