Kansas City Region
Bates County's coal and strip-mine legacy sits with DNR reclamation
Bates County has a coal-mining and strip-mine past, especially around Rich Hill, and the disturbed land and its reclamation fall under Missouri DNR, which matters for rural property and local history alike
Coal is part of Bates County’s story. The town of Rich Hill, in the southern part of the county, grew with coal mining. Later, surface mining and strip mining (where the soil on top is stripped off to reach the coal) left marks on the land. In many cases that disturbed land was reclaimed, which means it was repaired for new use.
In Missouri, the Department of Natural Resources (DNR) is the agency that regulates surface mining and the cleanup of mined land. So DNR is the best source for where mining happened, how reclamation went, and any land-use concerns.
If you are looking into rural property or local history here, start with DNR’s mining and reclamation programs. Do not judge a parcel’s past just by how it looks today. This is background, not a warning about danger. Confirm site details with DNR, and get local history through the State Historical Society of Missouri.
References
Where this fits: this note belongs to Bates County. See every local note for the county on its page.