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Remembering The Huber Breaker In Ashley, PA 

Discovering Pennsylvania
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Blue Coal's Huber Breaker was a landmark located in the borough of Ashley, Hanover Township, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, USA. The breaker was built in 1939 to replace the Maxwell Breaker which was located at the colliery. Run-of-mine coal arriving at the breaker was washed and cleaned to remove impurities, principally slate. It was crushed and screened to specific sizes desired by customers. Considered an ultra-modern plant when constructed, it used Menzies Cones to separate coal from waste. The breaker was operated by the Blue Coal Corporation, a subsidiary of the Glen Alden Coal Company. It processed 7,000 tons of Anthracite coal per day. The final product was sprayed with a blue dye and sold as “Blue Coal.” Railcars were loaded underneath the breaker and shipped to markets. The long decline of the anthracite industry after World War II caused Blue Coal to declare bankruptcy and cease operations in 1976.
Fate of the Huber Breaker
The Huber Breaker Preservation Society lost its bid to purchase the breaker and 8 acres of land for $25,000 in a final attempt to save the landmark. A Philadelphia salvage dealer named Paselo Logistics LLC. bid $1.28 million for the breaker and 26.58 acres of land in August 2013 and the U.S. Bankruptcy Court approved the sale. The demolition of the breaker started January 24, 2014. In September 2005, Scranton based Kanton Realty estimated the 900 tons of steel in the breaker had a scrap value of $85,000.
Demolition started on the breaker's outbuildings in the week of January 24, 2014. According to the new owner's attorney, Jonathan Comitz, the main breaker building will not be demolished until spring 2014.
The Huber Breaker's main building was demolished on April 24, 2014. The last structure of the colliery, the powerhouse, was demolished in August 2014. The issue of whether asbestos was properly handled during demolition is still generating controversy among Ashley residents, Ashley Borough, and the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection.

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13 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 12   
@georgekrisanda2481
@georgekrisanda2481 3 месяца назад
Thank you for the memories 😊😊
@emilycooper9908
@emilycooper9908 Год назад
I can see my grandparents house!❤ We used to visit and walk around the vacant buildings.
@ash7700
@ash7700 6 лет назад
Thanks so much for creating and posting this. I'm not from coal country, and I've never seen a breaker, but it's importance is so very clear in this presentation. Beautiful , meaningful, art.
@FollowingFootprintsMedia
@FollowingFootprintsMedia 6 лет назад
Amazing place. I was exploring the anthracite region this past weekend and found the site of this breaker.
@tonydeleo3642
@tonydeleo3642 2 года назад
At its high point, how many people worked at the plant? You think of all the people who worked here all their lives, possibly for generations. It is truly a shame that at least some of the machinery could not have been saved for static display to give an idea of the size of the operation.
@arborist460
@arborist460 6 лет назад
I'm from eastern ky and I miss all the old tipples...my whole family for as long as time lived off coal one way or another...sad to realize government is taking lives by killing coal mines not savin the earth like they wanna believe....everybody around here is desperate and havin to resort to evil to raise children and stay alive thereselves cause minin is it...no mine no life
@Gwhitebeard
@Gwhitebeard 2 года назад
Designed by engineers using slide rules and drafting tables..... What the hell happened to US???
@gliderydin2911
@gliderydin2911 2 года назад
We let our government get in the way
@georgekrisanda2481
@georgekrisanda2481 3 месяца назад
When i was a kid i used to sneak in there and sit on the very top floor and imagine what it was like when it was running. I knew the breaker like the back of my hand from spending so many childhood days and nights running around inside the old buildings, it was my playground. And I miss it dearly. Some of my passed away relatives actually worked in there.
@georgekrisanda2481
@georgekrisanda2481 3 месяца назад
Thank you for the memories 😊😊
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