Wiendahlsbank colliery

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Wiendahlsbank colliery
General information about the mine
Administration building of the Wiendahlsbank colliery.jpg
Administration building
Information about the mining company
Employees up to 12
Start of operation 1771
End of operation 1850
Successor use United Wiendahlsbank colliery
Funded raw materials
Degradation of Hard coal
Geographical location
Coordinates 51 ° 27 '24 .8 "  N , 7 ° 24' 50.1"  E Coordinates: 51 ° 27 '24 .8 "  N , 7 ° 24' 50.1"  E
Wiendahlsbank colliery (regional association Ruhr)
Wiendahlsbank colliery
Location of the Wiendahlsbank colliery
Location Kruckel
local community Dortmund
Independent city ( NUTS3 ) Dortmund
country State of North Rhine-Westphalia
Country Germany
District Ruhr area

The Wiendahlsbank colliery was a hard coal mine in Kruckel and Rüdinghausen .

history

The beginnings

On September 8, 1768, the expectation was laid on the Wiendahlbanks, consisting of three seams . For each of the three seams, the award of a treasure trove plus 20 dimensions was coveted. The assumption was made under the name Wiendahlsbank und Erbstollen. The mother was Johann Friedrich Lueg and Camerarius Wiendahl. Each of the two mothers was equally involved in the muted field. In addition, the two trades applied for the lending. The trades intended to create a deep tunnel and also applied for the right to inherit the planned tunnel. The Mining Authority commissioned the two jurors, Brenner and Heintzmann, with the inspection . Since the Johannes Erbstollen had already been excavated in the area of ​​the mine field , the right to inherit the planned deep tunnel was not granted.

The other years

On April 18, 1771, the trades Johann Friedrich Lueg, Camerarius Wiendahl, the schoolmaster Sturmfeld and Caspar Henrich Dulmann were registered in the records of the mining authority. The trades had a different number of kuxes . The mine was in operation at that time, two seams were in the ground . However, the mine had not yet been measured at this point . Since, in the opinion of the authorities, the mine consisted of two coal banks and the legal fees had only been paid by one bank, no mortgage had yet been granted. In 1774 the Längenfeld Wiendahlsbank was awarded. The field was solved by the Johannes Erbstollen . At that time tunnel construction was being carried out in the Brunebecketal west of Kruckel , and construction was carried out as far as the Ardey Mountains . In 1798 the mine was still in operation, after which it was not mentioned in the documents for almost 40 years. A length field was awarded on March 11, 1836. In 1842 the mine was in operation, with 12 employees , 2377 bushels of hard coal were extracted. On September 24, 1850 , the Wiendahlsbank colliery consolidated with the Geviertfeldern Wiendahlsbank No. 4, Güldener Mond, Rosalie and Westermannsbank under the United Wiendahlsbank colliery .

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e f 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 Thomas Schilp (ed.), Wilfried Reininghaus, Joachim Huske: Das Muth-, Verleih-, and Confirmation Book 1770 - 1773. A source on the early history of Ruhr mining, Wittnaack Verlag, Dortmund 1993, ISBN 3-9802117- 9-7 .

Web links

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. )