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Industrial
Change in Wolverhampton and District
Coal
Mining
Wolverhampton
is sited on the north-western edge of the South Staffordshire Coalfield.
The dominant feature of this field was the "Thick Coal"
or "Ten Yard Seam" in which 14 coal seams lie so close
together that it gives the impression of one continuous seam.

Bradley
Mine Bilston (H5/BRA/1)
This
coal bed
was rarely more than 400 feet below the surface and as such there
were a large number of small shallow coal mines that were cheaper
to run than deeper mines. Parts of the city, Parkfields, Monmore
Green, Rough Hills, Portobello and Bilston, were areas where coal
mining took place.

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on the image to enlarge
Ordnance
Survey Map 1887 showing over 30 coal mines, coal
pits and shafts
(sheet LXII.15)
Mining
began in the area in the 14th century. Coal is known to have been
dug at Bradley by 1315, at "le Hayeschute" near Wednesfield
in 1325 and at Bilston by 1401. By the 17th and 18th centuries coal
mining had expanded rapidly.
The system
used to work the mines in the area was known as the "Butty"
system. Under this system a contractor or "Butty"
agreed to supply to coal the owner or leasee
of the mine coal at a set price.
The mines
in the area of Parkfields, which were shallow workings, were known
locally as Gin
Pits.

Gin
Pit at Parkfields 1893 (L6/GIN/2)
Coal
mines in the Bradley area of Bilston tended to be deeper and needed
a deeper shaft and more machinery to extract the coal

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on the image to enlarge
Extract
from Bilston Mining Map 1960 (Map/BIL39)
The map
is based upon the a number of maps from the 1830s - it shows the
location of mines.

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on the image to enlarge
19th
century print of a Bradley Coal Mine (H/BRA/2)
By the
latter part of the 19th century much of the shallow coal had been
removed. Coal that was situated deeper underground was obviously
more difficult and more expensive to extract, which explains the
closure of a number of mines in this period. Between the years 1860
and 1928 a total of 32 mines were abandoned in Wolverhampton, 41
in Wednesfield and Heath Town, and no fewer than 132 in Bilston.
Local
collieries
with names like Chillington, Harolds, Old Heath, Cockshutts, Bowmans
Harbour and Natty Stack all closed.
One of
the last coal mines left in the area was Baggeridge Colliery. Though
not strictly in Wolverhampton (the coal mine was at Baggeridge Wood
just over the city boundary) some of its workings
reached under part of Wolverhampton.
The first
bore holes
at Baggeridge were drilled in November 1896 on land owned by the
Earl of Dudley. The project did not start well: the boring
rods broke and left £200 worth of diamonds in the
ground!). Further borings revealed a coal seam
at a depth of 600 feet. The first shaft was built in February 1899
and in July 1902 a seam of coal 24 feet thick was discovered.

Baggeridge
Colliery c. 1900 (BAG/H5/2)
The coal
mine suffered its first fatal accident in 1911 when 17 year old
William Cooper was crushed to death.
The mine
used pit-ponies
right up to its closure in 1968. Two of the ponies, Dickie and Winston,
were retired when the pit closed. When one of the ponies died a
few years later the funeral was shown on the local TV news!

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on the image to enlarge
Extract
from Wolverhampton Adnews, 10th August 2000
The legacy
left by the coal industry is still with the city today. Buildings
erected in the areas of coal mining activity have suffered from
subsidence. Houses have been known to collapse into old mine workings
and holes have appeared in gardens, sportsfields and roads as the
result of mineral extraction. In 2000 the Craft Gallery at Bilston
Library was closed for almost 12 months due to mine shafts being
found under the building.
©
Copyright. Wolverhampton City Council, 2002
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