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  Houghall Colliery  Index  Houghall Colliery  

Houghall Colliery


  Description Disasters Names Local Collieries Credits  

Location: Durham
1½ miles [2 km] SSE of Durham
Map Ref: (Sheet 88) NZ281405, 54° 45' 31" N, 1° 33' 48" W
Maps: 1860s map detailed map from the Ordnance Survey
1898 map from Reid's Handy Colliery Guide
1951 map from the Guide to the Coalfields (Colliery Guardian)
Opened:
Closed:
Owners: 1840's - Elvet Coal Co.
1860's - Joseph H. Love & Partners
1947 - National Coal Board (N.C.B.)
Output: 1873 - Coal.
  Colliery Management (prior to 1955)
Notes:

1840 - Boring operations commenced on Houghall estate, near Durham.

1841 - A sinking was put down from surface to the Hutton Seam on Houghall estate by the Elvet Coal Company.

1842 - Houghall Colliery and Brancepeth Colliery commenced shipping coal.

1880 - A couple of bore-holes were put down below the thill of the Hutton Seam at Houghall Colliery, proving the lower coals to be worthless at this point.



  Summary Disasters Names Local Collieries Credits  

Description


  Summary Description Names Local Collieries Credits  

Disasters (5 or more killed)

None found.


  Summary Description Disasters Local Collieries Credits  

Names of those killed at this colliery

Please note that this collection of names is by no means complete!

      

Collings, Thomas, 12 Feb 1884, aged 52, Hewer, fall of stone from roof while working in a broken jud, Buried: Shincliffe, St. Mary the Virgin on 15 Feb 1884 {NBI}

     

Crasswell, James, 30 Nov 1856, (accident: 29 Nov 1856), Banksman, he was lengthening a rope with the help of some other men in the engine house. He was in a stooping position with the rope between his legs, when it slipped through a pair of clams fixed to it to support it, and he was thrown violently against the engine house roof and fell a distance of 20 feet. His head was cut and bruised, and he was unconscious. He died the following morning, 30 November

      

Cresswell, Thomas, 30 Apr 1865, aged 13, Branch Driver, run over by waggons on the branches

      

Crooks, Joseph, 18 Jul 1873, aged 49, Hewer, crushed by horse and set of tubs

      

Crossthwaite, Henry, 30 Jan 1884, (accident: 29 Jan 1884), aged 22, Driver, severely crushed by being knocked down and trampled on by his horse

     

Dodsworth, James, 29 Aug 1866, aged 50, Screenman, was crushed to death between two waggons at the screens

      

Higgins, John, 08 Jun 1868, aged 16, Pony Putter, fall of stone in broken

      

Jackson, Thomas, 17 Jul 1877, (accident: 27 Jun 1877), aged 32, Deputy, burnt by explosion of gas in East Way; went into place at a fault, surrounded by goaf, with a candle, in order to make it ready for removing pillars, Buried: Shincliffe, St. Mary the Virgin, on 19 Jul 1877 {NBI}

      

Jarvis, James, 23 Oct 1867, aged 23, Hewer, fall of stone in broken

      

Race, Robert, 22 Nov 1870, aged 13, Hewer, killed by a fall of stone

      

Robson, Joseph, 11 Jan 1877, aged 16, Putter, fell out of cage while descending, too many boys crushed in overloading cage [Sunderland Daily Echo reports: accident - 12 Jan 1877 pg 4 col 2]

      

Soulsby, Abraham, 30 Oct 1861, aged 15, Driver, killed by a fall of stone

      

Sutherland, Robert, 15 Sep 1874, aged 39, Engineplane Man, crushed by engine set, Chester Ward Coroner's Inquest, place: Houghton Colliery, cause: run over by coal tubs (DRO Ref: COR/C/2/82)

     

Tindle, William Martin, 08 Feb 1872, aged 38, Blacksmith, crushed by set of tubs on an incline, Buried: Shincliffe, St. Mary the Virgin Churchyard

      

Willis, William, 15 Feb 1879, aged 45, Overman, fall of stone while drawing a jud, Buried: Shincliffe, St. Mary the Virgin on 19 Feb 1879 {NBI}

      

Winham, Walter, 12 Mar 1866, aged 36, Deputy, killed by a fall of stone

 
  16 names found

If you know of any fatalities missing from the above list then please contact us with the details and we will add them to our database.

Those names marked with , have a web page providing individual details of the accident, the page may also include a photograph of the deceased. Click on the symbol next to the name to see the web page.

Some of the names of mining fatalities on this web site have been kindly provided by Jim Grainger from his research into early newspapers (primarily the Durham Advertiser and Durham Chronicle) and are marked with .


The following unnamed fatalities are listed in the Mines Inspectors Reports, once again this collection is not complete!

Date Inspectors Remarks
30 Nov 1856 11machinery

  Summary Description Disasters Names Credits  

Collieries and Pits within 5 miles (8km)

  a simulated map showing the immediate vicinity of Houghall Colliery

  list of collieries/pits etc. near to Houghall Colliery


  Summary Description Disasters Names Local Collieries  

Credits

Sources:

  • 1861 Mines Inspectors Report
  • 1865 Mines Inspectors Report
  • 1866 Mines Inspectors Report
  • 1867 Mines Inspectors Report
  • 1868 Mines Inspectors Report
  • 1869 List of Mines
  • 1870 Mines Inspectors Report (C 124)
  • 1873 Mines Inspectors Report (C 1056)
  • 1873-4 List of Mines
  • 1874 Mines Inspectors Report (C 1216)
  • 1877 Mines Inspectors Report (C 2003)
  • 1879 Mines Inspectors Report (C 2604)
  • 1880 List of Mines
  • 1881 Mines Inspectors Annual Report
  • 1884 List of Mines
  • 1884 Mines Inspectors Report (C 4429)
  • Contributions by members of the Public
  • Tombstone(s) in St. Mary the Virgin Churchyard, Shincliffe
  • Victoria History of the Counties of England – Durham. Published in three volumes in 1907.

  Summary Description Disasters Names Local Collieries Credits  

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Page last updated: 01 Dec 2007


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