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Archive Reference / Library Class No.NCB/E/BRE
TitleBretby Colliery post-vesting records
Date1963-1965
Extent1 file, 1 item
LevelSubSubFonds
RepositoryDerbyshire Record Office
Archive CreatorBretby Colliery
National Coal Board
Administrative HistoryIn 1872, the site was opened for coal mining deveolopment by the Dowager Countess of Chesterfield, who owned the Bretby Hall estate the colliery was sunk on. The coal seam was finally found in 1876. The colliery was opened by the Dowager Countess of Chesterfield in 1878. It was originally known as Bretby No. 3, because two other collieries had been sunk nearby earlier in the century. Bretby No. 1 was closed in 1874 and Bretby No. 2 in 1886. Bretby Colliery (ex No. 3) passed in 1890 to the Earl of Carnarvon, who had inherited it as part of the Chesterfield estate of which his mother had been heir. As he only used Bretby estate for shooting, the site was sold on to Hall's Collieries in 1920. The money received from the sale went towards funding the Tutankhamun expeditions in Egypt.

The seams worked were the Eureka, Stanhope, Woodfield, Nether, Stockings, Main and Kilburn coal seams. The highest recorded manpower was 536 in 1924. It was seen as a difficult colliery to run and was briefly closed in 1928. The colliery was transferred to the control of the National Coal Board as a result of the nationalisation of the coal industry in 1947. It closed for the final time in 1962.
FormatMap/Plan

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Newhall; Bretby Colliery; 1878-1962; coal mine
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