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Showing posts with the label Finzel

Champ Miner Dug 12 Tons Daily, Died of Flu

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"He led the world in mining coal," says the epitaph on the Finzel Cemetery tombstone of Lawrence Finzel (1873-1919), and that's no exaggeration. Eulogized as the "World Champion Coal Miner," Finzel was judged by Johns Hopkins doctors to be "the finest muscled man that ever came to the institution." In 1915-1916, when he was 43 years old, Finzel averaged 12 tons a coal a day single-handed, three times what was expected of anyone else. He earned $2,360.60 that year, equivalent to $60,000 today, a fabulous sum for a miner at the time. Understandably in demand, Finzel moved from place to place and set production records in Maryland, West Virginia and Pennsylvania, all while avoiding the accidents that crippled, maimed or killed so many -- including his oldest son, Bernard, who died in a February 1916 cave-in in Fayette County, West Virginia, age 14. What finally killed Finzel at the young age of 45, when he lived on Bowery Street in Frostburg, was not the ...

Front-Yard Frightmare Is a Roadside Horror

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  For the same number of Halloweens as Dante had circles of Hell, Nina Fike has turned her front yard into the Frightmare on Finzel Road, and documented the annual adventure on a public Facebook page .   " I have a crazy imagination, and I'm a giant kid," Fike told WVNews. "I've always loved Halloween, but since I started decorating nine years ago, it has become an obsession." Mark it on your map for 2022: The Frightmare is at 1035 Finzel Road in eastern Garrett County, just north of old U.S. 40. Photos courtesy of Nina Fike.   Sources: "Aragog and ferryman." WVNews 27 Oct. 2021. https://www.wvnews.com/aragog-and-ferryman/image_2a019920-3741-11ec-9e4e-7f6ab38a654c.html . Accessed 10 Nov. 2021. Fike, Nina. Frightmare on Finzel Road. https://m.facebook.com/Frightmare-on-Finzel-Road-271423083358001/ . Accessed 10 Nov. 2021.

Dying Soldier Still Awaits Cemetery Rescue

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Grave of Charles & Columbia Bolden. Matt Lake’s entertaining and colorful 2006 book Weird Maryland includes an elaborate Civil-War-ghost-story-turned-graveyard-ritual set in the Finzel cemetery in northeastern Garrett County, nearly at the Pennsylvania state line. As its only source, the Weird Maryland account quotes, verbatim, Baltimore County paranormal investigator Beverly Litsinger, whose MarylandGhosts.com website seems to be defunct. Here’s the story as Litsinger tells it; I have broken up the long paragraph for online readability. The town has one road with the old Finzel cemetery located at the end of it on the outskirts of town. During the Civil War two brothers took up arms on opposing sides – talk about a family feud! One brother fought for the South and the other brother fought for the North; both fought tirelessly. Nonetheless, the two brothers met often in secret inside the small, secluded graveyard to discuss the war and to catch up on stories about the family ...