The Quincy Mine: Michigan's Two-Mile Deep Death Trap (Part 7) episode artwork

EPISODE · May 9, 2022 · 15 MIN

The Quincy Mine: Michigan's Two-Mile Deep Death Trap (Part 7)

from Hometown History · host Shane Waters

A tourist pays $700 for a fishing charter on Michigan's Torch Lake, catches an 8-pound beauty, and brings home dinner. There's just one problem: that fish is six pounds of meat and two pounds of tumor. The lake won't be safe to eat from for another 800 years. Welcome to Michigan's copper country, where the industry that supplied 90% of the Union's copper during the Civil War left behind one of America's first EPA Superfund sites.The Quincy Mine outside Hancock, Michigan wasn't just deep, it was 92 levels deep, stretching two full miles into the earth. Workers from Cornwall, Finland, Italy, and across Europe descended into darkness every day, communicating with the surface through a bell system where nine rings meant ambulance. At least 253 men died at Quincy, though the real number is far higher, the company only counted deaths if your body was pulled out while you were still on the clock.This is the story of America's copper boom: the immigrant workers who never got rich despite making millionaires in Boston, the women who held mining communities together above ground, and the environmental devastation that's still killing fish today. Because some kinds of wealth come at a cost that compounds for centuries.Subscribe to Hometown History for forgotten American history stories every week. New episodes release Tuesdays.Show Notes: :A $700 fishing trip to one of America's most toxic lakes ends with a cooler full of tumorsThe Quincy Mine stretched 92 levels deep, two full miles straight into the Michigan earthHow a bell signal system used nine rings to mean "ambulance" and became a sad daily songCornwall miners, Finnish immigrants, and workers from across Europe built America's copper industryWhy at least 253 recorded deaths is a massive undercount of the Quincy's real human costThe Boston investors who got rich while workers pushed one-ton ore carts twelve times dailyHow switched electrical transformers were dumped directly into Torch Lake, poisoning it for 800 yearsShane's humiliating attempt to push a mining tram (spoiler: miners were superhumanly strong)KEY FIGURES:Dylan - Quincy Mine tour guide with encyclopedic knowledge of Michigan copper countryThe unnamed fisherman who paid for a charter to a Superfund siteCornish miners - generational hard rock experts whose skills dated to pre-Roman timesThe women of mining families - held communities together while men worked undergroundTags: Quincy Mine Michigan, Michigan copper mining history, Hancock Michigan history, Torch Lake pollution, EPA Superfund site Michigan, Upper Peninsula history, American mining disasters, immigrant mining labor, industrial history podcast, forgotten Michigan history, Keweenaw Peninsula, 19th century mining, Cornish miners, Finnish immigrants MichiganCategory: HistoryChapter Markers: 0:00 - Introduction: The Hoist House and Quincy Mine 2:30 - Breakfast at Kingus Cafe and Finnish Upper Peninsula Culture 5:00 - Meeting Dylan: The Quincy's Civil War Copper Empire 7:30 - The Torch Lake Fishing Disaster: Six Pounds of Meat, Two Pounds of Tumor 11:00 - Life Underground: Hand Drills, Deafening Steam Engines, and Deadly Darkness 14:00 - The Bell Signal System and the Nine-Ring Ambulance Call 16:00 - 253 Deaths and the Workers Who Never Got Rich 18:00 - Conclusion: Michigan's Toxic Legacy Hometown History explores forgotten stories from small-town America. The overlooked events, hidden triumphs, and buried tragedies that shaped the country we live in. New episodes every Tuesday. Find every episode at mythsandmalice.com/hometown-historyAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy

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The Quincy Mine: Michigan's Two-Mile Deep Death Trap (Part 7)

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This episode was published on May 9, 2022.

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A tourist pays $700 for a fishing charter on Michigan's Torch Lake, catches an 8-pound beauty, and brings home dinner. There's just one problem: that fish is six pounds of meat and two pounds of tumor. The lake won't be safe to eat from for another...

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