Families begin burying 12 coal miners



Doctors were waiting for the one surviving miner to awaken.
PHILIPPI, W.Va. (AP) -- The funerals began early. There were just so many in West Virginia coal mining towns this Sunday.
And after the agonizing heartbreak that played out on television as families learned that 12 miners they thought were alive in the Sago Mine had actually died, the funerals were, for the most part, a private affair.
The miners' relatives and their tightknit communities filled the services, while police created a protective ring around funeral homes, asking the press not to intrude.
Even from a distance, the pain was clear as nearly 100 mourners hugged one another, many staring at their feet as they walked inside to remember Jackie Weaver, a 52-year-old electrician who had spent 26 years working in the mines.
Weaver always wrote "Jesus saves" in the coal dust of his mine car as he and colleagues descended into the mine, said his cousin, Scotty Felton, 42, of Philippi.
"He was a wonderful man with a wonderful sense of humor," said Melanie Hayhurst, 44, a friend from Fairmont who said she and her family had known Weaver for about 15 years.
Weaver's family planned to bury him next to his son, who died as a child about 20 years ago in a motorcycle accident, Hayhurst said. "He was a Christian," she said of Weaver, "so I am not worried."
Six on Sunday
There were so many funerals it was occasionally difficult for the funeral home employees to remember the times and locations without checking.
Wright Funeral Home worker Pete Sandridge's eyes filled with tears when he was asked if he knew any of the miners personally. All he could manage was to hold up four fingers, then he walked away.
First was Martin Toler Jr., whose funeral was Sunday morning in Tesla.
Next was Weaver's service in Philippi at 1 p.m. Services for David Lewis, Jesse Jones and Alva Bennett were an hour later, in Philippi and Buckhannon. Jerry Groves' memorial service was later in Cleveland.
"I know I'll see him again," said Groves' wife of nearly 29 years, Debbie, speaking during the memorial service. "Eternity is forever. Our time here is just a vapor."
More funerals are planned this week -- three today, two Tuesday. Another had yet to be scheduled.
The lone survivor of the mine remain hospitalized and had yet to wake up Sunday afternoon after several days of heavy sedation.
Near the mine, which has been sealed off by federal and state regulators, more than 100 people gathered Sunday morning at the Sago Baptist Church, the building where they kept vigil for more than 40 hours after the explosion last Monday.
Minister's words
Churchgoers sang hymns, including "The Sweet Bye and Bye" and "Farther Along," which speak of accepting God's unfathomable plan, and the Rev. Wease Day urged worshippers not to look for someone to blame.
Instead, the Rev. Mr. Day said, worshippers should imagine they had only 10 hours to live, and write a note about how they would spend those final hours.
The surviving miner, 26-year-old Randal McCloy Jr., was hospitalized in Morgantown, after being transferred late Saturday from Pittsburgh, where he had undergone special treatment for carbon monoxide poisoning.
He had been in a medically induced coma to allow his brain time to heal, and although hospital officials said in a statement Sunday that his sedation had been stopped, they said it would take awhile for the medication to clear his system.
"It has been very difficult to allow him to awaken, although that is our hope today," said Dr. Larry Roberts, the head of McCloy's treatment team at West Virginia University's Ruby Memorial Hospital. Once that happens, they can begin neurological testing to determine the extent of the damage McCloy suffered in the mine.
Roberts said McCloy had shown signs of improvement since Saturday but remained in critical condition.
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