Colliery resentment

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Colliery resentment
General information about the mine
Information about the mining company
Start of operation 1744
End of operation 1848
Successor use New Hope II mine
Funded raw materials
Degradation of Hard coal
Geographical location
Coordinates 51 ° 29 '2.4 "  N , 7 ° 35' 24"  E Coordinates: 51 ° 29 '2.4 "  N , 7 ° 35' 24"  E
Colliery Reßgunst (Regional Association Ruhr)
Colliery resentment
Location colliery resentment
Location Sölderholz
local community Dortmund
Independent city ( NUTS3 ) Dortmund
country State of North Rhine-Westphalia
Country Germany
District Ruhr area

The Mißgunst colliery is a former hard coal mine in Dortmund- Sölderholz. The mine was already in operation around 1744.

Mining history

On August 29, 1768, a suspicion was made that a mine field had already been partially dismantled . This pit field had previously been worked by the Freiherr von Hoevel using a shaft . The mine was initially in operation around 1790, and it was partly extracted with an open and partly with a concealed rose . The mine was later shut down again, the exact time of shutdown is not apparent from the documents. The reason for the closure were irregularities of the workers. In 1818 the eastern continuation of the seam from the New Hope colliery was mined via a tunnel . On January 6, 1819, a renewed request was made. From July 5th of the same year, a new tunnel was to be excavated next to the one that had already been broken , but this project was no longer tackled. On January 14 and February 7, 1848, the mining area of the coal mine envy as Beilehn of which was a new mine hope II awarded .

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

  1. As Beilehn or Beilehen is called an additionally imparted pit box, which is connected with another holding moderately pit pitch. (Source: Tilo Cramm, Joachim Huske: Miners' language in the Ruhr area. )