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At a recent rainy summer reunion, my great aunt slapped a stack of old photos I’d never seen before on the kitchen table next to the dessert bars.
In one photograph, a man in his 50s stares at some fixed point in the distance. The future, perhaps, but more likely some piece of equipment. He wears a hard hat, prescription safety glasses, a rumpled work shirt and high-waisted pants rolled up at the cuffs. His breast pockets stretch taut with pens, pencils and small instruments necessary to the work of a mining engineer. Even in black and white, I see how the red iron ore stains his boots.
This man is my great-grandfather, Ward Brown. I never knew him. I was told that after I was born, just before he died, he held me in his bony arms and said hello. In this picture, he is strong, captain of one of the last underground mines near Crosby, Minn., on the Cuyuna Iron Range.
The year is 1957. The mine gapes open behind him, yet still just a relative pinhole at the bottom of the massive Pennington Mine pit. Crisscrossed boards mark 20-foot steel bolts that support the drift blasted into greenschist rock. Inside, blue-gray ore spills out like candy from a curb-stomped piñata.
One of the men working in the background is my grandfather, Ward Jr., whose young son — my father, Ward III — was learning to walk just a couple miles away. The picture can’t show this, but the mine quickly grew into a dangerous cavern, bigger than an opera house, as ore kept falling from the back. They got as much as they could before it collapsed. My grandfather never knew if it made much money, which means it almost certainly did not.
The photograph recorded a brief moment in a historical maelstrom. Soon, the Pennington closed for good. When the pumps stopped, the pit filled with water. (My great-grandfather’s mine now rests more than 100 feet under what is now the Cuyuna Country State Recreation Area.) So the Browns went home to the Mesabi Range to chase the foolish notion that they might master metal for good.