Feldgesbank colliery

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Feldgesbank colliery
General information about the mine
other names Feldbank colliery, Feldbanck colliery, Feldgesbänker Striepen colliery, Feltgesbank colliery, Veldtbank colliery
Information about the mining company
Funded raw materials
Degradation of Hard coal
Geographical location
Coordinates 51 ° 20 '16.9 "  N , 7 ° 15' 42.2"  E Coordinates: 51 ° 20 '16.9 "  N , 7 ° 15' 42.2"  E
Feldgesbank Colliery (Ruhr Regional Association)
Feldgesbank colliery
Location of the Feldgesbank colliery
Location Scheven
local community Sprockhövel
District ( NUTS3 ) Ennepe-Ruhr district
country State of North Rhine-Westphalia
Country Germany
District Ruhr area

The Feldgesbank colliery is a former hard coal mine in Sprockhövel- Scheven. The colliery was also known under the name Zeche Feldbank or Zeche Feldbanck and for the secondary seam under the name of Zeche Feldgesbänker Striepen . The colliery is probably also identical to the Feltgesbank and Veldtbank collieries . The mine was located about 500 meters south of the Scheven district. It was operated in the Haßlinghauser Mulde as one of four mines in the Geitling seam.

history

Feldgesbank

On April 15, 1650, Hillebrandt Mielken zu Weiershaus and his son Peter lent the mine field as a loan , after which the mine was in operation. On June 7, 1671, the mine field was re-enfeoffed. In 1739 the tunnel was driven further. In the years 1754 and 1755, the mine was closed in time limits - the reason was that the solution through the Tiefen Erbstolln was awaited. In 1769, mining was carried out in the side seam of the Feldgesbänker Striepen colliery . In 1775, the colliery was listed under the two names of Zeche Feldgesbänker Striepen and Zeche Feldgesbank . On July 1 of 1784 the mine was by the head of the Mark Berg Revieres, the Baron von Stein , navigate . The Feldgesbank colliery was the forty-fifth mine that vom Stein visited on its journey through the Brandenburg mountain area. At the time of the inspection, the mine, which formed the north wing of the lower seam, was out of order. Vom Stein gave information about the condition of the mine in his protocol. , Denounced by the stone that at the time to passing over no mining operation Prepared was.

In 1796 mining was carried out at shafts 17 (Kuhlmann), 18 (Sönges) and 20 (Gottlob). In 1800 the Gottlob shaft was in operation. In 1805, the Adolph shaft and shaft 19 were in operation; 28,425 Ringel coal were mined. The last known production figures for the mine are from 1808 - 4846 tons of hard coal were produced. In 1810 the Noa, Johann and Adam pits were in operation in the Oberstollen area, and the Sophia, Caspar and August pits in the Tiefer adit area. In 1815 the Georg, Petrus and Alexander pits were in operation in the Oberstollen area, and the Eduard, Gustav Adolph, Zankapfel, Zwilling and August pits in the Tiefer adit area. From March of 1821 which was Berechtsame for horse mackerel main pit slammed shut.

Feltgesbank

The Feltgesbank colliery was also known under the name of Zeche Veldtbank or Zeche Schevener Bank . The colliery was already in operation in Krefftinger Holz before 1646. During the Thirty Years' War the mine was abandoned. On May 13, 1646, the enfeoffment was made by Peter Kueper zu Dellwigh and his son, but the tunnel was not driven any further. In 1646 the Sollen was advanced further and reached a length of 1000 feet on July 19. On June 19 of the same year, there was another loan from Peter Kueper and his son Kerstgen, Peter Buck and his sister-in-law Gretgen, Elisabeth von Diest and Caspar Herrmanns. There is evidence that the mine was in operation in 1650 and 1662, but no further information is available for the years thereafter.

Veldtbank

The Veldtbank colliery was also known as the Veldtbank colliery in Krefftinger Holz . Little is known about the mine. On June 20, 1646, a coal bank was named Unter Scheven Veldtbank ; there is no further information about the years after that.

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e Joachim Huske : The coal mines in the Ruhr area. Data and facts from the beginning until 2005 (= publications from the German Mining Museum Bochum. 144). 3rd revised and expanded edition. Self-published by the German Mining Museum, Bochum 2006, ISBN 3-937203-24-9 .
  2. a b Kurt Pfläging: Stein's journey through coal mining on the Ruhr. 1st edition. Geiger Verlag, Horb am Neckar 1999, ISBN 3-89570-529-2 .

Remarks

  1. The term coal bank is the name for the coal-bearing part of a coal seam . (Source: Carl Friedrich Alexander Hartmann: Vademecum for the practical miner. )