W.E. Turkington and Cherokee - Pittsburg, KS - Morning Sun

W.E. Turkington and Cherokee

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By Jerry D Lomshek

W. E. Turkington was a coal operator and businessman at Cherokee, Kansas. He was the virtual owner of the Cherokee Coal & Coke Company and the Cherokee Supply Company store there. In 1892, we find him sinking a mine east of Cherokee.

“W. E. Turkington, who has been drilling for coal in the east part of the city, struck a large vein at 122 feet. The company so far have refused to say just how thick the second vein is, but admit that the first vein is 28 inches of fine quality. They are busy at work drilling a second hole, as they want to be sure that they have a paying vein before sinking a shaft.”

Source: The Scammon Miner, Scammon, KS, Saturday, 4 June 1892, Vol. II, No. 8, taken from a article in the Cherokee Sentinel.

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From the Mining Memorial in Pittsburg to the Mined Land Wildlife Areas, there are numerous signs of the effects of mining in the area. Whether Big Brutus or the Mining Museum, the mines have shaped this land. This blog will look into the history and the legacy of what happened in the mines.

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