Hickleton Main Colliery was a coal mine in Thurnscoe, South Yorkshire, England from 1892 to 1988. [1] In 1933 it employed 2,560 people underground and 500 on the surface. [2] The coal mine's union lodge was the 400th recipient of the Order of Industrial Heroism. [3] [4]
On 9 February 1944, King George VI and Queen Elizabeth visited the colliery and thanked the miners for their war effort during World War II. [5]
In 2006 a black granite memorial was erected in Thurnscoe cemetery bearing the names of the 161 miners who died at the pit over the years. [6]
The site of the colliery now forms Phoenix Park in Thurnscoe. [7]
53°32′28″N 1°18′25″W / 53.5412°N 1.3069°W
Hickleton Main Colliery was a coal mine in Thurnscoe, South Yorkshire, England from 1892 to 1988. [1] In 1933 it employed 2,560 people underground and 500 on the surface. [2] The coal mine's union lodge was the 400th recipient of the Order of Industrial Heroism. [3] [4]
On 9 February 1944, King George VI and Queen Elizabeth visited the colliery and thanked the miners for their war effort during World War II. [5]
In 2006 a black granite memorial was erected in Thurnscoe cemetery bearing the names of the 161 miners who died at the pit over the years. [6]
The site of the colliery now forms Phoenix Park in Thurnscoe. [7]
53°32′28″N 1°18′25″W / 53.5412°N 1.3069°W