Shuttle Eye Colliery

View towards the warehouses on the site of the former colliery (2006)

Shuttle Eye Colliery was a coal mine on the South Yorkshire Coalfield at Grange Moor between Wakefield and Huddersfield on the A642 road, in England.[1]

The colliery was started in 1862 by Lockwood and Elliott and had two shafts, the deepest 288 yards. It produced coal from the Beeston and Black Bed seams. Two drift mines at Gregory Spring in Hopton near Mirfield to the north were linked to Shuttle Eye in 1962.[2] The colliery was nationalised in 1947.[3] It closed in 1973.[2]

In 1896 the colliery had 86 underground workers and 13 on the surface. By 1923 the workforce numbered 179 and 175 ten years later. At nationalisation the colliery had 234 underground and 40 surface workers.[3] The colliery employed 222 workers in the 1970s.[2]

After the closure of the colliery, the site has been overbuilt with warehouses.[4]

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ Yorkshire Sheet CCLXI.NW (Map). Ordnance Survey. 1904–1908.
  2. ^ a b c Taylor (2001), p. 78
  3. ^ a b Lockwood & Elliott, Durham Mining Museum, retrieved 11 August 2015
  4. ^ Nigel Homer (21 January 2006). "SE2314 : Towards Six Lanes End, near Flockton". Geograph Britain and Ireland.

Bibliography

  • Taylor, Warwick (2001), South Yorkshire Pits, Wharncliffe Books, ISBN 1-871647-84-3
  • v
  • t
  • e
Coal mining in Yorkshire
Coal mines in North Yorkshire
  • Selby complex2 (Gascoigne Wood, North Selby, Riccall, Stillingfleet, Whitemoor Wistow)
  • Tan Hill
Coal mines in South Yorkshire1Coal mines in West YorkshireIncidentsCoalfields and seamsIndustrial relations
Other articlesNotes
  • 1: Pre 1974, most coal mines in South Yorkshire were actually in the West Riding of Yorkshire. Those annotated with a number 1, were closed before 1974.

2: The Selby Coalfield straddled the border of North and West Yorkshire

53°38′10″N 1°39′58″W / 53.636°N 1.666°W / 53.636; -1.666