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  Tyne Main Colliery  Index  Tyne Main Colliery  

Tyne Main Colliery

also known as Friar's Goose Colliery


  Description Disasters Names Local Collieries Credits  

Location: Friar's Goose, Gateshead
1½ miles [2 km] SE of Newcastle
Map Ref: (Sheet 88) NZ266620, 54° 57' 7" N, 1° 35' 5" W
Maps: 1807 map from "The Picture of Newcastle Upon Tyne…", published in 1807 by D. Akenhead
1896 map detailed map from the Ordnance Survey
Opened: 1798
Closed: 1926
Pits: Engine Pit
William Pit, locn: (Sheet 88) NZ274631, opened: 1841, sinking: 14 Jan 1841
  Shaft details for William Pit
Owners: 1850's - Losh & Co.
1860's - George Elliott & Co.
Employment: 1854 - 0 [Working]
1854 - 0 [Working]
    Catalogue of plans of abandoned mines for Tyne Main Colliery
Notes:

1798 - The Engine Pit, Tyne Main Colliery, bored below the thill of the Low Main Seam, proving the Beaumont and Denton Low Main.

1841, Jan 14 - Commenced to sink the William Pit, Tyne Main Colliery, 14 January, from the surface to the Low Main Seam.

1842 - The High Main Seam being abandoned and tubbed off at Tyne Main Colliery in this year, an arrangement was entered into with the owners of Felling, Walker, Wallsend, Willington and Heaton Collieries, under which they contributed to the cost of keeping the large pumping engine at Friar's Goose at work to prevent the water from passing to the dip. The quantity of water raised by the engine at Friar's Goose Pit in 1849 amounted to 1,170 gallons per minute.



  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!

     

Astley, Thomas, 01 Aug 1919, aged 38, fell down shaft [More information ...]

     

Caldwell, John, 26 Apr 1844, fall of roof, married with a family [More information ...]

      

Dorman, John, 22 Jul 1875, aged 41, Hewer, Chester Ward Coroner's Inquest, place: Gateshead, cause: fall of stone, Bensham Seam Tyne Main Colliery (DRO Ref: COR/C/2/368)

      

Harrison, John, 12 Apr 1883, aged 33, Shaftman, fell out of kibble [More information ...]

     

Kears, Robert, 06 Feb 1843, aged 19, He had been ascending the shaft at Friar's Goose Colliery in a corf, when two men at work below heard something fall. One of them ascended supposing that some stones had fallen down, but finding that not to be the case, descended again, when the deceased was discovered lying dead at the bottom of the shaft. It was supposed he had been thrown out of the corf by its becoming entangled with the "rapper-rope", which was broken, [date of inquest]

      

Logan, Patrick, 21 Jul 1874, aged 17, Helper Up, fall of stone, caused by a tub getting off the rails and knocking out a prop

      

Morrison, William, 26 Dec 1870, aged 52, Onsetter, fall down shaft

 
  7 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.

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


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

Date Inspectors Remarks
28 Jul 1852 11
26 Jul 1858 11collision of tubs
14 Sep 1858 11Early in the morning at Friar's Goose Colliery, a young boy by sheer thoughtlessness and anxiety to get down to his work, ran into the mouth of the working shaft, although many persons were assembled around the pit. The cage was still at the bottom of that portion of the shaft into which he precipitated himself.
18 Mar 1861 11hurt by cage at shaft top
17 Jan 1865 22choke damp, More information ...

  Summary Description Disasters Names Credits  

Collieries and Pits within 5 miles (8km)

  a simulated map showing the immediate vicinity of Tyne Main Colliery

  list of collieries/pits etc. near to Tyne Main Colliery


  Summary Description Disasters Names Local Collieries  

Credits

Sources:

  • 1854 List of mines by T. Y. Hall, published in Vol II (1853-4) of the Transactions of the North of England Institute of Mining Engineers
  • 1869 List of Mines
  • 1870 Mines Inspectors Report (C 124)
  • 1874 Mines Inspectors Report (C 1216)
  • 1875 Mines Inspectors Report (C 1499)
  • 1883 Mines Inspectors Report (C 4078)
  • An Account of the strata of Northumberland & Durham as proved by Borings & Sinkings, Volume S-T, published by the North of England Institute of Mining & Mechanical Engineers, 1894
  • Contributions by members of the Public
  • Victoria History of the Counties of England – Durham. Published in three volumes in 1907.

  Summary Description Disasters Names Local Collieries Credits  

Related Links:

On this site
 Newspaper articles
 Evidence given to the 1842 Children's Employment Commission
 Article in the Transactions of the Mining Engineers

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 Tyne Main Colliery


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Page last updated: 01 Oct 2008


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