A very small quarry in Wiltshire, with about 150m of passages. Obviously not as notable or visited as the other quarries in Wiltshire. This one has never been reported on in here. So for the purposes of completeness, here’s a short report.
Lies almost in the grounds of the exclusive upmarket Lucknam Park Hotel. A surface quarry lies in the woods with several small entrances into the underground bits. The rock is poor and the roof extremely unstable (you have been warned!!), features horizontal wooden roof supports. Numerous bats inside. Unfortunately much evidence of the place being used as a drinking den with lots of litter and crude graffiti.
It is believed that stone from this quarry was used to build the hotel. What is known for sure from mid 19th century census records is that 23 labourers in Colerne were employed in the stone industry. Some of those men would have been working at the nearby Box mine and some employed within their own parish.
REPORT
Small entrance at the base of a 30ft quarry face
A roof fall just inside. The roof is still very unstable and more will drop
Looking in the place is covered in modern graffiti and there’s a litter strewn fire pit in the centre of the passage.
The walls are unstable too and propped up
Looking back from the deepest point in
The only graffiti in the quarry that could be considered “historic”. 1987 I think.
Thanks for reading
Lies almost in the grounds of the exclusive upmarket Lucknam Park Hotel. A surface quarry lies in the woods with several small entrances into the underground bits. The rock is poor and the roof extremely unstable (you have been warned!!), features horizontal wooden roof supports. Numerous bats inside. Unfortunately much evidence of the place being used as a drinking den with lots of litter and crude graffiti.
It is believed that stone from this quarry was used to build the hotel. What is known for sure from mid 19th century census records is that 23 labourers in Colerne were employed in the stone industry. Some of those men would have been working at the nearby Box mine and some employed within their own parish.
REPORT
Small entrance at the base of a 30ft quarry face
A roof fall just inside. The roof is still very unstable and more will drop
Looking in the place is covered in modern graffiti and there’s a litter strewn fire pit in the centre of the passage.
The walls are unstable too and propped up
Looking back from the deepest point in
The only graffiti in the quarry that could be considered “historic”. 1987 I think.
Thanks for reading