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Ballingarry Coal Mines

Ballingarry Coal Mines are underground coal mines located near the village of Ballingarry, County Tipperary, Ireland. Situated near the border with County Kilkenny, the mines are now disused and have flooded. Other nearby centres of population are Killenaule and New Birmingham.

Contents

1 Geology
2 19th and early 20th century
3 Gurteen
4 Lickfinn
5 Legacy
6 Colloquial mining terms used at Ballingarry
7 References
8 Other coal mines in Ireland

Geology

The type of coal mined here was anthracite, a hard, virtually smokeless fuel[1] with a high calorific value and relatively low ash content, but like other forms of coal is known to be a major contributor to air pollution and air pollution-related deaths.[2][not in citation given][3][not in citation given] The coalfield is situated in the Slieve Ardagh range of hills and is an extension of the Leinster coalfields, being separated by a narrow band of Carboniferous limestone. The deposits, which are highly faulted, consist of three strata, the lowest averaging nine inches in thickness and the others being approximately two feet thick. Due to the inclined coal layer acting as a slippage plane, substantial amounts of the deposits have been crushed and blended with the upper and lower boundary shale. This has resulted in a less commercially attractive material known locally as culm.[4] Due to its high elevation, melting snow in the Slieve Ardagh region intermittently resulted in large volumes of flood-water with a short ‘Time of Concentration’. This sometimes threatened to overwhelm the mines ordinary pumping capacity.
19th and early 20th century

From 1826, the main commercial enterprise was the Mining Company of Ireland which ended operations in 1926.[5] In the 1840s, 50,000 tons per year were extracted here.[6] The mines featured significantly during the Young Irelander Rebellion of 1848. By 1866, twelve pits were being worked locally while three had recently been abandoned.[7] From 1942 until 1950, the mines were managed by the government under the name Mianrai Teo.
Gurteen

In 1953, the mining lease for the area was purchased from the government by Tommy O’Brien for £50,000. O’Brien, originally from Co. Mayo, returned from Lancashire in England and soon many locals who had also emigrated from the area returned to work the mines. Three years later, 330 men were employed there and future employment prospects were good, with the new pit at Gurteen having been recently opened and “British coal up another 30 shillings a ton in the Dublin area”. Wages varied between £15 and £25 per week, depending on quantity mined.[8] By the early 1970s, the mines were in financial difficulties and management were seeking government intervention.[9] In 1971, 100 workers were made redundant and the following year the mines went into receivership resulting in the redundancy of another 150 men, just before the first oil crisis.[10] Maintenance of the mines was continued for a period, and disaster was narrowly averted in 1973 when an underground fire threatened the lives of 17 workers.[11] Despite these efforts the mines closed, and with the pumps disconnected the pits flooded. The second oil crisis resulted in soaring fuel prices, and it appeared the mines would once again be seen as a viable enterprise.
Lickfinn

In 1978, Kealy Mines commenced explorations in the area. The name derived from the surnames of its two principals, Patrick Keating, a civil engineer originally from Ballylooby in Tipperary and Gilbert Howley, a native of Co. Mayo. As a student, Keating had worked for O’Brien at the Gurteen pit before emigrating to work on the M1 motorway in England. He returned to Ireland in the early sixties and later became involved with Howley in the latter’s civil engineering and excavation business. They reopened workings at Lickfinn, near the village of New Birmingham, which accessed the coal by Slope mining. Initially the mines employed 34 miners and the Electricity Supply Board expressed an interest in using Ballingarry coal for the generation of power and so reduce its dependence on imported oil.[12] However, in preliminary testing at a power station designed to burn peat, the high temperatures produced by the anthracite caused its fire-grates to overheat. Coal dust was supplied to the Irish Sugar processing plant at Thurles and they became an important customer. Financing also proved a difficulty for Kealy Mines, and it was acquired by a Canadian consortium in 1982. Flair Resources Ltd., trading as Tipperary Anthracite was headed by John Young, a Tipperary emigrant to Canada. The new company expanded the workforce to 80 and transferred surface processing such as washing, screening and bagging to the old pithead at Gurteen. It also opened a second underground ‘cutting’ and investigated exploiting the more marginal No. 1 seam. An electrically powered coal-cutter was employed and investment allowed some further modernisation of plant. Extraction concentrated on the No. 2 seam, with its reserves estimated at that time to be 3 million tonnes. By 1985, Tipperary Anthracite was also in receivership. Financial irregularities regarding IDA grants were investigated by the Gardaí and highlighted on RTÉ current affairs programme ‘Today Tonight’. In 1989, Emereld Resources was granted a licence to reopen the mines and for a while sporadic work continued at Lickfinn-Earl’s Hill.

Legacy

Mining on a reduced scale progressed for some time before the pit again closed.

As part of a local initiative, the Old School at The Commons was renovated by Slieveardagh Rural Development. It displays numerous artifacts relating to the mining heritage of the Slieve Ardagh region and is also intended as a social centre for former miners and their families.

Colloquial mining terms used at Ballingarry

‘Banshee’, a compressed-air rock drill with an extending mono-pod, used to bore holes for explosives.
‘Puncheon’, a round timber strut (approx. 4 inches diameter) to support overburden in areas where coal was extracted.
‘Chock’, lengths of pine-trunk 3 feet long and from 9 to 12 inches in diameter and roughly sawn to give two flat surfaces. They were used on the flat to construct square supports if more substantial support than puncheons was required.
‘Bogey’, rail car for transporting support-timbers (and occasionally miners).
‘Tub’, rail car for transporting coal and shale.
‘Cane’, stick of gelignite.
‘Pit bottom’, limit of main road sloping from surface (at approx. 25 degrees) and where the largest pumps were positioned. Miners walked down the pit at Lickfinn, on rough-cut steps beside the single narrow-gauge rail. At the pit bottom, horizontal roads (also with a single rail-track), branched left and right. As the branch roads progressed, switched sidings were extended to ‘park’ tubs near the work area.
‘Topple’, a sloping drift off the branch road and following the coal seam upwards. It was excavated only to the depth of the coal. This was where most of the coal was extracted by miners lying flat in the two feet headroom.
‘Chute’, a metal bin fixed at the end of a topple and extending over the branch road. A trap-door was opened and closed to progressively fill a series of tubs on the road. Galvanised sheets extending from the chute up to the ‘coal face’ allowed the miners to fill the chute assisted by gravity. The full tubs were then winched or pushed to the pit bottom. There they were attached to the main winch for hoisting to the surface, tipped, and the empties returned.
‘Shining ball’, form of culm or duff, high in clay content.
‘Jigger’, pneumatic pick.
‘Tally’, a brass token with a stamped number threaded on a string and carried by the miner around his neck. It was placed by the ‘Hurrier’ in the full tub to indicate which team had mined it. Tallies were used to calculate production-based bonuses.
‘Fireman’, the foreman responsible for detonating explosives at the end of a shift.

References

Rezaiyan, John (2005). Gasification Technologies: A Primer for Engineers and Scientists. CRC Press. p. 37. Retrieved 8 June 2014.
Deaths per TWH by Energy Source, Next Big Future, March 2011. Quote: “The World Health Organization and other sources attribute about 1 million deaths/year to coal air pollution.”
How Deadly Is Your Kilowatt? We Rank The Killer Energy Sources, Forbes, retrieved 6/7/14
Luddy, Maria (1990). “The lives of the Poor in Fethard in 1821” (PDF). Tipperary Historical Journal (County Tipperary Historical Society) (1990): 124. Retrieved 2011-08-13.
Second Report of the Commissioners (on) Railway Communications (in) Ireland By Irish Railway Commission W. Clowes, 1838 p45
The Industrial Resources of Ireland Robert Kane : Edition: 2 : Hodges and Smith : 1845
Mineral Statistics of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland By Geological Survey of Great Britain, Robert Hunt, 1866 p209
Irish Times p5 23 June 1956 (with photo montage of Gurteen miners)
Irish Times p1 20 April 1971
Dick Walsh, Irish Times p1 11 Sept. 1972
Irish Times 7 Feb 1973
Irish Times pp 1 and 10 26 July 1979 (with photo montage of Lickfinn miners)
“Revival Of Traditions In The Old School, The Commons”. Tipperary Star. 04-01-2012. Check date values in: |date= (help)

“Slieveardagh Miners Reunion – A Great Success”. Tipperary Star. 05-03-2012. Check date values in:

Other coal mines in Ireland

Deerpark Mines, Castlecomer.
Arigna, County Roscommon.

 

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