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Dysart, Frances Colliery
Colliery (Period Unassigned)
Site Name Dysart, Frances Colliery
Classification Colliery (Period Unassigned)
Alternative Name(s) Frances Industrial Park
Canmore ID 53997
Site Number NT39SW 25
NGR NT 3120 9408
NGR Description Centred NT 3120 9408
Datum OSGB36 - NGR
Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/site/53997
- Council Fife
- Parish Kirkcaldy And Dysart
- Former Region Fife
- Former District Kirkcaldy
- Former County Fife
NT39SW 25.00 3120 9408
NT39SW 25.01 NT 30985 93887 Headframe and Winding Engine House (Mainshaft)
(Location cited as NT 310 939). Frances Colliery, sunk c 1850. The present steel-framed headframe and coal-preparation plant are relatively recent.
J R Hume 1976.
Site recorded by Maritime Fife during the Coastal Assessment Survey for Historic Scotland, Kincardine to Fife Ness 1996.
(Location cited as NT 3098 9388 (Frances shaft)). FRANCES Colliery (also known as THE DUBBIE)
Location: Dysart
Previous Owners: Originally the Early of Rosslyn's Collieries Limited, Fife Coal Company from 1923
Types of Coal: House and Steam
Sinking/Production Commenced: c.1850
Closed: 1988 (production ceased in 1985)
Average Workforce: 1,104
Peak Workforce: 1,482
Peak Year: 1957
Shaft/Mine Details: Frances shaft 460m deep (upcast, eliptical for 183m, and circular for remaining 277m (NT 3098 9388) Lady Blanche shaft 73m, Frances surface mine 732m long at 1 in 4 (NT 3096 9392) driven in 1924. New ventilation mine (NT 3091 9405).
Details in 1948: Output 1,250 tons per day, 266,000 tons per annum. 916 employees. Baum-type washer (coal cleaning system using water and compressed air), baths (1931), canteen, ambulance room. Reconstruction of underground transport in mid-1940s, including the introduction of large mine cars with direct-rope and locomotive haulage. Electricity supplied by National Coal Board (NCB) from their Kelty power station. Report dated 10-08-1948.
Other Details: Frances worked undersea coals from its cliff-top location. It was known locally as 'The Dubbie' because of wet undergound conditions, and was taken over by the Fife Coal Company in 1923 and subsequently equipped with its own washery (for cleaning the coal subsequent to bringing to the surface), built by Simon Carves in 1925. Further redevelopment occurred in the 1930s, and in the 1940s, new headgear and a ground-mounted Robey & Metro Vickers electric 1,600hp winding engine were installed with minimum disruption to production. Underground locomotive haulage (electric Greenbat units) was introduced in 1957. Its washery was closed in 1965, coal being taken to Bowhill (NT29NW 54) for treatment. Linked underground to Seafield (NT28NE 45) by 1981, and drained latterly from unit retained at Michael (NT39NW 23, previously closed in 1967). Fires caused by spontaneous combustion broke out during the 1984 strike. Retained on care and maintenance basis after 1985, but planned 'Frances Project' of 1990 never materialised, and the surface buildings were subsequently demolished with the exception of the headframe (NT 30985 93887), which survives as a monument to the Fife coal industry.
M K Oglethorpe 2006.
Field Visit (24 July 1991)
NT39SW 25.0
Surface Arrangement layout at 1:2500 scale - see MS 8435/1
1. Fan Drift and Fan House (ventilation mine), post-1943:
Walls: one-storey, rendered brick
Roof: fan houses have flat roofs covered with bitumen felt.
Windows: steel-framed, with reinforced glass
Floors: concrete
Other Details: Of the two fan towers, the east tower is of shuttered concrete, the west tower is of steek plate. The connecting conduits between the towers and the drift are also of steel construction.
2. Fan Drift Winder House, post-1943:
Walls: one-storey, rendered brick
Roof: flat roof covered with bitumen felt
Windows: steel framed, with reinforced glass
Floors: concrete
Other Details: contains electric winder used to wind men and materials down 600m drift.
3. Fan Drift Winder Cable
4. Main Winding Engine House, 1943:
Walls: one-storey, cement rendered brick, steel-framed
Roof: corrugated cement asbestos, pitched, concrete skews
Windows: steel-framed, reinforced glass
Floors: concrete
Other Details: Small external electricity transformer at SE corner. Built in 1943 - bleak appearance due to wartime building standards.
5. Canteen, post-1960:
Walls: one-storey rendered, probably brick
Roof: flat, slight slope, bitumen felt covered
Windows: Steel-framed, concrete sills. some barred
Floors: concrete
Other Details: now used as store [1991]
6. Headstock and Main Shaft, 1943:
Other Details: New tandem headframe designed by Dickson Mann Limited in 1943. All-steel, built around original headframe, pulleys and winding ropes being transferred to new headframe on a Sunday, only losing a few hours work. The shaft is eliptical (23 feet 6 inches in length by 12 feet 6 inches in width), 100 fathoms deep and brick -lined. Two pages have rail guides, each having two decks. Thee cages measure 10feet long by 4 feet in width, each deck accommodating one mine car.
7. Medical Centre, built between 1914 and 1943:
Walls: one-storey
Roof: flat, sloping, covered with bituman felt
Windows: wood-framed, concrete sills and lintels
Floors: concrete
Other Details: 'L'-shaped wing to east similarly constructed and contains a methane store
8. Baths (including toilets, heated lockers etc.), built between 1914 and 1943:
Walla: one-storey, rendered brick, panited white
Roof: two main ranges gabled, corrugated sheet metal each with a five round sheet-meta ridge ventilators. Central bay, and projections at east and west ends of block have flat roofs covered with bitume felt.
Windows: steel-framed, with wall vetilators beneath
Floors: concrete
Oher Details: concrete tower/chimney towards east end marks position of calorifier.
9. General Offices - Main Office and Pay Hall, built between 1914 and 1943:
Walls: one-storey, rendered brick
Roof: corrugated cement asbestos, hipped at east end and corrugated cement asbestos awning over entrance at east end
Windows: wood-framed, sash and case
Floors: concrete
Other Details: Main administration, including managers and deputy manager's 's offices
10. Electricity Sub-station, built between 1914 and 1943:
Walls: one storey, brick, painted, buttresses on west and east walls
Roof: corrugated cement asbestos, gabled, concrete skews
Windows: steel-framed, segmental-arched at ground floor level on east and west sides, circular windows in north and south gables
Floors: concrete
Other Details: steel-framed external stair with wooden treads to upper floor on north side of the building. Small extension built onto north end, built into slope on lower course of brick, main walls and pitched roof built entirely of corrugated sheet metal.
11.Fire Station, built between 1914 and 1943:
Walls: one storey, brick, painted white
Roof: flat with slight slope, covered with bitumen felt
windows: steel-framed, with reinforced glass
Floors: probably concrete
Other Details: a lean-to extension on south side of item 10 (electricity sub-station)
12. Control Room, Lamp Room, Time Office, post-1943 and pre-1968:
Walls: one -storey, rendered brick upper walls, exposed brick courses at wall base
Roof: gabled, corrugated cement asbestos on main bay, corrigated sheet metal over lean-to bay on north side
Windows: mostly steel-framed
Floors :concrete
Other Details: main block consists of central bay with addition of lean-to bay on north side and lean-to porch on south side
13.Electrical Workshop, possibly pre-1914, possibly former engine house:
Walls: one-storey, steel-framed, brick-infill panels
Roof: corrugated sheet-metal
Windows: steel-framed
Floors: concrete
Other Details: appears to be newer brick than the main body of the pithead buildings (item 17), onto the north side of which it is attached. Pit car hist is the steel-framed structure projecting from the north side of the building, itself covered by a small corrugated sheet-metal canopy.
14. Electricity Sub Station, post -1943 but before 1968:
Walls: one -storey, rendered brick, exposed at base
Roof: sloping, corrugated cement asbestos
Windows: steel-framed, reinforced glass
Floors: concrete
Other Details: Outside building on east side are three Bryce, 300v. transformers and on the west side, two smaller Johnson Phillips 3,300v. transformers.
15Open Storage Space
16. Compressor House, post 1943 but pre-1968:
Walls: 0ne storey, brick, painted white with buttresses
Roof: gabled, corrugated cement asbestos
Windows: steel-framed, three pairs of tall wooden double doors in north wall
Floors: concrete
Other Details: Contains three Alley and McLellan type 45B air compressors, electrically driven, producing 1,000 cubic feet air per minute. A fourth machine, also Alley and McLellan was type 23B. There is also a transformer outside the south west corner of the building.
17. Car Hall and Main Winding Level, of mixed origin - parts possibly pre-1914 with major alterations in 1943:
Walls: two-storeys, steel-framed infilled brick panels
Roof: gabled, corrugated sheet metal
Windows: Steel-framed
Floors: concrete, upper floor shuttered concrete
Other Details: Upper level contains car hall with back-shunt car circuit with tippler, standby tippler, creeper etc. After screening , coal passed on to coal preparation plant butted onto the west side (now demolished). A large steel external double stair leads to upper level on east side.
18. Tool Store and Rest Room/ Shaftsman's Cabin, built between 1893 and 1914:
Walls: one-storey, brick, painted white
Roof: gabled, slate, concrete skews
Windows: wood-framed, now boarded up [in 1991]
Floors: probably concrete
Other Details: Formerly weighbridge house. Weighbridge on north side and rail-mounted, made by Pooley of Birmingham. At its east end, there is a brick-built derelict building which has an oil tank mounted on its east end.
19. Winding-Engine House for Shaft Repairs, built between 1943 and 1949:
Walls: one-storey, brick
Roof: sloping, corrugated sheet metal
Windows: wood framed
Floors: concrete
Other Details: none
20. Rope Shed, post-1960:
Walls: one-storey, corrugated sheet metal on light steel frame
Roof: gabled, corrugated sheet metal
Floors: concrete
Other Details: Shorter block of similar construction at west end of main block, and has boarded-up wood framed windows.
21. Retaining Wall
Other Details: Above ground level, concrete posts infilled with brick panels. Below ground level, concrete rendered surface but exposed brick near to pithead.
22. Coal Preparation Plant, built 1 between 1914 and 1943:
Other details: Demolished, formerly attached to pithead complex (see item 17)
23. Colliery Store, built between 1949 and 1968:
Walls: one -storey, brick base, cement asbestos upper walls
Roof: corrugated cement asbestos, shallow pitch curving into wall heads
Roof: gables, corrugated cement with skylights
Windows: round window in east gable
Floors: concrete
Other Details Contains rescue room. Lean-to brick-built extension with corrugated sheet metal roof at west end, containing urinal.
2425. Training Centre, post-1959:
Walls: one storey, wood, horizontal tongue and groove boards
Roof: gabled, covered with bitumenn felt
Windows: large, wood-framed
Floors: wood
Other Details: disused [1991]
26. Coal Storage Area
27. Spoil Bing
28. Former Drift -Mine winder House/ Oil Stores, built between 1914 and 1943:
Walls: one -storey, brick, painted white, truncated and containing exposed steel beams
Roof: flat, slightly sloping
Windows: wood-framed
Floors: concrete
Other Details: a wedge-shaped building which appears to have been cut back. Current use unknown [1991] and was part of a much larger structure since demolished [by 1991].
29. Mechanics Stores, built between 1959 and 1968:
Walls: one- storey, brick
Roof: sloping, east half corrugated cement asbestos, wets part metal clad
Windows: wood-framed
Floors: concrete
Other Details: a long, roughly-built range of stores
30. Cement Store, , partly built in 1968?
Walls: one-storey, brick with concrete render
Roof: sloping corrugated sheet metal
Windows: no information
Floors: concrete
Other Details: partly built by 1968?
31. Incline for Tubway to Upper Level of Car Hall and Main Winding level (item 17), built between 1914 and 1943 in part:
Walls: one-storey, wedge-shaped elevation, brick
Roof: flat, slightly sloping, covered with bitumen felt
Windows: steel-framed
Floors: probably concrete (not viewed)
Other Details: ?disused [1991]
32. Store and Joiner's Shop, shown on 1943 map:
Walls: one-storey, brick, painted white
Roof: sloping, corrugated sheet metal
Windows: steel-framed, reinforced glass
Floors: concrete
Other Details: none
33. Electrician's Apprentice Training Centre, possibly in 1943 block:
Walls: one-storey, brick, painted white
Roof: sloping , corrugated sheet metal
Windows: wood-framed
Floors: concrete
Other details: none
34. Emergency Diesel Generator and Air Receivers for Winder, post 1943:
Walls: one-storey, rendered brick butted onto item 4
Roof: sloping , corrugated sheet metal
Windows: no information
Floors: concrete
outside buildings are two cylindrical steel air receivers (100psi swp) and emergency diese; generator backup for winder
35. Explosives Store, post 1943:
Walls: one-storey, rendered, possibly brick
Roof: flat, sloping concrete, covered with bitumen felt
Windows: small, reinforced glass, steel frames, concrete sills, protected by vertical steel bars
Floors: probably concrete
Other Details: steel doors
36. Bicycle Shed, post -1943:
Walls: one-storey, brick end walls, back (north) wall corrugated sheet metal
Roof: sloping corrugated sheet metal
Windows: none
Other Details: open-fronted, probably housed about 70 bicycles
37. Electricity Sub-station, built 1943 and 1959
38. Vent Branch, built between 1914 and 1943:
Walls: one storey, rendered, brick, painted white
Roof: sloping, covered with bitumen felt
Windows: none
Floors: concrete
Other Details: very small rectangular building, use unknown
39 Railway Siding: no details
40. Store: no details
visited by RCAHMS, Industrial Survey (MK Oglethorpe), 24 July 1991.