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Industrial Developments
Sinking New Hucknall Pit
New Hucknall Colliery Co.
Mining Community Build
New Hucknall Institute
Huthwaite Coal Pit Yard
NCB Pithead Workshops
Coal Mine Underground
Colliery Access Routes
Pit Railway Connection
Colliery Sports Teams
Centenary Celebrations
Coal Production Figures
NCB Employee Register
Huthwaite Collier Deaths
Final Salvage Gangs
1982 Pit Yard Demolition
1984 Down Memory Mine
Pit Wheels in Memorial
Pit Yard Redevelopment
Waste Landfill Recycling

A Hucknall History

New Hucknall Colliery

Centenary Open Day

Thanks again to the camera and memorabilia presented by Mick Bostock for allowing this dated coverage of the Huthwaite pits centenary celebrations. The New Hucknall Colliery invited everyone to an exhibition of modern mining machinery, old mining curiosities, Fire Fighting, Mines Rescue and First Aid Displays, plus conducted tours of surface installations. A visitors brochure also photographically offered a brief history of the pits success, fronted by this welcome signed by the colliery manager Mr J Hand.

1976 InviteMr J HandCentenary
It gives me great pleasure to welcome you all here this afternoon to the celebration of New Hucknall Colliery's Centenary. I am indeed proud to be the Manager on this occasion, but I fully appreciate that a great deal of credit must go to many of those here today for their past efforts which ensured the continued development and progression of the Colliery. I know that this has not been easy for I too have experienced the difficulties too often associated with our industry. I am conscious also of the way that the workforce both past and present have always risen to the task, despite the continued frustrations to put the colliery back onto its feet.

We have come a long way from the days of the pick and shovel and long hours of work for small rewards when miners walked home in their black to bath in front of the fire. Today we have better conditions, modern mining techniques and better social and welfare facilities for which we are grateful to those who fought and sometimes suffered to obtain such achievements. Nevertheless the miner is still the salt of the earth and still faces the dangers which are associated with the industry every day he goes underground, a fact which at last is fully appreciated by the public at large.

Ours is a job to be proud of and one which this country of ours relies on and will do so for many years to come. The country needs coal, but not at the expense of safety.

Sunday 25th July 1976

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Certificate

15 May 09     by Gary Elliott       Updated 15 May 09