
The Disaster in Butte
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Narrated by:
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Virtual Voice
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By:
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David Erickson

This title uses virtual voice narration
Virtual voice is computer-generated narration for audiobooks.
About this listen
On June 8th, 1917, deep within the Byzantine network of tunnels and shafts, a seemingly innocuous electrical cable sparked a conflagration that would etch the Granite Mountain mine into the annals of American disaster. As the flames rapidly ascended the timber-lined shaft, consuming precious oxygen, Wesley and David found themselves among the hundreds of miners trapped over a thousand feet below the surface.
When rescuers finally breached the mine over 55 hours later, they encountered a scene of unimaginable horror – rows of lifeless men, some huddled together, others splayed across the rock as if fossilized in their final agonizing moments. Among the 168 victims was Wesley Elson, while David was miraculously found alive, though gravely injured and forever scarred by the trauma.
In the wake of the nation's deadliest hard rock mining disaster, a grassroots labor movement erupted, with the miners going on strike to protest the deplorable conditions that had precipitated this tragedy. Though the Metal Mine Workers' Union was ultimately defeated, the sacrifices of men like Wesley paved the way for improved regulations and rights for future generations of miners.
For David Elson, survival came at an immense cost – his father's life, his own psychological wounds, and a simmering rage toward the corporate empire that had so callously sacrificed its workers. As the solemn memorial to the fallen miners took shape amidst the haunting relics of the disaster, David vowed to honor his father's memory by fighting for the justice and dignity his family's profession so desperately lacked.
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