Check Tag: 143

Name/Title

Check Tag: 143

Entry/Object ID

KK.0288

Description

143 (round)

Use

Check tags were a system for tracking miners, by number, as they entered an underground mine: Tags were removed from a board by each worker as he entered the mine, and replaced on the board when he exited for the day. This let the company know how many miners, and which ones, were in the mine at any given time. They were also used for coordinating the weight and payment for each cart of coal that emerged while the miners were still working below: a miners hung their numbered brass tag on each coal car they filled, so that the checkweighman knew which individual miner to credit with that cart's load. Also known as miner's checks, pit tags, pit checks, and time checks.

Collection

Coal Mining Tools

Material

Brass

Provenance

Provenance Detail

Archaeological Find

Exhibition

Life in the Coal Camps

Interpretative Labels

Label Type

Cultural/Historical Context

Label

Check Tags Miners were paid by the ton, not by the hour. After a miner filled his coal car, he marked his car with a specialized, numbered brass tag to distinguish his load of coal from another miner’s. The car was then pulled to the weigh station by a mule, and then on to the tipple. By 1912, a productive miner could earn the equivalent of two dollars in a twelve hour shift. collection of Kenneth King