Museum
Friends of Durham Mining Museum
Events Calendar
e-Books and Books for sale
Photograph Gallery
Document Archive
Master Name Index
Discussion Forums
What's new in the site

Mining History
Colliery Index
Colliery Index
Shaft cross sections
Borings and Sinkings
List of Mines
Colliery Managers
Abandoned Seams
Colliery Maps
Company Overviews
Who's Who
Mineral Information
Managers Certificates
Educational Material
Bibliography
Statistics
Workers/Employee Lists
Notes for Family Historians

Disaster Reports
Names of those killed
Disasters in the 1700s
Disasters in the 1800s
Disasters in the 1900s
Memorials
Awards for Gallantry

Links to other sites of interest
Industrial Heritage Days Out
Former www.pitwork.net site

View our Guestbook

Index to site

Contact and address details


  Morrison Colliery  Index  Morrison Colliery  

Morrison Colliery


  Description Disasters Names Local Collieries Credits  

Location: Annfield Plain
Map Ref:
Opened: 1869
Closed: 1964
Pits: North Pit
South Pit, closed: 1961
Owners: 1880's - Hedley & Bell
1890's - South Moor Coal Co. Ltd.
1910's - South Moor Colliery Co. Ltd.
1930's - Holmside & South Moor Collieries Ltd.
1947 - National Coal Board (N.C.B.)
Output: 1873 - Coal.
1888 - Coal.
1896 - Coal: Coking, Gas, Steam.
1902 - Coal: Coking, Gas, Steam.
1914 - Morrison - Coal: Coking, Gas, Steam.
1921 - Coal: Coking, Gas, Steam.
1930 - Coal: Gas.
Employment:
Year Pit  Total Below Above
1888Standing
189638034337
190251243082
1914Morrison1,5881,383205
19211,9461,568378
19301,5311,198333
1940North752543209
1940South28421074
Total1,036753283
  Colliery Management (prior to 1958)
Seams Worked: 1914 - Morrison - Five Quarter, Hutton, Low Main, Main Coal
1921 - Five Quarter, Hutton, Low Main, Main Coal
1930 - Five Quarter, Hutton, Low Main, Main, Maudlin
Notes:   Miscellaneous Notes and Incidents for Morrison Colliery


  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!

     

Bell, Michael, 21 Apr 1905, aged 17, Pony Putter, Fall of coal. Skull fractured and neck broken; also left leg fractured. He was filling some lying coal in a place where a headways lift had been taken out in main coal, the timber drawn, and the overlying Five Quarter Seam pierced or broken up. He had reached in under the lip to lift some coals when a quantity of Five Quarter coal burst in upon him without warning, Buried: St. Andrew's Churchyard, Stanley

     

Cassidy, -, 13 Dec 1917, aged 28, Buried: St. Joseph's (Roman Catholic) Churchyard, Stanley

      

Close, James, 06 Apr 1905, aged 49, Hewer, died of heart failure; no inquest held

     

Coxon, William, 13 Dec 1913, (accident: 09 May 1913), aged 37, Hewer, it was alleged that death had been accelerated by injuries received by Coxon on May 9th, 1913, when his eye was struck by a piece of coal

      

Dawson, George Thomas, 05 Oct 1951, aged 37, he was killed outright by a large slab of rock which had fallen from the roof, he was working alone in the seam

      

Hodgson, Robert, 27 Dec 1905, aged 56, Stoneman, died from heart failure when walking out-bye; no inquest held

      

Johnson, Thomas, 04 Apr 1898, aged 57, Hewer, This case was only brought to my notice today. He is alleged to have received a strain down the pit in August of last year, and to have died from the effects of same on December 2nd. but the doctor gave a certificate that he died from natural causes, and no inquest was held.

      

Lowery, John George, 11 Sep 1908, aged 37, Hewer, He was hewing in a split wall in the main coal seam which is worked under the goaf of the five quarter seam and separated from it by a band of only 9 inches thick. Apparently, as he was working the place began to weight and he, in trying to save his gear, stayed in it too long; the roof fell in and he was smothered beneath. The timber was set quite close

     

Maddison, Arthur Hewitt, 22 Jan 1904, aged 22, Stoneman, a fall of stone from roof of main rolleyway at a place where he was dressing side stone back occurred and killed him; the stone was 9 ft. by 6 ft. and began at a feather edge and thickened to a foot where it came off at a slip, and the top was very slippery, Buried: Harelaw Cemetery (old)

      

Newton, William, 11 Aug 1871, aged 11, Pick Carrier, fell from heapstead

      

Norton, William, 21 Oct 1914, aged 18, Driver, deceased was engaged in driving sets of six tubs between the flat and the landing; the road had a varying gradient requiring the use of drags in the wheels of loaded sets; on this account riding on the limbers was prohibited; deceased, however, did ride, and when the pony crossed out at a headways end it was thrown down on its side; the limbers were tilted into a vertical position, and the upper side of the bow caught deceased in the neck and pressed so hard against the tub end that his neck was dislocated

      

Pattinson, John William Toward, 27 Nov 1896, aged 32, Locomotive Fireman, Crushed between two trucks; he was attempting to pass between a truck standing in a siding and those of his set, which were in motion, but there was not room and he was crushed to death

      

Pearson, John, 09 Dec 1874, aged 58, Hewer, fall of coal, Chester Ward Coroner's Inquest, place: South Moor, cause: fall of coal in Morrison Pit (DRO Ref: COR/C/2/167)

     

Redfearn, Stanley, 27 Oct 1958, aged 52, Deputy, he collapsed and died in the North Pit, death was due to heart failure, chronic bronchitis and influenza and extensive lung fibrosis

      

Scanlon, Peter, 12 Apr 1906, (accident: 02 Apr 1906), aged 45, Hewer, He was engaged firing a shot when it exploded more quickly than he had expected. His face, arms and legs were burned, and he died ten days afterwards. [More information ...]

      

Speed, George, 10 Jun 1913, aged 50, Shifter, deceased was engaged in enlarging a return airway, so that brick side walls could be built; he was dressing down the coal when a piece of stone, some 50 lbs. in weight, fell from a height of 2 feet above his head; it came off at a slip

     

Tarr, Frederick, 23 Apr 1914, aged 58, Hewer, Deceased was hewing alone in a seam 11 feet thick, and was taking off a lift leaving a rail of coal 4 feet wide next the goaf. The putter left him apparently quite safe, but on returning in five minutes found the whole place had closed, burying deceased. It was evident that he had warning, as he had collected all his gear. Had he not spent time in doing so he would probably have got clear.

     

Wanless, James, 02 Jul 1914, aged 20, Pony Putter, Deceased was found dead, with his legs under the fore end of a full tub. His skull was fractured, and it is supposed that he slipped and fell, his head striking a prop at the side of the road.

 
  18 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.

For those names marked we have a digital photograph of the tombstone, see the information page for further details.

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 .

  more information on some of the fatalities shown above


  Summary Description Disasters Names Credits  

Collieries and Pits within 5 miles (8km)

Unable to generate - no grid reference supplied.


  Summary Description Disasters Names Local Collieries  

Credits

Sources:

  • 1871 Mines Inspectors Report (C 456)
  • 1873-4 List of Mines
  • 1874 Mines Inspectors Report (C 1216)
  • 1880 List of Mines
  • 1881 Mines Inspectors Annual Report
  • 1884 List of Mines
  • 1888 List of Mines - Government report from the Mines Department, from a copy held in the Scottish Mining Museum, Newtongrange, Midlothian
  • 1890 List of Mines - Government report from the Mines Department, from a copy held in the Scottish Mining Museum, Newtongrange, Midlothian
  • 1896 List of Mines - Government report from the Mines Department, also available online at Peak District Mines Historical Society Ltd
  • 1896 Mines Inspectors Report (C 8450), Durham District (No. 4) by R. D. Bain, H.M. Inspector of Mines, from a copy held in the Scottish Mining Museum, Newtongrange, Midlothian
  • 1898 Mines Inspectors Report (C 9264), Durham District (No. 4) by R. D. Bain, H.M. Inspector of Mines, from a copy held in the Scottish Mining Museum, Newtongrange, Midlothian
  • 1902 List of Mines - Government report from the Mines Department, from a copy held in the Scottish Mining Museum, Newtongrange, Midlothian
  • 1904 Mines Inspectors Report (Cd 2506)
  • 1905 Mines Inspectors Report (Cd 2910)
  • 1906 Mines Inspectors Report (Cd 3449), Durham District (No. 4) by R. D. Bain, H.M. Inspector of Mines, from a copy held in the Scottish Mining Museum, Newtongrange, Midlothian
  • 1908 Mines Inspectors Report (Cd 4672)
  • 1909 List of Mines - from Reid's Handy Colliery Guide
  • 1913 Mines Inspectors Report
  • 1914 List of Mines - Government report from the Mines Department, from a copy held in the Scottish Mining Museum, Newtongrange, Midlothian
  • 1914 Mines Inspectors Report (Cd 8023)
  • 1919 List of Mines - from Reid's Handy Colliery Guide
  • 1921 List of Mines - Government report from the Mines Department, from a copy held in the Scottish Mining Museum, Newtongrange, Midlothian
  • 1930 List of Mines - Government report from the Mines Department, from a copy held in the Scottish Mining Museum, Newtongrange, Midlothian
  • 1940 Colliery Year Book and Coal Trades Directory published by Louis Cassier Co. Ltd.
  • NEEMARC - Ref: NUMDA/1/6/39, D.M.A. Minutes, Circulars etc. for 1914 (two volumes: covers Jan-Jun, Jul-Dec)
  • Contributions by members of the Public
  • Text kindly provided by Jim Grainger from his research into early newspapers (primarily the Durham Advertiser and Durham Chronicle).
  • Tombstone(s) in St. Joseph's (R.C.) Churchyard, Stanley

Pictures:

  • Colliery picture provided by David Kitching from the John Ryan Collection (©)

  Summary Description Disasters Names Local Collieries Credits  

Related Links:

On this site
 Pictures in the Gallery section for Morrison Colliery

Further Reading:

  • Banners of the Durham Coalfield, Norman Emery, 1998, Sutton Publishing Ltd., ISBN 0-7509-1708-3, provides a brief history of the colliery along with the history of the associated Miners Lodge Banner

Further Research:

  Research Notes for Morrison Colliery


Mail:
Webmaster

Back

Home
Crown copyright material is reproduced under Class Licence Number C01W0000177
with the permission of the Controller of HMSO and the Queen's Printer for Scotland.

Copyright © 1999-2008 by The Durham Mining Museum and its contributors
Registered Charity No: 1110608
Page last updated: 30 Oct 2008


Search

Print