In A Room for the Summer , Fritz Wolff takes the reader on a memorable journey into the rough-and-tumble world of hardrock mining, recounting his experiences both above and below ground as an apprentice engineer during the late 1950s. In June 1956, at the age of eighteen, Wolff went to work for the Bunker Hill Company in Kellogg, Idaho, in the Coeur d’Alene region. Arriving in a tired 1939 Chevy coupe, with about twenty dollars in his pocket, Wolff spent three college summers working for Bunker Hill. He learned firsthand the pleasures of camaraderie with fellow workers and the dangers of working underground. Today the hardrock mining industry is all but forgotten. The Bunker Hill Company is known, not because it produced 430 million ounces of silver and not because it provided a living for thousands of families for more than a century, but because it is one of the largest EPA superfund sites. Wolff does not idealize the mining industry; for many workers the conditions were nightmarish. But in spare, lyrical prose, he evokes the intrinsic goodness of a simpler time, when hardworking folks went about their business with courage, humor, and lots of gumption.
It was so interesting to read a book about a college student living in Kellogg and working in the Bunker Hill mine during the years I was a young child. So many names and places were familiar and other places don't exist anymore. I learned so much about how the Bunker Hill mine and other mines in the Silver Valley operated. Since my dad didn't work in the mine I didn't learn as much at the dinner table about the mine as I did the zinc plant. Near the end of the book the strike happens and I was old enough to remember when my dad and other union workers at Bunker Hill were on strike. Dad became Mr. Mom when I was in kindergarten. I highly recommend this book as a fascinating memoir of life in a mining down in the late fifties.