Steinhardtsbank colliery

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Steinhardtsbank colliery
General information about the mine
other names Steinhardt
Colliery Steinhardtbank Colliery
Information about the mining company
Employees up to 2
Start of operation 1728
End of operation 1796
Successor use Louisenglück colliery
Funded raw materials
Degradation of Hard coal
Geographical location
Coordinates 51 ° 25 '35.8 "  N , 7 ° 19' 36"  E Coordinates: 51 ° 25 '35.8 "  N , 7 ° 19' 36"  E
Steinhardtsbank colliery (regional association Ruhr)
Steinhardtsbank colliery
Location Steinhardtsbank colliery
Location Bommern
local community Witten
District ( NUTS3 ) Ennepe-Ruhr district
country State of North Rhine-Westphalia
Country Germany
District Ruhr area

The Steinhardtsbank colliery is a former hard coal mine in Bommern . The mine was also known under the names Zeche Steinhardt and Zeche Steinhardtbank . According to the Niemeyer map, the mine was located east of Steinhausen Castle and west of today's Lindenweg.

history

The beginnings

In 1728 the mine was already in operation without any prior notice . The pit field in which the mine was active had not previously been enfeoffed . In 1735 the mine was still in operation, at that time 32 Kuxe were in the hands of the Treasury . In 1737 the trades refused to pay the taxes due, citing old rights as the reason. In 1749 the steel hammer owner Herdegen gave his shares in the mine to the Prussian king. In 1754 and 1755 the mine was still in operation with two miners . The Geitling seam was mined . This seam was 1.7 meters thick in the area . During this time, a new shaft with the Geitling seam was penetrated . The shaft had been sunk to take several tons and was 45 meters deep . According to the records of the Wetteramt, Johann Jorgen Niederste Frielinghaus worked as a shift supervisor at the mine in 1755 . The Prussian King, the heirs Mercklinghaus and Hundicker et Consorten were registered as trades . In the same year, the farmer Johann Jorgen Niederste Frielinghaus complained that his dirt road was constantly damaged by the carters who transported the coal from the mine to the Bergisches Land. He had lodged the complaint even though he was also involved in the mine.

The further operation

In 1763 the old and the new shaft were in operation. That year the mine was in production . In 1766 a length field was measured . In 1768 a disturbance called a Klancke was hit. The fault was in the area below the Niederste Friehlinghaus courtyard. The Klancke should not be discussed. In 1757 the mine was by the mining officials Wünnenberg navigate . At this point in time, part of the mine field threatened to collapse. The mine was also only operated temporarily, as the trades only started operations when there was sufficient demand for coal. Around 1770 Johann Caspar Hundicker was also a trade in the mine. In the year 1774 the seam had meanwhile been dismantled . In 1787 the mine was entered on the Niemeyer's map. In 1796 the Steinhardtsbank colliery was closed. On January 30, 1823 , the mine consolidated with other mines to form the Louisenglück colliery .

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e f g 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 .
  2. a b c d e f g Gerhard Koetter (Hrsg.): Mining in the Muttental. 1st edition, Druckstatt Wöhrle, Witten 2001, ISBN 3-00-008659-5 .
  3. ^ Gustav Adolf Wüstenfeld: Schlebuscher Revier Bergbau in Wetter. Gustav Adolf Wüstenfeld-Verlag, Wetter-Wengern 1983, ISBN 3-922014-05-4 .