In September 1828, the town and
port of Seaham Harbour were founded. As this was part of the parish of
Dalton-le-Dale most of the baptisms, marriages and burials from the new
community were recorded at St. Andrew's in Dalton village. St. Mary the
Virgin continued to serve only [Old] Seaham village, Seaton-with-Slingley
and outlying farms. In 1845 St. John's at Seaham Harbour opened its
doors after a new parish was created and detached from St. Andrew's.
Henceforth most of the events of Seaham Harbour were recorded at St.
John's.
-
1838 - Sinking of Murton
Colliery began. Events from this new community were recorded at St.
Andrew's.
-
1844 - Sinking of Seaton
Colliery commenced. Events from this new community were recorded at
St. Mary's.
-
1849 - Sinking of Seaham
Colliery began. Events from this new community were recorded at St.
Mary's.
New Seaham colliery village was
constructed from 1844 onwards. The new community was within the parish
of St. Mary the Virgin at (Old) Seaham until the building of New Seaham
Christ Church in 1857 and the creation of a new parish in 1864. It was
lumped with Old Seaham for census purposes until relatively recently.
Available Parish Registers at Durham Record Office
St. Mary the Virgin, (Old) Seaham, Baptisms 1646-1861
St. Mary the Virgin, (Old) Seaham, Marriages 1652-1967
St. Mary the Virgin, (Old) Seaham, Burials 1653-1966
Christ Church, New Seaham, Baptisms 1857-1967
Christ Church, New Seaham, Marriages 1861-1970
Christ Church, New Seaham, Burials 1860-1954
Wesleyan Methodist, New Seaham Cornish St., Baptisms 1870-1946
Also incorporated this site (www.durhamrecordsonline.com
)are the following records which are not currently available at Durham
Record Office.
St. Cuthbert RC, New Seaham, Baptisms 1934-1999
St. Cuthbert RC, New Seaham, Marriages 1934-1999
St. Cuthbert RC, New Seaham, Burials 1934-1999
|
|
1801 |
1811 |
1821 |
1831 |
1841 |
1851 |
1861 |
1871 |
1881 |
1891 |
1901 |
|
Seaham
(Old & New) |
115 |
121 |
103 |
130 |
153 |
729 |
2591 |
2802 |
2989 |
4798 |
5285 |
All
census returns 1841-91 inclusive for the village have been transcribed
and incorporated at www.durhamrecordsonline.com
Growth of the Village of New Seaham 1861-91
|
1861
Census |
1871
Census |
1881
Census |
1891
Census |
|
West Row
(23) |
School
Row/Vane Terrace (25) |
Vane
Terrace (23) |
Vane
Terrace (23) |
|
Infant Row
(6) |
Reading
Room Row (6) |
Infant Row
(7) |
Infant
Street (7) |
|
California
Row (68) |
California
Row (68) |
California
Street (68) |
California
Street (68 |
|
Mount
Pleasant (20) |
Mount
Pleasant (20) |
Mount
Pleasant (20) |
Mount
Pleasant (58) |
|
Australia
Row (82) |
Australia
Row (66) |
Australia
Street (66) |
Australia
Street (66) |
|
Lononderry
Engine Cottages (2) |
Londonderry
Engine Cottages (2) |
Londonderry
Engine Cottages (2) |
Londonderry
Engine Cottages (2) |
|
Office Row
(53) |
Office Row
(37) |
William
Street (30) |
William
Street (30) |
|
Butcher's
Row (40) |
Butchers
Row (39) |
Butcher
Street (40) |
Butcher
Street (40) |
|
German Row
(22) |
German/Doctors Row (66) |
Doctor's
Street (66) |
Doctor's
Street (66) |
|
Bownden
Row(23) |
Daker's
Row (21) |
Post
Office Street (21) |
Post
Office Street (21) |
|
Church Row
(23) |
Church Row
(25) |
Church
Street (26) |
Church
Street (57) |
|
Double Row
(32) |
Double Row
(32) |
School
Street (32) |
School
Street (32) |
|
Single
Row(24) |
Railway
Row (22) |
Bank Head
Street (22) |
Bank Head
Street (22) |
|
Model Row
(35) |
Model Row
(27) |
Model
Street (26) |
Model
Street (26) |
|
|
New or
Cornish Row (57) |
Cornish
Street (57) |
Cornish
Street (57) |
|
|
|
Henry
Street (59) |
Henry
Street (59) |
|
|
|
Seaham
Street (59) |
Seaham
Street (59) |
|
|
|
Hall
Street (50) |
Hall
Street (50) |
|
|
|
Cooke
Street (20) |
Cooke
Street (20) |
|
|
|
|
Viceroy
Street (61) |
History of Seaham Colliery
The sinking of Seaton Colliery
(the High Pit) by the North Hetton and Grange Colliery Company began in
1844 and production of coal commenced in March 1852 after a long and
desperate struggle against flooding. The sinking of Seaham Colliery (the
Low Pit) by the 3rd. Marquess of Londonderry commenced in 1849 and it
began production not long after Seaton though the actual date is not
recorded. The two pits were amalgamated as Seaham Colliery under the
control of the Londonderry family in November 1864. There were no less
than seven known explosions at the pits, before and after amalgamation.
There were three in one year at Seaton in 1852, the first year of
production, with six men and boys killed in the last of these. One of
the casualties was an 8 year old boy. Another explosion at Seaton in
1862 burnt to death two more workers. The massive explosion in October
1871 miraculously killed only 26. Even more miraculously none died in
the huge 1872 blast. Finally 164 men and boys were killed in the
calamity of September 1880. Though there were no further explosions
there were many single or multiple fatalities at Seaham Colliery after
1880 - Seaham's graveyards are littered with decaying headstones which
testify to that grim truth.
Seaham Colliery Pit Village (New Seaham) was constructed from the mid
1840s onwards and was virtually complete by the time of the 1880
disaster. Another street was built betweeen 1881 and 1891, called
Viceroy Street in honour of the office held by the 6th.Marquess of
Londonderry from 1886 to 1889. A final small row, Stewart Street (the
family name of the Londonderrys), appeared between 1891 and 1895.
By the 1930s much of the housing at Seaham Colliery, cheap and cheerless
to begin with, was well past its best and the village was earmarked for
wholesale demolition under the Slum Clearance Act. Parkside estate was
constructed at the end of that decade and most of the inhabitants
transferred en masse to there in 1939/40. Knowing that Westlea and
Eastlea council estates were planned to arise on the ruins of their
village a few of the inhabitants decided to stay put and wait for the
new houses. When war came they were joined by those made homeless in
Seaham Harbour by German bombing. The Germans also managed to hit the
colliery village, scoring a direct hit on the Seaton Colliery Inn after
hours one night in October 1941 and killing the landlady and her friend
(this author's great aunt). Eventually the aptly-named Phoenix was
constructed on the site.
The old pit village was finally swept away between 1945 and 1960 but
there are still a few remnants left in 1995 (The Miner's Hall building,
High Colliery School, the row of houses on Station Road which
incorporates the New Seaham Inn, now called The Kestrel). The village
and most of its inhabitants were gone by 1960 but Seaham Colliery itself
survived until the late 1980s. It was nationalised in 1947 after a
century of ownership by the Londonderry family. In 1987 Seaham was
'amalgamated' with Vane Tempest Colliery and the old pit was relegated
to the role of being third and fourth shafts for the newer concern. No
more coal was produced at Seaham Colliery. The Seaham/Vane Tempest
'combine' was closed by British Coal in 1994 and both sites were
cleared. Now there is a great open space where Seaham Colliery stood for
150 years.
History of New Seaham
The preparatory working for the sinking of Seaton Colliery or the High
Pit began on July 31 1844. The actual sinking of the shaft commenced on
August 12 1845. The mine was developed not by the landowner Lord
Londonderry but by the North Hetton and Grange Colliery Company, on a
site chosen because of its proximity to the Rainton and Seaham waggonway.
The main shareholder of this concern was Lord Lambton, 2nd.Earl of
Durham, an individual with many other inland pits and who was the second
largest producer of coal in County Durham behind Londonderry himself.
The North Hetton and Grange Colliery Company was licensed to exploit
only the coal under Londonderry's land between Seaton and Warden Law,
but that canny lord reserved any and all seaward coal for himself. The
Marquess it seems was still very nervous about the expense of sinking a
new and very deep colliery and preferred others to risk their money in
what might yet prove to be a fruitless undertaking. Also, as usual, he
was short of cash despite the fact that business was booming. Before
very long he had his proof when the North Hetton and Grange Colliery
Company discovered deep but rich seams of coal.
Sir Ralph Milbanke, he who had sold the estates of Seaham and Dalden to
the Irishman for a song a quarter of a century before, must have turned
in his grave. Even before this development Lord Londonderry was probably
on paper the richest man in the county of Durham. His numerous pits at
Penshaw and in the Rainton and Pittington districts and elsewhere in
Durham were at their peak and the demand was such that he could usually
sell every ton that he produced. Now, almost by accident, he had secured
his family's future for the next century.
The nearby Mill Inn was known as the 'Nicky Nack' and its landlord was
dubbed 'Tommy Nicky-Nack Chilton' and so Seaton Colliery soon acquired
the nickname. Little is known about these early years but a letter
survives in the Londonderry Papers at the Durham Record Office which
informs us that on January 27 1845 a party of guests travelled from Lord
Londonderry's mansion at Wynyard (near Stockton, now owned by John Hall)
to Seaham Harbour to observe the opening ceremony for a new extension to
the docks. On the way they passed the digging at Seaton, where a depth
of 40 fathoms had been achieved of an anticipated 240 fathoms. At the
request of the ladies present two of the 'sinkers' ascended from the
bottom of the shaft in a large kibble or bucket. They resembled drowned
rats more than men but they maintained their dignity and flatly refused
to 'run about and show themselves' to the spectators.
The pit later made much slower progress due to the water problem. After
coal was reached but before it could be exploited a second colliery was
begun nearby by the lord of the manor. The reaction of the North Hetton
and Grange Colliery Company directors to this development has not been
preserved but they cannot have been very amused. Nearly thirty years
after the first tapping of the concealed coalfield at Hetton the 3rd.
Marquess of Londonderry, now 71, at last took the plunge and sank his
first deep coal mine. The sinking of Seaham Colliery or the 'Low Pit'
commenced on April 13 1849. The Low Pit shaft was 1797 feet deep and the
High Pit shaft was 1819 feet deep. Both were 14 feet in diameter. The
new mines were the second and third deepest in the country (behind
Pemberton Main at Monkwearmouth). The first coal from Seaton was only
drawn on March 17 1852, after almost seven years of battles against
flooding and quicksand. Seaham began producing a little later after a
much shorter battle, but the precise date is unknown.
In the first weeks after coming on stream there were three explosions at
Seaton, the last of which, on Wednesday June 16 1852, killed six men and
boys and injured several others. Among the dead was a 10 year old boy,
Charles Halliday or Holliday. The inquest was held at the Mill Inn with
Mr.Morton, Agent of the Earl of Durham, present. It was revealed that
naked lights (candles) had been used in the pit, nearly four decades
after the invention of the safety lamp. The jury recorded a verdict of
accidental death.
To justify their huge outlay of money the Londonderrys' new Seaham pit
needed to be a giant in production terms compared to its predecessors
inland and this soon proved to be the case. By 1854 (when it had barely
begun production and would soon employ far more) 269 hands were
employed, making it as large as any of the Rainton and Penshaw pits
owned by Lord Londonderry. By the mid-1870s Seaham/Seaton was producing
as much coal as all of the other Londonderry pits at Rainton, Pittington
and Penshaw combined. By 1880 the mine employed 1500 men and boys and
had an output of half a million tons of coal per year. By the time of
the census of 1881 some 3,000 people lived in the village of New Seaham.
Charles Stewart, 3rd.Marquess of Londonderry and 1st.Viscount Seaham,
died at his home, Holdernesse House in London's Park Lane, in March
1854. A new place of worship, Christ Church, was built at New Seaham in
1855 by Lady Frances Anne as a memorial to her husband. It is virtually
the only monument to the old tyrant that still stands in the town he
created. The church received free heating and lighting courtesy of
underground pipes from the colliery 200 yards away. Christ Church also
included a graveyard which was to become the last resting place for
generations of New Seaham inhabitants. Previously the dead had been
interred at either the ancient St.Andrew's at Dalton-le-Dale or the even
older St.Mary's at Old Seaham or the new graveyard at St.John's in
Seaham Harbour.
Like her late husband the Marchioness was infamous for her parsimony and
yet on March 1 1856 this complex character entertained between three and
four thousand of her pitmen at Chilton Moor. In 1857 she spent over
£1000 to entertain 3,930 of her pitmen, dockers, quarrymen and
railwaymen at Seaham Hall, in the presence of the Bishop of Durham and
numerous friends. Her friend and protege Benjamin Disraeli recognised in
his writings after her death that Frances Anne was a tyrant in her way
but it would be fairer to describe her as a benevolent despot. As Durham
mine owners went the Londonderrys were actually among the best and the
miners of the day preferred to work for them than most others. Bad as
they were living conditions at New Seaham were far better than most
older mining villages in the county. In the 1850s the Marchioness built
Londonderry schools at the Raintons, Kelloe, Old Durham, Penshaw and New
Seaham (which still stands) and later her son Henry constructed another
at Silksworth. She personally paid the teacher's salaries and all other
expenses and allowed the children of non-employees to attend.
The 1850s saw the building of several streets in the vicinity of the two
pits and the creation of a tight-knit community. Window tax was
abolished in 1851 and mechanised brick production (with machine-pressed
bricks) was developed in 1856, both of which made the process cheaper
and easier. The typical 'through terrace house' at Seaton/Seaham
Colliery had one room downstairs and one upstairs (often divided into
two by a partition to provide separate sleeping accomodation for boys
and girls). The downstairs room served for cooking, bathing, meals,
general living and as sleeping space for parents. The back yard had a
dry closet privy (a netty) and a coal shed. Social life centred on the
back alley. Some of the streets were built and owned by the North Hetton
and Grange Colliery Company, proprietors of Seaton Colliery. The rest
were constructed and owned by the Londonderry family, owners of Seaham
Colliery. At this distance in time it is difficult to tell who owned
what. The first streets, all of which were mentioned in the 1861 census,
were:
West Row: which was later called School Row and later still
became Vane Terrace.
School Row: which is not to be confused with School Street (see
the below Double Row).
Infant Row: Very small. Only six dwellings.
California Row: 1849 saw the California Gold Rush.
Mount Pleasant : which may have been named after a place in
northern Ireland near the Londonderry mansion at Mount Stewart or simply
because it occupied a good vantage down to the sea.
Australia Row: Australia was a principal destination for British
emigrants in this period, especially miners from the northeast of
England. Many of them promptly commemorated their roots by naming their
new communities after the ones they had left behind. A Newcastle, a
Sunderland, a Murton, a Ryhope and yes even a Seaham, were created in
New South Wales and survive to this day.
Office Row: which was later called William Street.
Butcher's Row: Butcher may have been a director/official of the
North Hetton and Grange Colliery Company
German Row: later called Doctor's Street, which in the direction
of Sunderland had a fine view of the North Sea (The German Ocean.).
Bownden Row: later called Daker's Row and later still renamed
Post Office Street. Bownden may have been a director/official of the
North Hetton and Grange Colliery Company.
Church Row: which faced the new Christ Church
Double Row: later called School Street
Single Row: later called Railway Row, later still renamed Bank
Head Street
Model Row: Presumably the builders and owners were proud of this
street and gave it a magnificent title.Or maybe they had just run out of
names !
Seaton and Seaham Collieries (New Seaham) and Seaham Harbour remained
quite separate communities, divided by fields, and connected only by the
Rainton & Seaham Railway and a dirt track and the fact of shared
ownership by the Londonderrys. In 1863 a Local Board of Health was
created to conduct Greater Seaham's affairs. It was led from 1873-94 by
J.B.Eminson, chief financial agent for the Londonderrys in Seaham from
1869-96. The Board became Seaham Harbour Urban District Council by the
Local Government Act of 1894. Eminson also led the new body from
1895-96. During his 27 years service he filled the leading position in
the town. He was also Chairman of Seaham Magistrates and a member of the
Easington Guardians (Work House). Despite the semblance of a kind of
democracy after 1863 Greater Seaham was still a family fiefdom.
At Hartley Colliery in Northumberland in January 1862 over 200 men and
boys died of suffocation when the only shaft was blocked by falling
machinery. Shortly after this disaster, the greatest single loss of life
in the Great Northern Coalfield, the Seaton High Pit and Seaham Low Pit
were joined by an underground link. Within weeks, on March 29, a cage
rope broke at the Low Pit and the shaft was blocked by stone. Over 400
men and boys and 70 ponies escaped via the High Pit. They would have
shared the fate of the Hartley colliers and perished within hours
without the connection. The Northumberland and Durham Miner's Permanent
Relief Fund had its origin in the widespread need which followed the
Hartley Disaster. Before Hartley it was the individual worker's
resposibility to subscribe to a 'club' to cover 'private' medical
expenses. There were discretionary payments from the mineowners, at a
level below that of wages, for some workers who suffered an accident,
with the limited objective of retaining the services of skilled workmen
temporarily disabled. For those permanently crippled or worse there was
nothing and before long they and/or their widows and children were given
their marching orders from their colliery houses. The Employer's
Liability Act was still 20 years in the future.
Another explosion on April 6 1864 at Seaton Colliery severely burnt two
men, Tristram Heppell and William Fairley. Both died in agony in their
homes some days later. Heppell's father, a master sinker of pits, had
been a contemporary and friend of George Stephenson at Killingworth
Colliery in Northumberland. Heppell was a member of the Seaham
Volunteers and so was given a military funeral at St. Mary's. Reverend
Angus Bethune conducted the service. We shall come across this
individual again later in this narrative.
When an Act of Parliament prohibited the working of coal-mines without
two outlets from each seam Lady Frances Anne decided that the simplest
way to comply with this legislation in the case of Seaham Colliery was
to buy Seaton Colliery from the North Hetton and Grange Colliery Company
and amalgamate it with Seaham. This was done in November 1864, and was
virtually the last business deal she completed for she was dying by
then. She died at Seaham Hall on January 20 1865, three days after her
65th.birthday. Her collieries passed to her son Henry, Earl Vane, who
succeeded his half-brother Frederick as Marquess of Londonderry in 1872.
'Observer', who wrote 'Gleanings from the Pit Villages' in 1866, gave
Seaham Colliery high praise in contrast to older Durham pit villages. He
commended its roomy dwellings, good gardens and wide streets. The usual
outdoor meeting place for men at Seaham Colliery in dispute with the
management was the ball alley. This was also used for gambling,
fist-fights and games of hand-ball against teams from neighbouring
collieries. The surface of the wall eventually deteriorated and it was
abandoned to nesting birds in the 1920s.
As the North Hetton and Grange Colliery Company no longer had an
interest in the Seaton part of Seaham Colliery or its housing stock any
trace of that concern in the street names of the village was now removed
by the Londonderrys. Uncharacteristically they did not bestow their own
names as had happened at Seaham Harbour and other places, at least not
yet: West Row became School Row and only later became Vane Terrace;
Infant Row became Reading Room Row; Bownden Row became Daker's (the new
manager of Seaham Colliery) Row; Single Row became Railway Row. One new
street appeared, predictably being called New Row. By the time of the
1881 census it had become Cornish Row in honour of the wave of
immigrants coming in from that county.
All of the Easington district collieries began to receive a steady
stream of Cornishmen and Devonians and their families in the mid-1860s.
A street would be eventually be named in honour of the Cornish at Seaham
Colliery and a whole district of Murton was taken over by these refugees
from the dying lead and tin industries and nicknamed O'Cornwall. Wingate
Grange Colliery also received a very large contingent. Seaham Colliery
also absorbed Scots, Irish and Welsh and also a group from Norfolk. Wood
Dalling and neighbouring villages must have been stripped bare of their
agricultural labourers, lured north by the prospect of higher and
consistent wages by the agents of the Marquess of Londonderry and other
coalowners. Most of these people would retain their accents for the rest
of their lives but their children and grandchildren were completely
assimilated into the host community and became Geordies. Seaham Colliery
must have been a very cosmopolitan place in these early days and it
cannot have been unusual to hear a dozen accents during a day's work at
the pit.
The mother and stepfather of the alleged mass murderess Mary Ann Cotton
moved to New Seaham from South Hetton in the early 1860s. George and
Margaret Stott took up residence in California Street at an unknown
number and in the summer of 1865 took in Mary Ann's only surviving
child, Isabella Mowbray, aged 6. Mary Ann had lost her husband William
Mowbray to typhus in Hendon at the start of the year and her other
daughter Margaret Jane had succumbed to the same disease at Seaham
Harbour in May. Now Mary Ann needed time to sort herself out and farmed
her child out to its grandmother and step-grandfather. She moved to
Sunderland and got a job as a nurse at the Infirmary. There she met a
patient, George Ward, and married him before the year was out.
Mysteriously he was dead within months of a disease which apparently
baffled his doctors. At the end of 1866, within weeks of being widowed a
second time, she took a job at Pallion as housekeeper to a well-to-do
shipyard official James Robinson, who had just lost his own wife and
badly needed female help with his five children. The youngest of these,
a sickly infant boy, died within days of her arrival.
A few weeks later, in the spring of 1867 Mary Ann, a "nurse" remember,
was summoned back to New Seaham to look after her mother who was dying
of the liver disease hepatitis. Margaret Stott expired within a week and
was buried at New Seaham Christ Church. Mary Ann then quarrelled with
her stepfather over a few sheets she claimed had been hers. He had never
liked her much and now told her what he thought of her and ordered her
to leave his house and take her child with her. George Stott already had
eyes on a comely widow, Hannah Paley, who lived in the same street, and
he didn't want the little girl around cramping his style. He married
Hannah Paley not long after but Mary Ann was not invited to the wedding
and in fact never came to Seaham again. Within weeks of Mary Ann's
return to Pallion, Isabella Mowbray was dead, two more of Robinson's
children also, and the "housekeeper" was pregnant by her employer.
George Stott did see his stepdaughter one more time. He was her last
visitor in the condemned cell at Durham Gaol in March 1873 a few days
before she was hanged for the murder of yet another child, a son of her
fourth (bigamous) husband Frederick Cotton. Her mother Margaret Stott
and her daughter Isabella Mowbray are included among the 21 people that
Mary Ann Cotton has been accused of murdering either for the insurance
money or because they were somehow in her way.
The first mass meeeting of the lodges of the new union, the DMA (Durham
Miners' Association), took place at Wharton Park in the city of Durham
in July 1871. Just three months later on Wednesday October 25 1871 26
men and boys were killed in another explosion at Seaham Colliery. On the
day before the tragedy a mass meeting of young men and boys had
determined to ask for some alteration in their bonds - in particular a
reduction in their hours of labour. For many below the rank of hewer the
working day lasted from their rising at 3am until they returned home
filthy at about 6.15pm. There was barely time for any relaxation before
going to bed. A deputation was sent to see the manager Dakers but he
refused to give them an answer until the next conclusion of the bond in
April 1872. Dakers refused even to see a second delegation.In
consequence a mass meeting of all the men and boys was called for the
Thursday night with a view to laying the pit idle. The disaster
intervened.
The explosion of Wednesday October 25 1871 occurred at 11.30 pm,
otherwise the death-toll would have been much higher - by now the
colliery was employing 1100 men and boys. The shock was felt at Seaham
Harbour.John Clark, aged 9, sitting on the surface in a cabin near the
pit shaft, was blown 10 yards by the explosion. The force of the blast
was such that many ponies were killed in their underground stables 1.5
miles away from the epicentre. Two men named Hutchinson, father and son,
working as 'marrows' (marras), fired the shot which triggered the blast.
The father, Thomas senior, survived the explosion but was badly injured.
For days he hovered between life and death and medical opinion concluded
that he could not survive. But survive he did - for he was destined to
be killed in the 1880 explosion. Thomas Hutchinson junior left a
pregnant widow and two children. Manager Dakers and Head Viewer Vincent
Corbett went down the pit to assess the situation and made a decision
which to some seemed harsh and to others seemed like murder. The 'stoppings'
were rushed up to starve the fire of oxygen and save the mine
irrespective of the men thereby entombed. The explosion occurred on
Wednesday - by Sunday the furnace was re-lighted at the shaft bottom for
ventilation. The men were somehow persuaded to return to work while the
bodies of their colleagues lay entombed for several weeks in nearby
workings. Religious decency then laid much greater emphasis on proper
burial of a body in consecrated ground.Four of the bodies were brought
out immediately after the explosion but the remaining 22 were not
recovered until December 20. The appeal fund produced just over £2,000.
The inquest was held at the New Seaham Inn (now called the Kestrel).
Verdict - Accidental death. Just as the village began to recover from
the tragedy it was struck another mortal blow with an outbreak of
smallpox. There was another explosion in 1872 but there was no loss of
life or injury.
Manager Dakers either retired, died or moved on at the start of 1874. He
was replaced by a 21 year old, Mr.Thomas Henry Marshall Stratton, who
was fated to be in charge when the 1880 disaster occurred. By then he
was still only 28 and due to move on from Seaham Colliery to his next
post. The man had no luck. There was another county-wide coal strike in
1879, the first major confrontation since the the Great Strike of 1844
and, as usual, the miners were defeated. Before the village of Seaham
Colliery could properly recover from this ruinous episode an even
greater disaster struck in the following year. The death of one collier
started a train of events which led to an immense tragedy. A man called
Robert Guy was run over and killed by a set of tubs on the Maudlin
engine-plane at Seaham Colliery on August 7 1880. Adverse and critical
remarks made at the inquest a few days later obliged manager Stratton to
have refuge holes from the rolling tubs made larger and more frequent to
prevent a recurrence of the tragedy. This work went on for several weeks
and it may well have been a shot fired in the course of it which
triggered the great explosion.
In that hot August of 1880 the Seaham Volunteer Artillery Brigade
distinguished itself in the big gun shooting of the National Artillery
Competition at Shoeburyness, picking up a beautiful trophy and over £200
in prize money, a very handsome sum in those days. The team members were
welcomed back to Seaham as heroes and their crackshot Corporal Hindson
was carried shoulder-high through the town. The next big event in the
town's social calendar was Seaham's Annual Flower Show, to be held in
the grounds of Seaham Hall from Thursday September 9 to Sunday the 11th.
The 5th.Marquess himself, a rather shy and unassuming man, was to make
one of his rare visits in order to present the prizes. Indeed he was to
honour the town his parents had founded with his presence for an entire
week. As it turned out he was to stay for a good deal longer than he
anticipated. Many of the miners at Seaham Colliery had entries in the
show and some of these men swapped shifts with those disinterested in
horticultural affairs in order that they might attend. It was to prove a
fateful decision for those who should have been working on the
Tuesday/Wednesday night and for those who ended up working when
ordinarily they would have been at home sound asleep.
At Seaham Colliery there were three shifts per day for hewers (everyone
else worked much longer hours) of 7 hours each, covering the period from
4 am to 11.30 pm. The shifts were: 1) Fore Shift, 4 am to 11.30 am 2)
Back Shift, 10 am to 5.30 pm 3) Night Shift, 4 pm to 11.30 pm. Each
shift involved some 500 men and boys and at the overlap of the shifts
there could be over 1,000 men in the pit. From 10 pm to 6 am, when the
colliery was comparatively quiet, was the maintenance shift, which
employed far fewer workers. Fortuitously the 1880 explosion took place
at 2.20 am during one such maintenance shift, 100 minutes before the
start of the Fore shift, which is why only 231 men and boys were below
ground.The tragedy could have been much much worse, eclipsing the
disasters at Hartley and West Stanley.