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[[Category: Architectural elements]]
[[Category: Architectural elements]]
[[Category:Street furniture]]
[[Category:Street furniture]]
[[Category:Coal hole]]
[[Category:Coal]]

Revision as of 16:23, 29 April 2006

A coal hole is a hatch in the pavement above an underground coal bunker. They were sometimes part of houses that existed during the period when coal was widely used for domestic heating from the early 1800s to the middle 1900s. In Britain they became redundant when the Clean Air Act forced a change of fuel.

The coal hole allowed the easy delivery of coal, generally in sacks and often from horse drawn carts, to the house's coal bunker. The location of the coal hole on the street minimised the carrying distance of the sacks and meant that dusty sacks and delivery men did not need to enter the house.

The cover of hatch is typically about 12 to 14 inches (30 to 35 cm) in diameter and consisted of a cast iron ring set into the pavement, with a circular cover often made of cast iron alone but sometimes containing concrete or glass panes or small ventilation holes. Hatches had an internal latch on the inside that prevented the hatch being opened from the outside.