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Ash and Bread Life Labor America's Coal Towns
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Ash and Bread Life Labor America's Coal Towns in Franklin, TN
Current price: $9.99

Barnes and Noble
Ash and Bread Life Labor America's Coal Towns in Franklin, TN
Current price: $9.99
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Size: Paperback
Ash and Bread: Life and Labor in America's Coal Towns
By John Frances
Coal dust. Homemade bread. One built the country. The other kept its people alive.
Ash and Bread
is a deeply human, immersive journey into the heart of America's forgotten coal towns - the patch communities of Pennsylvania where generations of immigrants lived, worked, prayed, and endured.
From the breaker boys and the company stores to the steel lunch pails, church picnics, and basement coal bins, author
John Frances
brings to life the true stories of ordinary people who did extraordinary things just to survive. Through vivid storytelling, historical accuracy, and emotional depth, this book paints an unforgettable portrait of the working-class families who powered America with their labor - and paid the price in sweat, blood, and silence.
Explore:
The rise of company towns and the grip of coal scrip
The lives of miners, mothers, children, and widows
Union struggles, mine disasters, and quiet resistance
Churches and bars, dances and baseball, grief and grit
What remains today - and what should never be forgotten
If you're drawn to books like
Hillbilly Elegy
,
The Worst Hard Time
, or
Working in the Shadows
, this is a must-read.
This is more than coal mining history.
It's a tribute to the people who built a world from ash and bread - and left a legacy carved into the American soil.
By John Frances
Coal dust. Homemade bread. One built the country. The other kept its people alive.
Ash and Bread
is a deeply human, immersive journey into the heart of America's forgotten coal towns - the patch communities of Pennsylvania where generations of immigrants lived, worked, prayed, and endured.
From the breaker boys and the company stores to the steel lunch pails, church picnics, and basement coal bins, author
John Frances
brings to life the true stories of ordinary people who did extraordinary things just to survive. Through vivid storytelling, historical accuracy, and emotional depth, this book paints an unforgettable portrait of the working-class families who powered America with their labor - and paid the price in sweat, blood, and silence.
Explore:
The rise of company towns and the grip of coal scrip
The lives of miners, mothers, children, and widows
Union struggles, mine disasters, and quiet resistance
Churches and bars, dances and baseball, grief and grit
What remains today - and what should never be forgotten
If you're drawn to books like
Hillbilly Elegy
,
The Worst Hard Time
, or
Working in the Shadows
, this is a must-read.
This is more than coal mining history.
It's a tribute to the people who built a world from ash and bread - and left a legacy carved into the American soil.
Ash and Bread: Life and Labor in America's Coal Towns
By John Frances
Coal dust. Homemade bread. One built the country. The other kept its people alive.
Ash and Bread
is a deeply human, immersive journey into the heart of America's forgotten coal towns - the patch communities of Pennsylvania where generations of immigrants lived, worked, prayed, and endured.
From the breaker boys and the company stores to the steel lunch pails, church picnics, and basement coal bins, author
John Frances
brings to life the true stories of ordinary people who did extraordinary things just to survive. Through vivid storytelling, historical accuracy, and emotional depth, this book paints an unforgettable portrait of the working-class families who powered America with their labor - and paid the price in sweat, blood, and silence.
Explore:
The rise of company towns and the grip of coal scrip
The lives of miners, mothers, children, and widows
Union struggles, mine disasters, and quiet resistance
Churches and bars, dances and baseball, grief and grit
What remains today - and what should never be forgotten
If you're drawn to books like
Hillbilly Elegy
,
The Worst Hard Time
, or
Working in the Shadows
, this is a must-read.
This is more than coal mining history.
It's a tribute to the people who built a world from ash and bread - and left a legacy carved into the American soil.
By John Frances
Coal dust. Homemade bread. One built the country. The other kept its people alive.
Ash and Bread
is a deeply human, immersive journey into the heart of America's forgotten coal towns - the patch communities of Pennsylvania where generations of immigrants lived, worked, prayed, and endured.
From the breaker boys and the company stores to the steel lunch pails, church picnics, and basement coal bins, author
John Frances
brings to life the true stories of ordinary people who did extraordinary things just to survive. Through vivid storytelling, historical accuracy, and emotional depth, this book paints an unforgettable portrait of the working-class families who powered America with their labor - and paid the price in sweat, blood, and silence.
Explore:
The rise of company towns and the grip of coal scrip
The lives of miners, mothers, children, and widows
Union struggles, mine disasters, and quiet resistance
Churches and bars, dances and baseball, grief and grit
What remains today - and what should never be forgotten
If you're drawn to books like
Hillbilly Elegy
,
The Worst Hard Time
, or
Working in the Shadows
, this is a must-read.
This is more than coal mining history.
It's a tribute to the people who built a world from ash and bread - and left a legacy carved into the American soil.

















