Before Eckley became a museum village, it served Hollywood as a movie set (
The Molly Maguires, 1970), such is the power of this bleak streetscape, laid out in 1854 by the Sharpe, Weiss Company. As in the commonwealth's other early corporate landscapes, Eckley's owners lived among their workers, but there is no romanticism here—only the grim rationality that would reach full flower in the next generation of anthracite towns. Indeed, given the nature of the industry, such places were assumed to be impermanent. Like an army camp, gradations of corporate rank are encoded into Eckley's town plan. Status decreases from west to east, proceeding from mine owner Richard Sharpe's cross-gabled Gothic Revival house (1861) and the company doctor's office, to single houses for mine
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Eckley Miner's Village
1850s–c. 1930. Off PA 940, 9 miles east of Hazleton
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