In the early 20th century, Matewan was essentially a
company town, in which the owners of the coal mines controlled many aspects of the lives of the miners they employed. In a response to efforts by the
United Mine Workers of America to unionize the miners in the region, the owners hired detectives of the Baldwin-Felts Agency to evict the families of striking workers from their company-owned housing. In Matewan, this effort was resisted by the chief of police,
Sid Hatfield, who objected to the presence of armed detectives in the town. In a standoff on May 19, 1920, shots were fired, and the ensuing shootout resulted in the deaths of 10 men: seven detectives, two miners, and Matewan's mayor. The event served to greatly heighten tensions, and prompted many miners to join the union. The miners' actions culminated in the September 1921
Battle of Blair Mountain, which was ended by the intervention of federal troops. It was the most violent act of labor violence in United States history. ==Gallery==