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Smith goes on: <br />Thus started the longest coal strike in Colorado history — four years and eight <br />months.... [F]or the northern field, most union men were out of work for almost <br />five years. During that time, street fights, knifings, and sudden gunfire became <br />commonplace. There were mysterious explosions and unexplained fires. Picket <br />strikers fought with children of scab workers. At the end, almost five years later, <br />the full-scale industrial war would be discussed by United States citizens and <br />would finally come to the attention of such absentee mine owners as the reclusive <br />businessman ... John D. Rockefeller, Jr. <br />(Smith, 106-107) <br />Mine owners resisted unionization and refused to buckle under. They began to bring in <br />strikebreakers, or scabs. Many of these men were recent immigrants, some from Eastern <br />Europe. <br />As described in the film Louisville: <br />Mine operators brought in hired guns from back East to protect the non -union <br />workers and by 1910 had built stockades around their properties, turning their <br />mines into armed camps. Company housing was built and strikebreakers were <br />urged to live on site for their own protection. <br />The Hecla Mine in Louisville, located at the northeast corner of South Boulder Road and <br />Highway 42, was at the center of this labor war. In 1910, it was one of Louisville's oldest <br />mines, having been in operation since 1890. <br />By the summer of 1910, the owner of the Hecla Mine constructed buildings for the <br />strikebreakers inside a fenced compound. The purpose was to keep the strikebreakers on <br />the premises so that they would not have a reason to leave and thereby risk their lives. <br />This effort represented the company's decision to dig in for a long strike. The buildings <br />that were constructed for the strikebreakers were a large boardinghouse for about 75 <br />men; about twenty-six mine camp houses that were called "Hecla Heights"; and a <br />"Casino" for entertainment and gambling. The building that is now at 1800 Plaza Drive <br />was the Casino. According to Smith, "The gambling hall became a great financial asset to <br />the operator who, after paying Hecla workers on Friday afternoon, got the money back <br />over the weekend ..." (Smith, 108-09) <br />The accompanying map, obtained by author Carolyn Conarroe from the files of the Rocky <br />Mountain Fuel Company, shows the location of the Hecla compound buildings. (The top of <br />the map represents the direction east.) The mine camp houses at Hecla Heights were at <br />the very corner of South Boulder Road and Highway 42. The Casino was just to the east of <br />2 <br />