In coal mines.
10 shilings
Coal miners in the Victorian era were paid low wages, typically earning around 15-25 shillings per week. The work was extremely dangerous and the conditions were harsh, leading to widespread poverty among coal miners and their families.
Yes, coal miners work in coal mines to extract coal from the ground. They use heavy equipment to dig tunnels and remove coal from deposits in the earth.
The type of dangerous they had were such as factory workers, chimney sweeps, coal miners and so on.
Victorian miners found a variety of minerals and ores in mines, such as coal, gold, silver, lead, tin, and copper. They also encountered dangerous conditions underground, including poor ventilation, flooding, and the risk of collapses.
A coal miners work clothes
No, they are copper miners.
Coal miners often make 20 to 25 dollars per hour. With shift work and overtime, it is possible to make over 100 thousand dollars in a year.
It is not stated if they were brothers. They did all work together in the coal mine.
Mostly as farmers, slaves or miners (tin coal etc).
You can read about the history of coal miners from Wikipedia's official website. You can also read about the history of coal miners from Mining USA's official website.
Women were 6% of coal miners in the USA in 2013, according to National Mining Association statistics.