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Photos of Wigan
Photos of Wigan



Wigan Album

Pemberton

19 Comments

pemberton colliery
pemberton colliery
Photo: terry almond
Views: 4,861
Item #: 22985
colliery remains 1983.

Comment by: JB on 23rd March 2013 at 14:53

Some great pictures here Terry. I spent many happy hours on 'the tips' as a boy. Thanks for uploading them.

Comment by: Tim Cooke on 23rd March 2013 at 15:19

Oh aye! I used to climb up there, the best play ground going!

Comment by: Albert. on 23rd March 2013 at 17:03

When was it last,a working colliery?. Was it a drift mine,or were there headgears?

Comment by: Paula on 23rd March 2013 at 20:42

Where was the colliery situated? Was it near foundry lane where the new houses are now being built?

Comment by: james hornby on 24th March 2013 at 08:41

the colliery was where the new houses are being built ,i believe they have had to under-pin the new houses because they started to sink - not surprised with that land .

Comment by: Loz on 24th March 2013 at 10:53

Albert, it had four shafts - King Pit, Queen Pit, Prince Pit, and Bye Pit. It closed in 1946, though the screens were kept open to deal with the output from opencast sites. (They were operated by William Todd). In 1931, 1,365 miners and 473 surface workers were employed.The company owned approx 2,000 railway wagons.

Comment by: Albert. on 24th March 2013 at 12:46

Thanks Loz, for the very detailed answer to my question. I never realized it was such a large colliery. It was a strange time to close the colliery, when coal was so badly needed in, 1946.

Comment by: fred foster on 24th March 2013 at 15:36

The colliery ran out of coal seams to work. When I was at Stones Colliery, Bill Sharrock who worked at Blundells told me that they took the coal left by Worsley Mesnes Colliery which closed in 1926. The shafts for Worsley Mesnes colliery were situated near the 3 blocks of flats that were in the Worsley Mesnes estate near the Crooked Wheel.A boy fell down one of the shafts and his body was never recovered.Any coal reserves that were held by Blundells were later worked by the Summersales Colliery and these stretched underground up to Windy Arbour.Don Anderson had written a book on Blundells Colliery but it is out of print now. When I was at school in the 1930s, the dumpling tip was still burning and you could smell the sulphur and see the re hot ash at night.

Comment by: Albert. on 24th March 2013 at 19:40

Thanks Fred. Another enlightening set of memories, and facts.

Comment by: ann21 on 24th March 2013 at 22:06

Very interesting information. I can't believe how many mines there were round here. Colonel Blundell built a Sunday School in Little Lane for the children. It is a garage now but you can pick it out because of the pointed roof.

Comment by: fred foster on 25th March 2013 at 07:36

Colonel Blundell also gave Alexandra Park,the bowling green opposite, The cricket field at Highfield and also the bowling green behind Enfield Street. Highfield Church was built by him as a memorial church to his wife, who had been a lady in waiting to Queen Victoria.

Comment by: AP on 25th March 2013 at 17:43

An excellent photo of Blundell's, taken in 1931, when still active, can be found in the book: 'The Wigan Coalfield', by Alan Davies.

Comment by: Albert on 25th March 2013 at 19:41

A very detailed account of the explosion that occurred at the King's Pit, Pemberton,when thirty five miners lost their lives,plus five men who tried to rescue them,including the mine manager, can be found at http://www.old-merseytimes.co.uk/mining7.html

Comment by: fred foster on 26th March 2013 at 14:56

My great grandfather was killed in the 1877 explosion. I got the a/c from the archives of the Observer and re-wrote it. If anyone is interested, I can email the document to them.It gives a list of the men killed and the youngest was 13, a pony driver.

Comment by: ann21 on 26th March 2013 at 19:20

Fred I can't believe how many pits there were in Pemberton.

Comment by: carol Hankey (Nee Moot) on 18th May 2013 at 19:18

spent many happy summers and weekends playing skilly on the tin mine, trying to raft in the muudy murky large pools just to the side and getting a clout if your shoes got sucked into the mud never to be seen again, swinging in the trees in Blue bell wood an sliding down the tips, who needed play grounds. Our childhoods were brilliant, we were so lucky not to have X boxes and playstations. Good times!!

Comment by: Dave on 20th October 2023 at 16:01

I live in one of the houses built there in 2017, against the woods. I’m trying to work out where the shaft was? Tried looking for maps etc but can only find photos. Northstone owned by peel holdings are developing the rest of where the colliery was now

Comment by: Dave on 21st October 2023 at 07:36

I live in one of the houses built there in 2017, against the woods. I’m trying to work out where the shaft was? Tried looking for maps etc but can only find photos. Northstone owned by peel holdings are developing the rest of where the colliery was now

Comment by: TONY on 23rd April 2024 at 01:24

Hi Dave
the queen pit shaft is /was on the carpark of the pimrose pub
turn right as you go in the car park after the last space a small square painted on floor (now fading)

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