Newren, Merrill Clifford
History of Maria Charlotta Andersson Newren
When Clifford was 15 years old, he went to his brothers in Scofield and worked there the rest of his life. He married a young lady and they had three children. He was killed in an accident by a horse kicking him in the head. He was 30 years old at the time of his death, 6 March 1925.
The Newrens' In Scofield by Gary Newren
Bernard Newren became the Chief Clerk and later the General Superintendent of the Union Pacific mine. Clifford Newren also worked at the mine. In 1925 Merrill Clifford was kicked by a horse outside the mine and died later in a Salt Lake City hospital.
The Newren Family in Scofield by Merrill Newren
In 1915 Merrill Clifford Newren left Gunnison and joined his brothers in Scofield...In the summer of 1925, Merrill Clifford was kicked in the face by one of the mine horses. He was taken to St. Marks Hospital in Salt Lake City where he later died.
So, I piece together that he was kicked by the mine horse, at the mine and he died in Salt Lake City. It sounds to me like it is a mine accident. He was age 30.
1925 Report of Industrial Commission Claim no. 1371 - Decision rendered May 28, 1925
Nellie M. Newren, et. Al, widow and children of Merrill Clifford Newren, deceased, vs. Scofield Coal Co., Aetna Life Insurance Company.
On February 27, 1925, Merrill Clifford Newren of Scofield, Utah, was employed by the Scofield Coal Company mine as mine clerk and was paid a wage amounting to a sum of $50.00 per week. On said date he was told by the Superintendent to come from the office to the mine to take charge of the men. As Mr. Newren was going down the office steps a horse which was standing on the steps kicked him in the face. He sustained a contusion of the face and nose, broken nose and jaw and possible fracture of skull. As a result and injury he died on the 5th day of March, 1925, at St. Marks Hospital at Salt Lake City.
On June 22, 1912, applicant was married at Price, Utah, to Merrill Clifford Newren, the decedent herein. There are two minor children as the issue of that marriage, namely, Nelda Marie age 8, and Beverly 4, and an unborn child, all of whom were living with the decedent at the time of injury and were wholly dependent upon him for maintenance and support
Ordered, that compensation be paid by defendants to Nellie Marie as the surviving widow, for the sole benefit of herself and the two minor children above named, and an unborn child, in the sum of $16.00 per week for a period of not to exceed 311 weeks, beginning on the 5th day of March, 1925; also the defendants pay for the burial of decedent according to law.
Nielsen, Cory Gordon
http://www.msha.gov/disasterhistory/WCREEK2000/willowcreekfinal/willowcreekfinalrpt.pdf
UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF LABOR MINE SAFETY AND HEALTH ADMINISTRATION COAL MINE SAFETY AND HEALTH REPORT OF INVESTIGATION UNDERGROUND COAL MINE EXPLOSIONS JULY 31 - AUGUST 1, 2000
WILLOW CREEK MINE - MSHA ID. NO. 42-02113 PLATEAU MINING CORPORATION HELPER, CARBON COUNTY, UTAH
Shane Stansfield & Cory Nielsen
The following are excerpts of the MSHA report. For the full report visit website listed above.
The longwall crew consisted of Wesley Ellner, tailgate shearer operator; Kyle Medley, headgate shearer operator; Tyson Hales, stageloader operator; Ronnie Gonzales and Shane Stansfield, longwall mechanics; and Cory Nielsen, propman. At approximately 3:50 p.m., the longwall crew, along with McKinnon, Whitten, Berdan, and Jas Mills, boarded the mantrip on the surface and traveled underground to the D-3 section.
First Explosion
At 11:48 p.m., a methane explosion occurred on the headgate side of the D-3 gob. Outside in the mine office, Dean LaCotta, Jr., AMS attendant, observed that the system was reporting communication failures with many sensors surrounding the D-3 section. All of the miners on the D-3 section, and those in close proximity to the section, felt the forces of the explosion, but most miners interpreted the forces to be a result of a major 7 cave in the gob. The physical effect of the explosion varied for each miner depending upon their proximity to the origin. Stansfield, probably located near Crosscut 49, was thrown by the forces and suffered rib injuries. Burton, located at Shield 3, was knocked down. Medley's hard hat was knocked off. Ellner felt a blast of air traveling from the headgate toward the tailgate and turned toward the face to shield his eyes from the suspended dust. When Ellner turned back toward the shield line, he observed sporadic blue flames in the toes of Shield 8. He shouted “fire” to alert the miners at the headgate. Medley and Ellner then observed flames at Shield 6.
Second Explosion
At approximately 11:55 p.m., a second explosion occurred in the D-3 gob. The forces of the explosion threw Medley to Shield 6, where he ended up on his hands and knees in a pool of water and burning hydrocarbons. Nielsen, who was located on the shield line outby Medley, was thrown to Shield 4 and was asphyxiated as a consequence of carbon monoxide poisoning. The forces of the explosion threw Burton outby in the No. 1 entry and he ended up by the stageloader near Crosscut 49. McKinnon was thrown into Crosscut 49 facing the outby rib. He lost his cap lamp. Burton and McKinnon felt intense heat and each received burns and other injuries. Burton lost consciousness. McKinnon attempted to don his own personal SCSR. However, he dropped it and was unable to find it. Whitten was knocked down and thrown back into Crosscut 49 against the outby rib. He lost his hard hat, but not his cap lamp. Whitten made his way to the No. 2 entry where he saw Berdan.
Berdan was in No. 2 entry near Crosscut 49. Tyson Hales was nearby. Gonzales, Stansfield, and Ellner were located in the No. 2 entry close to Crosscut 48. Gonzales heard the explosion, felt slight forces and observed dust and debris coming out of Crosscut 49 into the No. 2 entry. Marvidikis, in the belt entry near Crosscut 25, felt a small rush of air and believed that it was another cave. He continued the preshift examination in the No. 1 entry, traveling inby.
Gonzales and Stansfield signaled the miners near Crosscut 49 to evacuate. Ellner was at the driver's door of the mantrip and was entering the vehicle. Gonzales opened the back door on the driver's side while Stansfield was preparing to enter the passenger side.
Third Explosion
At approximately 11:56 p.m., a third explosion occurred in the gob. The forces of the third explosion likely resulted in Stansfield being fatally injured.
As McKinnon walked to the mantrip, he saw Tyson Hales lying on the mine floor. McKinnon, due to his injuries, was unable to assist Tyson Hales. McKinnon, Berdan, and Medley traveled out of the mine. At this time, Tyson Hales, Burton, Stansfield, and Nielsen were the only miners remaining underground.
Powell, Robinson, and Montoya remained with Tyson Hales to stabilize his condition and load him on a stretcher. Robinson proceeded outby and backed one of the trucks inby to Crosscut 48. Haigler, Wood, and Moosman found Burton in the No. 2 entry, halfway between Crosscuts 48 and 49 lying partially under a shop car. Burton was conscious, alert, and was able to describe his injuries to the team members. He also relayed to the team that he thought Stansfield was outby his location and that Nielsen was probably still inby him. They pulled Burton from under the shop car, stabilized his injuries, and loaded him on a stretcher. Burton was carried outby toward the truck at Crosscut 48 where Tyson Hales had just been placed onto the truck by Powell and Montoya.
In order to place Burton onto the truck, it was necessary to clear more space. The team members began to unload some of their equipment and while throwing fire extinguishers toward the rib, Moosman discovered another miner lying against the outby corner of Crosscut 48 in the No. 2 entry. The miner was identified as Stansfield. He was positioned against a timber set along the rib and was covered with brattice cloth. Powell determined that Stansfield had received fatal injuries.
Deseret News - August 5, 2000
Fallen miner remembered
Mourners recall him fondly as tease, loving dad
HUNTINGTON - Jack Clark tells the story so often and so well it sounds almost legendary: He and Cory Gordon Nielsen decided to go fishing in the dark but ended up driving their pickup truck into the drink instead.
With an air of finality not usually evident, Clark told the story one more time Friday at the funeral for Nielsen, just 28, when he was killed Tuesday in an explosion at the Willow Creek Mine northeast of Price. Clark joined Nielsen's sister and mother in paying tribute while a large crowd of family, friends, and coal miners from both Utah and Colorado listened at the Huntington LDS Stake Center.
Residents of Carbon and Emery counties banded together this week in a show of sympathy and support for the families of Nielsen and Shane Stansfield, a 29-year-old Price resident who also died at Willow Creek Tuesday and whose funeral is today. Eight others were sent to the hospital when a falling piece of rock sparked a pocket of methane gas into a blaze that then exploded, mine officials say.
Four of the eight, Kyle Medley, Bill Burton, Charles Whitten, and Tyson Hales, remained hospitalized Friday night. Medley was in neuro-critical care at University Hospital and Burton remained in critical condition at Castleview Hospital in Price.
The flowers, cards, meals, money and tears have flowed all week in east-central Utah. On Friday, Nielsen was eulogized against a backdrop of dozens of flower arrangements that included a deer with antlers, reflecting the Emery High graduate's love of hunting and the outdoors.
Nielsen's family has had a difficult time understanding why fate would take a young father who loved to spend time with his wife and their 4-year-old son and 1-year-old daughter, said Nielsen's sister, Nadine Wilson. Nielsen and his son were great “fishing buddies,” she said.
After the funeral, a procession led to the cemetery in Elmo, the tiny burg where Nielsen grew up and where his parents still live. Emery County Sheriff Lamar Guymon sent a posse of deputies to accompany the cortege from Huntington to Elmo, where Nielsen was buried.
Nielsen's wife, Trish, received a letter this week from the LDS Church First Presidency expressing condolences and promising prayers on behalf of the Nielsen family. “Cory touched the lives of many as they witnessed his love and devotion to his family,” the church leaders wrote.
Nielsen, Russell Dean
Ogden Standard Examiner January 17, 1958
Four Men Entombed in Carbon Mine
Price - Four miners were entombed deep inside the Spring Canyon Coal Co. mine 13 miles northwest of here early today when a “bounce” caused a severe cave-in. A company official said it was not known if the men were buried by the fall of coal and rock or if they were trapped-possibly safely—behind it. “We're hopeful they are behind it and safe,” he said. The cave-in site is about 5,000 feet from the main mine entrance. It is 2,000 feet down the hillside mine's fourth left lateral where the mine itself dips downward.
Families of the men waited outside the mine entrance for any word on whether the four men were alive. The four have a total of 11 children. It was believed the cave-in, which accompanied the “bounce” or sudden pressure change inside the mine, occurred between 1 and 1:30 a.m. The ground shock from the bounce was so severe it loosened the entire top face of coal in the cave-in area and workers were forced to timber their rescue shaft as they tunneled toward the trapped men.
The spokesman said the latest report was that rescue workers had tunneled 800 feet through the giant pile of debris in an effort to reach the miners. The four trapped men were identified as William Daniels, 47, the mine face boss; his son-in-law, Dean Nielsen, 29, the shuttlecar operator; Cecil Garcia, 36, a rope rider, and Keith Anderson, 30, a motorman. Garcia is from Helper. The other three are from Spring Canyon.
A Bulletin attached to the above article:
Price - The body of one of four trapped coal miners was recovered this afternoon. He was Cecilio Garcia, 36, father of four children. There was no word of the other men.
Ogden Standard Examiner, Saturday, Jan. 18, 1958
Third Miner's Body Found; No Hope Held for Fourth
SPRING CANYON - Blackfaced, dirty workers recovered today the body of a third man trapped deep in a coal mine by an earth tremor that caused a cave-in. A fourth man was still caught somewhere under tons of rock and rescuers held no hope he would be found alive. He is Dean Nielsen, 27. The body of Keith Anderson, 30, was uncovered this morning. Both he and Nielsen were from Spring Canyon, a tiny company mining town of dreary brown sandstone about 120 miles southeast of Salt Lake City.
Late last night workmen, erecting timbers as they proceeded, against the possibility of further cave-ins, uncovered the body of William Daniels, 47, also of Spring Canyon. Earlier they found the body of Cecilio Garcia, 36, the father of seven children from nearby Helper. He was not caught beneath the torrent of falling coal set loose when a “bounce” - a shift in the mountain above the mine—sent the rocks crashing down.
Garcia apparently was hit on the head by a flying rock. A doctor said he never knew what hit him. Rescuers at first hoped for another miracle such as occurred at nearby Sunnyside two years ago when three men survived after being buried in a similar cave-in for 72 hours. There was no such miracle here. The faces of the workers showed they knew it as they marched wearily away from the mine portal after a shift of rescue work. Two officials expressed what the miners hadn't the heart to say.
The mine manager, C. E. Pauley, said he didn't see how the men could be found alive. And Clair Nowren, a safety engineer, said it was inconceivable. The four men were working overtime to remove equipment from one of the shafts that honeycomb a mountain. If they had left at the end of their regular shift, the mine would have been empty.
Salt Lake Tribune, Sunday Morning, January 19, 1958
Death in Spring Canyon
All Utah joins the bereaved families and friends of the four victims of the Spring Canyon coal mine disaster in mourning his tragedy. While investigation has not been completed, this appears to be the kind of coal mine accident that is practically unavoidable. A “bounce” or earth slip above the tunnel in which the men were working caused a sudden cave-in, filling the tunnel with coal dust. An electric wire short or other spark caused by the cave-in set off an explosion.
The mine had been inspected only about six weeks ago, but a state safety inspector was quoted as saying: “No inspection could foretell this.” Underground mining by the very nature of things is a hazardous occupation. Despite, all the safety precautions in the world, some accidents will happen. Utah actually has had quite a safe record, for this is the worst coal mine disaster in years. This does not lessen the blow to those bereaved. It is bleak tragedy to four wives suddenly made widows, to 17 children of the four men, and to two children yet unborn. Our heartfelt sympathy goes out.
Salt Lake Tribune January 19, 1958
Mine Shaft Gives Up Third Victim's Body
PRICE - The body of the third of four Carbon County miners trapped early Friday in a mine cave-in was brought to the surface at 10:20 a.m. Saturday. The badly crushed and burned body of Keith Arthur Anderson, 30, was found under tons of rock and coal about 5,000 feet from the shaft entrance in an unused section of the Spring Canyon Coal Co. mine. Previously recovered were the bodies of Celilio Garcia, 35, of Helper, brought up at noon Friday, and face boss William Daniels, 47, recovered late Friday evening.
Still missing and presumed dead is Russell Dean Nielsen, 29, son-in-law of Mr. Daniels. From the position of the bodies already recovered, officials believed Mr. Nielsen is buried under eight feet of rock some 80 feet further down the choked shaft. Rescue work was hampered all day Friday by an explosion and fire following the cave in, which was caused by a “bounce” or shift in the mountain above the mine. All fallen rock must be recovered and removed from the shaft by hand, further slowing efforts to reach Mr. Nielsen.
Keith Arthur Anderson was born at Emery, Emery County, September 6, 1927, the son of Clinton C. and Florence Abelin Anderson. He married Edna Sheets. He had been a resident of Spring Canyon for the past nine years.
Surviving are his parents, Carbonville; widow, three daughters, Susanne, Connie and Dawn, Spring Canyon; two brothers and one sister, Preston C. U. S. Navy, Fallon, Nev.; Maurice, Carbonville; Mrs. Rine Erickson, Spring Canyon. Funeral will be Tuesday at 1 p.m. in Price Tabernacle, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints with burial in Emery Cemetery.
William Daniels was born March 23, 1910, Lafayette, Colo., the son of Charles and Jeannie Daniels. He was married to Elsieanna Mitchell at Grand Junction, Colo. In 1933. He had been a resident of Spring Canyon since 1952.
Surviving are his parents, Oak Creek, Colo.; his widow, three sons and two daughters, Gilbert, Steamboat Springs, Colo.; Stanley, U. S. Navy, San Diego, Calif.; Charles Albert, Emily Jane, and Mrs. Dean Nielsen, Spring Canyon; and a brother, Albert, Carlsbad, N.M.
Cecilio Garcia, was born March 29, 1921 in Canyoncito, N. M. son of Fredencio and Garguerita Gurule Garcia. He was married to Solema Garcia in Helper, June 3, 1945. He is survived by his wife and the following children: Virginia, Linda Sue, Lucy Margie, Mary Jean, Lawrance Cecil and Eddie F. all of Helper; four brothers, Dommitlio, Lee, Ferman and Joe; two sisters, Sophia Chevez and Livie Lucero. The Rosary will be said Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in Mitchell Funeral Home. Requiem Mass will be said Wednesday at 10:30 a.m. in Helper St. Anthony Church.
Daily Herald Jan. 19, 1958
3 Bodies Recovered From Mine - Digging Continued at Spring Canyon for Body of 4th Miner.
PRICE - Rescue workers Saturday uncovered the mangled body of a third miner, one of four trapped Friday thousands of feet inside a mountain coal mine. Digging continued for the fourth miner under a 2,000 foot long caved in tunnel of the Spring Canyon Coal Co. mine 13 miles northwest of Price. The cave-in was followed by an explosion and fire. Two bodies were uncovered Friday. The victim found this morning was Keith Anderson, 30, Spring Canyon.
The find further weakened hopes that the fourth miner, Dean Nielsen, 29, Spring Canyon, would be found alive. Workers said they had found no trace of him by mid-morning Friday the body of Cecelio Garcia, 36, was found. Late Friday night rescue workers found the body of William Daniels, 47.
Daniels and Garcia, along with Anderson and Nielsen, Daniel's son-in-law, were working overtime removing old tracks and equipment when the tunnel collapsed with an earthquake-like bounce which dumped tons of coal, rock and debris on the men.
Teams of rescue workers reached Garcia's body shortly after noon Friday, 11 hours after the cave-in occurred. He was found in a clear area at the far end of the caved in section. Officials said his skull had been crushed by falling debris. The other three miners were trapped beneath the fall itself. From the start, rescue crews knew there was little chance any of the three could be found alive.
However, the rescuers remember another mine cave-in near here April 18, 1956 at the Sunnyside mine of Kaiser Steel Co. In that cave-in, three of four trapped miners were found “miraculously” alive after nearly 40 hours entombment. Rescue crews from the Sunnyside mine joined Spring Canyon workers in the rescue effort. Diggers encountered fires inside the mine Friday but extinguished them.
Salt Lake Tribune Jan. 20, 1958
Mine Workers Carry Out Fourth Body
SPRING CANYON - The Body of a fourth Carbon County coal miner killed in a Friday cave-in was recovered Sunday shortly before noon in the Spring Canyon Coal Co, mine here. The body of Russell Dean Nielson, 29, was brought to the surface about 11:15 a.m. He was badly crushed. Three others, Cecilio Garcia, 35, Helper; William Daniels, 47, father-in-law of Nielsen, and Keith Anderson, 30, Spring Canyon, also were killed.
Otto A. Wiesley, chairman of the State Industrial Commission, said Sunday that full-scale investigation into the explosion and cave-in will be made. The exact cause of the blast is undetermined, Mr. Wiesley said. It probably was touched off when the earth settled. Russell Dean Nielsen was born April 5, 1928, in Salem, a son of William and Hazel Beddoes Nielsen. He attended schools in Spanish Fork. He married Barbara Daniels May 28, 1954, in Spring Canyon.
Surviving are his parents, Spring Canyon; his widow; two sons, Russell and Robert Joe, Spring Canyon, and two sisters and three brothers, Mrs. Alice Kirkwood, Martin, Carbon County; Joan and Jerry, Spring Canyon; Rulon, Sunnyside, Carbon County, and William E. Grand Junction, Colo. Joint funeral services for Mr. Nielsen and Mr. Daniels will be conducted Monday at 2 p.m. at the Mitchell Funeral Home in Price. The body of Mr. Daniels will be sent to Oak Creek, Colo, for burial. Additional services for Mr. Nielsen will be conducted Tuesday at 1 p.m. at the Palmyra Ward Chapel, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, in Spanish Fork.
Ogden Standard Examiner - January 20, 1958
LAST BODY OUT, PROBE READY IN MINE DEATHS
Spring Canyon - Workmen removed the last body yesterday from the rubble of a tunnel blast and cave-in deep inside the Spring Canyon Coal Co. mine here. The cave-in, last Friday, buried four men, killing them all. The last body found was that of Dean Nielsen, 29. Its discovery brought a temporary halt to rubble-clearing operations that had been in progress, round the clock, since the cave-in early Friday morning.
Already removed were the bodies of Cecilio Garcia, 35, Helper; Keith Anderson, 30 Spring Canyon, and William Daniels, 47, Nielsen's father-in-law. Chairman Otto A. Wiesley of the State Industrial Commission said here a full-scale investigation into the tragedy will be conducted this week.
He speculated that a “bounce” or movement caused by earth settling, probably started the rock and rubble down on the men, and friction or a hot trolley wire could have ignited the resulting coal dust, causing the explosion.
Nielson, Gilmer B.
Copied from FamilySearch FamilyTrees
Salt Lake Tribune, The | Salt Lake City, Utah | Friday, March 16, 1945 | Page 11
Carbon Mine Explosion Kills 2 More Tribune Intel-mountain Wire
KENILWORTH. Carbon County —Death toll in the Independent Coal and Coke Co. coal mine dust explosion was swelled to three Thursday, with two more miners in critical condition in Price hospital, and six more listed as serious. The blast occurred Wednesday. The rest of the 16-man crew was back at work, four uninjured, and one back on the job after emergency treatment for burns and shock.
The three died of severe burns and injuries. They are Gilmer Nielsen and Clem Hawks, Kenilworth, and Ivan Russell Jackson, Price. Being treated are Richard Sarrimond, Arthur Smith, David Bennett and Arthur Lermusiax in Price hospital, and Nick Markakis, Iven Jensen, George Archibque and Felipe Armizo are in Kenilworth hospital. Alcaria Quintane was treated at Kenilworth and was back at work Thursday.
Ivan Russell Jackson, 27, who died Thursday at 3 a. m., was born in Lehi Dec. 1, 1917, a son of John S. and Victoria College Jackson. He had lived in Price two years. Survivors include his widow, Mrs. Vola Holley Jackson, Price; parents, and four sons and daughters, Erven, Verla, Lloyd and LeEarl. Price, and the following brothers and sisters, Lester W. Jackson, Lehi; Forrest Jackson, Draper; Floyd Jackson, Washington, D. C.; Mrs. Violet Chidester and Mrs. Fay Lamb, Price; Mrs. Myrtle Lovendale, Riverton; Mrs. Virginia Rasmussen, Salt Lake City, and Norman and Ronald Jackson, Lehi.
Funeral services to be conducted in Lehi will be announced later by the Wallace mortuary, Price. Gilmer B. Nielsen, 35, who died Wednesday at 9:10 p.m. in Price hospital, was born June 27, 1909, in Manti, Utah, a son of James and Florence E. Anderson Nielsen. He was a resident of Helper, Survivors include his widow, Mrs. Delma Rostron Nielsen, Helper: his mother, Gunnison; three children, Gilmer Regnol, Bobby J. and Cora Lou Nielsen, Helper, and three brothers, Melvin Nielsen, Lehi; Roldo Nielsen, Long Bench, Cal., and Alfonzo Nielsen, Salt Lake City.
Funeral services will be conducted Sunday at 11 a. m. at the Helper civic auditorium. Burial will be in Manti under direction of Mitchell funeral home, Price.