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Coal
Mining and Railways in the North East
A
Victorian representation of Industry on the Tyne
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For detailed
information on individual coal mines in North East England I highly
recommend that you visit the Durham Mining museum website at http:www//dmm.org.uk
The collieries
that once dominated many parts of North East England have now gone
and the pit heaps have been reclaimed and naturalised into the landscape,
but there is no doubting the important influence that coal mining
has had upon shaping the modern character of North East England.
It seems probable
that the North East is the oldest intensive coal mining district
in the country and evidence suggests that the Romans burned and
excavated coal in the region. But it was not until the 13th and
14th centuries that it became more widespread with demand spurred
on by ever expanding towns and an increasing population. Among those
to profit from the increased demand were the Bishops of Durham,
but it was the merchants of Newcastle who stood to gain the most.
This was primarily because Newcastle was a seaport, but also because
the shallowest, most accessible coal seams lay so close to the Tyne.
There were other ports in the region, away from the Tyne, notably
at Hartlepool and Stockton, but they lay outside the coalfield.
The one main exception was Sunderland, but its coal lay deep underground.
Coal is mentioned
in the records of County Durham as early as the 12th century, when
the Boldon Book (1183) mentions a coal miner at Escomb. It states
that the coal miner provided coal for the iron-work of the ploughs
at nearby Coundon. The book also records that the smiths of Sedgefield
and Bishop Wearmouth were making use of local coal. But most of
the early coal mines of the region, were along the banks of the
Tyne where seams were shallow and easily mined. As early as the
mid 1300s, mines were recorded at Cockfield, Coundon, Hett, Lanchester
and Ferryhill, along with others further east at Lumley and Rainton.
The Lumley mine was owned by the monks of Finchale Priory, near
Durham and consisted of a drift mine, with recesses for candles
to light the mine.
- For
information on individual mines or miners visit the excellent Durham
Mining Museum website www.dmm.org.uk/
SEA
COAL
Strangely, all
coal was often referred to in the Medieval period as 'sea coal,
even if found miles inland. For example, in 1298 there is a record
of 'sea coal' mined at Hett, near Spennymoor, even though Hett is
more than 10 miles from the coast. The term Sea-coal may have been
used because coal arrived at other ports such as London by sea -
more often than not as a shipment from Newcastle. However, a more
likely explanation is that sea-coal was originally found in a washed-up
form on the beaches of the North-East and other parts of the country.
Along the Durham
coast, coal lay deep underground, but in Northumberland, where the
coal measures outcropped along the coast, coastal erosion would
have caused much coal to be washed ashore naturally. The 'Sea Coal'
now washed ashore and occasionally collected on the Durham coast
may be a waste remnant from coastal colliery activity in more recent
times. In the earliest times coal washed ashore was the most familiar
kind, so when it was later found inland, it was still given the
name 'sea coal'. However the Victoria County History of Durham (1907)
suggests that by as early as 1313, the original meaning of sea-coal
was forgotten and that it had come to mean 'sea-borne coal'.
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NEWCASTLE
COAL
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In the late
thirteenth century Newcastle was regarded as the leading English
port for exporting leather. It benefitted from a plentiful supply
of local local livestock in the Northumberland countryside, which
of course provided the leather hides. However, it was around this
time that the border wars began to ravage this very countryside
and destroyed the town's trade, but fortunately for Newcastle, coal
was closer at hand. The exposed coal outcrops along the banks of
the River Tyne, were of particular importance, as the river provided
a means of transportation.
The Tyne quickly
developed into the major river for exporting coal to London. By
the 13th century coal mining was well established along the Tyne,
most notably at Whickham, County Durham
and at nearby Winlaton, where the mine was owned by Lord De Nevill,
a Baron of the bishopric. In
1291, 80 quarters of coal were sent to Corfe Castle in Dorset from
Newcastle and coal was being shipped to London from here at least
as early as 1305. Royalty was one major customer of Newcastle coal
and there is a record of the purchase of 576 chaldrons of coal from
the Winlaton mine by Henry III, in the thirteenth century, for his
castle at Windsor.
Although Newcastle's
defensive walls were falling into decay, they were enough to protect
the town's coal trade from Scottish raids. By 1334 Newcastle was
the fourth wealthiest town in England after London, Bristol and
York and the eleventh largest in 1372 with 2,637 tax payers. Recorded
coal mines supplying coal to Newcastle in medieval times existed
at Elswick, Winlaton, Heworth and the Town Moor. By 1378 Newcastle
shipped 15,000 tons of coal per year and exported coal to many parts
of Europe as well as importing iron ore from Sweden.
In 1452 trades
included the Keelmen who ferried the coal to collier ships in the
centre of the Tyne. The phrase 'Coals to Newcastle' meaning an unnecessary
pursuit was first recorded in 1538. Newcastle was the most important
port in the region and this was demonstrated by the establishment
of the Society of Masters and Mariners of Newcastle at Trinity House
in 1492. Their jurisdiction covered every single port and creek
from Whitby to Holy Island. Shipping and shipbuilding were also
important at Newcastle and the town was building ships from at least
1296, the year in which a galley was completed for King Edward's
fleet.
Such was this
town's early importance, that it would even begin to rival London
in its wealth, as Timothy Eden's History of Durham records;
"the burgesses
of Newcastle waxed fat and proud, believing themselves to be citizens
not only of the richest town in the North but soon of the richest
in England. They laughed and snapped their fingers at London herself.
`Our staiths their mortgaged streets will soon divide'
By 1547 Newcastle's
population was around 10,000 and a group of powerful merchants called
the Hostmen had taken control of the mines and coal export. By 1615,
200 ships carried coal to London and another 200 supplied coal to
other parts of the country. Newcastle had a virtual monopoly on
exporting coal with considerable control over rival ports like Sunderland.
Newcastle lost its control over rival North Eastern ports after
the Civil War of the 1640s. During this period, Newcastle took a
firm Royalist stance and banned the export of coal to London whilst
at Sunderland, where there was some parliamentarian support, coal
continued to be exported. With Parliaments victory, Sunderland's
future was assured, as was the future of rival Tyneside ports. However
it is likely that such a monopoly would have been crushed by the
Parliamentarians regardless of Sunderland's stance.
For information
on individual mines or miners visit the excellent Durham Mining Museum
website www.dmm.org.uk/
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NEWCASTLE
AND THE MONASTIC PORTS
Durham's
Prince Bishops owned rights to the mining of both coal and lead
within their realm, but from 1303 the bishop granted lesser landowners
the right to mine. The monks of Durham Cathedral exploited coal
from at least the 14th century and in the 1350s they owned or leased
mines at Lumley, Rainton and Ferryhill. It is the Durham monks who
are recorded as the first in the region to mine coal beneath the
level of free drainage. This took place at Moorhouse near Rainton,
to the north east of Durham City, where the monks, based at Finchale,
provided a water pump for the mine.
North of the
Tyne, there was also heavy monastic invovement in the exploitation
of coal and North Shields was firmly established as a port
by Prior Germanus of Tynemouth Priory in 1225. North Shields was
allowed to trade peacefully as a port until 1267 when Newcastle
merchants attacked the inhabitants and seized a ship. Newcastle
saw this rival port as a threat and by 1292 had enlisted the support
of King Edward I. The king ordered the dismantling of the North
Shields jetties. His support can be easily explained, since part
of Newcastle's rich revenue belonged to him, whilst the North Shields
revenue belonged entirely to the Priors.
In 1303 Edward
III went further than his predecessor, banning markets, fairs and
the unloading and loading of ships by the Tynemouth monks. The king
also banned similar activity at South Shields by the Durham
monks, although in the previous century Newcastle's merchants had
successfully discouraged Durham from establishing major port facilities
there. Port facilities were reintroduced at North Shields in 1390
with Royal permission, but trading in coal and other commodities
remained illegal. By 1429 there were 14 fish quays and 200 houses
at North Shields. The fishermen of the port ventured as far as Iceland
in boats and cobles. Coal trading was not restored to North Shields
until 1446 when Tynemouth Priory was given permission to ship coal
without reference to Newcastle. But the ban was reintroduced once
again in 1530 and once more restricted coal export to Newcastle.
For information
on individual mines or miners visit the excellent Durham Mining Museum
website www.dmm.org.uk/
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TYNE AND
WEAR COAL AND RAILWAYS
Coal mining
activity continued to increase in the sixteenth and seventeenth
centuries with mining concentrated around Tyneside and the Washington
area of Wearside. Around 7,000 pitmen worked in the region in 1787,
growing to 10,000 by 1810. Coal mines were opening in the region
at places like Newbottle (1774), Lumley (1776) Washington F Pit
(1777) and Penshaw (1791). Coal mining would spread to the Hetton
area of east Durham, where the coal was much deeper, after 1800
but it was not significant in south-west Durham until after 1825.
This is partly because south west Durham was further away from the
ports of Tyne and Wear where ports were served by an ever increasing
network of colliery railways. The
new railways were largely funded by a cartel of wealthy coal-owning
families called the 'Grand Allies' who included the Russells of
Brancepeth, Brandlings of Gosforth, Liddells of Ravensworth and
the Bowes family (Earls of Strathmore). William Russell, a Sunderland
banker who bought Brancepeth castle in 1796, was the country's wealthiest
commoner.
Seventeenth
century Colliery railways were called 'Newcastle Roads' and
enabled the coal mines to be opened slightly further away from the
rivers Tyne and Wear, but they were still largely concentrated in
North Durham. The railroads were suited to the hilly terrain of
Tyne and Wear countryside, where the building of canals would have
been impossible. The 'Newcastle Roads' were built first of wood
and later of iron. They were the first railways in the world and
were operated by horse drawn wagons called Chaldrons which were
filled with coal. Some examples of Chaldron wagons can be seen at
Beamish Museum in County Durham.
The first recorded
railway `The Whickham Grand Lease Way' of 1620 ran from Whickham
to Dunston on Tyne via Lobley Hill, but other railways almost certainly
existed in the area before this time. A
railway existed near Blyth from at least 1693 whilst another early
railway is known to have supplied coal staithes on the Wear near
Washington in this era. From a slightly later period, the Tanfield
railway in North West Durham dates from 1725 and now claims to be
the oldest existing railway in the world. It was originally eight
miles long and terminated at Dunston on the Tyne. Only a short stretch
remains, as a museum with asmall collection of carriages, waggons
and steamable colliery locos. Nearby, we also find the historic
stone bridge known as Causey Arch
which crosses the Causey Burn Dene. Historically part of the Tanfield
Railway, it dates from 1727 and is the world's oldest surviving
railway bridge.
For information
on individual mines or miners visit the excellent Durham Mining Museum
website www.dmm.org.uk/
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COAL ROADS
TO STEAM RAILWAYS
With the birth
of the Newcastle Roads, the North East of England can easily claim
to be the cradle of railways, but coal mining in the region also
drove on the development of steam locomotoves and the great railway
age of steam. The greatest railway pioneers
William Hedley, Timothy Hackworth, Edward
Pease and George and Robert Stephenson, were all from the North
East and all actively involved with the railway developments of
the region's coal mining industry.
The earliest
steam engines used in the coalfield of North East England
were of course not locomotives, but colliery winding engines, used
in the process of bringing coal from the seams to the surface. Later,
it was realised that such engines could be used to haul coal along
the railway lines themselves. The first steam engines to be used
on the railways, were still nevertheless stationary ones, situated
upon inclines where they could haul coal waggons across hillsides,
using strong wire ropes. A visitor to the region at the time described
the work of the wire cables;
"Here
and there you saw careering over the plain, long trains of
coal waggons, without horses or attendants or any apparent
cause of motion but their own mad agency. They seemed, indeed,
rather driven or dragged by unseen demons"
The first
steam powered incline in the region was at Washington Moor near
Birtley to the north of Chester le Street. Today the Birtley
area is the site of the Bowes Railway, the only surviving standard
guage rope-hauled railway in the world.
Locomotives,
or `steam engines on wheels', were of course the natural progression
from the stationary engines in the colliery areas. In 1822 Hetton
colliery near Houghton le Spring, was one of the first to use
locomotives. At that time the Hetton Colliery railway, was the
largest in the world and was partly operated using stationary
engines and partly by locomotives.
Hetton colliery
railway and its locomotives were the creation of George Stephenson
(1781-1848) and one of his locomotives that worked at the colliery,
is now preserved at Beamish Museum. Dating from 1822 and known
simply as`The Hetton', this locomotive is older than Stephenson's
more famous `Rocket' (1829) or `Locomotion Number One' (1825).
Stephenson's locomotives and railway at Hetton Colliery served
as models for the `Stockton and Darlington',
the world's first public railway, which is yet another feature
of County Durham's rich railway heritage. It is interesting
to note that the guage Stephenson chose for his railways (4'8
1/2'') is now the standard guage for railways throughout the
world.
- For
information on individual mines or miners visit the excellent
Durham Mining Museum website www.dmm.org.uk/
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GROWTH
OF RIVAL COAL PORTS
Newcastle dominated
the region's coal exporting trade for centuries and other ports
on the Wear, Tees and other parts of the time only started to compete
in a big way from the seventeenth century.
The ports of
the Tees and Whitby for example, lay oustide the coalfield,
but were able to benefit from the coal trade. Whitby was the home
to much shipping and a certain James Cook (later Captain Cook) worked
on Whitby colliers shipping coal from the Tyne and Wear to London
in 1746. Stockton shipped coal from at least 1622 and by
1795 had easily eclipsed Hartlepool and Yarm as a port. The flat
terrain of the Tees vale prompted suggestions that a 'coal canal'
might benefit Stockton and Darlington's trade and canals were surveyed
in 1767, 1796 to bring coal to the ports of the Tees.
Neither canal
was built and by 1810 the idea of building a railway was suggested
instead. It was this that led to the Stockton and Darlington Railway
of 1825. One important aspect of the Stockton and Darlington Railway
was that it resulted in the opening of Middlesbrough Dock
on May 12 1842 specifically for the shipment of coal and had actually
brought about the birth of the town of Middlesbrough in 1830. However,
in the long term iron became the lifeblood of this particular town.
Railways helped
in the development of ports throughout the region. With the ever-growing
network of colliery railroads, coal could be brought from all parts
of the region's coalfield to expanding ports on the Tyne, Wear,
Tees and the Northumberland and Durham coast. New docks opened at
Sunderland from 1837 to 1868 and in the 1850s docks like
the NER Tyne Dock at Jarrow (1859) were opening on the Tyne.
Also linked with the railway network were the massive coal staithes
at Dunston on Tyne, built by the NER from 1890 to 1893 and
still in existence today. On the Durham coast, Seaham Harbour
was devloped as a coal port from 1831
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HARTLEPOOL
COAL
In the early
1830s Hartlepool was transformed from a fishing community with a
silted harbour to a major coal port. Coal was supplied by Christopher
Tenant's new Stockton and Hartlepool Railway. The railway was taken
over by Stockton solicitor Ralph Ward Jackson in 1839 and his Victoria
Dock of 1841 was soon shipping more coal than any northern port.
In the 1840s
Hartlepool railways carried more coal than any other in the North
East with 27 per cent of all coal shipped from the region passing
along its tracks. Ralph Ward Jackson was frustrated by restrictions
on business at Hartlepool's Victoria Dock and obtained an act in
1844 for the formation of Hartlepool West Harbour Dock Company.
This dock was the first stage in the growth of West Hartlepool.
By 1862 the two Hartlepools shipped merchandise to the value of
more than three times as much as that of all North-East ports put
together, beating Newcastle, North/South Shields, Sunderland, Stockton
and Middlesbrough. Hartlepool was the fourth busiest port in the
country behind Liverpool, London and Hull and overtook Hull for
a time in the 1890s. By 1881, Old Hartlepool's population was 12,361
and newly born West Hartlepool had a population of 28,000
- For
information on individual mines or miners visit the excellent Durham
Mining Museum website www.dmm.org.uk/
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TRADE
UNIONISM
During the period
1800-1900 coal mining rapidly expanded in the region and over 200
pits were sunk in County Durham alone. The coal ports of Tyne, Wear
and Tees were developing into major urban regions and there were
many new industries demanding coal. Mines got deeper and deeper
and safety increasingly became an issue with many miners losing
their lives in horrific colliery disasters. Businessmen made their
fortune from the region's mines and were often unscrupulous or uncompromising
over pay and conditions.
Coal owners
usually owned the miners' homes and often evicted those who protested.
The notorious 'Candymen', or Down and outs from dockside areas often
helped with eviction. Many coal owners like the unpopular Marquess
of Londonderry were aristocrats. Boys were of course employed in
the mines and the Marquess was once said "A boy of twelve should
be learning his trade not wasting his time reading and writing".
With an ever-increasing
workforce Coal miners were able to form into unions in order to
fight for better pay and conditions. In 1830 the region's Coal Miners
established a union under the guidance of Thomas Hepburn and the
following year they negotiated a 10 per cent increase in wages and
a reduction in working hours for boys. A mass meeting of Northumberland
and Durham miners was held on Newcastle Town Moor that year and
the following year the miners went on stike. It was a clear demonstration
that coal owners would not have so much power to do as they pleased.
In the 1840s
the miners organised themselves on a national basis in the Miners
Association of Great Britain and Ireland, but its headquarters were
based at Newcastle from 1843. In 1848 successive depression in the
coal industry weakened the union but it recovered in the later part
of the century. The Durham Miners' Union was formed on November
20, 1869 after a meeting of mine leaders at the Market Hotel in
Durham's Maket Place. Their first annual Gala was held in Durham
City's Wharton Park on August 12 1871 but moved to the city's racecourse
in 1873. Enormous crowds attended these galas and on July 3 1875
the LNER Railway Company withdrew all trains from Bishop Auckland,
Lanchester and Newcastle to Durham. It claimed its railways could
not cope with the huge quantity of passengers travelling to the
gala, but the real reason may have been political.
- For
information on individual mines or miners visit the excellent Durham
Mining Museum website www.dmm.org.uk/
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MINING DISASTERS
METHODS AND SAFETY
Medieval mines
were usually drift mines or shallow bell pits. The bell pits were
dug down from the surface and then out into the coal seam in the
shape of a bell. Coal and miners were hoisted up and down in the
manner of a bucket in a well. Mine roofs only collapsed if the 'colliers'
burrowed too far outwards. This may be what caused deaths in coal
mines at Whickham and Thrislington in 1329, although even in the
earliest times, the danger of gas explosion or flooding was high.
From 1580 the
deeper mines around Tyneside used horse driven engines or 'gin-gans'
to pump out water. Standing 'Fire Engines' of the type developed
by Newcommen in 1712 appeared in the region around 1715 at Byker,
Washington Fell and Oxclose Collieries. Scotsman James Watt made
improvements to this kind of engine in 1769.
Engines could
also be used for the purposes of raising coal and in 1753 Michael
Menzies of Chartershaugh Colliery near Washington invented one such
machine, called a 'Menzie' . As mines got deeper, safety became
a problem and in 1662 a petition was handed to parliament by 2,000
pitmen regarding mine ventilation, since colliery gas was claiming
many victims. Records for the seventeenth century are scant but
in the eighteenth century mine deaths included 69 at Fatfield near
Washington in 1708, 80 at Bensham near Gateshead in 1743, 39 at
Fatfield in 1767, 23 at Chartershaugh in 1773, and 30 at Picktree
near Chester-le-Street in 1794. Pit ponies used underground from
1750 were often victims. Roof safety was also a problem and pillars
supporting roofs were first recorded in the region at Chartershaugh
Colliery in 1738.
There were around
30 major colliery disasters in Durham and Northumberland in the
period 1800-1899 claiming the lives of more than 1,500 men and boys.
Gas explosions were the major danger, although some incidents were
caused by collapsing mines. The six worst disasters of the period
in terms of numbers killed were;- 204 killed at Hartley near Blyth
in 1862, 164 at Seaham in 1880 (plus 181 pit ponies), 102 at Wallsend
in 1833, 95 at Haswell in 1841, 92 at Felling in 1812, 76 at Burradon
in 1860 and 74 at Trimdon in 1882.
Colliery disasters
highlighted the need for improvements in safety and as mines got
deeper safety became more of an issue. The major danger was from
gas explosions caused by naked flames on miner's lamps. In 1815
Humphry Davy and George Stephenson developed the Miners' Safety
lamp. This reduced the danger of explosion and enabled coal owners
to explore ever-deeper mines. The cage, for the movement of miners
underground was introduced to collieries for safety reasons in 1834
and in 1862 an act of Parliament made it compulsory for every colliery
to have two shafts for the purposes of safety. For further safety
John Dalglish, General Manager of Earl Vane's Durham collieries
in 1867 organised a system of voluntary inspection of pits by his
workmen. This system was made compulsory by an Act of parliament
in 1887.
- For
information on individual mines or miners visit the excellent
Durham Mining Museum website www.dmm.org.uk/
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LIST
OF MAJOR NORTH EAST COLLIERY DISASTERS 1708-1951
1708
- 69 DIE AT FATFIELD
1743
- 80 DIE AT BENSHAM
1767
- 39 DIE AT FATFIELD
1773
- 23 DIE AT CHARTERSHAUGH
1794
- 30 DIE AT PICKTREE
1805
- 38 DIE IN OXCLOSE COLLIERY, WASHINGTON
1805
- 35 DIE AT HEBBURN COLLIERY
1812
- 92 DIE AT FELLING PIT (May 25)
1813
- 32 DIE AT FATFIELD HALL PIT
1815
- 57 DIE IN NEWBOTTLE COLLIERY, FENCEHOUSES
1815
- 38 DIE IN ROW PIT DISASTER, HARRATON, WASHINGTON
1815
- 40 MEN AND 30 BOYS HEATON COLLIERY FLOOD
1817
- 27 DIE IN WEST RAINTON PIT (December)
1819
- 35 MEN DIE AT SHERIFF HILL PIT
1821
- 52 MEN DIE AT WALLSEND COLLIERY DISASTER
1823
- 59 DIE AT PLAIN PIT, RAINTON (November
3)
1826
- 34 DIE AT JARROW COLLIERY
1833
- 47 DIE AT SPRINGFIELD COLLIERY
1835
- 102 DIE AT WALLSEND PIT (June 18th )
1841
- 32 DIE AT WILLINGTON
1844
- 95 DIE AT HASWELL (September 28th)
1845
- 39 DIE AT JARROW COLLIERY
1849
- 31 DIE AT HEBBURN
1855
- 28 DIE AT ELEMORE NEAR HETTON(December 2)
1860
- 76 DIE AT BURRADON DISASTER
1862
- 204 DIE HARTLEY COLLIERY COLLAPSE NEAR BLYTH
1866
- 24 DIE AT PELTON DISASTER
1880
- 164 MINERS AND 181 PIT PONIES DIE SEAHAM September 8
1882
- 74 DIE TRIMDON GRANGE DISASTER (February 16)
1882
- 35 DIE IN TUDHOE BLAST (April 18)
1886
- 28 DIE AT ELEMORE (December 1)
1896
- 20 DIE AT BRANCEPETH (April 13)
1899
- 6 DIE AT BRANDON PIT (August 15)
1906
- 24 DIE AT WINGATE (Oct 14)
1908
- 14 DIE AT WASHINGTON GLEBE DISASTER (Feb 20)
1909
- 168 DIE AT WEST STANLEY(February 16)
1942
- 13 DIE IN MURTON COLLIERY DISASTER (June 26)
1947
- 21 DIE AT LOUISA COLLIERY (August 22)
1951 - 81 DIE
IN EASINGTON EXPLOSION (May 29)
- For
information on individual mines or miners visit the excellent Durham
Mining Museum website www.dmm.org.uk/
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COLLIER'S
RANT
Records of mine
disasters go back to Medieval times with reference to gas explosions
in the North East mines as early as 1621. In earliest times, the
miners associated danger in the pit with a great deal of suspicion
often attributing it to the workd of the devil (known as 'Auld Nick').
Hew was believed to lurk at the bottom of every pit. An old North
Eastern miner's song 'The Collier's
Rant ' with origins lost in time, confirms the superstition;
"As me an'
me marra were gannin' te' wark,
We met wi'
the De'il it was i' the dark,
Aw up wi'
me pick it being i' the neet,
Aw chopped
off his horns, likewise his club-feet.
Foller the
horses, Johnny me laddie,
Foller them
through me canny lad, oh !
Foller the
horses, Johnny me laddie,
Oh lad lye
away me canny lad oh !
As me an'
me marra were puttin' the tram,
The light
it went oot, an' me marra went wrang,
Ye wad ha'e
laughed had ye seen the gam,
The Dei'l
tyeuk me marra an' aw gat the tram.
Foller the
horses, Johnny me laddie,
Foller them
through me canny lad, oh !
Foller the
horses, Johnny me laddie,
Oh lad lye
away me canny lad oh !"
(The Collier's
Rant - a marra is a workmate)
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- For
information on individual mines or miners visit the excellent
Durham Mining Museum website www.dmm.org.uk/
DEEP
COASTAL PITS
East Durham
Coal lay deep below the Magnesian Limestone escarpment which dominates
the east of the county. Coal was first proved to exist here by the
sinking of a pit at Haswell in 1811 but the first great deep pit
in the region was sunk at Hetton in 1821. Sunk to a depth of over
1000ft, it became one of the most productive pits in the region
as well as a focus for some of Stephenson's important locomotive
developments. Monkwearmouth Colliery followed shortly afterwards
and was shipping coal from 1835 with a seam 1,590 feet below the
surface. Harton near South Shields became the deepest Tyne pit in
1841 (1,290 feet). Monkwearmouth, 1700 ft in 1846 was the deepest
coal mine in the country. It would be these deeper coastal pits
that would be the last to survive the colliery closures of the late
twentieth century.
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RISE
AND FALL OF COAL MINING 1800-1990
Coal mining
continued to grow throughout the later nineteenth and early twentieth
century. The nineteenth century development of coal mining in Durham,
brought about a tremendous increase in the population of the North
East, as many previously rural villages, grew into small colliery
towns almost overnight. This was particularly the case in County
Durham, where villages seemed to spring up from virtually nowhere
at all. In 1787 there were around 7000 colliers employed in the
coal mines of North East England and by 1810 this number had only
increased to 10,000. Just over a hundred years later, in 1919, there
were 223,000 coal miners working in the region and 154,000 of these
were in the county of Durham. It reached a peak in County Durham
in 1923 when 170,000 miners were employed in the industry.
One obvious
question is where did all this labour come from? They of course
came from all parts of England, Scotland, Wales and Ireland, though
in the main they originated from the local region, from existing
areas of the Northumberland and Durham coalfield, but also from
the dales and rural areas of Northumberland and Durham. Many of
course originated from the larger towns of the region and even non-mining
towns like Darlington would have made a major contribution to the
increasing coal workforce. Coal mining employment in County Durham
would eventually reacha reached a peak in 1923, when 170,000 miners
were employed.
The two world
wars helped to boost the need for coal in industry, but in the later
half of the twentieth century colliery closures began to increase.
One major
event in the history of the mines was the nationalisation of the
industry in 1947, when the coal mines, previously under the management
of private concerns were brought under the control of the government.
By the time of Nationalization, the number of miners in County Durham,
had fallen to 108,000 and there were 127 collieries. Nationalization
was not enough to save many pits from closure as many mines were
worked of their coal or sometimes controversially declared 'uneconomic'.
In the two decades from 1950-1970 around a hundred North East coal
mines were closed often with shattering consequences for small mining
communities which relied on coal mining for work.
The closures
continued throughout the eighties and nineties, despite vehement
protests from the miners and their unions and an often violent miners
strike. In 1994 the closure of the Wearmouth Colliery in Sunderland
saw the end of the last remaining colliery in the Durham coalfield.
It site is today marked by Sunderland football club's Stadium of
Light.
Despite the
fact that there are no collieries in the region today, many towns
and villages still betray their nineteenth century mining origins.
One feature associated with these colliery areas that has now dissappeared,
which many will be glad to see the back of, are the pit waste heaps
that once scarred the often attractive rural countryside of the
region. These have now been removed or landscaped out of recognition,
the exception is of course the recreated pit heap, in the colliery
area of Beamish Museum, near Stanley in County Durham Of course
the collieries may have gone, but the former mining areas still
retain their own individuality and identity and their is still often
a strong community spirit associated with colliery districts although
perhaps not to the same extent as in the days of mining. Even the
place names of towns and villages in these areas seem to have an
indivuality all of their own. Thus we have Tantobie, Quaking Houses,
Perkinsville, Stony Heap, Toronto, Philadelphia, Quebec, Deaf Hill,
Pity Me and No Place. Back to top of page
- For
information on individual mines or miners visit the excellent Durham
Mining Museum website www.dmm.org.uk/
LIST OF COLLIERY
CLOSURES IN THE NORTH EAST 1950-1994
Some of the
major colliery closures of the twentieth century in Northumberland
and Durham are listed below.
1950s
- 'Axwell Park, Bildershaw, Blaydon Burn Bessie, Blaydon Burn Mary,
Castle Eden, East Hedleyhope, Greencroft Tower, Harbour House, Little
Burn, Montague (Newcastle), New Brancepeth, New Delaval, New Hartley,
Ramshaw, South Shildon and Throckley Isabella.
1960s
- Addison Colliery, Barcus Close, Barlow Towneley, Beamish Mary,
Bedlington F, Bedlington Doctor, Bowburn, Brancepeth, Brandon, Burnopfield,
Cambois, Chester South Moor, Choppington A, Chopwell, Clara Vale,
Crofton Mill (Blyth), Crookhall (Lanchester), Deaf Hill (Trimdon),
Dean and Chapter (Ferryhill and Chilton), Dinnington, East Tanfield,
East Walbottle, Esh, Hamsterley, Handenhold, Harraton, Harton, Hazlerigg,
Heworth, High Marley Hill, Kimblesworth, Lambton D, Lanchester,
Leasingthone, Linton, Lumley Sixth, Longhirst (Ashington), Mainsforth,
Malton (Lanchester), Middridge (Ferryhill), Newbiggin, New Shildon,
Pelton, Randolph, Ravensworth Anne (Gateshead), Ravensworth Park,
Ravensworth Shop, Rising Sun (Wallsend), Roddymoor, Ryhope, Seghill,
Sherburn Hill, South Pelaw, Staindrop Field House, Stanley Burn,
Stanley Cottage, Stargate, Tanfield Lea, Thrislington, Trimdon Grange,
Tudhoe Mill, Tudhoe Park, Ushaw Moor, Washington F, Waterhouses,
West Auckland, West Thornley, Wheatley Hill, Whitburn, Wingate Grange
and Witton.
1970s
- Adventure Pit (Rainton), Bardon Mill, Bedlington A, Blackburn
Fell (Gateshead), Burradon, Elemore, Fishburn, Hylton, Kibblesworth,
Langley Park, Medomsley, Metal Bridge, Nettlesworth, Shotton, Silksworth,
Thornley, Usworth, Washington Glebe and Whitworth Park (Spennymoor)
1980s
- Ashington, Bearpark, Blackhall, Boldon, East Hetton, Eccles (Backworth),
Eden and South Medomsley, Eppleton, Herrington, Horden, Houghton,
Marley Hill, Sacriston, Seaham, Shilbottle, South Hetton and Woodhorn.
1990s
Dawdon (1991), Murton (1991), Easington (1993), Westoe (1993), Vane
Tempest (1993), Wearmouth (1994).


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