Posted February 22, 2017. Definatly Babbington Colliery. The two shafts on the right laterly worked as tandem upcasts are the original shafts of 1842, The larger headgear was the coal winding downcast No.4 shaft. …
Get QuoteAdministrative / biographical background: BA Collieries was a company formed in 1936 on the merger of the Babbington Coal Company Ltd and the Bestwood Coal and Iron Company Ltd. The Digby Colliery Company Ltd joined them in 1937. The main collieries covered by these records are: Babbington Coal Co Ltd - Babbington. Birchwood.
Get QuoteBabbington Colliery. Alan Murray-Rust - Page 3/3. A couple of pictures taken in April 1983 and May 1986 respectively showing Babbington Colliery (Cinderhill), Nottingham. As …
Get QuoteIn the view of the Coal Authority 450 litres per second would need to be pumped across the South Nottinghamshire Coalfield to control the water build up in 2012. Annesley Colliery discharged around 52.5 litres per second and was the main discharge point in the region keeping the coalfield drained. A set of pumping locations pumping 5 times this ...
Get QuoteI was in East Midlands Division, south Notts No6 area and we had Babbington, Clifton, Calverton, Cotgrave, Hucknall No2, Bestwood, Linby, Gedling, Radford and Wollaton pits. ... Notts #3 Area..Newstead Colliery. Pyehill Colliery. Williamsthorpe Colliery. Moorgreen Colliery..Central Workshops..Central Stores and HQ for the area. …
Get QuoteIn 1841-1843 the sinking of deeper shafts at Cinderhill Colliery (also known as Babbington Colliery) 3 miles north of Nottingham led to the establishment of what has been considered the first modern deep mine of the area. Although Wakefield was bankrupted by 1847 and Morley withdrew from the partnership, North carried on as sole proprietor with ...
Get Quote(2) Blackwell Colliery Co Ltd: Alfreton Blackwell Shirland Sutton 3. Nottingham and Clifton Colliery Ltd: Clifton 4. B A Collieries Ltd: (1) Babbington Colliery Co Ltd Alfreton Babbington Birchwood Broxtowe Bulwell Cinderhill Newcastle Tibshelf (2) Bestwood Coal and Iron Co Ltd: Bestwood (3) Digby Colliery Co Ltd: Calverton Digby Gedling 5 ...
Get QuoteDescription. Babbington, Cinderhill: Sunk 1842, one of the two oldest pits in the Area (Langton was sunk in the same year); is 553 yards deep; recent £1½ million …
Get QuoteThe Colliery took on a new look in 1956, when the Nos.1 and 2 steam winder and headgear were demolished together with the boiler plant and chimney, To be replaced by a 270 hp electric winder with new tandem steel headgear. During 1983, coal preparations ceased at Babbington and coal was taken by road to be washed at Hucknall No 2 Colliery.
Get QuotePosted November 17, 2009. Here's a bit of history, the main collieries in Nottingham in 1861 were, Cinderhill, Newcastle, Kimberley and Babbington, all belonging to Thomas North. Radford, Catstonehill and the Old Engine Pit near Trowell Moor, belonging to Lord Middleton and Watnall Colliery.
Get QuoteMEMORIES OF THE PIT PONIES. We have spoken to some men who worked at the coal pit and remember the ponies. You can hear one of them talk about the ponies by clicking on the link below. Keith Stone worked at Bestwood Colliery from April 1957 until its closure in May 1967 when he moved to Babbington Colliery. Here he recounts his memories of …
Get QuoteThe Colliery took on a new look in 1956, when the Nos.1 and 2 steam winder and headgear were demolished together with the boiler plant and chimney, To be replaced by a 270 hp electric winder with new tandem steel headgear. During 1983, coal preparations ceased at Babbington and coal was taken by road to be washed at Hucknall No 2 Colliery.
Get QuoteCOAL 80/1928 - Babbington and Broxtowe collieries, Nottinghamshire. Album includes 1 photograph of Bulwell colliery and 15 photographs of the Newcastle Wharf... This record …
Get Quoteplus ten years extensive researching into colliery fatal accidents, results Nottinghamshire 3293 Derbyshire 4300 Leicestershire about 700 plus 3250 injured miners admitted to NGH 1846 1950. Shaft sites from a former NCB surveyor who has researched Midlands mining for 40 years.
Get Quotethe Babbington Moorgreen connection is 120 metres in length constructed 5' x 6' Hollybank contour for the collection of all the waters migrating from Babbington, Pye Hill and …
Get QuoteThe second line from Cinderhill which joined the Mansfield line at Basford Jcn was built by North but the Midland Railway bought it from the Babbington Coll Co in 1877. North's line beyond Broxtowe Colliery must have been abandoned after Kimberley Colliery closed in 1897 which would explain why the maps show it in 1881 but as …
Get QuoteDetails of NCB 4/4/2-10; Reference: NCB 4/4/2-10 Title: Lists of numbers and causes of accidents at Babbington Colliery Co., giving date, location, name, age, occupation, place of accident, nature of injury, duration of disability etc. for
Get QuoteRoy Babbington was born on July 8, 1940, in Kempton, England, UK. When was Kylie Babbington born? Kylie Babbington was born on December 13, 1987, in Havering, Essex, England, UK.
Get QuoteCinderhill Christ Church. History. Christ Church was built to serve the small hamlet which was the home of miners who worked at Cinder Hill, Babbington and Newcastle Collieries. The driving force behind the building of a church came largely from Thomas North, the entrepreneur who sank the pits. He sank the first one at Cinder Hill in 1842 ...
Get QuoteBabbington Coal Co Ltd, colliery owners and brick manufacturers; This page summarises records created by this Business The summary includes a brief description of the collection(s) (usually including the covering dates of the collection), the name of the archive where they are held, and reference information to help you find the …
Get QuoteBabbington Colliery ran into trouble very quickly because of a fault which stopped coal being got. However, North persevered and after about five years came to the end of the fault and coal was mined once more. However, it nearly bankrupted him. North built mines at Kimberley (near the Queen Adelaide), Broxtowe, Whitemoor and Bulwell.
Get QuoteBabbington or Cinderhill 1840-1986. Beauvale Colliery. Beggarlee Colliery. Bentinck Colliery. Bestwood Colliery - List of Collieries - Next Page. Babbington Colliery Previously Cinderhill Colliery 1840-1986 (Page 5) Name/Address: Age: Date of Accident: Inquest date/Place: Detail: Robert Henson 2, Atherton Rise Nottingham: 50: 15-08-1948: …
Get QuoteBabbington Colliery. Alan Murray-Rust - Page 3/3: A couple of pictures taken in April 1983 and May 1986 respectively showing Babbington Colliery (Cinderhill), Nottingham. As you can see, they are principally intended to be bus pictures, but the presence of the pit in the background is not accidental; the viewpoints were deliberately chosen ...
Get QuoteThe new shaft at Hucknall was at the No.2 colliery and was sunk in the late 1950's early 1960's. It was called No.5 shaft. I think shafts & 2 were at Hucknall 1 Colliery and shafts 3 & 4 at Hucknall No.2 Colliery, these were deepened at the same tine as No.5 was sunk. Shaft No.2 at Hucknall 1 was deepened and became Babbington …
Get QuoteThere is a collection of coal leases and associated papers relating to the Wollaton Estate from1861-1943, many of which refer to Wollaton Colliery. A handful relate to Babbington Colliery, about which very little survives except some documents regarding the company boundaries from 1910-1913.
Get QuoteBroxtowe Colliery, Nottingham, England, UK : Mine Owner(s): 1895-1925 Babbington Coal Co. 1930 Babbington Coal Co. Ltd
Get QuoteMore. ×. Price - *BABBINGTON COLLIERY : 1841~1986 END OF AN ERA* Commemorative Mining Plate. Avg: £16.06, Low: £2.59, High: £70.00. Great price and value when compared to PicClick similar items. Close. Seller - 6,629+ items sold. 0% negative feedback. Great seller with very good positive feedback and over 50 ratings. More.
Get QuoteSome of these must be the shafts in the Strelley area near the M1, like the Catstone Hill Colliery, which I think is near Babbington north of Spring Wood, another shaft near Oldmoor Wood west of the M1, a shaft north of Stonepit Plantation, and I think the original Cinderhill Colliery was at or close to Assarts Lodge where two disused shafts ...
Get QuoteCatalogue Description. NCB - National Coal Board, later British Coal Corporation - 1574-1994. A - Pre-Vesting Colliery Companies superceded by the National Coal Board - [1672]-1972. BAB - Babbington Coal Company - 1898-1942. 1 - Babbington Coal Company accident record books - 1898-1942. 2 - Tibshelf Colliery accident record books - 1898 …
Get QuoteThe former Babbington Colliery site in Bulwell has been allocated in a new development plan as a site for 500 new homes. The vast spoil tip of the former colliery, known as Stanton Tip, in ...
Get QuoteAnnesley Pit near Kirkby-in-Ashfield was sunk in 1860 by the Annesley Colliery Co. with production beginning in 1865. Two shafts were sunk to the Top Hard seam and each had it's own headgear. In 1925 the colliery was sold to the New Hucknall Colliery Company and in 1947 it was nationalsied. By 1982 the Annesley Bentinck Concentration Scheme was ...
Get QuoteThe Colliery took on a new look in 1956, when the Nos.1 and 2 steam winder and headgear were demolished together with the boiler plant and chimney, To be replaced by a 270 hp electric winder with new tandem …
Get QuoteBabbington Colliery The Cessation of pumping at Cossall colliery in May 1967 resulted in minewaters at the rate of 294 million gallons per annum (560 g.p.m.) migrating through disused Broxtowe Colliery Workings to Babbington Colliery pit bottom water lodge. Babbington Pit Bottom is the highest point in the combined ...
Get QuoteThe sinking of Cinderhill Colliery. (now called Babbington) took place between 1841 and 1843 by Thomas North. No.s 1 and 2 shafts, to be seen near the main Nuthall to Nottingham Road were 7 ft diameter. and erected over them was wooden tandem headgear which was then new to the district. It was the first colliery in the locality to have ...
Get QuoteBabbington Colliery : Babbington Colliery (See also Cinder Hill Colliery) Location: Cinderhill 4 miles [6 km] NW of Nottingham Map Ref: (Sheet 129 Nottingham and Loughborough) SK533436, 52° 59' 12" N, 1° 12' 21" W: Opened: Closed: Sinking Started: 1842: Owners: Babbington Coal Co.
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