BulwellBrian

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Posts posted by BulwellBrian

  1. Very interesting Chulla, I played cricket a few times for Broomhill Road Methodists. Also the National Provincial Bank and the Westminster Bank merged in 1970 although I do not know when the two Bulwell branches merged. I cannot remember K H Clarke jewelers on Highbury Road I would not have had enough money to shop there.

  2. I grew up in Bulwell and never thought of it as a rough place, admittedly 50 years ago, but we had Bulwell Forest (not Bulwell Common, that was just a railway station) and Bulwell Hall Park to play in, Good trollies to Nottingham City Center and Trent Bridge. Shops that sold all we wanted.I was never ashamed of coming from Bulwell.

    • Upvote 6
  3. The Colliery Yearbook 1947 gives the former owners of Radford & Wollaton collieries as:

    Wollaton Collieries Co. Ltd.

    Registered Office: Grove House, Radford, Nottingham:

    Directors - W Dawson 29 Arboretum Street, Nottingham (Chairman) & Lieut.-Col. G.A. Lewis CMG, Midland Road Derby.

    Secretary - C.C. Forrest ACA

    Agent & Manager W Alun Jones MIME.

    W A Jones is recorded as the manager of both collieries under the NCB.

    The workforce is quoted as -Radford 320 underground and 70 surface, Wollaton 160 underground and 60 surface.

    The approx annual output as Radford 97000 tons Wollaton 56100 tons.

    Under the NCB the output of both collieries was significantly higher.

  4. One thing I am not sure of about Newcastle Wharf, was it only Babbington coal that was taken to the wharf or was coal from other collieries brought in via rail through Babbington. I am talking about after nationalisation. The wagons to the wharf were a mixture of BR wagons and internal NCB wagons, if I remember right the trains included a guards van with NCB on the sides.

  5. Newcastle Colliery was just off Nuthall Road to the West of Western Boulevard. It was served by the mineral railway that ran east from Babbington Colliery, just after it passed Newcastle Colliery it turned south and is shown on the maps on this thread, #10 and #15. The site of Newcastle Colliery remained in use as a landsale wharf sitll served by the mineral line. Newcastle Wharf and the line closed in the 1960's.

  6. Just as a matter of interest, where does all the coal for the Notts power stations come from now that nearly all the pits have closed ?

    I'm thinking of places like Ratcliffe power station.

    Is that imported coal ?

    Where is it brought in from ?

    There is still coal produced at Thoresby colliery, also some opencast coal including from Scotland and imported coal through various ports as well as Immingham such as Avonmouth, Hull, and the Mersey. I am not sure of the countries of origin but I would think they include Russia, Poland, USA, Colombia.

  7. Further to #97. Norman Siddall became Chairman of the NCB. Only one shaft existed at Calverton and it was part of Bestwood colliery and Cotgrave was a pipe dream in1947. Bulwell colliery was closed before nationalisation. Babbington and Cinderhill soon became recognised as one colliery called Babbington. The output of all the working collieries increased substantially under the NCB partially due to mechanisation. At various times Babbington, Bestwood, Calverton, Cotgrave, Gedling, Hucknall, and Linby all produced 1 Million tons in a year.

  8. According to the colliery year book 1947 there were 766,300 men working in mines in 1939 of which 604,200 worked underground. Employment peaked in 1920 at 1,226,900 men.

    Output of coal in 1939 was 231,337,900 tons. Peak output was in 1913 at 287,430,473 tons. Which included 82,521 tons produced in Ireland.

    The details for local collieries in the year book are:-

    Manager men underground surface approx output

    Bestwood N Siddall 1575 500 853,000

    Gedling G P Thompson 1450 450 625,000

    Linby W E Bowen 745 210 314,000

    Babbington H Taylor 600 220 250,000

    Cinderhill H Taylor 700 280 260,000

    Clifton W Morrell 750 170 250,000

    Hucknall 1&2 L R Boyfield 900 290 430,000

    Radford W A Jones 320 70 97,000

    Wollaton W A Jones 160 60 56,000

    That was No.6 Area of the East Midlands Division of the NCB.