By BRUCE A. FASOL
All emergency sirens throughout Franklin County will be tested this morning at 10 a.m.
The sirens used to warn residents of dangerous weather and other emergency situations are tested on the first Tuesday of each month.
Benton, West Frankfort, Illinois News | Franklin County News
Newspaper covering Franklin County, Illinois
By BRUCE A. FASOL
All emergency sirens throughout Franklin County will be tested this morning at 10 a.m.
The sirens used to warn residents of dangerous weather and other emergency situations are tested on the first Tuesday of each month.
STAFF REPORT
As a third snow-making event enters our area in less than a week, the National Weather Service has Franklin County and much of Southern Illinois under a Winter Weather Advisory.
The advisory is in effect from noon Monday until 6 a.m. Tuesday.
NWS meteorologists expect one to two inches of light snow this afternoon and overnight, but the periods of freezing rain that will likely accompany it are the bigger concern.
The precipitation has already started with light rain in some of Franklin County this morning. After midnight tonight, just as New Year’s Eve revelers have said hello to 2013 and are heading home, snow and sleet are expected to dominate.
You are advised to keep a close eye on weather conditions today; you may need to change holiday plans tonight based on road conditions and what is expected as the front moves through the area.
STAFF REPORT
Just when Franklin County residents have finished digging out of the snow from Wednesday night’s blizzard, the National Weather Service reports that more is on the way.
The NWS has issued a Winter Weather Advisory that includes Franklin County and runs from 3 p.m. Friday through 6 a.m. Saturday.
The front moving in should drop 1 to 3 inches of snow on the area, and some sleet is also possible.
In other words, stay in Friday night if you can, and dust off that shovel come Saturday morning.
As the sun rises on Franklin County this morning, roads are piled with several inches of snow, and driving conditions are extremely dangerous. Officials are urging all residents to stay home.
STAFF REPORT
National Weather Service meteorologists continue to forecast snowfall for Franklin County through around noon today, Dec. 26, and say wind gusts could keep the snow on the move and affecting visibility through late afternoon.
Trained NWS weather spotters are reporting snowfall totals between 4 and 7 inches in Southern Illinois, as of 6 a.m. A total of 6 to 12 inches is expected in Franklin County. Officials say the snowfall will be difficult to measure because it is blowing and drifting. Wind gusts are measuring 30 to 40 miles per hour.
This is making travel extremely dangerous. While roads may not be extremely slick at this point, visibility is very low, and it can be difficult to even find the roads.
Road crews are out working, but say it will be impossible to keep roadways safe until the snow and winds have died down.
Officials are urging people to stay home. Schools are closed for the Christmas break, and all county offices and the courthouse are closed, as well as local healthcare centers. FranklinCounty-News.com is receiving reports that many other businesses will be closed today, including many private medical offices. If you have appointments today, you are advised to call first to see if the business is planning to open before leaving home.
Officials also remind you that calls to 911 should be reserved for emergency situations only. Do not call 911 to try to get updates on road conditions or closures.
FranklinCounty-News.com has a continuously updated list of weather-related closures at this link.
For road condition information, check the Getting Around Illinois Web site, or call 1-800-452-4368.
Cold wind gusts can also be damaging to skin and increase frostbite threat. If you must venture outside, you should ensure that your face and hands are covered, leaving no exposed skin. While children may be itching to get outside this morning, it is best to keep them in until the storm has passed and the winds have subsided. The good news for the kiddos, though, is that the snow won’t be going anywhere, and it’s heavy and wet — just right for making an epic snowman when it’s safe to do so.
By Jim Muir
Mother Nature is playing havoc with post-Christmas work schedules and holiday tournament basketball action.
Franklin County Sheriff Don Jones has closed all county offices due to the blizzard conditions that are expected to roar through Southern Illinois and Southeast Missouri late Tuesday night through midday Wednesday. This area is expected to receive 6-12 inches of snow. Gusting winds in excess of 45 miles per hour will make travel hazardous. This marks only the second time in nearly three decades that weather has forced all county offices to close.
The Sesser-Valier Holiday Tournament will also be pushed back one day with Wednesday’s schedule being played on Thursday, according to Sesser-Valier High School athletic director Chip Basso. The tournament was scheduled to run December 26, 27, 28 and 29 but with the weather-related cancellation the final day of games will be pushed back to Monday, December, 31.
Updated 1:20 p.m. – The Eldorado Holiday Tournament schedule has also been pushed back one day. Thursday’s schedule will be played on Friday. The tournament will now run Friday, Saturday and Monday. The West Frankfort Redbirds will play at 11:30 a.m. Friday.
Anybody needing information about road conditions can go to this link.
Also, the Sesser-Valier cheer clinic scheduled for Wednesday morning and the performances on Wednesday and Thursday nights have been postponed until the week of January 7-11, 2013.
NEW – UPDATED AT 6:45 a.m.
The city of Marion has issued and advisory that all offices except emergency departments will be closed Dec. 26. Additionally, Miner’s Memorial Health Center & West Frankfort Family Medicine and Logan Primary Care in Herrin are also closed
Here’s an updated (6 a.m.) list of closings via WSIL TV.
ALEXANDER COUNTY
Delta Center, Cairo — Closed
FRANKLIN COUNTY
Franklin County Courthouse and County Offices — Closed
Special Minds Services, West Frankfort — Closed
South Central Transit — Closed
Franklin-Williamson BiCounty Health Department — All offices closed
Franklin County Housing
Authority will be closed Wednesday. Residents with emergencies may call our emergency line 932-2125.
HAMILTON COUNTY
Hamilton County Schools Daycare Center — Closed
JACKSON COUNTY
Center for Wound Healing at St. Joseph Memorial Hospital — Closed
Com-Pac International — First Shift don’t come in Wednesday
CVP Rehab at St. Joseph Memorial Hospital, Murphysboro — Closed
Senior Adult Services — Closed
Jackson County Mass Transit — All routes cancelled
JEFFERSON COUNTY
Jefferson County Comprehensive Services — Closed
PERRY COUNTY
South Central Transit (SCP) — All routes cancelled
SALINE COUNTY
Eygptian Health Department (Saline,Gallatin, White Counties) — Closed
UNION COUNTY
Dongola School District office — Opens at Noon
Anna Heights Early Learning Center — Closed
WILLIAMSON COUNTY
Franklin-Williamson BiCounty Health Department — All offices closed
Center for Wound Healing at Herrin Hospital — Closed
Marion VA Outpatient Clinics — Closed
(The main Marion VA Hospital campus will remain open.)
Williamson County Programs on Aging — Closed, Employees not required to come in
AREA-WIDE CLOSURES
H-Group — Essential Staff Only
SMART Transportation is not running
Closings at Southern Illinois Healthcare facilities:
The Centers for Wound Healing at
Herrin Hospital and at St. Joseph Memorial Hospital in Murphysboro are
closed Wednesday, December 26 due to the threat of hazardous weather.
Also cancelled for tomorrow: CVP Rehab at St. Joseph Memorial Hospital in
Murphysboro.
Look for other closings on franklincounty-news.com. Anybody that would like to report a cancellation or change of schedule please contact us by email at jmuir@frontier.com or by text at 618-525-4744.
The staff of Franklin County News Online (franklincounty-news.com) would like to take this opportunity to wish our faithful readers a blessed and happy Christmas. May God bless you as we pause to celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ.
John L. Lewis emerging from the Orient No. 2 mine in West Frankfort, Illinois after viewing the devastation of a mine explosion that killed 119 miners in December 1951.
By JIM MUIR
Christmas traditionally is a time for wide-eyed children, exchanging gifts and festive family get-togethers. For many, though, it also is a time that serves as a grim reminder of the worst tragedy in the history of Franklin County.
On Friday, Dec. 21, 1951, at about 7:35 p.m. a violent explosion ripped through Orient 2 Mine, located near West Frankfort, claiming the lives of 119 coal miners. The tragedy occurred on the last shift prior to a scheduled Christmas shutdown. News of the tragedy spread quickly from town to town and hundreds of people converged on the mine to check on loved ones and friends. A basketball game was under way at Central Junior High School in West Frankfort, when the public address announcer asked that Dr. Barnett report to Orient 2 Mine, No. 4 Portal, because “there had been a catastrophe.”
There were about 2,000 people at the game, and nearly half of them left with Dr. Barnett. News of the tragedy and massive loss of life drew nationwide attention. Both Time Magazine and Life Magazine featured accounts of the explosion and newspapers from throughout the country sent reporters to Franklin County to cover the holiday tragedy.
Gov. Adlai Stevenson was at the mine the following day along with volunteers from the Red Cross and Salvation Army. Those who arrived at the Orient 2 Mine immediately after reports of the explosion surfaced had no way of knowing that they would be a part of history and folklore that would be handed down from family to family for decades to come.
Rescue workers began entering the mine within hours of the explosion, clearing gas and searching for survivors. What they met, however, was the grim reminder about the perils of mining coal and the force of methane-fed coal mine explosions. Locomotives weighing 10 tons were tossed about, timbers a foot thick were snapped like twigs and railroad ties were torn from beneath the rails.
Rescue workers began recovering bodies of the 120 missing men shortly after midnight on Dec. 22. As the hours passed, and body after body was recovered from the mine, it became apparent that it would take a miracle for anybody to survive the explosion and the gas and smoke that resulted. In the early morning hours of Christmas Eve — 56 hours after the explosion — that miracle happened.
Benton resident Cecil Sanders was found on top of a “fall” barely clinging to life. Authorities theorized that Sanders, by climbing on top of the rock fall, miraculously found a pocket of air that sustained him until rescue workers arrived.
Sanders told authorities later that he was with a group of five men (the other four died) when they actually heard the explosion. He said the men tried to get out of the mine but were driven back by smoke and gas. Sander said later he had resigned himself to the fact that he was going to die, even scribbling a note to his wife and children on the back of a cough drop box. “May the good Lord bless and keep you, Dear wife and kids,” Sanders wrote. “Meet me in Heaven.”
Sanders, who died only a few years ago, reported in a book, “Our Christmas Disaster,” that rescue workers were amazed that he survived.
“My God, there’s a man alive,” Sanders later recalled were the first words he heard as he slipped in and out of consciousness. “They didn’t seem to think it was true,” Sanders said. “When they got to me I couldn’t tell who they were because they all had on gas masks. Rescue workers came back in a few minutes with a stretcher, gave me oxygen and carried me out of the mine. There’s no question it was a miracle.”
Rescue workers and funeral directors were faced with a grim task during the 1951 Christmas holiday season. Something had to be done with the scores of bodies that were brought up from the mine. And funeral homes throughout Franklin County — where 99 of the 119 fatally injured miners lived — would have to conduct multiple funerals; in some instances, six or eight per day.
A temporary morgue was set up at Central Junior High School where row after row of bodies lined the gymnasium floor. Brattice cloth, normally used to direct the flow of air in coal mine entries, covered the bodies. The usual joyous Christmas season turned into a bleak pilgrimage for families from throughout Southern Illinois as they faced the task of identifying the charred remains of the miners.
The last body was removed from the mine on Christmas night, completing the work of the rescue and recovery. In all, 252 men were underground at Orient 2 when the explosion took place — 119 died and 133 miners in unaffected areas escaped unhurt.
Nearly every person in Franklin County was affected, either directly or indirectly, by the disaster. For some of those who lost loved ones in the Orient 2 explosion, the events of that Christmas are just as vivid now as they were in 1951.
Perhaps no story evolved from the tragedy that was more poignant than that of Geneva (Hines) Smith, the 26-year-old mother of two small children, who lost her husband, Robert “Rink” Hines in the explosion. Smith, who later remarried, still brushes away a tear when she recalls the last words of her young husband before he left for work on that fateful Friday afternoon.
“He held our daughter Joann, she was 3 months old, and he put his face against hers and he said, ‘she looks just like me … doesn’t she?” Smith recalled. “Only a few hours later his sister came to the door and said there had been an explosion … and then we learned later that he’d been killed. The last thing I remember was how happy he was holding his daughter.”
Smith said a cruel irony involving the funeral also played out after her husband’s death.
“There was so many funerals that they had them early in the morning and all day until in the evening,” Smith remembered. “The only time we could have his funeral was at 8 p.m. on Christmas Eve. That was our fifth wedding anniversary and we got married at 8 p.m. … I’ll never forget that.”
Lyle Eubanks, of Mulkeytown, remembers distinctly his last conversation with his father Clarence, prior to the elder Eubank’s departure for work.
“He walked into the kitchen and got his bucket and then walked back into the living room and sat down on the couch,” Eubanks said. “He talked about it being the last shift prior to the Christmas shutdown and said if he didn’t need the money so bad he wouldn’t go to work that night — that’s the last time I talked to him.”
Eubanks said he identified his father’s body at the morgue.
“There was just row after row of bodies and they were covered with brattice cloth,” he recalled. “You just can’t imagine how horrible of a scene it was. I’ll never, ever forget what that looked like.”
Eubanks said the holiday season for his family and all of Franklin County came to an abrupt halt on Dec. 21, 1951.
“People took down their Christmas trees and outside ornaments after the explosion. It was almost like they didn’t want to be reminded that it was Christmas. Someone came to our house and took the tree, ornaments and all, and put it out behind a building in back of our house,” Eubanks said. ” Christmas in 1951, well, … Christmas ended that night.”
John L. Lewis: ‘And the mining industry continues to be a mortician’s paradise’
By JIM MUIR
UMWA President John L. Lewis was on the scene at Orient 2 the day after the explosion and the legendary union boss went underground at the ill- fated mine while rescue operations were still under way.
Lewis, known for his no-nonsense approach with coal operators and his untiring devotion to improve conditions for union miners, was visibly shaken when he left the mine. He wasted little time leveling an attack on mining laws that he said needed to be revised.
“Necessary legislative steps would prevent these recurring horrors,” Lewis said. “They are totally unnecessary and can be prevented. Unless all mines are forced to comply with the safety codes of the Federal Bureau of Mines, the mining industry will continue to be a mortician’s paradise.”
Exactly two months later, on Feb. 21, 1952, Lewis testified before the U.S. House of Representatives Subcommittee on Mine Safety, and once again used the Orient 2 explosion as an example that mining laws must be improved.
Lewis said in part: “On Dec. 21, 1951, at the Orient 2 Mine, 119 men were killed. Their average age was 40.9 years old, the youngest was 19 and the oldest was 64. Aside from the human values that were destroyed in this explosion, the community and the state suffered a monetary loss in the contribution that those men would have made had they been permitted to live; or if their lives had been safeguarded; or if one coal company had carried out the provisions of the existing federal code of safety, promulgated by the U.S. Bureau of Mines. That is all, in the judgment of experienced mining men, that would have been necessary to have saved the lives of those 119 men and avoided the disruption of the lives of 175 children growing up to manhood and womanhood.”
Lewis didn’t mince words when he spoke before Congress offering a stinging rebuke about mining laws and practices.
“The Orient explosion was preventable, preventable in the judgment of the U.S. Bureau of Mines, as testified here by its able director. The Orient explosion was preventable in the judgment of every man in the industry that has knowledge of sound mining practices. So, the record runs on, explosion after explosion through the years. Management was at fault in the West Frankfort explosion. It failed to take proper precautions in the face of abnormal conditions that intensified the hazard. Management didn’t take those steps. As a matter of fact, I think it is conceded by those qualified to speak on the subject that every mine explosion and disaster we’ve had in our country since 1940 would have been prevented if the existing code of safety had been enforced.”
The legendary union boss concluded his comments with a powerful and graphic description of what took place in Franklin County in the aftermath of the explosion.
“And the mining industry continues to be a mortician’s paradise. I just watched 119 funerals in two days in Franklin County — 119 funerals in two days! Can you imagine anything more heart-rendering, more soul- stirring? 119 funerals in that little county in two days! They went to work, the last shift before Christmas … and many of them were brought home to their loved ones in rubber sacks — rubber sacks! Because they were mangled, and shattered and blown apart and cooked with methane gas, until they no longer resembled human beings. And the best the mortician could do was put them in rubber sacks with a zipper. And then, for a Christmas present in Franklin County, 119 families could look at rubber sacks in lieu of their loved ones.”
(Editor’s note: This story was written on the 50th anniversary of the Orient 2 explosion. Since this story was written Jim Stewart and Jack Bigham have both passed away.)
By JIM MUIR
Fifty years ago, Jim Stewart was a 25-year-old coal miner working at the Orient 1 Mine near Orient. His father, Silas, was working in the nearby Orient 2 Mine. On Dec. 21, 1951, just past 7:30 in the evening, while both were at work, an explosion of methane gas tore through Orient 2 Mine and took the lives of 119 coal miners. Silas Stewart was among the victims.
The elder Stewart was working on the last shift before a scheduled Christmas shutdown.
“I didn’t know about it until I had finished my shift,” Stewart said. “It didn’t matter who you talked to, they had either lost a relative, a neighbor or a friend. It affected everybody.”
In the wake of the tragedy, Stewart, who died a few years back, remembered the generosity of total strangers.
“Funds were established for the victims and their families and contributions poured in from across the United States. Those were pretty hard times anyway and there was just a great outpouring of help,” he said.
And Stewart remembers the despair of that Christmas. “It was just a terrible, terrible time,” he said. “I remember that some of the funerals couldn’t be held because there wasn’t enough caskets for all the victims.
“My father was buried on Christmas Day, so there’s never been a Christmas go by that you don’t relive that.”
Jack Bigham of West City was just completing his first year of employment at Orient 2 and was underground when the explosion occurred. “I was in the 15th East section of the mine working with Roland Black. We hadn’t been in there very long and the power went off, so I called out to see what was wrong,” Bigham said.
“They wouldn’t tell us exactly what was wrong, they just told us to walk to the old bottom. I remember when we got to the bottom the power was still off and we had to walk the stairs out. We didn’t find out what was wrong until we got on top.”
Bigham, who retired after a 38-year career as a coal miner and is now deceased, went back to work at Orient 2 after it reopened and worked an additional eight years at the mine. He said it was difficult to go back.
“I think about it quite often — of course, even more at this time of the year when it’s near the anniversary,” Bigham said. “I know that I was just very lucky to be in another section of the mine that night.”
Curt Gunter, 57, of Benton, a 25-year veteran of the Southern Illinois coal industry, was 7 years old when his father, Harry “Tater” Gunter, was killed.
“There are things about it that are hazy, like I don’t remember my dad’s funeral at all,” Gunter said “But the thing that stands out in my mind the most is that, looking back through the eyes of a boy, it seemed like there was a big, black cloud just hanging over everything because so many people were involved. When you grow up with a memory like that at Christmas, well, you don’t ever forget it.”
STAFF REPORT
A 21-year-old Cambria woman has pleaded guilty to one count of aggravated DUI of drugs during a hearing in Franklin County Court.
Samantha A. Seiler was sentenced to five years in prison for her role in the accident that claimed the life of Sue Ramsey, 49, of Mulkeytown.
The fatal crash took place on Jan. 5, 2012 when Seiler was traveling west on Park Street Road and failed to stop at an intersection of Route 148 striking the vehicle driven by Ramsey broadside, who was southbound on 148. Seiler had her 10-month-old daughter in the car when the accident took place. The intersection has been the site of several serious accidents through the years. As part of a negotiated plea agreement additional charges including endangering the life of a child were dropped.
Seiler will be required to serve at least 85 percent of the five-year sentence meaning that she will spend at least 51 months in prison.
December 29, 2024
December 29, 2024