Local coal merchant in a station yard,Hook,Hampshire, England, 1965. Office at centre, coal stores on the right.
Acoal merchant is the term used in the UK and other countries for a trader who sells coal and often delivers it to households.[1][2] Coal merchants were once a major class of local business, but have declined in importance in many parts of the developed world due to the rise of alternative heating methods, includingcentral heating,gas,oil andelectric heating.[3] The men who carried the coal to households were calledcoal men.[4][5]
The mass of coal homes burned was large; the UK government estimated in 1975 that the average household burningsolid fuel used about 4.7 tons per year.[6]
According toJ. U. Nef, the term "coal merchant" originally meant "the owner, or part owner, of an east-coast collier [ship]; but in the eighteenth century the word was applied to all kinds of London coal traders, including small retailers", while the shipper came to be called a coal dealer, although the terms were "seldom applied consistently" in this period.[7]
Bill-card of a London coal merchant, c. 1830
From the coming of the railways, coal merchants in the UK were typically based atrailway stations in thegoods yard, with coal delivered by train.[1][8][9] Other possibilities were delivery by canal boat or bycollier ship,[1][10] or direct sale from the colliery in areas close to one, known as "landsale".[11][12] The coal would then be transferred by cart or truck to local homes and businesses, sometimes into acoal hole, a hatch leading down to thecellar.[13][14]
Coal merchants in the railway era were typically small local businesses, although larger dealers did exist,[1] and might buy their coal from a coal factor, also called a coal broker.[15] According to John Armstrong, in London there was a "rough implicit division" with coal consignments to individual local coal merchants coming by railways while large power stations and factories, often near theThames, received it by collier ship.[16][17]
There was a risk ofoccupational injury from the back-breaking work of carrying the heavy sacks of coal.[4][18] Liz Barclay reports that inGelderland in theNetherlands it was common for deliveries to be done in summer when it was dry to stock up for winter to reduce dirt coming into the house.[18]
Smog in London from burning coal led to attempts to reduce consumption of coal, especially non-smokeless fuels, in the 1950s
During the post-war austerity period the nationalisedNational Coal Board promoted poor-quality "nutty slack" coal for consumer use so that higher quality coal could be exported or used elsewhere.[19] TheClean Air Act 1956 attempted to switch UK consumption away from this towardssmokeless fuel.[20] In 1962 the NCB and traders set up a Coal Trade Code and promoted an "Approved Coal Merchant" mark, which continues to exist as of 2022.[21]
From the 1950s,British Railways reducedwagonload freight to individual railway stations as part of theBeeching cuts, with supply to UK coal merchants often switching to delivery by road from large "coal concentration depots" where coal was unloaded fromblock trains.[22][23][24] However, coal merchants often stayed trading in station yards.[25][26]
Coal delivery lorry, Richmond, North Yorkshire, 1994
Decline of rail shipment of coal generally led to the closure of concentration depots around the 1990s.[27][28]
Coal merchants have declined due to new heating methods.[20][18] Explaining his decision to sell his business inSwindon in 2015, one commented "business was good but it wasn’t growing any more. With the introduction of natural gases to Swindon and electric cookers, demand was slowing."[3]
^Eadie, Alex (3 March 1977)."Coal Consumption".Hansard. Retrieved5 May 2023.The total number of solid fuel consuming households in the United Kingdom in 1975 was estimated to be 3·3 millions and the total solid fuel disposals to the domestic sector in the same year was 15·5 millions tons, giving an annual average of about 4·7 tons per solid fuel consuming household.
^abcBarclay, Liz (2016).The Farmer, the Coal Merchant, the Baker: A Personal Impression of the Development of the Gelderland Horse World. YouCaxton Publications. pp. 79–87.ISBN978-1911175285.
^Rhodes, Mike (15 February 2023).MGR Coal Trains. Amberley Publishing Limited.ISBN978-1-3981-0889-9.The Deepdale Coal Concentration Depot in Preston was one of the last in the UK to receive coal by rail...1994...was the last year in which the train ran.