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Lofthouse Colliery disaster

Coordinates:53°42′54″N1°30′18″W / 53.715°N 1.505°W /53.715; -1.505
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mining accident in Lofthouse, West Yorkshire, England

53°42′54″N1°30′18″W / 53.715°N 1.505°W /53.715; -1.505TheLofthouse Colliery disaster was amining accident in Lofthouse, in theWest Riding of Yorkshire,England, on Wednesday 21 March 1973, in which seven mine workers died when workings flooded.[1]

Memorial to disaster

Disaster

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Lofthouse Colliery was in Lofthouse Gate, close toOutwood in the Stanley Urban District, where many of the colliers lived. The village, to which the colliery was adjacent, now falls within the Ardsley and Robin Hood ward of the City of Leeds metropolitan borough but with a Wakefield postal address (WF3). A new coalface was excavated too close to an abandoned flooded 19th-century mineshaft.[2] The sudden inrush of three million imperial gallons (14,000 m3) of water trapped seven mine workers 750 feet (230 m) below ground.[3][4] A six-day rescue operation succeeded in recovering only one body, that of Charles Cotton.[5] The location of the flooded shaft was known toNational Coal Board (NCB) surveyors but they had not believed it to be as deep as the modern workings.British Geological Survey records indicated that the flooded shaft did descend to the same depth but the NCB neglected to check these records.[6]

Legacy

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The incident led to the Mines (Precautions Against Inrushes) Regulations 1979 (PAIR), requiring

examination of records held by theNatural Environment Research Council which might be relevant to proposed workings [and] diligent enquiry into other sources of information which may be available, e.g. from geological memoirs, archives, libraries and persons with knowledge of the area and its history.[7]

The response ofArthur Scargill, a compensation agent in the YorkshireNUM, is credited with boosting his popularity with the Yorkshire miners and helping his election to the post of president of the Yorkshire Area NUM later in 1973.[8][9] He accompanied the rescue teams underground and was on site for six days with the relatives of the seven deceased.[8] At the enquiry he used notebooks of underground working from the 19th century retrieved from the Institute of Geological Sciences in Leeds to argue that the National Coal Board could have prevented the disaster had they acted on the information available.[8]

Lofthouse Colliery closed in 1981. Many of the miners took transfers to the newSelby Coalfield.[10]

Folk song

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There is a folk song entitledThe Lofthouse Colliery Disaster, which was attributed to Sam Richards and Tish Stubbs.[11]

Memorial

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A seven-sided stone obelisk listing the names of the seven miners was erected in Wrenthorpe above the point where the miners were trapped. It is on the south side of Batley Road, opposite the junction with Wrenthorpe Lane atgrid referenceSE 304 221.

The men who died were:

  • Frederick Armitage, 41
  • Colin Barnaby, 36
  • Frank Billingham, 48
  • Sydney Brown, 36
  • Charles Cotton, 49 (the only miner whose body was recovered)[3]
  • Edward Finnegan, 40
  • Alan Haigh, 30

Services and reunions were held in Wakefield and Wrenthorpe on the weekend of 23/24 March 2013 to commemorate the 40th anniversary of the disaster.[3]

See also

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References

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  1. ^"The Lofthouse Colliery Disaster".BBC. January 2003. Retrieved28 July 2011.
  2. ^Price, Michael (1996).Introducing Groundwater.Routledge. p. 223.ISBN 978-0-7487-4371-1.
  3. ^abc"Lofthouse Colliery miners remembered at services".BBC News. Retrieved14 December 2014.
  4. ^Faux, Ronald (23 March 1973). "Mine rescue hopes set back six hours".The Times. No. 58739. London. p. 1.
  5. ^"New video's tribute to miners in pit tragedy".Yorkshire Evening Post. 4 October 2001. Retrieved28 July 2011.
  6. ^Younger, P. L.; Adams, R. (1999).Predicting Mine Water Rebound. Bristol:Environment Agency. p. 39.ISBN 1-85705-050-9.
  7. ^The prevention of inrushes in mines: Approved Code of Practice.Health and Safety Executive. 1993. pp. 17–18.ISBN 978-0-7176-0620-7.
  8. ^abcRoutledge, Paul (1994).Scargill: the unauthorized biography. London: Harper Collins. p. 58.ISBN 0-00-638077-8.
  9. ^Strike: 358 Days that Shook the Nation. London: Sunday Times. 4 May 1985. p. 13.ISBN 0-340-38445-X.
  10. ^"It was never the same again!".BBC Bradford & West Yorkshire. Retrieved12 December 2015.
  11. ^The English folksinger: 159 modern and traditional folksongs. Glasgow: Collins. 1979. pp. 187–188.ISBN 0004110676.

External links

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Coal mining in Yorkshire
Coal mines in North Yorkshire
Coal mines in South Yorkshire1
Coal mines in West Yorkshire
Incidents
Coalfields and seams
Industrial relations
Other articles
Notes
1 Pre 1974, most coal mines in South Yorkshire were actually in the West Riding of Yorkshire. Those annotated with a number 1, were closed before 1974.
2 The Selby Coalfield straddled the border of North and West Yorkshire
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