Count Kinsky working as a miner
After his conviction in the summer of 1949, the political prisoner Karel Vavřínek served his term in Slovak Leopold. In early 1950, he was transferred to Jáchymov, where he worked in the “Bratrství,” (Brotherhood), mine. He was assigned to the geodesy department led by a Russian engineer by the name of Komarov. Karel Vavřínek studied the basics of geodesy from the only available textbook in the Jáchymov camp. He then worked as a markscheider, his task being to measure the volume of excavated soil. “I made friends there with Jan Kinsky, Count von Kinsky. He worked in the mine, on the vein as they say. I had to measure the volume of the earth he dug out. Here and there, I’d add some twenty centimeters to his output, which produced quite a huge number of extra cubic meters of the volume of excavated earth, which meant higher earnings for him. Then, much later, Count Kinsky spoke publicly about those times, he claimed that he had been a good miner. I actually contributed to his good reputation by my benevolent measurements,” he recalled. Karel Vavřínek served in the Bratrství mine until his release from the labor camp in 1952. He would spend the following year in the mine as well, working there voluntarily as a geodesist.
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