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Citizens of the Month: Those Who Gave Their Lives In the Katherine Mine #4 Explosion Eight Decades Ago 

Mountain Media, LLC by Mountain Media, LLC
July 24, 2024
in Local Stories
0

By Elicia Drummond Kuhl

Great Granddaughter of

Daniel Kenneth Drummond

 

It’s been 80 years since the Katherine Mine #4 Explosion. I didn’t realize as we

planned this trip to Shinnston that it would be in the midst of a monumental year of that

tragedy but here we are my sister Becky, my husband Gary and me. Our journey

started with a plan to travel to Shinnston and bring our Great Grandmother and Great

Great Grandmother’s dresses to be displayed at the Bice Ferguson Memorial Museum.

Actually this journey started when my Great Aunt Mary (Mary McGinnis Milligan) gave

me my grandmothers dresses when I was 20 years old. They were both homemade,

one with a lace kerchief around the neck of the dress and a black pin carved intricately

into a bird sitting on a tree branch pinned at the neckline. The other one was different

but still homemade with buttons and a jeweled pin but there’s more to these dresses

than the material. They were worn by two women that were connected, mother and

daughter (Florence Ash Drummond and Savilla Swiger Ash). Both shared an

experience that changed their lives as well as many others.

Our great grandmother married into the Drummond family becoming Florence

Ash Drummond. We have an old photograph of the Drummond family taken, which I

believe was the last picture that captured my grandfather, Daniel Kenneth Drummond.

He was standing in the back row along with his brothers, the other siblings in front of

them and on a couch. The photo included our Great Great Grandmother Savilla Swiger

Ash (Florence Drummond’s mother) sitting on one end of the couch. She was wearing

the exact dress that was donated to the Museum. This is the thing, at that time neither

one knew that after that picture was taken their life would change. I’m not really sure of

the date of the picture but after March 1944, his face (Daniel Kenneth) would no longer

be part of a family photograph.

Over the last forty six years, these two dresses mostly sat in a box in my cedar

chest with only a few opportunites to be shown to family or friends. Actually

Grandmother Ash’s dress was highlighted at several of my church functions as part of a

display. The years prior to my ownership I can only imagine the milestones that came.

Were these “Sunday go to meeting” dresses, worn to visit friends, only for really special

occasions or did tears fall on the hem as they mourned the death of a son and

grandson, Daniel Kenneth Drummond. I’m not sure but I was honored to care for them

and thankful that they are now back in their hometown to be seen and maybe even

bring comfort to others that look upon them.

I have pondered what life would have been like for my dad (Daniel Thomas) had

his dad (Daniel Kenneth) lived instead of dying in the Katherine #4 Coal Mine explosion.

For my dad it would have been a different life. Probably one that would have allowed

him to grow up in West Virginia, find a wife and have children, but I think that those

children would not have included me. But in truth my Grandfather Drummond did die in

that mine explosion and was no longer part of my dad’s, Daniel Thomas Drummond,

life. I have to say this, my grandfather willingly became part of a fire team to put the

flames out so he went back inside not to save lives but to save the mine. I believe that

 

tells you my grandfathers character; dedicated, which describes all of the men that lost

their lives that day.

My grandmother, Kathleen Mona McGinnis Drummond, later picked up the

pieces of her loss, and remarried ending up in Florida where our dad met Jo Ann Pope

Drummond, our mom. Four children out of five (Elicia Ann, Teresa Jo [deceased],

Lyneese Daneen, Daniel Thomas II, and Rebecca Jolene) were raised by amazing

parents. I believe our Grandfather Drummond (Daniel Kenneth) would have been proud

of the man our dad became not without imperfections but one that loved his family, a

jokester like his dad, a carpenter who built homes that dazzled the best of them and

lived a life that cared about people. Many times I remember him picking up people on

the side of the road hitchhiking (complete strangers), delivering them to their

destination. Even taking in family and friends to help them get on their feet. I would call

that being a servant. So we as his children have fallen into his footsteps by serving

people through our ministries, our work opportunties and our gifts.

We didn’t have a lot of contact with our Drummond family in West Virginia but I

do have a letter a letter Grandmother Drummond wrote to my mom in 1958 that showed

she wanted to see us but in reality the distance kept that from happening. As an older

child one trip I remember is my sister Dannen and I went to see Great Grandmother

Drummond. We sat on the stairs at her house (41 Main Street) and ate hotdogs. Funny I

remember looking back up the stairs and her gazing down at us. I wonder what she

was thinking? Did we resemble her son (Daniel Kenneth) or just remind her of the loss?

Well, we never asked and she never shared her thoughts.

I wrote a poem to commemorate and honor our dad and grandfather. I also want

to remember the others that gave their life that day. Grandfather Drummond will always

be remembered and our dad continues to be loved and cherished.

Elicia Drummond Kuhl

July 21, 2024

 

Forever a Coal Miner

I’m a coal miners granddaughter

And still feel the sting of loss

It’s only through pictures we see

And a moment I came across

The explosion was at Katherine Mine

His brother knew where Dan would be

But the mine was sealed, no way out

All hope lost, oh such a travesty

That explosion took his life

Our daddy was the only heir

Grandma’s pain cut like a knife

 

All they knew now was despair

A tornado struck, more lives taken

So opening the mine was not to be

Even with a little boy wanting his dad

Nor a fragile wife loosing her sanity

Months passed from this tragedy

Then finally the time had come

Death came where his brother said

Now all they could feel was numb

He was laid to rest in 1944

But remembered beyond that year

We heard he was a jokester at heart

A memory from grandma made clear

Grandpa stopped on top of the bridge

Pulling her from the car they began to dance

I wonder about the song that played

But I’m just glad they had the chance

Grandpa, Daniel Kenneth Drummond

A jokester will always be your legacy

You have generations of sons

That make people laugh most certainly

 

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