Media Resource
BackStory: Blasts from the Past: A History of Dynamite in the United States

Photo caption
Joe Gladski, a coal miner at Maple Hill mine in Shenandoah (Schuylkill County, PA), sets dynamite in a mine tunnel in 1938. Photograph by Sheldon Dick of the Farm Security Administration.
While dynamite is often a symbol of protest or revolution, it was long a part of the daily life of miners, construction workers, and other laborers who relied on the explosive to alter human or natural landscapes.
In Blasts from the Past: A History of Dynamite in the United States, hosts of BackStory Brian Balogh and Lizzie Peabody investigate an explosive history: the use of dynamite in the United States.
A full transcript of this episode can be found at the BackStory website.
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