Massacre of the Miners (Horrors of History Series)
The fourth book in the Horrors of History historical fiction series follows several characters in Colorado in 1914, just before and during the Ludlow Massacre, which was an attack by the Colorado National Guard and Colorado Fuel & Iron Company camp guards on a tent colony of 1,200 striking coal miners and their families.
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Massacre of the Miners (Horrors of History Series)
The fourth book in the Horrors of History historical fiction series follows several characters in Colorado in 1914, just before and during the Ludlow Massacre, which was an attack by the Colorado National Guard and Colorado Fuel & Iron Company camp guards on a tent colony of 1,200 striking coal miners and their families.
9.99 In Stock
Massacre of the Miners (Horrors of History Series)

Massacre of the Miners (Horrors of History Series)

by T. Neill Anderson
Massacre of the Miners (Horrors of History Series)

Massacre of the Miners (Horrors of History Series)

by T. Neill Anderson

eBook

$9.99 

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Overview

The fourth book in the Horrors of History historical fiction series follows several characters in Colorado in 1914, just before and during the Ludlow Massacre, which was an attack by the Colorado National Guard and Colorado Fuel & Iron Company camp guards on a tent colony of 1,200 striking coal miners and their families.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781607347866
Publisher: Charlesbridge
Publication date: 05/12/2015
Series: Horrors of History Series
Sold by: Penguin Random House Publisher Services
Format: eBook
Pages: 176
File size: 5 MB
Age Range: 12 - 17 Years

About the Author

T. Neill Anderson is fascinated—and often horrified—by the countless true tales of America’s past stories. The Horrors of History series are his first books for young readers. He lives and writes in Brooklyn, New York.

Read an Excerpt

Tuesday, April 21, 1914
            The sun rose, casting gauzy shards of light over the smoldering ruins of the Ludlow tent colony. For the past seven months, the camp had been home to more than a thousand people, but now it was in ashes. Most of the tents had been reduced to skeletal remains: charred frames, mangled bedsteads, and coiled springs. Some tents still burned; laundry still hung from a clothesline. Flocks of chickens clucked, and a wet, soot-covered Saint Bernard, bleeding from one ear, skulked down one of the paths between tents. Its tail smacked against the charred frame of a baby carriage as it passed.
            Militiamen moved among the few tents that remained standing, looting what few valuables they could find: silverware, bicycles, bedding, tools, and jewelry. A series of rifle shots rang out from the hills outside the camp, and the militiamen dropped to the ground. A few moments later the shooting stopped, and they returned to their work, dousing the tents with coal oil and setting them aflame.
At the front of the colony, in the second row from the road, a disheveled woman gasped as she crawled out from under the floorboards of a burnt tent—only the frame of it remained. She clambered out of one of the many pits that had been dug under the tents as hiding places for the colony’s women and children. Dazed and coughing, she looked up and saw the militiamen scouring some tents nearby. She dashed in the opposite direction, toward the arroyo, covering her head for fear of being shot. One of the militiamen caught sight of the woman and set out after her.
“Please!” she shouted, waving her hands above her head. “My children! My children!”
The man laughed and stopped in his tracks, peering into the pit she had just vacated. “Your children better scat out of here like their mama,” he shouted after her. “This is our camp now.”
She fled, skirting two bodies lying on the ground. Shielding her eyes from the wreckage of the camp, she continued south and escaped the scorched colony.
The militiaman stood at the dark mouth of the under­ground hideaway as two of his fellow militiamen approached.
“I’m sure she wasn’t the only one in there,” he said. “Shall we see?”
“After you,” one of them replied.
He slowly stepped down into the pit and shone his torch in front of him. On the second step he stopped and sucked in his breath.
            On the dirt floor in front of him was a jumble of charred clothing and the twisted, lifeless bodies of two women and almost a dozen children.

Table of Contents

Prologue ix

Chapter 1 Rifles 1

Chapter 2 Hide-and-Seek 17

Chapter 3 "Put the Baby in the Buggy" 30

Chapter 4 Like Hailstones Upon Houses 44

Chapter 5 Into the Foxhole 58

Chapter 6 The Mirror Cracks 71

Chapter 7 Spatters of Blood 82

Chapter 8 Louis the Greek 95

Chapter 9 Harvest of Death 106

Epilogue 121

Authors Note 126

Photo Credits 130

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