Earsdon Colliery, Duke and Dutchess Pit
Earsdon Colliery, Duke and Dutchess Pit
HER Number
              1111
          District
              N Tyneside
          Site Name
              Earsdon Colliery, Duke and Dutchess Pit
          Place
              Earsdon
          Map Sheet
              NZ37SW
          Class
              Industrial
          Site Type: Broad
              Coal Mining Site
          Site Type: Specific
              Colliery
          General Period
              POST MEDIEVAL
          Specific Period
              Hanoverian 1714 to 1837
          Form of Evidence
              Documentary Evidence
          Description
              The Duke and Duchess Pits at Earsdon Colliery, 'won' in 1823 and 1826 respectively, were served by the Backworth Wagonway (East Holywell Branch) (HER ref. 1051). They were owned by Hugh Taylor and William Clark, while the miners occupied the farm cottages owned by a Mr Grey. These buildings later formed the community of Shiney Row, and are shown on Greenwood's map of 1828. By 1897 the pits had disappeared, and had been replaced by the Abbey Shot Factory.
          Easting
              431030
          Northing
              571900
          Grid Reference
              NZ431030571900
    Sources
              << HER 1111 >>  1st edition Ordnance Survey map, 1865, 6 inch scale, Northumberland 89
1844, valuation of Moor Edge Farm, in the parish of Earsdon, belonging to.. -Northumberland Records Office ZHE 38a
R.E. Young, 2000, Tyne and Wear Museums, Moor Edge Farm, Archaeological Assessment; Durham Mining Museum www.dmm.org.uk
          1844, valuation of Moor Edge Farm, in the parish of Earsdon, belonging to.. -Northumberland Records Office ZHE 38a
R.E. Young, 2000, Tyne and Wear Museums, Moor Edge Farm, Archaeological Assessment; Durham Mining Museum www.dmm.org.uk