Durham Mining Museum - Local Records Extracts (original) (raw)

Logo Museum Museum Friends of Durham Mining Museum Events Calendar e-Books and Books for sale Photograph Gallery Document Archive Main Document Archive Newspaper Articles Local Record Extracts Transactions of I.M.E. Miners' Welfare N.C.B. Archive The Colliery Engineer The Colliery Guardian Mine & Quarry Engineering Mining Journal The Science and Art of Mining Coal Magazine Coal News Coke and Gas Master Name Index What's new in the site Mining Mining History Colliery Index Colliery Maps Company Overviews Who's Who Mineral Information Managers Certificates Educational Material Bibliography Statistics Workers/Employee Lists Notes for Family Historians War Service information Disasters Disaster Reports Names of those killed Disasters in the 1700s Disasters in the 1800s Disasters in the 1900s Memorials Awards for Gallantry On this day ... Links to other sites of interest Industrial Heritage Days Out Former www.pitwork.net web site Index to site Contact and address details Share Page with Social Media 1753 June 3. — A machine was going at this time at a colliery at Chartershaugh, in the county of Durham, belonging to William Peareth, esq., invented by Michael Menzies, esq., (for which he had obtained an act of parliament to secure the property to himself) by which coals were drawn up, not by the power of horses, but by the descent of a bucket full of water, to a weight superior to that of the coals dawn up, lifting a corf of above 600lb. weight out of a pit 50 fathoms deep in two minutes. [_LRS_] Prev Page Return to Top of Page Next Page LRS — Local Records or Historical Register of Remarkable Events by John Sykes, Published in 1833 in two volumes