Löbbeckenbusch colliery
| Löbbeckenbusch colliery | |
|---|---|
| General information about the mine | |
| other names | Löbkenbusch colliery Am Löbbeckbusch colliery Löbbeken Busch colliery |
| Mining technology | Underground mining |
| Information about the mining company | |
| Start of operation | 1769 |
| End of operation | 1848 |
| Successor use | Friedrich Wilhelm colliery |
| Funded raw materials | |
| Degradation of | Hard coal |
| Geographical location | |
| Coordinates | |
| Location | Emschertal |
| local community | Dortmund |
| Independent city ( NUTS3 ) | Dortmund |
| country | State of North Rhine-Westphalia |
| Country | Germany |
| District | Ruhr area |
The Löbbeckenbusch colliery in Dortmund- Emschertal is a former hard coal mine . The mine was also known under the names Zeche Löbkenbusch , Zeche Am Löbbeckenbusch and Zeche Löbbeken Busch . According to the documents, the mine is not identical to the Löbken Mühle colliery.
Mining history
The mine was put into operation in 1769. The mine mouth hole was located north of the Emscher . There was only a small pit field . The tunnel was north ascended . During this excavation, three seams lying one below the other were exposed , all three seams were worth building . A tunnel shaft was sunk later . In the course of time there was little dismantling , but operations were soon stopped again. The time at which operations were stopped is unknown, and it is also unknown whether and when the mine went back into operation. In 1787 the mine was mentioned in a document. Around the year 1792 the operation was stopped, the mine was taken out of operation again. On January 8, 1803, the mine belonged to the Hövelische trade union, but it was still out of order.
In 1813 the mine was probably back in operation. In 1827 the mine was closed in time limits . On May 27 and 28, 1845, the mining authority approved a square as a right . In 1848 the construction site for the colliery had become too small, for this reason the operation was stopped again. The rightful owner was slammed into the Friedrich Wilhelm mine in the same year . On April 4, 1856, a small square was awarded . According to a communication from the Oberbergamt from 1918, the Löbbeckenbusch colliery was still independent at that time. Thereafter, further information about the Löbbeckenbusch colliery is missing.
literature
- Joachim Huske : The coal mines in the Ruhr area. Data and facts from the beginning to 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 .
Remarks
- ↑ An entry well , even Stoll bay called, is a light hole was geteuft on a cleat. These shafts are required to support the tunnel operation. (Source: Albert Serlo: Leitfaden der Bergbaukunde. First volume, fourth revised and up to the most recent edition supplemented.)