Fence Colliery
Fence Colliery was a small colliery sunk at the lower end of the village of Fence, South Yorkshire, England alongside the main Sheffield to Worksop road in the 1840s, shortly before the opening of the North Midland Railway through the Rother Valley.
History
The original coal pit at Fence, a small village within Rotherham Rural District alongside the main Sheffield to Worksop road. started operations in the 1840s.
In 1862 the Fence Colliery Company was formed to purchase the colliery, this leading to a period of development of the colliery and the building of houses for its workers. These were built along Falconer Lane, on the opposite side of the main road to the colliery, and are still in use.
Closure and after life
Fence colliery closed as a coal producing unit in 1904, coal from its reserves being brought to the surface at Orgreave, but it was retained as a pumping station. Nationalisation came in 1947 and in the 1950s the site became home to the National Coal Boards divisional workshops, finally closing in the 1990s. After a short period of inactivity the site was redeveloped as Ley's Cast Iron Foundry, being relocated from Dronfield.
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- Selby complex2 (Gascoigne Wood, North Selby, Riccall, Stillingfleet, Whitemoor Wistow)
- Tan Hill
- Aldwarke1
- Askern
- Barnburgh
- Barrow
- Bentley
- Brodsworth
- Brookhouse
- Bullcroft1
- Birley
- Cortonwood
- Dalton
- Dinnington
- Elsecar
- Fence
- Harry Crofts1
- Hatfield
- Hickleton
- High Hazels
- Huskar
- Kilnhurst
- Kiveton Park
- Maltby
- Manvers
- Markham Main
- New Stubbin
- North Staveley
- Nunnery1
- Orgreave
- Rossington
- Rother Vale
- Rotherham1
- Roundwood1
- Silverwood
- Smithies
- Thorne1
- Thurcroft
- Tinsley Park
- Treeton
- Waleswood
- Warren House
- Warren Vale
- Wath
- Wharncliffe Woodmoor
- Yorkshire Main
- Caphouse
- Flockton
- Frickley
- Garforth Collieries (Isabella Pit, Sisters Pit, Trench Pit)
- Kellingley
- Killingbeck
- Middleton
- Shuttle Eye
- Prince of Wales
- Upton
- Waterloo Main
- Wheldale
- Woolley
- UK miners' strike (1969)
- UK miners' strike (1972)
- UK miners' strike (1984–85)
- Battle of Orgreave
- South Yorkshire Miners' Association
- West Yorkshire Miners' Association
- Yorkshire Miners' Association
- Geology of Yorkshire
- List of collieries in Yorkshire (1984–2015)
- Monckton Coke Works
- National Coal Mining Museum for England
- British MPs sponsored by mining unions
- 1: Pre 1974, most coal mines in South Yorkshire were actually in the West Riding of Yorkshire. Those annotated with a number 1, were closed before 1974.
2: The Selby Coalfield straddled the border of North and West Yorkshire
53°22′01″N 1°20′25″W / 53.3670°N 1.3403°W / 53.3670; -1.3403