Lofthouse Colliery disaster


The Lofthouse Colliery disaster was a mining accident which took place in the West Riding of Yorkshire, England on Wednesday 21 March 1973, in which seven mine workers died when workings were flooded.

Disaster

Lofthouse Colliery was in Lofthouse Gate close to Outwood in the Stanley Urban District where many of the colliers lived. Its site is now in the City of Wakefield.. A new coalface was excavated too close to an abandoned, flooded 19th century mineshaft. The sudden inrush of of water trapped seven mine workers below ground. A six-day rescue operation was carried out but succeeded in recovering only one body, that of Charles Cotton. The location of the flooded shaft was known to National Coal Board surveyors but they had not believed it to be as deep as the modern workings. British Geological Survey records indicated that the flooded shaft did descend to the same depth but the NCB neglected to check these records.

Legacy

The incident led to the Mines Regulations 1979, requiring
The response of Arthur Scargill, a compensation agent in the Yorkshire NUM, is credited with boosting his popularity with the Yorkshire miners and helping his election to the post of president of the Yorkshire Area NUM later in 1973. He accompanied the rescue teams underground and was on site for six days with the relatives of the seven deceased. At the enquiry, he used notebooks of underground working from the 19th century, retrieved from the Institute of Geological Sciences in Leeds, to argue that the National Coal Board could have prevented the disaster had they acted on the information available. Lofthouse Colliery closed in 1981, with many of the miners being transferred to the new Selby Coalfield.

Memorial

A seven-sided stone obelisk listing the names of the seven miners was erected in Wrenthorpe above the point where the miners were trapped. It is on the south side of Batley Road, opposite the junction with Wrenthorpe Lane at.
The men who died were:
Services and reunions were held in Wakefield and Wrenthorpe on the weekend of 23/24 March 2013, to commemorate the 40th anniversary of the disaster.