Places
15 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Pit, Gwent
- Talke Pits, Staffordshire
- Tunnel Pits, Humberside
- Bedwellty Pits, Gwent
- Fenton Pits, Cornwall
- Slay Pits, Yorkshire
- Tre-pit, South Glamorgan
- Bailey Pit, Gwent
- Gore Pit, Essex
- Moss Pit, Staffordshire
- Red Pits, Norfolk
- White Pit, Lincolnshire
- Even Pits, Hereford & Worcester
- Forest Coal Pit, Gwent
- Michaelston-le-Pit, South Glamorgan
Photos
89 photos found. Showing results 1 to 20.
Maps
84 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
866 memories found. Showing results 1 to 10.
Wish Iwas There
lackhall colliery in the 1940s and 50s i was lucky to be brought up there proud loyal hard working people so different from life today.born 1940 lived in 11th street and was encased in love and safetymy father was a shaft ...Read more
A memory of Blackhall Colliery by
Wish Iwas There
lackhall colliery in the 1940s and 50s i was lucky to be brought up there proud loyal hard working people so different from life today.born 1940 lived in 11th street and was encased in love and safetymy father was a shaft ...Read more
A memory of Blackhall Colliery by
Waterhouses Bleak Winters
l remember the pit tubs running under the houses to the colliery where my dad worked down the mines, and when we used to chuck his snap over to him when the tub ran past. Also remember the bleak cold winters ...Read more
A memory of Waterhouses in 1860 by
Wallsend 1954 68
Born in the Green Maternity Hosp 1954, lived in Windsor Drive, Howden, Sandown Gardens, Howden and Prospect Ave. I remember being taken to the Masons Arms at Bigges Main in a pushchair, parked outside the corrugated iron lean to ...Read more
A memory of Wallsend by
Visiting Rawmarsh
I had an uncle who lived in Claypit lane Rawmarsh and we used to travel from Sheffield to visit them,is name was Horace Walton and he had three girls and one boy,the girls names were Olger,Joan Audrey and Brian he worked at the pit ...Read more
A memory of Rawmarsh by
Victoria Terrace
Thanks to everyone who sent their memories of Newburn and Millfield, it brings it all back! I lived at 16 victoria terrace from about 1955 until it was demolished. I remembered how overcrowded we must have been in a one bedroomed ...Read more
A memory of Newburn by
Three Horse Shoes
My memories were of coming to my grandmother at the Three Horse Shoes Inn. My Uncle Billy and Aunt Olive had the licence at that time, my mum was Martha Dailly nee Hall. I remember meals in the kitchen behind the bar, ...Read more
A memory of Kirk Merrington in 1948 by
Thelife I Wanna Know In Danderhall Before Me And After Me .
I was the youngest child of the McNamee family, that lived in Danderhall in the 60's and 70's. My father worked in the pit and also my eldest brother, who still lives in the house once he was married at the age of twenty one.
A memory of Danderhall by
The Threepenny Bit House/Roundhouse
I remember as far back when i was 6 years old . I lived in the little house that used to be by the black iron bridge in gadebridge lane . I was born in the little house called the threepenny bit house . I ...Read more
A memory of Hemel Hempstead by
The Hughes Family
My name is Allan Calvert, my mother's maiden name was Hazel Hughes, she came from a large family consisting of two brothers and two sisters. My grandad, Walter, owned a fish and chip shop a couple of doors down from the ...Read more
A memory of Esh Winning by
Captions
118 captions found. Showing results 1 to 24.
Houses for the colliers were built around the pit which dominated their lives.
When this picture was taken, Ryton was a pit village in County Durham with no less than five working pits in the immediate vicinity.
This is the Lower Ninestones china clay pit, with waste being hauled up inclines to older flat-topped tips on the left and newer 'sky tips' on the right.
Even in the late 18th century there were ninety pits in the Forest, with a combined annual output of about 100,000 tons of coal.
To the east of the High Street there were several chalk pits: this was the biggest. It lies to the south of Carshalton Road, and east of the Congregational Church.
Langley Park is a pit village just off the road between Lanchester and Durham. The road to the left goes to Quebec and Cornsay Colliery.
There has been a ferry at Farndon for centuries; these days the village offers river users extensive facilities, including a large marina created out of some old gravel pits.
The garderobe pits - the medieval toilets - are shown on the foreground, with the stone and flint walls of the tower behind.
In 1960 Ryhope was still very much a pit village, with its own colliery. In 1967 Ryhope, along with Silksworth, East Herrington, South Hylton, and Castletown, was incorporated into Sunderland.
One of its more interesting features is what is thought to be an ancient beheading pit.
When the mining industry was nationalised in 1947, there were 127 active pits in County Durham employing 108,000 mineworkers.
Modern buildings have crowded in along the northern part of Betchworth's long village street, but the line of the North Downs and the big chalk pit remain much the same, although the downs are far more
Annfield Plain, to the north-west of Durham, was one of several towns to attract industrial development as the number of active pits declined.
In 1954 the NCB sank its first pit in the country at Lea Hall, Rugeley. The colliery opened in July 1960; most of its output went by conveyor direct to nearby Rugeley, a power station.
Fern Pit, at the mouth of the Gannel, was owned by generations of Northeys, who also ran the ferry to Crantock, which is in the background on the other side of Crantock Beach.
All along the Nene valley hereabouts are flooded iron ore pits, some of which have been turned into fishing or boating lakes.
China clay from the St Austell pits was brought to the harbour by trains, which carried coal for the gasworks on the return journey.
The garderobe pits—the medieval toilets—are shown on the foreground, with the stone and flint walls of the tower behind.
It is just over forty years after photograph No 55427, and doubtless the inspection pits are not quite the selling point they once were!
The ornately designed building is a vivid reminder of the days, long before the television and video age, when every town in the country had a picture house, or 'flea pit' as they were sometimes known.
Bathing has not always been the family pastime it is today. 'Tommy's Pit', built at the end of the breakwater, was strictly men only, while women used Crooklets beach, then named Maer Beach.
In 1954 the NCB sank its first pit in the country at Lea Hall, Rugeley.The colliery opened in July 1960; most of its output went by conveyor direct to nearby Rugeley, a power station.
Eastry was home to many miners who worked down the east Kent pits. The mother of the actress Susan Hampshire once lived here too.
It was once one of Farnham's hop- growing villages, and poles for the bines can be seen on the far left.
Places (15)
Photos (89)
Memories (866)
Books (0)
Maps (84)