How I “met” Dr. Elizabeth Hayes, hero of A MIGHTY FORCE
“How did you develop an interest in a woman from the Pennsylvania hinterlands?” That question came from Barb Emmer, who lives in those “hinterlands” herself. Like me, Barb is a Dr. Betty fan who’s done a huge amount of her own research into Hayes’s role in leading 350 coal miners on a 1945 strike for decent living conditions and clean drinking water in their company-owned town. She’s also given me the great honor of an invitation to talk about A MIGHTY FORCE at a luncheon scheduled for March 19, 2022, during Women’s History Month.
I’m tremendously excited about speaking on Dr. Betty’s home turf, and I expect that others will ask me that same question there: How did a writer from Brooklyn get interested in someone from the north-central Pennsylvania hills?
Ironically, I have to thank Wall Street for introducing me to Dr. Elizabeth Hayes of Force, PA. The strike, sparked by her resignation as company doctor for Shawmut Mining, shed light on the questionable financial practices of the railroad that owned the mining concern. In the end, Hayes’s actions forced the Pittsburg, Shawmut & Northern Railroad to go out of business. She was the woman who ended the nation’s longest receivership — PS&N heads had drawn handsome salaries for decades while leaving the rail line bankrupt — and the business press saluted her for it.
I discovered this by searching for women’s names in the year-end indexes of a pocket-sized magazine called the Investor’s Reader. From 1943 to 1973, this biweekly publication ran breezy stories about business and finance. Merrill Lynch put it out, hoping to draw average people into the stock market. Most articles, predictably, revolved around males. But, as I noticed while writing my previous books, it wasn’t unusual for Investor’s Reader to write features about women. A fair number of women wrote for the magazine over its lifetime, perhaps because it launched in the war years.
So, having drawn on Investor’s Reader for my two previous books about women in business — POPOVERS AND CANDLELIGHT, about restaurateur Patricia Murphy, and SCAN ARTIST — about speed-reading marketer Evelyn Wood — I went to the New York Public Library to consult the year-end lists of Investor’s Reader articles. I began with the 1940s because I’m interested in that decade, and I skimmed each December list of the decade for women’s first names.
An Investor’s Reader feature about Patricia Murphy, which I drew on for my previous bookThis took me to articles about one woman with a successful textile mill and another who ran a profitable brewery with her husband. Neither seemed to be likely subjects for a book. As in fairy tales, the third try was the charm. My authorial antennas quivered madly as I read a short summary about Dr. Betty Hayes and her battle with the coal company, which, the article told me, “made front-rank news in almost every daily paper in the East as well as in periodicals like Business Week.”
From there, I found the articles, as well as the photos at the Historical Society of Pennsylvania, the letters and papers in the collections of Indiana University of Pennsylvania, Cornell, and Penn State, and the memories of Hayes’s niece and stepson. To all who have helped me, I’m profoundly grateful. And to Merrill Lynch (then Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Beane) a special tip of the hat (with veil — remember, this is the Forties)!
[image error]My first introduction to Dr. Elizabeth Hayes: the section headed, “The Doctor Prescribed.” No photo, unfortunately.


