Hopefully this small thread is in the right place.
The Hartley Pit Disaster is probably something very few folk have heard of. It occured in my old village where I used to live. It was so obvious that I had missed it for this forum.
Officially known as Hartley Hester Pit there is very little left of what was a terrible site. The disaster which happened here changed mining law in The United Kingdom forever. Following this disaster it was ordered that every mine shall, from then on, have at least two means of escape/access.
This mine used only one shaft. This shaft was halved down the middle with wooden framework to separate ventilation and pumping from winding operations.
A huge cast iron pumping beam snapped in half above the shaft, dragging down all the shafts framework and equipment and trapped all the men and boys below. No-one survived down below. I wont go in to detail because Wiki can do that.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hartley_Colliery_Disaster
Please take the time to follow the links. The reading will make you think....
Some pics. The bronzel plaque as you enter the memorial garden.
The "cap" on the rescue shaft which was dug to free the trapped miners. A frantic effort which sadly yeilded nothing.
The "cap" which sits above the old collapsed shaft. The caps were built out of old stone from the original pit buildings. The builder who made these structures left a plaque carved into the stonework. Nowadays it is illegible.
The site looking in from the entrance. Peace and quiet is all that graces this once frantic rescue attempt.
Thank you for looking.
The Hartley Pit Disaster is probably something very few folk have heard of. It occured in my old village where I used to live. It was so obvious that I had missed it for this forum.
Officially known as Hartley Hester Pit there is very little left of what was a terrible site. The disaster which happened here changed mining law in The United Kingdom forever. Following this disaster it was ordered that every mine shall, from then on, have at least two means of escape/access.
This mine used only one shaft. This shaft was halved down the middle with wooden framework to separate ventilation and pumping from winding operations.
A huge cast iron pumping beam snapped in half above the shaft, dragging down all the shafts framework and equipment and trapped all the men and boys below. No-one survived down below. I wont go in to detail because Wiki can do that.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hartley_Colliery_Disaster
Please take the time to follow the links. The reading will make you think....
Some pics. The bronzel plaque as you enter the memorial garden.
The "cap" on the rescue shaft which was dug to free the trapped miners. A frantic effort which sadly yeilded nothing.
The "cap" which sits above the old collapsed shaft. The caps were built out of old stone from the original pit buildings. The builder who made these structures left a plaque carved into the stonework. Nowadays it is illegible.
The site looking in from the entrance. Peace and quiet is all that graces this once frantic rescue attempt.
Thank you for looking.