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Developments at the Pit-head
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Introduction Although – apart from the vital innovation of steam-engine pumping – there were no technological inventions in the mining of coal, coal mines did change substantially 1700-1900.
After you have studied this webpage, answer the question sheet by clicking on the 'Time to Work' icon at the top of the page. |
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1 Harrington Mill Pit Colliery in Northumberland, c.1770
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Interrogating Source 1: Point out: • the shaft into the ground (labelled A); • the winding gear, used to lower miners down the shaft; • the whim-gin – the horse wheel that was in earlier days used to lower the miners down the shaft; • the steam engine house, where a new steam engine powered the winding machinery which lowered the miners into the pit and brought up the coal; • the steam engine's copper boiler behind the house; • the pile of coal in the foreground; • a basket used to bring coal up the shaft; • the loading platform, where the coal was sorted into sizes and loaded onto packhorses.
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2 Hebburn Colliery in County Durham, c.1844
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Interrogating Source 2: Point out: • the downcast shaft, with corves (coal tubs) being drawn out of the mine; • the winding gear, used to lower miners down the shaft and to bring up the coal corves; • the steam engine house, with its chimney, where a steam engine was used to power the winding gear; • the upcast shaft, with a wind-vane to turn the chimney opening away from the wind at all times; • the screening sheds, where the coal was sorted into different sizes; • the railway, on which the coal was taken away to be sold (note the distinctive chaldron wagons).
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