Scherenberg colliery

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Scherenberg colliery
General information about the mine
Information about the mining company
Start of operation 1647
End of operation 1704
Funded raw materials
Degradation of Hard coal
Geographical location
Coordinates 51 ° 20 '24.3 "  N , 7 ° 16' 5.9"  E Coordinates: 51 ° 20 '24.3 "  N , 7 ° 16' 5.9"  E
Scherenberg Colliery (Ruhr Regional Association)
Scherenberg colliery
Location Scherenberg colliery
Location Hasslinghausen
local community Sprockhövel
District ( NUTS3 ) Ennepe-Ruhr district
country State of North Rhine-Westphalia
Country Germany
District Ruhr area

The Scherenberg colliery in Sprockhövel (district Haßlinghausen ) is a former hard coal mine .

Mining history

On June 22nd, 1643, the general loan was granted. On June 22nd, 1647, a Längenfeld and the Erbstollen fairness were awarded . The lent field was west of the Cord Stock coal bank, near the Gennebeck local border. The Längenfeld was awarded to Peter Scherenberg. Presumably, Peter Scherenberg's father had already been mining in the same field before the Thirty Years War . After the award, the mine was put into operation. In the second half of the 17th century, it went from Pinge nbau for tunneling over. On July 14, 1670, the seam was given as a gift from God. On June 1 of the following year, the loan for the Lehnbank seam took place and only a few days later, the Gertgesbank seam was loaned on June 7. On July 23, 1694, the loan for the Leveringsbank seam took place. On May 28, 1704, a settlement between the Stock and Scherenberg mines was concluded. This comparison regulated the demarcation of mining in individual seams. For the Scherenberg colliery, the comparison envisaged a restriction of mining to the area above the bottom of the Jutermann tunnel. This restriction applied to the area west of the Weiershauser Bach. As the degradation progressed, this comparison became meaningless. The mine later became part of the Stock & Scherenberger main mine.

Individual evidence

  1. a b c Wilhelm Hermann, Gertrude Hermann: The old collieries on the Ruhr. 4th edition. Publishing house Karl Robert Langewiesche, successor Hans Köster, Königstein i. Taunus 1994, ISBN 3-7845-6992-7 .
  2. a b c 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. 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. )