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Coal was the bedrock of the North East. It facilitated economic and social change in every corner, enabling the region to thrive as an industrial powerhouse. Intense mining also led to terrible loss in countless disasters, and deprivation in the villages which depended on it. The Coals Archive intends to catalogue the area's rich mining history for a new generation, to ensure we never forget the sacrifice our ancestors made. 

Scroll down our comprehensive database to explore the hundreds of workings which became the arteries of our region's prosperity.

ham01a

Last Updated

27 Oct 2022

Rabbit Gill, Coal Shafts

Hamsteels

54.802267, -1.741822

lan01a

Last Updated

27 Oct 2022

Mawsfield Wood, Coal Level

Lanchester

54.836029. -1.746860

lan01b

Last Updated

27 Oct 2022

Mawsfield Wood, Coal Level

Lanchester

54.836036, -1.741062

che02a

Last Updated

24 Oct 2022

Chevington, Old Colliery

Chevington

55.262644, -1.644418

du04a

Last Updated

20 Oct 2022

Crook Hall, Coal Shaft

Durham

54.782398, -1.577427

du03a

Last Updated

20 Oct 2022

Durham Main Colliery

Durham

54.785501, -1.575268

Map
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Background photo: View of Washington 'F' Pit, May 1965. Source: Tyne & Wear Archives

Historic Maps provided by

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