N18513b
Etal Colliery
Etal
55.658961, -2.090713
Berryhill Pit
Opened:
Closed:
1860s
pre-1890s
Entry Created:
24 Apr 2025
Last Updated:
24 Apr 2025
Reclaimed
Condition:
Owners:
Earl of Glasgow, Scremerston & Shoreswood Coal Co. (1860s)
Description (or HER record listing)
Etal Colliery was a long running operation around a mile west of Etal village, on the road from Slainsfield - a set of cottages inhabited by colliers at the pit. It was less a modern colliery, but a decentralised complex of shafts with a couple of ground level sites to process and transport the product. Overall, there were around 20 shafts across the whole moor operating similar to that at Stublick.
Though the coal shafts surrounding this site are from the 18th century, there were more modern investigations after the 1860s and this is one of them. It appears they simply reopened the previous workings for landsale. This site stood next to a mill pond running into Duddomill Burn, and had a single onsite building and small pond with a footpath leading to Berryhill Farm which is still extant. The shaft is possibly still in situ after study on satellite maps.
The Northumberland Name Books suggests the Etal collieries were owned by the Earl of Glasgow Captain James Carr-Boyle, who was previously in the Royal Navy and MP for Ayrshire from 1849 to 1843. Before his death, it appears the portfolio was sold onto the Scremerston & Shoreswood Coal Co.
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Historic Environment Records
Durham/Northumberland: Keys to the Past
Tyne and Wear: Sitelines
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