Relative: US miners left notes for family (AP) Updated: 2006-01-06 08:35
Some of the 12 coal miners who died in the US Sago Mine disaster scrawled
farewell notes assuring their loved ones that their final hours trapped
underground amid toxic gases were not spent in agony.
"Tell all I'll see them on the other side," read the note found with the body
of 51-year-old mine foreman Martin Toler Jr. "It wasn't bad. I just went to
sleep. I love you Jr."
Tom Toler, Martin's older brother who worked 30 years in the mine with him,
said Thursday that the note was "written very lightly and very loosely" in block
letters on the back of an insurance application form his brother had in his
pocket.
"I took it to mean that it was written in the final stages," the brother
said. "I'd call it more or less scribbling."
The miners died after an explosion that rocked the mine Monday morning.
Eleven of the victims were discovered nearly 42 hours after the blast, at the
deepest point of the mine, behind a curtain-like barrier set up to keep out
carbon monoxide, a toxic byproduct of combustion that was found to be present at
deadly levels inside the shaft. The 12th victim was believed to have been killed
by the blast itself.
Autopsies were under way Thursday, and officials would not comment on the
cause of death or how long the men might have survived.
Investigators and miners gather Thursday, Jan.
5, 2006 near the entrance to the mine where 12 people were killed in an
explosion in Tallmansville, West Virginia, the United States.
[AP] | John Groves, whose brother Jerry was
one of the victims, told The Associated Press that he knew that at least four
notes were left behind. He said his family did not receive one.
No note was found on the body of 59-year-old machine operator Fred Ware Jr.,
but daughter Peggy Cohen said she and other relatives who went to identify
bodies at a temporary morgue were told by the medical examiner that some of the
men wrote letters with a similar message: "Your dad didn't suffer."
"The notes said they weren't suffering, they were just going to sleep," said
Cohen, who planned to retrieve her father's belongings to see if he had put such
a note in his lunch box.
Cohen said her father had the peaceful look of someone who died of carbon
monoxide, and the only mark on his body was a bruise on his chest.
"It comforts me to know he didn't suffer and he wasn't bruised or crushed,"
she said. "I didn't need a note. I think I needed to visualize and see him."
The sole survivor, 26-year-old Randal McCloy, remained in critical condition
in a coma, struggling with the effects of oxygen deprivation to his vital
organs. Doctors said he may have suffered brain damage. On Thursday afternoon,
he was moved from a hospital in Morgantown to one in Pittsburgh for hyperbaric
oxygen treatment.
The treatment helps get oxygen to the body's tissues, including the brain,
and can help increase blood cells to fight infections or promote healing of
injuries.
"Certainly Mr. McCloy is going to have a tough course," said Dr. John
Prescott. "We just don't know at this point how things will turn out."
The miner's father, Randal McCloy Sr., told The Associated Press that he
believes "in his heart" that his son's mostly 50-something colleagues decided
during their last, desperate hours to share their dwindling supply of oxygen
with his son because he was the youngest of the group and had two young
children.
"Those men were like brothers. They took care of each other," he said.
There was no immediate confirmation from officials that the men shared their
oxygen.
Each of the miners had breathing apparatus designed to provide up to an
hour's worth of oxygen, but an expert said that time could conceivably be
extended.
"A lot of it depends on the circumstances and how big you are and how much
air you suck," said Terry Farley, an administrator with West Virginia's Office
of Miners' Health Safety and Training.
Speaking of seeing his son on a hospital ventilator, the elder McCloy broke
down in tears. "I bent over and kissed his head. I told him that I loved him,"
he said.
The first of the funerals are set to begin on Saturday.
Federal and state investigators were at the mine Thursday, seeking the cause
of the explosion and a more detailed explanation for the miscommunication among
rescuers that had relatives believing for three hours that 12 of the miners had
actually survived.
Coal mine explosions are typically caused by buildups of naturally occurring
methane gas or highly combustible coal dust in the air, but what exactly
triggered that explosion remained unclear.
The Charleston (W.Va.) Gazette reported Thursday that a federal contractor
that monitors thunderstorms detected three lightning strikes within five miles
of the mine within a half-hour of Monday's explosion. The contractor, Vaisala
Inc., said two of the strikes, including one that was four to 10 times stronger
than average, hit within 1 1/2 miles of the mine.
The federal Mine Safety and Health Administration cited the Sago mine for 208
violations of federal mine rules in 2005, a number an agency official said was
higher than normal for a mine that size. Those violations included 18 orders
shutting down parts of the mine until alleged violations were corrected, but
none serious enough to shutter the entire operation.
Denver Anderson, who was in a group of miners just behind those who were
trapped, still had red splotches on his face from the coal dust and rock that
struck him from the explosion.
"It wasn't no explosion sound to me that I heard," he said. "It was just a
big gush of air and heat and gravel, dirt, dust and smoke. I tried to turn
around and throw my arm up to protect my face."
The explosion was West Virginia's deadliest coal mining accident since 1968,
when 78 men were killed in an explosion. Sago was the nation's worst coal mining
disaster since a pair of explosions at a mine in Brookwood, Ala., killed 13
people in September 2001.
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