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Report - - The Lost Ganister and Clay Mines of Sheffield project: 2017 - to date: Part 3 - Wadsley and Worrall | Mines and Quarries | 28DaysLater.co.uk

Report - The Lost Ganister and Clay Mines of Sheffield project: 2017 - to date: Part 3 - Wadsley and Worrall

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HughieD

28DL Regular User
Regular User
The Lost Ganister and Clay Mines of Sheffield project: 2017 - to date:

Part 3: Wadsley, Worrell


Part 1: Stocksbridge, Deepcar and Wharncliffe is HERE
Part 2: Oughtibridge and Beeley Wood is HERE

Again, like the first two parts of these reports, the remnants are scare and far from spectacular. This is truer here as like the previous two reports, there are no mines. However, there are some interesting remains which I’ve done my best to document and research the history. Mining of ganister goes right back to the mid-1700s but up scaled with increased demand from the steel industry in the second half of the 1800s.

Area Map:

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The mines in this area are predominantly ganister mines, including some which yielded some of the highest quality ganister the region produced.

(A) Caledonian Works, Worrall
This largish-sized ganister and fireclay brick-works were owned by the Bramhall family, more specifically Joseph Bramhall. Born into a farming community in Oughtibridge in 1807, he was a pioneer of ganister brick manufacturing and was responsible for establishing the works. He was also credited with developing a grinding machine that could reduce the mined ganister rock into the small grains that were needed for the process (although John Armitage and J.Grayson Lowood would contest this!).

A 1900 O/S Map showing Caledonian works, the tramway and Bull Pierce quarry:

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Between 1830 and 1880 the Bramhall’s rented and bought land for mining and quarrying gannister. During this time, in 1865, Bramall’s opened a brickworks with one beehive kiln at Birtin Works. Situated nearby, Caledonian works first appears on O/S maps in 1890, showing three beehive kilns situated to the north-east of the factory. Hence, construction pre-dates this time, with some sources citing it as opening in 1871 and others later in 1879. The main building was more than 100 yards in length. Ganister brick production was discontinued at Birtin works in 1889 with production transferring to Calendonian works. The works latterly passed to the management of Joseph Bramhall’s son, Charles (born 1850), the youngest of his 9 children. By 1900, production had clearly expanded as seven kilns are now clearly marked. By 1910, this had become two rows of 8, before reducing to 8 kilns by 1920. Charles Bramall died aged 71 in 1921.

While the works were operational, ganister was supplied from a number of sources. Due west and linked by tramway constructed in 1879 were the opencast workings at Bull Pierce and continuing further west just past Long Lane, Myers lane ganister mine. There was also a small mine on the western side of the works called Caledonian Fire Clay mine, which closed on 8th May, 1912. Fireclay was also brought in from the small Hope Mine at nearby Hagglestones. The works closed sometime in the early 1930s. By 1950 the works had disappeared altogether.

Done a lot of searching but can’t find a single archive picture of these works. I’ve visited the site twice and I was amazed that how much was actually left if you look carefully.

Unidentified metal box:

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This looks like the site of the drift mine entrance:

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Remains of a retaining wall:

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More evidence of retaining walls:

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This old grinding stone was a really lovely find:

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Remains of small red-brick building:

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An Oughtibridge brick:

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An old engine mounting block:

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This was an exciting find. An arch of one of the work’s beehive kilns:

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And another!

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And another small building near the kilns:

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(B) Bull Pierce Quarry
Now bang in the middle of Hillsborough golf course, this large L shaped gash in the land was quarried for ganister which was then trammed eastwards to Caledonian works. The land was leased by Joseph Bramhall from John Gibbs (from Weston-Super-Mare) to extract ganister in 1867. The tramway eastwards to Caldedonian works was constructed in 1871. The rails went to the bottom of the quarry face and were periodically moved as the quarrying progressed westwards. The wagons or corves, once loaded, were initially pull by ponies (latterly an engine house was constructed). Then gravity took over as they rolled down to the works on a double stretch of track, gravity pulling the empty corves back up.

Today the steep-sided wooded quarry is easily identifiable and now partially flooded.

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(C) Yew’s Mine
Nothing much of note here. There were some small scale workings here from 1863 but once Bramhall’s had leased the land four years later in 1867, things began to expand. However, by 1875 little ganister was being extracted.

(D) Langhouse Mine
Taking its name from Lang house, in 1878, when Charles Bramhall visited the mine he noted it not having rails - something subsequently fixed soon after the mine come under his tenure. Located four miles north-west of Sheffield near the village of Worrall, it was also recorded as Birtin mine, maybe due to supplying ganister to the nearby Birkin works. Accessed via two drift entrances that ran under Long Lane, there was also a drift entrance west of Birtin works. The purpose of the multiple entrances was to improve the ventilation of the mine and to those ends, it had at least two other drift entrances along with two ventilation shafts. The mine was drained by a subterranean water course to the southern end of the working. By 1896 the mine employed five underground workers and three surface workers. Below is a postcard of the quarry mine from 1906. The sender of the postcard lived in the house above (Lang House Farm) and sent the postcard to a friend pointing out how close the workings were to his house. Interestingly the postcard shows a corve, two horses that would have pulled them out of the mine and six mine workers.

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The northern reaches of the mine were closed in 1909 and, laterally, the southern workings on March 26th, 1920. One of the tunnels under Long Lane collapsed in 1996 causing the road to close for several days while the whole was infilled. Today, very little in the way of evidence remains, hence why there are no pictures to accompany this entry.

(E) Stubbin Mine
Referred to as Low Stubbin mine to differentiate it from Stubbin colliery, it was located 1.5 miles south of Worrall, near Stubbing Lane. To the east were the workings of the latterly discussed Langhouse mine and to the north old workings made by E&H Brooks between 1885-89 in an area that had been worked extensively for coal previously. It was then reworked from circa 1908 for the 2ft 6in ganister seam that sat below the Hard Bed coal. As a consequence of these previous coal workings, the mine experienced a lot of flooding. The main drift entrance to the south of the mine (now completely gone from the landscape) was on the north side of Stubbing Lane. These large workings also had a northerly drift entrance that was trammed for a short distance before reaching Kirk Edge Road. Here the ganister from the corves was loaded onto lorries for onward transportation by road to owner Oughtibridge Silica Fire Brick Company’s brickworks in Oughtibridge. The mine also had an 8ft air shaft part way along the northern entrance and a 9ft air shaft on its southerly entrance. According to a Sheffield newspaper, the mine was closed on 8th July, 1922 due to it being “worked out”. This is clearly incorrect though as it is recorded in 1923 that the mine had 13 above-ground and four below-ground workers. A more indicative date to closure is given on the mine’s abandonment plan which carries a later date of November 1927.

(F) Haighen Mine
Including this here for completeness as I have a few photos. Next to nothing about this place despite clear evidence of mining activity. It may have well been a small colliery where coal rather than ganister was mined, but it is hard to tell, given the lack of history and the fact that many mines were in fact “mixed” mines. To the north-east were Low Ash quarries

A few pictures. A covered air shaft:

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This looks like a raised loading bay:

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A nearby gravel pit:

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(G) Spitewinter Mine
This small ganister mine one mile west of Worrall was under the ownership of Thos Wragg of Loxley. Entered via a small drift entrance on the north side of Kirk Edge Road where it meets Coal Pit Lane. The mine closed on 19th July 1913 and was subsequently abandoned.

Across the road were a series of gannister pits and quarries that have now been landscaped:

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Just one picture from here. The drift entrance to the mine lies at the bottom of this pond:

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CONTINUED....
 
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HughieD

28DL Regular User
Regular User
(H) Myers Lane Mine
Located in the north-west quarter of the angle of Myers Lane and Long Lane, this quarry/mine was situated on land belonging to the Duke of Norfolk, latterly purchased by Charles Bramall. When the ganister works first appears on O/S maps in 1890, it is already linked by tramway. As mentioned in the earlier entry for Caledonian works, it supplied ganister to the works and was linked by a tramway to the east. In 1900 the quarry had expanded east and was getting close to Larch Hall which was in fact three terrace houses.

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The mine had several drift entrances but these are hard to locate on the old maps. The ganister varied in thickness between 24” and 27”. By 1920, the pit to the west of the mine had moved past Larch Hall, which appears to have been knocked down by 1930 due to the quarrying activity around it. The mine itself was closed in 1928, deemed to no longer be economically viable with an abandonment plan dated May 8th. However, the mine was latterly acquired by General Refractories Ltd and reopened in 1938. Its reprieve was sort-lived, as a second abandonment plan was filed on 14th July, 1939.

North of the ganister works there is plenty of evidence of earlier coal mining via the use of shallow pits.

Remains of buildings to the north:

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Coal pits:

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And a mine shaft, most likely for coal, now under the management of the Coal Authorities:

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Further south, this looks like a loading platform:

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Sleepers from the tramway?

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Opencast workings to the west:

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(I) Loxley and Close Mines
Two small mines on the east side of Long Lane not far for Myers Lane mine. Loxley mine was owned by the Oughtibridge Silica Firebrick company. It consisted of a day hole and an air shaft in order to reach the ganister seam which was between 20” to 24” thick in this location. Closing in 1904, today there are no surface remains to see. Close Mine. Close mine was 100yds to the south, the mine belonged to Mrs Hague. Again a small mine, it was a mixed mine extracting coal and “bastard” ganister that was lower down in the geological strata compared to true ganister. Ganister was also won via opencast extraction too. This mine closed later in 1931 and has similarity landscaped.

(J) Wadsley Common Ganister Works and Top Mine

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Key:
A - Wadsley Common ganister works
B – Old ganister pit
C – Location of three shaft entrances
D – First drift entrance
E – Approximate location of 2nd drift entrance

Top Mine, located on Loxley Common, was also rather confusingly also referred to as Wadsley Common (b) mine (a mine of the same name was located further to the east, past Bower mine). The mine was half-a-mile to the west of Bower Mine and much smaller. It supplied ganister to the nearby Wadsley Common ganister works. The works consisted of two buildings which would have functioned as little more than a storing area for the ganister before onward transportation by lorry via a curved track on to Long Line. The works were open by 1890 but sourced their ganister from an adjacent quarry and what looks like to be a pit behind the works. When these sources of ganister ran out, they then looked to source ganister from Top mine.

A 1900 O/S map shows the mine linked to the works by a tramline. It is marked as a pit, but lately an adit was added too. The area had been mined previously for coal in the mid-to-late 1800s via numerous unmapped day holes and shafts. It was these unchartered coal workings that prevented the mining progressing too far to the north for fear of hitting the old workings and the ensuing risk of flooding (a 1913 survey of the area came to a dead half for this very reason).

The mine exploited the same 2 foot seem of ganister that Bower mine did. It developed in stages, with the first stage being the sinking of three shafts along a line running from south-west to north-east axis. The first was 3 yards deep, the second 7 yards and the third and deepest one 10 yards, all were lined with local rough gritstone. Historical records that indicate the mine was in the ownership of G.C. Siddons between the years of 1904-1915 and it was Siddons who most likely added an adit entrance in 1905. The new mine entrance was trammed and once out of the mine, the tracks headed 60 yards south-west, passing a small building to the east before turning to the right westwards, through more than 270 degrees. This must have required the usage of a small turntable to turn the wagons. The map also includes the letters “W.M.” which most likely indicates the presence of a weighing machine. The ganister then travelled 300 yards, up a slight incline, to the north-east up to the aforementioned Wadsley Common ganister works. About half-way along, off to the north-east, the map also shows an earlier ganister pit which by 1900 was untrammed and abandoned.

Ray Battye’s book, “The Forgotten Mines of Sheffield” makes reference to a second drift entrance 100 yards to the east of the initial adit. Marked on the abandonment plan as a day hole, Battye’s entry notes indicate it was “certainly more than this”. The entrance was trammed and passing over a weigh bridge before the tracks divided into two and ended in dual loading platforms - one for ganister and the other for coal where the coal and ganister. These were then transported by lorry along a track eastwards past Bower mine and on to their final destination. Other buildings included a workman’s hut hear the mine entrance. This had a small forge and bellows, the main use of which was to sharpen the miner’s picks. Battye also notes that due to the lack of a forge and bellows down at Bower mine, the workers there came up to Top mine to sharpen their picks. Other buildings included a ventilation shaft, a small stable for the mine ponies and the mine deputy’s office. Finally, there was a ventilation shaft to the east of the entrance including a brick-built chimney. Despite these quite extensive surface features, none of them feature on any O/S maps and hence are hard to locate. Equally, the closure of the mine is also hard to fathom. Abandonment plans note part of the mine closed in 1914. This is likely to be the three day holes in the north-west extremities. Other parts closed in 1928. This could be referring to the initial drift entrance, although this contradicts the 1920 O/S map that doesn’t mark it and shows the works to have completely disappeared too. However, the final date that references 1943 will most certainly refer to the second drift entrance in the south-eastern reaches of the mine.

Spend a lot of time searching the common for the remains and it was pretty slim pickings.

Nothing left of the ganister works:

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One of three sleepers still in situ in the adit approach:

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The adit approach appears more like a stream:

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The adit entrance used to be approximately here:

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You need quite a bit of imagination:

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One of the three grit-stone shaft entrances from circa 1900:

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And to the north, some of the many early un-mapped coal workings:

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CONTINUED...
 
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HughieD

28DL Regular User
Regular User
(K) Bower (Bottom) Mine

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The Bower mine was located in a plantation of the same name and to the east of Top Mine. Hence it was also known as Bottom mine and on the mine abandonment plans, incorrectly labelled as Wadsley Park mine. Opening in 1890, Initially it was owned by G. Longden & Son Ltd between 1900-1928 and latterly by Oughtibridge Silica Fire Brick Co. Ltd from 1929-1940. The area is marked as a disused quarry in 1890 and was then opened as mine just prior to 1900. However, it is only in 1920 that maps show the two adit locations to be trammed, when the main period of ganister extraction is likely to have started. By 1950, the tram tracks had been lifted, which ties in with the September 1940 abandonment survey. One theory is that the site was a former coal mine before reopening for ganister extraction in the early 1900s.

Like Top mine, Bower utilized corves that were pulled by ponies. The mine had several ventilation shafts along with a few day holes. The tram line from the main easterly drift entrance curved round from east-to-south then split into two – one branch for the ganister and the other for the coal. The wooded tubs were then tipped sideways from a raised platform into the steam-driven lorries below for onward transportation. Located in the main area outside the mine were a workman’s hut and an explosives store, some evidence of the former still remains. To the east was an engine house and its accompanying reservoir which provided water for the steam engine. The main adit entrance was blasted in on closure in the 1940s.

One other question surrounds the westerly adit entrance. Battye notes that both Top and Bower mines were very close. It might be that the two aforementioned adits were in fact part of Top mine rather than Bower mine. I guess this point of information could be cleared up by a close examination of the mine abandonment plans.

This is the main part of the mine where the associated buildings were located:

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This might not look like much, but it is the stone-build roof of the explosives or powder store:

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And on to the mine’s most impressive remnants – the stone lined approach to the mine’s main entrance:

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Over toward the west side, this looks like the remains of a day hole:

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And this is most likely an anchor block for some sort of machinery:

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Another day hole or ventilation shaft:

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And what is left of the two adit entrances, now overgrown and quite hard to make out:

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And on the way back, this random bit of MARS graff:

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(L) Old Ganister Pit/Goal Club Mine
This place would have escaped my attentions had it not been for an article on the web. It doesn’t appear to even have a name recorded for it anywhere. On old maps in 1890 it is labelled “old quarry”. However, for a period between 1900 and 1920, the area was again worked for ganister and a drift entrance for underground mining constructed. By 1920, however the site was again marked as abandoned. There is a fantastic piece of research by A E Bailey from May 2020 so will leave it to their excellent research to tell the story of this place and how ganister was extracted. You can find it just HERE

This looks like an adit approach to south-west of the main pit:

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Over to the main area, you can tell it something has gone on here but it is hard to locate specific features:

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(M) Haggs Stones Quarry
Off the above map, north of Worrall, Hope Mine/Haggs Stone quarry are off to the north of Boggard Lane. The quarry was in operation by 1890 but marked as disused by 1920. There was also a small mine here too, sometimes referred to as Aspland’s Mine. This mixed mine that also produced coal was listed as closing in 1918.

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That’s all folks.

Part 4 coming soon!
 
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Calamity Jane

i see beauty in the unloved, places & things
Regular User
What a wonderful read. Very comprehensive and I love the images. Nature really doing her thing.
 

Stannington Joe

28DL Full Member
28DL Full Member
Great piece of research. Please note that the family were ‘ Bramall ‘ not ‘ Bramhall ‘ - I have a silica (ganister) brick made by the Bramall company. It’s stamped BRAMALL and was found in a waste dump at the site of the former BSC Ravenscraig steelworks complex at Motherwell. I’ll post a photo in due course. Bramall’s also made house bricks and I have a photo of a stamped brick.
 

HughieD

28DL Regular User
Regular User
Great piece of research. Please note that the family were ‘ Bramall ‘ not ‘ Bramhall ‘ - I have a silica (ganister) brick made by the Bramall company. It’s stamped BRAMALL and was found in a waste dump at the site of the former BSC Ravenscraig steelworks complex at Motherwell. I’ll post a photo in due course. Bramall’s also made house bricks and I have a photo of a stamped brick.
Cheers Joe - duly noted for the next installment!
 

Stannington Joe

28DL Full Member
28DL Full Member
I'm attaching a photograph of a BRAMALL silica brick made from ganister. The brick was found in Scotland in 2017. It would have been made before c. 1928 when the Bramall's works closed. I'm also attaching a photo of a housebrick made by Bramalls. The housebrick was found in the Deepcar area in 2018.

BRAMALL silica brick ex MC ex Fife 2020.jpg


C . BRAMALL OUGHTIBRIDGE - House brick - Frank Lawson 2020 - photo.jpg
 
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