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Shotton Colliery

Shotton Colliery
Memorial Pit Wheel Shotton Colliery - geograph.org.uk - 662090.jpg
Memorial Pit Wheel, Shotton Colliery.
Shotton Colliery is located in County Durham
Shotton Colliery
Shotton Colliery
Shotton Colliery shown within County Durham
OS grid reference NZ3908240712
Unitary authority
Ceremonial county
Region
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Police Durham
Fire County Durham and Darlington
Ambulance North East
EU Parliament North East England
List of places
UK
England
County Durham
54°45′35″N 1°23′39″W / 54.759830°N 1.3942000°W / 54.759830; -1.3942000Coordinates: 54°45′35″N 1°23′39″W / 54.759830°N 1.3942000°W / 54.759830; -1.3942000

Shotton Colliery is a parish in County Durham, England, situated west of Peterlee.

The two villages in the parish of Shotton are Old Shotton, a small village southeast of the main village, now merged into the town of Peterlee.

Old Shotton can be traced back as far as 900 AD, when it was known as Scitton, which in Old English means 'of the Scots', The village name was first recorded in 1165 as 'Sottun'. By the 16th century, when Easington was under the control of Prince Bishops, the village had become known as Shotton.

In 1756, the Brandlings built Shotton Hall and through marriage this eventually passed to the Burdon family.

In 1833, the Haswell Coal Company began to sink a colliery to the west of Old Shotton, near Shotton Grange Farm. This pit began producing coal the following year and the village of Shotton Colliery soon started to develop.

The pit was initially prosperous, but closed on November 3, 1877, causing people to leave the village to work at other pits in the area. In 1900, the pit reopened and grew rapidly, leading to an increased population in the village. More housing was built, making other industries, including the Coke Works and the Brick Works, less popular.

By 1947, the original houses, east of the railway line were in disrepair. Most of the bottom of Front Street was demolished.

In 1972, the National Coal Board announced that it was closing the colliery, at a cost of 800 jobs. Easington District Council built new housing in the 1970s, pulling down most of the remaining pit houses in an attempt to improve the village. Throughout most of the 1970s, work was done to remove the pit heap, which was at one time the largest in the country. The Brick Works and Coke Works went with the pit.

The only pit building left is now used as a second hand car show room. The remains of the pit baths remain semi-derelict.

The village is now almost empty of work. On the colliery site a few small industrial units survive, but the main sources of employment are call centres which opened east of the village, dividing Shotton Colliery and Old Shotton.


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