Homepage
Home
Search
Catalogue Search
Name Search
Place Search
Contact Us
Record
Entry Type
Corporate
Corporate Name
Grassmoor Colliery Company Limited
Place
Grassmoor, Chesterfield
Epithet
colliery company
Dates
1846-1947
History
The company of Messrs Barnes came into existence in 1846, after the original mineral rights leased by the Duke of Devonshire under land at Grassmoor had been recently acquired by the Barnes family. Alfed Barnes was the main protagonist of the company, although it had been his father who had made the initial purchase of land and advised his son to investigate the utilisation of its coal resources. In 1879 the company's name was changed to Grassmoor Colliery Company and then changed again in 1881to A.E. Barnes. In 1884, the Barnes family decided to form the limited company of Grassmoor Colliery Company, rather than to carry on using the family name. Despite the loss of the family name in the company, the family were still heavily involved in its running: all but one of the subscribers to the company were from the Barnes family, the other subscriber being a cashier for it.
The company was often plagued with financial problems. The first of these times occured in 1896, when it meant that half of the miners then employed had to be laid off. During World War 1, the company became known for its punishment of miners who were absent without permission at a time when there were problems with labour shortages.By 1928, the company faced liquidation when the Barnes family went bankrupt. A new company with the same name was established to take over, with no further involvement by the Barnes family.
The colliery was transferred to the National Coal Board as a result of the nationalisation of the coal industry in 1947.
Key Events
1846: formation of company of Messrs Barnes
1884: formation of Grassmoor Colliery Company Limited
1928: end of Barnes family involvement
1947: nationalisation
Source
‘Grassmoor’, http://www.oldminer.co.uk/grassmoor.html
‘Grassmoor Colliery Merged With Williamthorpe’, http://www.healeyhero.co.uk/rescue/individual/Bob_Bradley/Bk-4/B4-1950-B.html and http://www.healeyhero.co.uk/rescue/individual/Bob_Bradley/Bk-5/B5-1967-D.html
‘Grassmoor Training Centre’, http://www.healeyhero.co.uk/rescue/individual/Bob_Bradley/Bk-4/B4-1952-4.html
Bell, D., Memories of the Derbyshire Coalfields (Newbury: Countryside Books, 2006)
Garlic, S. L., ‘Bygone Grassmoor’, Derbyshire Miscellany, 8.5 (1979)
Lomax, S. C., The Home Front: Derbyshire in the First World War (Barnsley: Pen & Sword, 2016)
Wain, K., The Coal Mining Industry of Sheffield and North Derbyshire (Amberley, 2014)
Authorised Form of Name
Grassmoor, Chesterfield; Grassmoor Colliery Company Limited; 1846-1947; colliery company
Show related Catalog records.
Add to My Items
Local Studies Periodicals
Useful Links
Viewing the records
I can't find what I'm looking for
Research Guides
Reproducing items from the collections
Picture the Past - old photos
Heritage Mapping Portal
Online Exhibitions
Our Blog
Tweets by DRO
See more Collection highlights
Local Studies Periodicals
Florence Nightingale
National Coal Board
Sir John Franklin (1786-1847), naval officer and arctic explorer
Collection Highlights