Titwood and Corkerhill Coal Mines
When working with the India Office Records, it is not unusual to come across unexpected items. One such example is within a volume of Public & Judicial Home Correspondence. In the middle of a volume of correspondence and associated papers relating to the administration of India is a large poster of regulations for two coal mines in Scotland, the Titwood and Corkerhill Collieries: General & Special Rules for the Conduct and Guidance of the Persons Charged with the Management and of the several Workmen employed in and about this Colliery.
'The man engine at Cook's kitchen mine' from J C Burrow, 'Mongst mines and Miners (1893) British Library: C.194.b.213 plate 2 British Library Images Online
Dating from around 1861, the copies of the poster would have been pasted up around the sites making it clear what was required of anyone employed in the Collieries, and what they could expect in their working environment. Both mines were located on the southwest of Glasgow and at the time of this poster were owned by Sir John Maxwell (1791-1865), a Scottish landowner and politician. The Titwood mine in Pollock was worked from 1854 to 1875, and the Corkerhill mine was worked from 1860 to 1875.
'The man engine at Dolcoath mine' from J C Burrow, 'Mongst mines and Miners (1893) British Library: C.194.b.213 plate 2 British Library Images Online
The General Rules section of the poster covered such health and safety issues as ventilation, use of safety lamps, communication between the surface and the bottom of the mine shaft, and measures to prevent flooding of the mine. The Special Rules section details the responsibilities of each occupation in the mine, the names of which are not always obvious:
• Brusher: responsible for maintaining the roof, sides and pavement of a passageway, usually done by an experienced miner.
• Bottomer: loaded and unloaded the cages at the bottom of a mine shaft and regulated the number of men ascending in the cages, making the signals which controlled the safe working of the cages. In this case, only a maximum of 4 men at a time were allowed to ascend in a cage.
• Colliers were the underground workmen in a coal mine.
• Drawers took the coal from the working face to the mine shaft. A Drawer might be assisted by a Putter to take his hutch (small wagon) past a difficult section of a drawing road (underground passage).
• Fireman: responsible for the supervision for the ventilation of the works. He inspected the pit before each shift to make sure it was safe for the miners to work.
• Pitheadman: responsible for unloading the cages and weighing the coal at a pithead (the landing at the top of a shaft).
• Oversman: responsible for the underground operation of the Colliery and reported to the Manager.
Everyone working at the Collieries were issued with a set of the Rules, and pulling down or defacing the poster brought a fine of 40s. A violation of the Special Rules brought a fine of £2 or three-months imprisonment. The poster was sent to the India Office by Sir John Maxwell, with a covering letter, dated 15 February 1861, for the consideration of the Secretary of State for India. Unfortunately, no reply, if any was given, was kept on file.
John O’Brien
India Office Records
Further Reading:
Titwood and Corkerhill Collieries on the Estate of Pollok, General & Special Rules for the Conduct and Guidance of the Persons Charged with the Management and of the several Workmen employed in and about this Colliery, 1861, reference IOR/L/PJ/2/157 File 23/1.
‘A Glossary of Scotch Mining Terms’ on the Scottish Mining Website