, poster promoting anthracite, which was used extensively in military production In southwest
Wales, anthracite has been burned as a domestic fuel since at least medieval times, when it was mined near
Saundersfoot. More recently, large-scale mining of anthracite took place across the western part of the
South Wales Coalfield until the late 20th century. In the United States, anthracite coal history began in 1790 in
Pottsville, Pennsylvania, with the discovery of coal made by the hunter Necho Allen in what is now known as the
Coal Region. Legend has it that Allen fell asleep at the base of
Broad Mountain and woke to the sight of a large fire because his campfire had ignited an outcrop of anthracite coal. By the late 18th century, it was known in the United States that anthracite could be burnt, but the techniques required to do so were unknown. Anthracite differs from wood and bituminous coal in that it has a higher ignition temperature and needs a fresh air draft from the bottom to burn. Several claims are made about who "first" burnt anthracite coal in the United States around this time, and all such claims originate from Pennsylvania. The city of Pottsville, Pennsylvania claims that their town was founded around an anthracite-fired
iron furnace purchased by
John Potts in 1806, which was built on the
Schuylkill River in 1795. at some point between 1812 and 1815. In spring 1808, John and Abijah Smith shipped the first commercially mined load of anthracite down the
Susquehanna River from Plymouth, Pennsylvania, marking the birth of commercial anthracite mining in the United States. From that first mine, production rose to an all-time high of over 100 million tons in 1917. The difficulty of igniting anthracite inhibited its early use, especially in
blast furnaces for smelting iron. With the development of the
hot blast in 1828, which used waste heat to preheat combustion air, anthracite became a preferred fuel, accounting for 45% of US pig iron production within 15 years.
Anthracite iron smelting was later displaced by
coke. From the late 19th century until the 1950s, anthracite was the most popular fuel for heating homes and other buildings in the northern US, until it was supplanted by oil-burning systems, and more recently natural gas systems. Many large public buildings, such as schools, were heated with anthracite-burning furnaces through the 1980s. During the
American Civil War, Confederate
blockade runners used anthracite as a smokeless fuel for their boilers to avoid revealing their position to the blockaders. The invention of the
Wootten firebox enabled
locomotives to directly burn anthracite efficiently, particularly waste culm. In the early 20th century US, the
Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad started using only the more expensive anthracite coal in its passenger locomotives, dubbed themselves "The Road of Anthracite", and advertised widely that travelers on their line could make railway journeys without getting their clothing stained with soot. The advertisements featured a white-clad woman named
Phoebe Snow and poems containing lines like "My gown stays white / From morn till night / Upon the road of Anthracite". Similarly, the
Great Western Railway in the UK was able to use its access to anthracite (it dominated the anthracite region) to earn a reputation for efficiency and cleanliness unmatched by other UK companies. Internal combustion motors driven by the so-called "mixed", "poor", "semi-water" or "
Dowson gas" produced by the
gasification of anthracite with air (and a small proportion of steam) were at one time the most economical method of obtaining power, requiring only , or less. Large quantities of anthracite for power purposes were formerly exported from South Wales to France, Switzerland and parts of Germany. Commercial anthracite mining in
Wales ceased in 2013, although a few large
open cast sites remain, along with some relatively small
drift mining operations. Commercial anthracite mining is still ongoing in Pennsylvania; the state produced a "total of 4,614,391 tons of [anthracite] coal, predominately from surface coal mines" in 2015. ==Anthracite today==