Brinsley Colliery

Image ID: 25940

Brinsley Colliery

Brinsley Colliery
Brinsley
England

Coal has been mined in the Eastwood area for nearly 700 years. Originally, the monks of Beauvale Priory held the coal mining rights and there may have been shallow workings dating further back to Roman times. By the 1870s the good quality 'top hard' coal at Brinsley had been almost exhausted and a second shaft was sunk in 1872 to a depth of 780 feet. At its peak of production the colliery produced around 500 tons of coal a day and employed 361 men, 282 of whom worked at the coal faces. By 1930, coal reserves had been exhausted but the shafts were kept open until 1970 to access neighbouring pits. The Brinsley Colliery site has now been landscaped and turned into a picnic area. It was the workplace of D H Lawrence's father and he used this location in his novels 'Sons and Lovers' and 'Odour of Chrysanthemums'.

Date: c 1920

Organisation Reference: NCCC001950

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