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Whitehouse Colliery |
Index |
Whitehouse Colliery |
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Whitehouse Colliery
| Location: |
Woodland
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| Map Ref: |
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| Maps: |
1928 map from Reid's Handy Colliery Guide |
| Opened: |
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| Closed: |
23 May 1928 |
| Owners: |
1910's - Owners of White House Colliery |
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1910's - J. G. Elwood |
| Output: |
1914 - Coal: Household. |
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1921 - Coal: Household. |
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1923 - Coal: Coking, Steam. |
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1924 - Coal: Coking, Gas. |
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1925 - Coal: Gas, Household. |
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1927 - Coal: Gas, Household. |
| Employment: |
1914 - 0 [Standing] |
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1921 - 12 (8 below, 4 surface) |
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1923 - 10 (8 below, 2 surface) |
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1924 - 11 (9 below, 2 surface) |
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1925 - 5 [Temporarily closed 09/25] |
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1927 - 0 [Closed since 12/26] |
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Colliery Management (prior to 1955)
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| Seams Worked: |
1914 - Brockwell |
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1921 - Brockwell |
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1923 - Brockwell |
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1924 - Brockwell |
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1925 - Brockwell [Temporarily closed 09/25] |
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1927 - Brockwell [Closed since 12/26] |
Description
Disasters (5 or more killed)
None found.
Names of those killed at this colliery
No names found.
Collieries and Pits within 5 miles (8km)
Unable to generate - no grid reference supplied.
Credits
Sources:
- 1914 List of Mines - Government report from the Mines Department, from a copy held in the Scottish Mining Museum, Newtongrange, Midlothian
- 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
- 1923 List of Mines - Government report from the Mines Department, from a copy held in the Scottish Mining Museum, Newtongrange, Midlothian
- 1924 List of Mines - Government report from the Mines Department, from a copy held in the Scottish Mining Museum, Newtongrange, Midlothian
- 1925 List of Mines - Government report from the Mines Department, from a copy held in the Scottish Mining Museum, Newtongrange, Midlothian
- 1927 List of Mines - Government report from the Mines Department, from a copy held in the Scottish Mining Museum, Newtongrange, Midlothian
Related Links:
| External sites |
| Gaunless Valley History Trust |
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