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Stoke-on-Trent - photo of the week |
Advert of the Week
Potworks of the Week
Pye Hill No.2 Colliery
Clock
Pye Hill No.2 Colliery Clock
- restored and installed at Whieldon Road, Fenton
The Colliery Clock being
installed at the
Hesketh Pit buildings at Chatterley Whitfield
Sentinel Newspaper
Pye Hill Colliery The original Pye Hill colliery at Pye Hill, Jacksdale was sited in an 'exposed' section of the Nottinghamshire coalfield and was worked as an 'outcrop' where coal could be lifted from the surface of the ground. Gradually outcrops gave way to 'bell pits' which were holes dug down into the ground and hollowed out in the shape of a bell. The original Pye Hill pit was sunk at Jacksdale, but was later known as Pye Hill No 2, when the nearby Selston/Underwood Colliery became known as Pye Hill No 1. The shaft known as No 2, was sunk in 1866. This pit clock was installed at Pye Hill Colliery in 1902, - when the pit closed in 1985 the clock was transferred to the National Mining Museum in Nottinghamshire. In 1991 it was then relocated to the Chatterley Whitfield Mining Museum, Stoke-on-Trent. |
The Pye Hill Clock
Purchased in 1994 by Mr. H.J. Key J.P., Chairman of FWB Products Ltd., and Oakbray Ltd, for the benefit of the citizens of Stoke-on-Trent. officially unveiled by The Lord Mayor of the
City of Stoke-on-Trent The Pye Hill Clock was
manufactured by John Smith & Sons of the Midland Steam Clock Works
of Derby in 1902, and first erected at the Pye hill No. 2 shaft in
Nottinghamshire in that year. |
the bricks for the clock
tower were donated by Redland Bricks Ltd