IC 6153 Safety In Mines As Affected By First-Aid And Mine-Rescue Contests

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
W. D. Ryan
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
12
File Size:
5799 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1929

Abstract

The organic act passed by Congress in 1910 instituting the Bureau of Mines provided that the director of the bureau should promulgate such investigations as might be necessary to determine the causes of mine accidents and the best methods of preventing them. With the object of accident prevention in view, Director Joseph A. Holmes, and others who were pioneers in the bureau, conceived the Plan of having first-aid and mine-rescue training as one of the major activities of the Bureau. Out of this plan grew the first-aid and mine-rescue contests, which have been featured as an incentive for men to take courses in this type of mine safety training. The first appropriation for mine-accident investigations became available on July 1, 1908, under the jurisdiction of the U. S. Geological Survey, with Dr. J. A. Holmes in active charge. During 1908 there had been some first-aid training in the Pennsylvania anthracite field and a start made in Illinois, although there appears to be no exact information as to when or where first-aid training in the mining industry first became a reality, it is generally conceded that the St. John's ambulance corps of Scotland was one of the first - if not the first - to make the work effective. In 1911, to celebrate the establishment of the Bureau of Mines and the formal opening of the Pittsburgh, Pa., station, a first-aid and mine-rescue demonstration was conducted on Forbes Field, Pittsburgh. President William Howard Taft and many other men notable in public life were 2 resent. This was the first general national contest of the kind held it the United States; and since then there have been a number of nation-wide first-aid and mine rescue contests, as well as some which have been international in scope. There are over one hundred first-aid and mine-rescue contests of various kinds held annually in connection with mining and the allied industries.
Citation

APA: W. D. Ryan  (1929)  IC 6153 Safety In Mines As Affected By First-Aid And Mine-Rescue Contests

MLA: W. D. Ryan IC 6153 Safety In Mines As Affected By First-Aid And Mine-Rescue Contests. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1929.

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