Rogue Scholar Posts

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Appalachian FiguresHarlan County KYLeslie County KY
Published in Appalachianhistorian.org
Author Alex Hall

Appalachian Figures Series – The Story of Travis Glenn Brock of Leslie, Kentucky On a winter morning in 2010, deep under Leslie County, a young miner from Helton was doing the work he had learned as a teenager. He stood beside a remote controlled cutting machine in a crosscut of the Abner Branch Rider mine, trimming the mine floor and ribs so the crew could keep advancing.

Appalachian HistoryHarlan County KY
Published in Appalachianhistorian.org
Author Alex Hall

Appalachian History Series – The Coal Camp Post Office at the Heart of a Company Town The Benham Post Office has never been the biggest building in town. It does not tower over the valley like the old tipples once did, and it does not have the imposing bulk of the commissary that now houses the Kentucky Coal Museum. What it has instead is persistence.

Repurposed AppalachiaHarlan County KY
Published in Appalachianhistorian.org
Author Alex Hall

Repurposed Appalachia Series​ – The Kentucky Coal Mining Museum in Benham, Kentucky On a gray morning in the Tri-Cities, the old company store at Benham still anchors Main Street. Brick walls rise in neat lines against the slope of Black Mountain, and the wide storefront windows look out on a town that once lived by coal and corporate schedules.

Repurposed AppalachiaHarlan County KY
Published in Appalachianhistorian.org
Author Alex Hall

Repurposed Appalachia Series​ – Benham Theater of Harlan County On the quiet streets of Benham, the brick facade of the old theater still faces Circle Park, its green ticket booth and canopy standing out against the red walls and the backdrop of Black Mountain.

Repurposed AppalachiaHarlan County KY
Published in Appalachianhistorian.org
Author Alex Hall

Repurposed Appalachia Series​ – The Benham Schoolhouse Inn of Harlan County If you stand in the center of Benham and look toward the long brick facade of the old schoolhouse, it is easy to see what Wisconsin Steel and International Harvester were trying to build in the 1920s. The company did not just carve driftmouths into Black Mountain and lay tipple tracks along Looney Creek.

R-universeInfrastructure
Published in rOpenSci - open tools for open science

We refactored the R-universe CI workflows to make it possible to run the exact same workflow from your own GitHub repository. This allows you to test or debug the build and check process on your R package, exactly as it will happen on R-universe, but without actually deploying to https://r-universe.dev.

Repurposed AppalachiaHarlan County KY
Published in Appalachianhistorian.org
Author Alex Hall

Repurposed Appalachia Series​ – From Depot Yard to Coal Miners Memorial Park in Benham, Kentucky Benham sits in a narrow valley beneath Black Mountain, the highest point in Kentucky. A century ago this was one of the most productive coal camps in the world, a company town built by Wisconsin Steel, a subsidiary of International Harvester.

Repurposed AppalachiaHarlan County KY
Published in Appalachianhistorian.org
Author Alex Hall

Repurposed Appalachia Series​ – Benham City Hall of Harlan County In the middle of Benham, Kentucky, where Looney Creek bends through a narrow valley below Black Mountain, the city hall does not look like a grand marble temple of government. It is a compact red brick office building, one of a ring of matching structures that frame a small park. Coal trucks once rattled past just outside its doors.