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Report - - More Islip mines & quarries | Mines and Quarries | 28DaysLater.co.uk

Report - More Islip mines & quarries

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Rustynail

it's dark in here innit?
28DL Full Member
Production from Church Mine North, an adit driven into the hillside at the end of a quarry, known as Marsh's pit, began in 1923. The mine, along with others owned by the company, was laid out by a German engineer Hans Wolf . Headings were driven at an angle of 50 deg. to one another to give diamond-shaped pillars in order to increase the amount of stone that could be extracted over the usual 90 deg and square pillar method. The ironstone was hand-loaded into 2ft. 6in. gauge tubs and hauled by horses to a tipping dock near the adit where it was tipped at into 3ft. gauge railway wagons for transport to the nearby Islip furnaces. By 1933 the mine had been connected to Church mine (from then on known as Church Mine South) and the adits at North being used only for ventilation, all production leaving from the adits, about a mile away, at South.

In the mid 1930s diesel locomotives replaced horses on the main haulage runs with up to five being used in the mine and all built by Ruston & Hornsby Ltd. of Lincoln. In the 1940s up to eighty men were working in two shifts. The mine closed in 1947.

On with the pics...

Deep in the jungle
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Aha!
church009.jpg


church010.jpg


church020.jpg


Oil can?
church013.jpg


Horse shoe
church017.jpg


The remains of a mine tub?
church014.jpg


Hobnail boot marks
church028.jpg


Carbide lamp
church027.jpg


church038.jpg


church035.jpg


At this point in this heading we turned around because the rock was flaking under pressure due to the walls being very thin here.
church037.jpg


Brick walls were built to block off worked-out areas to divert airflow around the mine.
church042.jpg


Iron oxide stalactites
church044.jpg


The way out...
church045.jpg


The vent shaft, which is 100ft. deep.
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