In 1921, some 10,000 West Virginia coal miners-- outraged over years of brutality and exploitation-- picked
up their Winchesters and marched against their tormentors, the powerful mine owners who ruled their corrupt state.
For ten days the miners fought a pitched battle against an opposing legion of deputies, state police, and makeshift
militia. Only the intervention of a Federal expeditionary force ended this undeclared war. In The Battle of Blair
Mountain, Robert Shogan shows this long-neglected slice of American history to be a saga of the conflicting political,
economic, and cultural forces that shaped the power structure of twentieth-century America.