The Penn-Anthracite Section is a vibrant group serving the following Central and Eastern Pennsylvania Counties, and the State of New Jersey:
- Berks
- Bucks
- Carbon
- Chester
- Columbia
- Dauphin
- Delaware
- Lackawanna
- Lancaster
- Lebanon
- Lehigh
- Luzerne
- Lycoming
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- Monroe
- Montgomery
- Montour
- Northampton
- Northumberland
- Philadelphia
- Pike
- Schuylkill
- Sullivan
- Susquehanna
- Wayne
- Wyoming
- York
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New Jersey:
- Montgomery
- Atlantic
- Burlington
- Camden
- Cape May
- Cumberland
- Gloucester
- Hunterdon
- Mercer
- Ocean
- Salem
- Warren
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Our History
The American Institute of Mining Engineers was founded in 1871 at a meeting at the Wyoming Valley Hotel on South River Street in Wilkes-Barre. Present at this meeting were a group of 22 mining engineers, mostly from the area of today's Pennsylvania Anthracite Section of the Society of Mining Engineers Carbon, Columbia, Dauphin, Lackawanna, Luzerne, Lycoming, Montour, Northumberland, Schuylkill, Sullivan, and Wyoming Counties in Northeastern Pennsylvania. After the three-day meeting there were 71 members of AIME.
A record of the first meeting is contained in
Transactions of AIME Volume I. (496 pages)
Pennsylvania Anthracite Coal Production in 1871 was 15.5 million tons. By 1914, it had grown to 91 million tons.
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In 1911 the Institute had grown to over 4000 members and the first three local chapters were founded in New York, Boston and Spokane.
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On February 17, 1914, the Pennsylvania Anthracite Section became the 10th local chapter of AIME. The Local Section was led by Robert Van Arnsdale Norris, a Wilkes-Barre Mining Consultant and expert in Mine Drainage for its first 15 years.
AIME membership in 1972 was 50,000, while Pennsylvania Anthracite Coal Production was down to only 6.5 million tons. During this period, the local Section almost collapsed, with no meetings being held in 1972, 1973, 1974 or 1975.
Due to the efforts of a small group of members including Cy Kranick, Ivor Williams, Charlie Kuebler, Walter Haentjens, Peter Haentjens, Bob Rissinger, Ken Wesner and Charlie Zink, the Section was revived, and the ongoing efforts of Secretaries of the Section, notably Charlie Zink, Don Featherstone, and Joe Martarano, the Section has continued as a vibrant group in Northeastern Pennsylvania.