Brodsworth Colliery
Brodsworth Colliery was a coal mine north west of Doncaster and west of the Great North Road. in South Yorkshire, England. Two shafts were sunk between October 1905 and 1907 in a joint venture by the Hickleton Main Colliery Company and the Staveley Coal and Iron Company.[1]
The colliery exploited the coal seams of the South Yorkshire Coalfield including the Barnsley seam which was reached at a depth of 595 yards and was up to 9 feet thick.[2] After a third shaft was sunk in 1923,[3] Brodsworth, the largest colliery in Yorkshire, had the highest output of a three-shaft colliery in Britain.[1]
The colliery and five others were merged into Doncaster Amalgamated Collieries[4] in 1937 and the National Coal Board in 1947.[5] It closed in 1990.[2]
The colliery was consistently amongst those that employed the most miners in Britain, employing around 2,800 workers throughout the 1980s.
The company built Woodlands, a model village for its workers.[6] Since the colliery closed, its spoil tip has been restored and developed as a community woodland; owned by the Land Restoration Trust and controlled by the Forestry Commission. Some of the colliery site has been sufficiently remediated to allow houses to be built upon it.[7]
See also
References
Notes
- ^ a b Hill 2001, p. 190
- ^ a b Hill 2001, p. 195
- ^ Hill 2001, p. 191
- ^ Doncaster Amalgamated Collieries Ltd., Durham Mining Museum, retrieved 25 June 2011
- ^ Hill 2001, p. 192
- ^ Goodchild, John (2001). South Yorkshire collieries. Stroud: Tempus. p. 126. ISBN 0752421484.
- ^ Wright, Greg (3 December 2019). "Plans have been submitted to build 159 homes on site of famous Yorkshire colliery". The Yorkshire Post. Retrieved 3 December 2019.
Bibliography
- Hill, Alan (2001), The South Yorkshire Coalfield A history and Development, Tempus Publishing, ISBN 0-7524-1747-9
External links
- Brodsworth Colliery on nmrs.org.uk
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- Selby complex2 (Gascoigne Wood, North Selby, Riccall, Stillingfleet, Whitemoor Wistow)
- Tan Hill
- Aldwarke1
- Askern
- Barnburgh
- Barrow
- Bentley
- Brodsworth
- Brookhouse
- Bullcroft1
- Birley
- Cortonwood
- Dalton
- Dinnington
- Elsecar
- Fence
- Harry Crofts1
- Hatfield
- Hickleton
- High Hazels
- Huskar
- Kilnhurst
- Kiveton Park
- Maltby
- Manvers
- Markham Main
- New Stubbin
- North Staveley
- Nunnery1
- Orgreave
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- Rother Vale
- Rotherham1
- Roundwood1
- Silverwood
- Smithies
- Thorne1
- Thurcroft
- Tinsley Park
- Treeton
- Waleswood
- Warren House
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- Wath
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- Yorkshire Main
- Caphouse
- Flockton
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- Garforth Collieries (Isabella Pit, Sisters Pit, Trench Pit)
- Kellingley
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- Middleton
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- Prince of Wales
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- Waterloo Main
- Wheldale
- Woolley
- UK miners' strike (1969)
- UK miners' strike (1972)
- UK miners' strike (1984–85)
- Battle of Orgreave
- South Yorkshire Miners' Association
- West Yorkshire Miners' Association
- Yorkshire Miners' Association
- Geology of Yorkshire
- List of collieries in Yorkshire (1984–2015)
- Monckton Coke Works
- National Coal Mining Museum for England
- British MPs sponsored by mining unions
- 1: Pre 1974, most coal mines in South Yorkshire were actually in the West Riding of Yorkshire. Those annotated with a number 1, were closed before 1974.
2: The Selby Coalfield straddled the border of North and West Yorkshire
53°33′53″N 1°12′33″W / 53.56472°N 1.20917°W / 53.56472; -1.20917
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