Since the founding of the
United Mine Workers union, a
trade union founded with a focus on coal miners, in 1890, coal mines in
Mingo County, West Virginia and its surrounds hired only non-union workers, and strictly enforced employment contracts that included union membership as grounds for immediate termination. As miners in the area lived almost exclusively in
company towns, termination also meant eviction. Company homes were all that were available, so evicted workers were forced to live in tent colonies along the Tug Fork River. Rows of company houses were boarded up, and the miners and their families, including in one instance a woman with a newborn, were thrown out and had to live in tents or board houses with no sides. In 1920, the UMW's new president
John L. Lewis sought to finally end the three-decade resistance to unionization in the area. He was under increased pressure to do so from both miners elsewhere participating in the
United Mine Workers coal strike of 1919, and from affected mine operators who were now being undercut by nonunion mines in West Virginia. One of the workers from the Keystone Mine said miners from Illinois and Pennsylvania had put up fliers about joining the union. The miners were paid very little: "You could go in the mines and load five or six cars of coal and couldn't come out to the company store and get enough food to feed your family till you worked another day." This unionization push included efforts from
Frank Keeney, president of the local union district, and
Mother Jones, who gave fiery speeches at the age of 83. An eyewitness stated that Mother Jones would "come up to the head of the creek ... and call out for all the men that wanted to be let out of slavery to follow her. And they did, scores of them." Over 3,000 Mingo County miners joined the union—and were summarily fired. The coal companies then hired agents of the
Baldwin–Felts Detective Agency to evict the families of their former employees. On May 19, 1920, a dozen Baldwin–Felts detectives, including Lee Felts, arrived in
Matewan in Mingo County and connected with Lee's brother Albert Felts. Albert and Lee were the brothers of Thomas Felts, the co-owner and director of the
private detective agency. The Baldwin–Felts agents were
union busters who had a reputation for using violence against groups looking to organize. The agents were also responsible for the
Ludlow Massacre of 1914 in Colorado. Albert had already been in the Matewan area and had tried to bribe Mayor Cabell Testerman with to place machine guns on roofs in the town; Testerman refused. That afternoon Albert and Lee, along with 11 other men, set out to the Stone Mountain Coal Co. property. The first family they evicted was a woman and her children; the woman's husband was not home at the time. The detectives forced them out at gunpoint in poor weather. Witnesses sent word to the authorities in town. As the agents walked to the train station to leave town, Police Chief
Sid Hatfield and a group of deputized miners confronted them and told them they were under arrest. Albert Felts replied that in fact he had a warrant for Hatfield's arrest. Testerman was alerted, and he ran out into the street after a miner shouted that Sid had been arrested. Hatfield backed into the store and Testerman asked to see the warrant. After reviewing it, Mayor Testerman exclaimed, "This is a bogus warrant." There followed a gunfight, in which Chief Hatfield shot the agent Albert Felts. Testerman, together with Lee Felts, was also among the ten men killed (three from the town and seven from the agency). The gunfight became known as the
Matewan Massacre, and held symbolic significance among the miners, representing the first major setback for Baldwin-Felts. Chief Sid Hatfield was lauded as a hero by the union miners. Throughout the summer and into the fall of 1920 the union gained strength in
Mingo County, as did the resistance of the coal operators. Sporadic shootouts occurred up and down the
Tug River. In late June state police under the command of Captain Brockus raided the
Lick Creek tent colony near
Williamson. Miners were said to have fired on Brockus and Martin's men from the colony. In response, the state police shot and arrested miners, destroyed their tents, and evicted their families. Both sides were bolstering their arms, and Sid Hatfield continued to support the resistance (specifically by converting Testerman's jewelry store into a gun shop). On January 26, 1921, the trial of Hatfield for killing Albert Felts began. It was in the national spotlight and brought much attention to the miners' cause. Hatfield's stature and mythical status grew as the trial proceeded, driven largely by his interactions with reporters. All men were acquitted in the end, but overall the union was facing significant setbacks. Eighty percent of mines had reopened with imported replacements and ex-strikers who signed
yellow-dog contracts to return to work. In mid-May 1921 union miners launched an assault on non-union mines. In a short time the conflict had consumed the entire Tug River Valley. This "Three Days Battle" was ended in a truce and the implementation of
martial law. From the beginning, the miners perceived the enforcement of martial law as one-sided. Hundreds of miners were arrested, often for minor infractions. The miners responded with
guerrilla tactics and sabotage. towards
Williamson Hatfield traveled to
McDowell County on August 1, 1921, to stand trial on charges of dynamiting a
coal tipple. Along with him traveled a good friend, Ed Chambers, and their wives. However, a group of Baldwin-Felts ambushed Hatfield and Chambers outside the courthouse. The group included
Charlie E. Lively, a double agent working for the coal industry who had opened a restaurant near the UMWA office and reported back to the coal company. The agents shot Hatfield and Chambers as they approached the steps of the courthouse. One agent then descended the steps and further shot Chambers in the back of the head. Hatfield's and Chambers' bodies were returned to Matewan, where word of the murders spread through the local community. Angered by the murder of Hatfield, the miners again took up arms. Miners along the
Little Coal River were among the first to organize and began patrolling the area. Sheriff
Don Chafin of
Logan County sent troopers to the Little Coal River area, where armed miners captured, disarmed, and routed them. On August 7, 1921, the leaders of the
United Mine Workers (UMW) District 17, which encompassed much of southern West Virginia, called a rally in
Charleston. The leaders were
Frank Keeney and Fred Mooney, veterans of previous
mine conflicts in the region. Keeney and Mooney met with
Governor Ephraim Morgan and presented him with a petition of the miners' demands. When Morgan rejected the demands, the miners began to talk of a march on Mingo to free the confined miners, end martial law and organize the county. However this required them to pass through Logan County via Blair Mountain, which was under the supervision of the anti-union Sheriff Chafin. == Battle ==