Reference Numberp/1892
TitleAbbiss Coal Merchants, Landsale Wharf, Baggeridge, Himley
DescriptionWorkers loading coal on to a lorry from coal trucks. Mr Joe Abbiss, who owned the coal merchants whose company name is on the lorry, is the gentleman standing in the lorry. The man on the left holding the horses, is believed to be a Major Westwood. The "E D" on the sides of the trucks indicate that the colliery belonged to the Earl of Dudley. The description "Landsale wharf" in the Black Country, usually means a railway siding at which coal is unloaded for sale to merchants or consumers. Coal is usually loaded from the train to lorries by hand. (Courtesy of Mr. J. Abbiss).
Date[Early 20th cent]
TermCoal mining
FormatPhotograph
Image

p1892.jpg

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p1801-1900/p1892.jpg

AccessStatusOpen
Extent1 item
LevelItem
AdminHistoryThe construction of the colliery's first shaft was begun in February 1899, and in July 1902 a seam of coal 24 feet thick was discovered. A second shaft found the same seam of coal in 1910. This considerable delay in completing the first works of the colliery was the result of the sinkers meeting what was described as 'a perfect sea of water' while sinking the second shaft. For 19 months the workers fought against the water without making a single inch of progress; the water was finally kept out by the use of cast-iron segment plates fixed for 40 yards in the shaft. The principal winding shaft was 17 feet in diameter and special methods for unloading the coal involved the use of both German and English technical ideas. This attempt to utilise at the pit the most modern machinery was also illustrated by the equipment used to raise the cages. 10 boilers were used to provide steam for the plant, 4 generating plants provided electricity that supplied power throughout the colliery. The colliery was equipped to deal with an output of 3120 tons each 8 hour shift. The winding engines were supplied by Messrs Frazer and Chalmers of Erith, who had earlier made the engines for the Sandwell Park Colliery and the compressors at the Mond Gas Works, Dudley Port. The colliery finally closed in March 1968.

Joseph John Abbis Snr., born in 1902, moved to Wombourne in 1904 from Lower Gornal with his family so that they could start a local coal round. At twelve years old, he was put to work to help with the coal round, visiting local coal pits in the Pensnett and and Kingswinford areas. The business was taken over by his grandson John in 1953, on John's father's illness (Joseph Abbiss Jnr.). Joseph John's wife ran a bakery and cake shop from premises which were purchased in 1921. By the time of the Second World War (1939-1945), the coal round became motorised. In the 1950s, the company helped draw the first loads from the new Land Sales Wharf in Baggeridge. Now the supplies are usually smokeless fuel drawn from L. C. P (Lunt, Comley & Pitt Group) in Pensnett.
Persons
CodePersonNameDates
DS/UK/747Himley, Staffordshire, UK; Baggeridge Colliery; 1899-19681899-1968
DS/UK/948Wombourne, Staffordshire, UK; J. J. Abbiss & Son; 1904 - present1904 - present
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