Museum
Friends of Durham Mining Museum
Events Calendar
Join our Friends!
Newsletter Contents
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 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

View our Guestbook

Index to site

Contact and address details

  Disasters - Names Disasters - Names  
Date:  8th November 1906
Colliery:  Clara Vale
Cause:  Fall of stone
Lives Lost:  1

Description

Deceased was working in a longwall heading 17½ feet wide in the South-west district of the Five Quarter seam. The coal was nipped out at the right side of the place; it had been worked forward 7 feet, gradually thinning from 18 inches until it was entirely lost. A canch extending half-way across the place from the right side, above where this thin coal had been taken cut, had to be blown down. At the brow there was 2 feet 4 inches of post overlaid by blue metal. Deceased set his boring tree just outbye of a 6 feet balk, which, with a prop at either end supported the permanent roof 1 foot 9 inches from the brow, and sat down on a piece of stone between the balk and the brow to drill a hole near the top of the post, and had his legs stretched out under the brow. When he had drilled 16 inches, a stone, 24 inches by 20 inches by 18 inches, fell off the brow on to his legs and broke his left thigh. It was relieved by jacks at the side and by a parting above and fell between two short props set 2 feet apart under the brow. The chargeman was in the place at the time, having examined it, and thought all was safe, and when the stone fell was coming out from under the brow close to deceased. Deceased was taken to Newcastle Infirmary, but as the broken bone would not unite, he was put under chloroform, and was being operated on when he died from shock and heart failure.

Source: 1906 Mines Inspectors Report (Cd 3449), Newcastle District (No. 3) by J. B. Atkinson, H.M. Inspector of Mines, copy held in the Scottish Mining Museum, Newtongrange, Midlothian.

Fatalities

  

Wright, John, aged 49, Stoneman, killed by a fall of stone

 
All names found

 

Return Return   Return Return to Top


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: 01 Jan 2008


Search

Print