Mining in the Worsley Area of Lancashire

Description

A dissertation on customs, traditions and beliefs connected with the coal mining industry in the Worsley area of Lancashire, based on printed sources and interviews with four miners. Its sections present information on Worsley past and present, with sections on the Duke of Bridgewater, the Earl of Ellesmere and Countess of Ellesmere, the area's pits and developments in the second half of the twentieth century. A further section concentrates on the miners themselves, and covers work, promotion, wages and hours, accidents, work clothes, lamps and tools, pit ponies, meals, superstitions, attitudes to work and to the employers. Leisure time activities, including pigeon keeping and racing, running, football, piggy, pitch and toss, parading and music, are also described. Life at home, including food, washing and washing clothes, is also documented. Appendices provide a dialect glossary, articles and maps, and information on Unions and the future of the industry.

Metadata

Identifier csq3j71b
IRN 410096
Class Mark LAVC/SRP/2/060
Level File
Type of Record Archives - ISAD(G)
Peristent Link http://prototype1.library.leeds.ac.uk/csq3j71b
Collection(s) Leeds Archive of Vernacular Culture
Category Archive
Parent Record Undergraduate Dissertations
Creator(s) Taylor, Ruth
Date 1974
Size and Medium 71 unbound typed leaves; 18 colour, 4 b/w photographs.

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