Miner's Tag Bracelet
Miner's Tag Bracelet
Miner's Tag Bracelet
Miner's Tag Bracelet
Miner's Tag Bracelet

Miner's Tag Bracelet

  • National Archives Store Exclusive
  • Made in Connecticut
  • Lava stone beads
  • Each bracelet features an original miner's tag, but its origin, number, shape, material, and further inscriptions (if any) will vary and make each piece unique. Each tag comes on a stretch bracelet adorned with lava stone beads.

    These tags were used as a means of knowing how many people are underground, and who they are. As such, each tag represents a human life. Such a system ensures blasting underground can take place without exposing miners to hazards like oxygen deficiency, gases and injuries from the blast. In an emergency situation, it plays a vital role to ensure all workers are accounted for and would trigger the dispatch of mine rescue teams for missing workers.

  • The Power & Light exhibition features more than 200 of Russell Leeʼs photographs of coal miners and their families in their homes, mines, and communities. Visitors will experience large-scale prints, projections, and digital interactives. Although Leeʼs earlier images of Depression-era Americans are well-known, his 1946 coal survey images have enjoyed little public exposure. The full series, which includes over 2,000 of Lee’s photographs, can only be found in the holdings of the National Archives. These images document inhumane living and working conditions, but also depict the joy, strength, and resilience of the minersʼ families and communities

    Russell Werner Lee (1903-1986) was born in Ottawa, Illinois. Originally trained as an engineer, he was methodical in his work, but he approached his subjects with warmth and respect. The quiet Midwesterner put people at ease, enabling him to capture scenes of surprising intimacy. Many of his photographs reveal worlds through small details—keepsakes on the mantel, lined and calloused hands. What may be most distinctive about these images is their reflection of the photographerʼs respect for his subjects. Despite their plight, it is their strength, dignity, and humanity that strikes the viewer.

    Although the coal survey photos represent some of Leeʼs finest work, his best-known photographs are from an earlier project. Lee was one of several photographers hired by the federal government in the 1930s to document the toll of the Great Depression and drought on rural Americans. While he worked alongside famous colleagues including Walker Evans and Dorothea Lange, Lee eschewed celebrity. He aimed to inspire social change, believing visual evidence of struggle and hardship could inspire reforms.

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