WebChapter 22 - Pony Driving. The pit used to work on Saturday mornings, but only certain faces produced coal. Most districts used Saturday as the time to catch up on work that had fallen behind. It was purely a voluntary shift and Ben had given me permission to work Saturdays, not for him, but for any deputy that needed a willing hand. WebThe second photo is looking from the direction of Winstanley (opposite direction) at the next bend in the road from the entrance to the old Pony Dick colliery entrance. I will be more …
Yorkshire Colliery papers The National Archives
WebJun 21, 2012 · Formerly Winstanley Colliery No. 3 Pit, at the time of the visit was being used as a pumping shaft for Windy Arbour Colliery. The winding engine had gone, and the … WebTHREE hundred and forty years ago the learned German writer Agricola, enumerated, in the first book of his treatise, De re metallica, the various branches of knowledge that ought to be acquired by ... greed the resource 3 factory
Chapter 22 - Pony Driving - Northern Mine Research Society
WebThirlby had grossly underestimated the costs of sinking a new colliery and Ibstock Colliery had a very shaky start indeed. By the early 1830’s however, the colliery was working the Upper and Lower Main coal seams. A branch line was also built to connect with the Leicester & Swannington Railway and this branch was opened in 1832. WebA pit pony brought to the surface at Pemberton Colliery during the 1926 Strike. It would have been strange for the poor animal to have felt the warmth of the sun on its back and the … WebOne particularly unpleasant story from Hawkesbury Colliery states that the colliery deputy, William Mostyn, once pulled a pony’s tongue clean out of its mouth in an attempt to get the pony to move. The pony was later put down and the man fined £2. Mostyn said that he did not pull the ponies tongue to torture it, but rather to try and get the ... flotation mat