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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Formation  





2 Nationalisation and the end  





3 Collieries  














Sheffield Coal Company: Difference between revisions







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and continued this until 1866 when they leased a large tract in the area of [[Woodhouse]], [[Hackenthorpe]] and [[Beighton]], at that time outside the Sheffield boundary, from the [[Earl of Manvers]].

and continued this until 1866 when they leased a large tract in the area of [[Woodhouse]], [[Hackenthorpe]] and [[Beighton]], at that time outside the Sheffield boundary, from the [[Earl of Manvers]].



In [[1937]] the United Steel Companies, which had coal mining interests at [[Orgreave Colliery | Orgreave]] and [[Treeton Colliery | Treeton]], made an offer for the Sheffield Coal Company of which the directors recommended acceptance, the deal being finalised on 24 June.

In [[1937]] the [[United Steel Companies]], which had coal mining interests at [[Orgreave Colliery | Orgreave]] and [[Treeton Colliery | Treeton]], made an offer for the Sheffield Coal Company of which the directors recommended acceptance, the deal being finalised on 24 June.



== Nationalisation and the end ==

== Nationalisation and the end ==


Revision as of 12:11, 9 January 2007

The Sheffield Coal Company was a colliery owning and coal selling company with its head office situated in South Street,Sheffield, South Yorkshire.

Formation

The Sheffield Coal Company was one of the oldest colliery companies in Sheffield being founded on 28 February 1805. The Houndsfield-Wilson Coal Company, owners of pits in Birley Vale merged with three individuals named Bartholomew, Jeffcock and Dunn to form the new company and were later joined by John Jeffcock and William Littlewood from High Hazels, Darnall and John and Edwin Sorby of Attercliffe but with colliery interests at Dore House, near Orgreave.

The company worked below land of the Duke of Norfolk's estates and continued this until 1866 when they leased a large tract in the area of Woodhouse, Hackenthorpe and Beighton, at that time outside the Sheffield boundary, from the Earl of Manvers.

In1937 the United Steel Companies, which had coal mining interests at Orgreave and Treeton, made an offer for the Sheffield Coal Company of which the directors recommended acceptance, the deal being finalised on 24 June.

Nationalisation and the end

The collieries of the Sheffield Coal Company, by that time owned by United Steel Companies, became part of the National Coal Board on nationalisation, but the company name, which had continued to exsist under United Steels ownership continued, along with others which became part of the NCB, until being finally wound up in 1961.

Collieries

From their agreement with the Earl of Manvers the company sunk Birley West Colliery on a site in the Shirebrook Valley between Woodhouse and Hackenthorpe and within ten years plans were put forward to acquire more land and sink a new shaft. It was not until Spring 1887 that work commenced on the new shaft but the following year the part completed colliery gained the name Birley East Colliery (collectively these pits were referred to as Birley Collieries). Although a small amount of coal was being cut from the new colliery, brought to the surface at Birley West, it was not until 1890 when a new winding engine was installed that it fully came on stream. Later expansion came with mining rights being obtained from the Duke of Norfolk to mine below Handsworth Common.

In1844, looking again to expands the company took a vested interest in North Staveley Colliery at Aston. The colliery was situated to the north of, and set back from the laterManchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway line between Woodhouse and Kiveton.

On the south side to the M.S.& L.R. line was the site of Brookhouse Colliery, between Swallownest and Beighton.


Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Sheffield_Coal_Company&oldid=99543771"

Categories: 
Industrial company stubs
Mining in the United Kingdom
 



This page was last edited on 9 January 2007, at 12:11 (UTC).

This version of the page has been revised. Besides normal editing, the reason for revision may have been that this version contains factual inaccuracies, vandalism, or material not compatible with the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.



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