THE OGMORE VALLEY

LOCAL HISTORY & HERITAGE SOCIETY

Tel: 01656 842 258

EMAIL: ovlhs@ovlhs.co.uk

Anne Shaft

Catherine-Shaft-left-and-Anne-Shaft-Right

The Anne shaft, named after one of Sir William Thomas’s three daughters was sunk in 1909 by the Lewis Merthyr Consolidated Collieries Ltd. Sir William Thomas Lewis, Baron of Senghenydd was the Head of this colliery Combine which had extensive colliery properties and interests throughout South Wales.

The Anne shaft was sunk to a depth of 378 yards and proved the No. 2 Rhondda seam at 259 yards. It became the Downcast shaft and the main coal rising shaft. The Anne shaft was sunk close to the east bank of the River Ogmore and soon encountered Running Sand which despite great efforts caused the sinking operations to be abandoned at a depth of about 60 yards.

The No. 2 Rhondda coal seam is here split into two or three leaves with some four feet of workable coal in total. The intervening dirt bands required major coal washery facilities and plant at the surface to separate the clean coal from the dirt.

Seam Map and Abandonment Plan for the 2nd Rhondda Main Colliery

It was worked from the Catherine and Anne shafts by long wall stall and long wall conveyor systems; the general dip of the coal measures here is 7 inches per yard to the south. To the north of the shafts, the geology of the strata proved difficult with much faulting and folding. Developments to the south of the shafts encountered high water inflows which resulted in high pumping costs.

It is said that the colliery was very well equipped with up to date machinery both on the surface and underground. It had its own electrical generating plant which provided electrical power to surface and underground plant and machinery.

The colliery closed in 1924, and in 1959 the National Coal Board built a coal washery on the site. The washery closed on 10th June 1986
All that remains of the Anne Shaft today

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