tarboat's photos with the keyword: welbeck

Welbeck pit

04 Nov 2023 1 282
The headgears of Welbeck Colliery rise over the trees around the pit. This was the penultimate colliery working in Nottinghamshire and closed in 2010.

Welbeck Colliery

09 Nov 2021 1 324
The penultimate Nottinghamshire Pit a couple of years before the inevitable end. In this case the pit just ran out of reserves having opened in 1912.

One down and one on its way

31 Mar 2011 417
Last rites for the headstocks at Welbeck Colliery today. It was sad to see the end of this pit, but at least it was because the reserves of coal had been extracted.

Welbeck Colliery overview

04 Jan 2011 355
The pithead area at Welbeck was well screened from this side by Leylandii.

Welbeck Colliery closes

10 May 2010 404
www.chad.co.uk/news/Welbeck-Colliery-to-close-next.627172... It is the end of an era at Welbeck Colliery as the pit prepares to cease production next Tuesday after almost a century. UK Coal has announced the colliery, at Meden Vale, will be closed on 11th May when the last coal face there reaches the end of its life, after being open since 1912. The colliery had 1,400 working men at its peak but this figure has now fallen to 410 – all of whom were offered jobs in other parts of the company. Around 170 workers have finished working at the colliery so far, with just 57 taking voluntary redundancy. And about 70 men will remain working there for the next three months to recover face equipment worth around £6m, some of which will be transferred to neighbouring Thoresby Colliery, then the pit will be decommissioned. UK Coal spokesman Stuart Oliver said: "Most of the site is owned by Welbeck Estates and there are on-going discussions involving Welbeck Estates, UK Coal, the local authority and other job-creation agencies to determine what the best future use of the site should be to create jobs for the future." The first shaft for the pit was sunk between 1912-15 at a depth of 660m and it became one of the first million-tonne-a-year superpits. Mr Oliver said the colliery shared the same seam of coal with Thoresby Colliery, the deep soft seam, but it is separated by a geological fault, so the company decided to continue mining it from the Thoresby side. He said: "When the decision to close it was taken about three years ago, it had a limited future, for the coal reserves on this side of the geological fault." The coal face at Welbeck is 300m long and is now reaching the end of its life, while Thoresby Colliery has had a £55m investment made to open up new reserves there, which will keep it open for at least another decade.

Welbeck Colliery

16 Jun 2008 283
Dump truck moving across the dirt tip at Welbeck Colliery in Nottinghamshire, one of only two working pits left in the county. Downcast shaft on the right and ventilation fan evasee lower left.