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Record
Entry Type
Corporate
Corporate Name
Parkhouse Colliery
Parent Body
Clay Cross Company Limited
National Coal Board
Also Known As
Catty Pit; Clay Cross No. 7 Colliery
Place
Danesmoor
Epithet
coal mine
Dates
1867-1962
History
The colliery was first sunk in 1866 by the Clay Cross Co. to work the Blackshale coal seam. The Tupton coal seam was also later worked. It was also known as Clay Cross No. 7 Pit. It originally employed around 320 men. In 1882, a large gas explosion killed 55 men and boys employed at the site. A later inquest blamed 3 simultanous explosions for the loss of life. A branch line of the Erewash Valley Railway served the pit.
Control of the colliery was transferred to the National Coal Board following the nationalisation of the coal industry in 1947 The colliery eventually closed in 1962. At the time of closure 420 men were employed.
Key Events
1866: First sunk by Clay Cross Co.
1882: Methane gas explosion killed 55 men and boys
1947: Nationalisation
1962: Closed
Source
‘Parkhouse Colliery, Known As Catty Pit’, http://www.healeyhero.co.uk/rescue/pits/Parkhouse/Parkhouse1.html
Bell, D., Memories of the Derbyshire Coalfields (Newbury: Countryside Books, 2006)
Bridgewater, A. N., North Derbyshire Collieries, https://www.aditnow.co.uk/documents/Doe-Lea-Coal-Mine/North20Derbyshire20Collieries20Small20Update.pdf
Chapman, S., The Clay Cross Company, 1837-1987 (Old Woking: Unwin Brothers Ltd, 1987)
Clay Cross Today, Parkhouse Colliery, http://www.claycrosstoday.co.uk/Parkhouse-Colliery/
Authorised Form of Name
Danesmoor; Parkhouse Colliery; 1867-1962; coal mine
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