Miners' Lives Celebrated By Loved Ones
12 Miners Loved Families, God, NASCAR, And A Good Laugh
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Play CBS Video Video West Va. Honors 12 Coal Miners A community shaken by the death of 12 coal miners gathered for an emotional memorial. Randall Pinkston reports from West Virginia as family and friends took the first steps to move on.
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Video Honoring The Sago Coal Miners More than 2,000 people from across West Virginia attended a chapel service in honor of the 12 coal miners who died after an explosion in Sago. Susan Roberts reports.
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Mourners at a memorial service honoring the victims of the Sago Mine explosion release balloons outside of Wesley Chapel on the West Virginia Wesleyan campus in Buckhannon, W.Va., Jan 15, 2006. (AP)
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Wanda Groves is led by her son John, to her seat, Sunday, Jan. 15, 2006, in Buckhannon, W. Va. during a memorial service. Her son Jerry Groves is one of the 12 miners who died. (AP)
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Gayle Manchin, left, the first lady of W. Va., stands with Anna McCloy after receiving a statue of a miner Sunday, Jan. 15, 2006, in Buckhannon, W. Va. during a memorial service. (AP)
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Photo Essay All Hope Lost Anguish besets a West Virginia town as 12 of 13 miners are found dead after an explosion.
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Photo Essay Mine Explosion Tragedy unfolds after a coal mine explosion in Tallmansville, West Virginia.
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Interactive Mine Tragedy Here is a closer look at the miners who perished in West Virginia and the people who are mourning them.
"I'm sure there was a prayer meeting goin' on in that ol' coal mine the other evening like we've never seen before," Sago Baptist Church Pastor Wease Day told more than 1,800 people gathered at the memorial service.
"I can hear Jim Bennett hollerin' 'Boys you need the Lord in your life.' And I can hear (George) Junior Hamner say 'Does anybody got any cards? Let's play a round.' I can hear them now," said Day, whose church became the center for families and others who gathered to await word of their loved ones after an explosion in the Sago Mine.
Bennett, 61, and Hamner, 54, were among the 12 miners who died after a Jan. 2 explosion as they reopened the mine following a holiday break. Investigators have yet to re-enter the mine to determine what went wrong. The blast killed one miner immediately and spread carbon monoxide that slowly killed the 11 others as they waited 260 feet below ground for rescue.
The only survivor, Randal McCloy Jr., 26, remained in a coma Sunday at West Virginia University's Ruby Memorial Hospital.
McCloy's wife, Anna, attended the memorial service and was the first of the miners' families to light 13 candles of honor. First lady Gayle Manchin handed each family a statue of a coal miner.
"We cannot know the purpose of this tragedy," said Gov. Joe Manchin, "but I pledge to you we will determine the cause."
Several speakers recounted the anxious hours of waiting after the accident, reports CBS News correspondent Randall Pinkston , but there was no mention of the painful episode when families were first told all 12 had survived only to learn that the first report was wrong (video).
Mike Rose, whose father-in-law was fallen miner Jerry Groves, said during the service that the family takes comfort in knowing that Groves "is in a better place, being held in the arms of a loving savior."
Organizers of the service said family and friends had requested that the media not seek comment from them before or after the service.
During the two-hour service a heart-wrenching photo montage showed the men as they were in life — husbands, fathers, fishermen and West Virginians who followed a strong tradition of digging coal.
"There are no better men than coal miners," said author Homer Hickam, who wrote the memoir "Rocket Boys" about growing up in a southern West Virginia coal community. "The American economy rests on the back of our coal miners. We could not prosper without them."
©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.




