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  Newlandside Quarry  Index  Newlandside Quarry  

Newlandside Quarry


  Description Disasters Names Local Collieries Credits  

Location: Stanhope
16½ miles [27 km] SSE of Hexham
Map Ref: (Sheet 92, OL31) NY995383, 54° 44' 22" N, 2° 0' 28" W
Opened:
Closed:
Output: 1922 - Limestone.
Employment: 1922 - 73 (61 below, 12 surface)
Notes:   Miscellaneous Notes and Incidents for Newlandside Quarry


  Summary Disasters Names Local Collieries Credits  

Description

The Stanhope quarries are Parson Byers & Newlandside, which adjoin one another and form a continuous face three miles in length. The limestone bed reaches a thickness of about 60 ft. and lies at an elevation of about 900 ft. above sea level. Each of the quarries is served by a self-acting incline which delivers the loaded 10-ton railway trucks to the lines of the L. & N. E. Railway.

A pair of gravity-operated balanced drums are placed at the top of each incline. The Parson Byers drums are 12 ft. dia. by 3 ft. wide, those at Newlandside being 8 ft. dia. by 3 ft. 2 in. wide. The latter have recently been renewed. The new drums made in the company's fabrication department are of welded-steel construction. The brakes are "Ferodo" lined.

From the incline head to the working face the trucks are handled by four-wheel coupled saddle-tank steam locomotives having 12-in, cylinders by 18 in. stroke.

The quarrymen work in pairs and load the limestone direct into trucks, the face being served with 4-ft. 8½-in. gauge tracks. Blasting is done with high explosives, the holes being put in by compressed-air drills. Each quarry is equipped with a Ruston-Bucyrus steam-driven excavator for removing the overburden. One of these excavators has a bale pull of 18 tons and the other a pull of 20 tons.

Iron & Coal Trades Review 1937


  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!

      

Craig, William, 07 Apr 1909, aged 38, Quarryman, Knocked over the edge of the panel on which he was working by a stone falling from a slip [More information ...]

     

Davis, Joseph Sydney, 02 May 1929, aged 44, Buried: St. Michael & All Angels, Frosterley

      

Gardiner, Joseph William, 28 Mar 1910, aged 28, Quarryman, killed by a fall of rock and knocked a distance of about 20 feet down the quarry face [More information ...]

      

Peart, John Watson, 30 Aug 1909, aged 24, Barer, Fatally injured by a fall of loose soft earth [More information ...]

      

Vipond, William, 08 Oct 1906, aged 54, Quarryman, He was knocked off the bench upon which he was working by a stone which fell from a point about 6 ft. above the bench. [More information ...]

 
  5 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.

  more information on some of the fatalities shown above


  Summary Description Disasters Names Credits  

Collieries and Pits within 5 miles (8km)

  a simulated map showing the immediate vicinity of Newlandside Quarry

  list of collieries/pits etc. near to Newlandside Quarry


  Summary Description Disasters Names Local Collieries  

Credits

Sources:

  • 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
  • 1909 Mines Inspectors Report (Cd 5177)
  • 1910 Mines Inspectors Report (Cd 5676)
  • 1922 List of Quarries - Government report from the Mines Department, from a copy held in the Scottish Mining Museum, Newtongrange, Midlothian
  • Industrial Locomotives of Durham by The Industrial Railway Society, compiled by Colin E. Mountford and L. G. Charlton, published in 1977
  • Profile of Dorman, Long ∓ Co. Ltd. printed in The Iron & Coal Trades Review in 1937
  • Tombstone(s) in St. Michael & All Angels Churchyard, Frosterly

  Summary Description Disasters Names Local Collieries Credits  

Related Links:

None found


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