Winter Hill Scrapbook WEB EDITION
Winter Hill Scrapbook WEB EDITION
SCRAPBOOK.
Compiled by Dave Lane
Photo shows aerial view of Rivington Pike with the surrounding tracks. Picture
taken by the author from a Mainair Blade microlight. I’m the pilot …. flying with
one hand, camera in the other hand!
dave@daveweb.co.uk
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Free Web PDF edition June 2019 . NOT FOR SALE
The right of Dave Lane to be identified as the author of this work has
been asserted in accordance with the UK Copyright, Design &
Patents Act 1988
ISBN
Cover photo: The modern mast on Winter Hill with the original
Granada structure next to it. Photograph courtesy of Bill
Learmouth who retains full copyright.
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To my ever suffering wife Sue, who has endured
many absences from home over many years
when I’ve been out “on the hills” - and should
perhaps have been at home with the family.
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Introduction.
For what seems like most of my life, I’ve wandered all over Winter
Hill in all seasons and in all weathers. There are many others like
me! This bleak and lonely spot somehow pulls us back there time
and time again. For those who cannot understand our love and
affection for the place, Winter Hill must seem an appalling sort of
environment except for on the nicest of summer days! This book is
aimed at the “aficionado” but I hope that even the casual reader will
be able to get something out of it, if only to see why some of us find
the place so fascinating.
Although much of this book has been written by the compiler, some
of the material is merely extracts from the work of others. Credits
and acknowledgements to the writers are listed in Appendix 1.
Initially this will be produced just as the original book was with all
copies merely PDF files on the Web. Whether this book will ever see
the light of day or not and whether it will eventually have a printed
edition, depends mainly on my health, how busy I am with other
books plus how much help others can give me to produce this new
volume. I can’t really get out too much at the present time so am
unable to take my own photographs of many of the places I want to
include in the book, the farmhouses ruins etc
I’ll try to get recent copies of the new book into the files sections of
the various Facebook groups that deal with Winter Hill, Anglzarke
etc from time to time so that at least the information I write about
might be preserved one way or another.
dave@daveweb.co.uk
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Where and what?
Winter Hill is an unremarkable, fairly small hill, situated in the North
West UK, located near to the towns of Bolton, Horwich, Chorley,
and Darwen, on a Western spur of the Pennine range of hills. In this
book, the term “Winter Hill” has been deliberately left vague in order
to include any adjacent areas of interest!
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On a clear day, the view from the top of Winter Hill is quite an eye
opener for those who have never seen the view before. Looking
South, the whole of the Cheshire plain is clearly in view with Mow
Cop in Staffordshire as the limit. The Welsh mountains are clearly
visible to the South West with Snowdon sticking up right in the
middle. Anglesey and the Great Orme at Llandudno can clearly be
seen. Liverpool Bay, with the Seaforth Cranes at Liverpool (along
with the offshore gas rigs) are in view as are Southport (with it’s
distinctive water tower), Blackpool Tower and we can see North as
far as Black Combe in Cumbria. If you have a pair of binoculars
handy then take a look Lytham on the Ribble estuary and even the
windmill on the sea front can be seen along with the Aerodrome at
Warton.
There have always been rumours that on a really clear day (and
really clear days are very rare) it is possible to see the top of Snaefell
on the Isle of Man, around 100 miles away from Winter Hill.
Although I have been on Winter Hill in what I would class as the
most perfect “seeing” conditions I have, as yet, never seen the Isle of
Man from the Hill. I do have poor eyesight! No doubt someone will
now contact me to say that they have seen the Isle of Man – and if
they contact me I’ll add that fact to this chapter! (Since writing this,
many HAVE written to say they HAVE seen the IOM!)
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The upper parts of Winter Hill are fairly barren, with poor soil, poor
vegetation and with the only visitors being walkers, mountain bike
riders, cross country runners, model plane flyers, hang and paraglider
pilots, cross country skiers …… and the engineers at the TV station
on the summit. A private road does go to the radio mast and in
“theory” other traffic is prohibited.
After reading this book, I trust that others may be enticed onto the
hill.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Winter Hill was not always as it appears today. Once it was not even
a hill, nor was it even in the earth’s temperate region as it is today.
As a result of tectonic plate movements, cataclysmic bending and
flexing of the earth’s surface and dramatic changes in climate, slowly
but surely what we now see today has emerged. Without going into
too great detail (unless someone would like to provide me with this
detail for inclusion in a later version of this book) a brief description
of the Winter Hill geological history follows.
When our planet earth was first formed some 4.6 billion years ago,
the earth was in a molten state but slowly started to solidify
accompanied by volcanic activity and surrounded by an atmosphere
that does not resemble the atmosphere of today. Over billions of
years, the earth began to stabilise and life somehow began on our
planet. In the Winter Hill area no deep borings have been taken so
we have no real record of exactly what lies under our feet at great
depth. Closer to the surface however, we do know something about
our more “recent” history over the last few hundred million years by
studying the geology in mining shafts, shallow borings, quarries etc.
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associated underlying bands of fireclay or ganister) and are
approximately 8.000 feet in thickness
This area was once part of the great “Upper Carboniferous” delta of
the North of England, a version of some of the more famous world
deltas that we have today such as the Nile, Mississippi and Amazon.
Somewhere to the north of Winter Hill was a huge land mass with a
large river entering the sea (to the South) via a delta. At that stage in
the earth’s evolution, the surface of the “land” was continuously
rising and sinking so the areas near the delta were continuously being
raised above sea level, then dropped beneath that level in a
succession of floodings and periods when plant growth was possible.
Over periods of time, the sandbanks and the muds were overlain with
swamps and vegetation only to be inundated over and over again
with the either the river or the nearby seas. Thus, over a period of
time, the rocks (formed as a result of pressure) have formed in a
seemingly endless cycle of marine shales, sandstones, mudstones and
vegetative coal layers.
For anyone who wants proof of these earth movements I can tell you
that it is possible to find fossil remains of those tropical forests
(leaves, tree bark and roots, seeds etc) on the very top of Winter Hill
….. they can be found at various points in shale bands on the sides of
the road running up to the television mast. Honest! ….. but you’ll
have to find the sites yourself …. I don’t want to be held to blame for
new “holes” appearing on the hill top!
There are two main seams of coal under Winter Hill and both have
been exploited in the past. In fact, almost the entire section of one
part of the south facing flanks of Winter Hill are to all intents and
purposes hollow, due to centuries of coal mining, with only pillars of
coal being left “in situ” to support the surface as we know it today.
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The layers of rock forming Winter Hill are not horizontal but dip
towards the south at a dip of 1 in 12. Due to the shape of the hill and
the dip of the layers, the upper coal seam is at a fairly constant depth
below the surface of the ground despite the fact that the hill is not
level!
Apart from Winter Hill providing local people with coal in the past,
it also provided stones and rocks for building houses and walls,
fireclays and other clays for producing bricks and tiles. Hopefully,
this book will provide you with details of all these industries of
Winter Hill.
Tigers Clough.
Tigers Clough, or Shaw’s Clough as it is usually marked on
Ordnance Survey Maps is the wooded valley of the River Douglas
which lies a few hundred yards to the north-east of Rivington School.
Although today the clough is an oasis of peace, it was not quite so
peaceful over a hundred years ago.
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The clough at that time housed a bleachworks, a drinking
establishment and with a
brick and pipe works nearby along with a coal mine just higher up
the hill. The clough can be best accessed by going up the road to the
east of the school to the road junction. Take the concrete road going
uphill and opposite the quarry go down the path to the river.
A drawing of Knoll Bleach works from the mid 1800’s. I have only a
photocopy of this drawing but I am informed that it was drawn in 1849 by a
J Whitaker. Source of drawing unknown.
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One rather sad story about the bleach works is that in 1798 a local
man, John Eccles, was caught breaking into and stealing calico from
the works, and in August of that year, he appeared before the
Lancaster Assizes and was sentenced to death and executed in
September.
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Mankind has always seemed to be attracted to Tigers Clough! In the
1940’s a local man was out walking when he spotted an unusual
piece of stone in the river. When he retrieved it, he found that it was
a six inch long axe head which had been highly polished. At a later
date the axe was found to be made of a type of stone found in
Scandinavia and was dated to the Neolithic period around 2,500BC.
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The unusual shaped "bowl" just above the waterfall in Tigers Clough
What is known, is that the top of the hill was not always as bare as it
is today. It was once covered in woodland and there is no reason to
suppose that perhaps people even lived up here amongst the
woodlands thousands of years ago. There is ample evidence on and
around the hill to prove that people lived in the area, even though no
remains have been found of a true settlement on the top of the hill.
The people of the area did however leave remains and artefacts
which tell us a little about their existence.
We know for example that men worked on Winter Hill, owing to the
finding of a stone axe in Tigers Clough, and the many flint chipping
sites which have been discovered on the top of the hill. Flint does not
naturally occur in this area, and the early inhabitants of the area
(between about 2,000 BC and 1,000 BC) obviously traded with
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people in other parts of the country in order to obtain the natural
flint.
Flint was used for many purposes. We know it was used to fashion
arrow heads for hunting, axes for cutting, “scrapers” for dealing with
animal hides, knives, and many other articles. We think that the trade
in flint comprised of the “purchase” (probably by way of barter) of
nodules or lumps of the material, and that the implements were made
locally. This theory is backed up by the finding of several small areas
of flint “chippings” or “flakes” on the hill, where men would have
obviously spent some considerable time “working” on the raw flint,
turning it into usable implements.
Probably the “earliest” find in the Winter Hill area is the stone axe
that was discovered lying in the bed of the river Douglas in Tigers
Clough by a Mr Southworth of Anderton, The axe was about six
inches in length and was highly polished and after expert advice had
been obtained, it was found that the stone probably originated in
Scandinavia and was from the period around 2,500BC. To my
knowledge this is the earliest item ever found on Winter Hill.
The only other early remains found on the hill are the two “burial
mounds” discovered near the peak of the hill, both thought to date
from around the Bronze Age, and indicative that somewhere in the
area was a settlement (or settlements) dating from this era.
The first burial mound to be found was the one now known as the
Winter Hill Tumulus or Barrow which was discovered purely by
chance when John Rawlinson and Tom Creear were walking on the
moors in 1957. On the 24th March they spotted what appeared to be a
“curved line of stones” sticking out from the peat. The stones were
part of a “wall” some two feet in height, which surrounded a round
area with a raised small mound in the middle of it.
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Higher up the hill and on the southern heading edge , lies Noon Hill,
upon which is the Noon Hill Saucer Tumulus. Although this had
been known to exist for some time it was not until August 1958 that
it was excavated. This was undertaken by the Bolton & District
Archaeological Society and when the topsoil of part of the site was
removed, it revealed two rings of stones one inside the other, the
outer ring being about 52 foot in diameter and the inner one 32 foot.
The outer wall consisted of “large stones” each about two foot six
inches long, a foot wide and eight inches high. The inner circle of
small stones were said to have been “strengthened with buttresses”.
Inside the inner circle, were two piles of human remains, and nearby
was found what is thought to be a cremation urn. I have been unable
to find out if there was anything found inside the urn. Also
discovered in the tumulus were two barbed flint arrowheads along
with a flint knife. All discoveries are housed in Bolton Museum and
have been on public view from time to time. So far as I am aware, no
pollen dating took place on the Noon Hill Site, but examination of
the items found, indicates a date of around 1,100BC for the burial
mound.
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even though other individuals have found dozens! The only flint I
have ever found in the locality, was a superb barbed arrowhead
(minus shaft) found some 20 yards due north of the peak of Black
Hill on Anglezarke Moor and is illustrated below.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
After passing through Col. Ainsworth’s land the route passed onto
land leased by Mr Deakin of Belmont Bleach works, who since 1893
had been trying to close the Belmont to Rivington road over the
moors. When viewed from the summit of Winter Hill it was
reckoned that the procession was over 1.5 miles in length.
The following Sunday, the 13th Sept another walk was organised and
this time it was estimated that 12,000 people took part. They met at
the junction of Blackburn and Halliwell roads and marched to
Smithill’s Hall then up and over the moors again. This time the 60
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police present who were positioned where the gate had been were
more conciliatory and the gates no longer blocked the path.
The demonstrators were aware that they ran the risk of being
prosecuted for trespassing, which would be very serious for ordinary
working people would be unable to pay the fines which may have
been levied and they might well lose their jobs if found guilty of an
offence in court.
Col. Ainsworth did in fact pursue the question of access in the courts,
seeking an injunction to restrain over 30 people and through them,
the general public, from passing over his land. He also claimed
damages.
Adam Hill
Brown Hill 325m 1066 feet
Brown Lowe 325m 1066 feet
Burnt Edge 325m 1066 feet
Counting Hill 433m 1421 feet
Crooked Edge Hill 375m 1230 feet
Egg Hillock 328m 1076 feet
Noon Hill 380m 1247 feet
Rivington Pike 362m 1188 feet
Two Lads 389m 1276 feet
Whimberry Hill 340m 1115 feet
White Brow 358m 1175 feet
Winter Hill 456m 1496 feet
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The Origin and Development of the Moorland.
Winter Hill – and the surrounding upland areas – have not always
been as bare and empty as they now appear. At one time they were
forested and contained many different types of trees and bushes as
has been proved by pollen analysis and pollen dating tests done on
the moorland. So what happened to change things?
Grazing.
Probably the single most important factor in the development of
these man made moorlands was the introduction of grazing livestock,
particularly sheep. Sheep will nibble almost any vegetation down to
ground level thus preventing the generation of tree species. Continual
grazing by sheep alone will, in time, convert a woodland into a
moorland. The practice of running large flocks of sheep on the
moorland has not only contributed to the deforestation but has
maintained a virtually treeless landscape.
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Fire.
Fire would have played a part in the reduction tree cover. Fire can
occur naturally in a forest due to lightening strikes and it can
devastate large areas. In the years following a forest fire there is
usually an increase in the seedling growth of “pioneer” species such
as the fast growing birch, willow and rowan. These in turn provide
shelter for the slower growing and less numerous species such as
oak, ash and pine. Over a long period of time the character of the
forest would be restored. Should fires occur on a frequent basis or
grazing of livestock be established then the pioneer species would be
prevented from regenerating ultimately causing the death of the
forest and the creation of moorland.
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in which many plants just will not grow. Thus we have Winter Hill
as we have it today!
There are two major types of grasses, purple moor grass (Molinia
Caerulea) and wavy hair grass (Deschampsia flexuosa). Purple moor
grass is very common throughout the UK and is often the dominant
grass on damp moors, heaths and fens around the country. It’s
perennial and forms tufts or tussocks with the flowerhead usually
dark purple (but occasionally pinkish, yellowish or green). In height
it varies from 15 to 100cm and flowers between July and September.
This is the “ankle breaker” on parts of Winter Hill forming large
tussocks, which are partially obscured by the long flowering stems in
summer – and this period they are a curse for the hayfever sufferer.
The other variety of grass common on the hill is the wavy hair grass
but this forms smaller tussocks and flowers in June and July forming
delicate heads appearing like a pink mist on the ground. This is the
commonest grass on the moorland in the area. The only other major
type of grass found on the hill is mat grass (Nardus Stricta), a hard &
fibrous grass growing between 10 and 40 cm in height forming dense
tufts. This is unpalatable to sheep.
One type of grass seen in many of the damper areas of Winter Hill is
cotton grass (either Eriophorum vaginatum or Eriophorum
angustifolium. This is instantly recognised by everyone with its white
tufty cotton like flowers between April and June and it grows only on
wet ground.
There are also a number of sedges and rushes on the hill (you can tell
the difference between grass and sedge easily enough, in cross
section grasses are round and hollow whilst sedges are triangular). I
haven’t got a clue about the names of the sedges on Winter Hill so if
there are any knowledgeable botanical readers out there then please
get in touch – or write a full article for inclusion in the next update.
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Rampant on parts of the moor is bracken (Pteridium aquilinum), and
probably the best known fern, unfortunately it is also one with the
most nuisance value as a weed. It can be poisonous to livestock if
eaten in quantity but is normally avoided by cattle, sheep or rabbits
and so it spreads in their grazing areas fairly rapidly thus reducing
the value of the land for grazing purposes. The far reaching
underground rhizomes makes eradication difficult. This plant dies
away every winter and what might have been a pleasant place to
walk at that time of year can become a nightmare in mid summer –
especially when it’s wet! Bracken only thrives on dryish ground.
I’m not going to disclose the exact location, but on the top of Winter
Hill is a fairly large patch of cranberry.
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The story behind the Stump.
Scotsman's Stump is the name given to a gaunt iron pillar on the top
of Winter Hill located directly in front of the TV station. The
“stump” is topped with a plaque, which states “In Memory of George
Henderson, traveller, native of Annan, Dumfrieshire who was
barbarously murdered on Rivington Moor at noonday November 9th
1838 in the 20th year of his age”.
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Poor George Henderson was a young man of 20 who earned his
living as a travelling packman or salesman, who sold goods in the
area for his Blackburn based employer. He obviously travelled the
same route with great regularity, for every other Friday he would
meet another packman and the two would meet at Five Houses beer
house on the moor and then travel together back to Blackburn. On
this occasion George Henderson never turned up for the usual
meeting.
The exact site of the murder was at the side of the road opposite the
main entrance to the television station located at the top of Winter
Hill, and originally a tree was planted at the spot as a memorial to
George Henderson. In 1912, the tree was removed and replaced by
an iron post and plaque.
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The Mines of Winter Hill
Winter Hill, especially on the southern side, was once extensively
mined for coal. The coal mining activities were so great that that the
higher slopes on the Horwich side of the hill are virtually “hollow”
except for pillars of coal that were left “in situ” in the mines to stop
total roof collapse.
Once the location of the coal seams were known, small shafts would
have been dug to intercept the coal under the surface. These diggings
were in the form of “bell pits”, so called because the shaft would be
dug to the seam then the coal extracted at each side of the shaft
forming a bell shaped hole. Once the coal was extracted, another
shaft would be dug nearby and in some areas around Horwich whole
groups of these pits can be found. There are the remains of some bell
pits to the east of Rivington Pike.
Apart from the outcrop workings, the bell pits, and the major
commercial undertakings, there were also a number of “trial”
workings on Winter Hill, some of which produced small quantities of
coal and others which were soon abandoned. The workings to the
west of Rivington Pike fall into this category - and one of these
shafts is described in this article.
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Some of these mines and coal workings will be described below, but
readers will have to excuse the lack of exact or precise details of
some of the mines due to the dangers inherent in any coal mines.
Take my word for it, roof collapses are not uncommon, some coal
mines do contain gases, they can be very dangerous places. Don’t
even think of going inside old coal mines. All of the underground
photographs in this article, were taken by experienced people fully
equipped with all the latest safety equipment and mining safety
technology. The mines under Winter Hill are particularly dangerous
because “pillar and stall” working was practiced in the whole area
and the underground workings are rather like a maze on a massive
scale, with square miles of passages entered via only one
entrance/exit. One’s chances of getting lost are pretty high, and apart
from going into the “entry” points and pottering near those entrances,
the writer has NOT explored the mines even though I was with fully
equipped groups.
A couple of years ago one of the shafts re-appeared and was quickly
explored. The shaft was very unusual in that it contained a short
series of steps carved into the side near it's entrance, it being the only
known example of this in the area. A very poor quality photo is
shown below with the steps visible on the right hand side.
Other photo's were taken within the shaft but it was very wet and
muddy, and the extreme condensation on the camera made the
pictures unusable. At the bottom of the steps, the tunnel continued
for only a very short distance before being blocked by glutinous
mud. Two plans exist of mining remains in this immediate area and
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they indicate that the tunnel went only a short distance. The shaft was
soon filled in by the authorities before proper measurements could be
taken.
The filled in shaft on the opposite bank was filled in years ago. My
memory has it that this shaft was much deeper than the earlier
mentioned one and had a ladder sloping deeply down on one side of
it. If anyone else has memories of this shaft, further details would be
appreciated.
Further down the hill heading towards the moorland road is a small
pile of mining spoil. This marks the entrance to the drift mine which
led into the coal workings. The drift has long since vanished but its
location is clearly shown on old maps. A trackway led from the
tunnel entrance down to the road.
The map below shows the drift entrance. The quarry behind the
Pigeon Tower is in the bottom left hand corner of the map.
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2. Montcliffe Colliery, Horwich.
Few photographs exist of the mine but those I have managed to find
are produced on this and the next few pages. The first photo shows
the number 1 shaft behind the houses. The air or vent shaft is off the
photo just to the right of the right hand chimney on the white cottage.
The man is believed to be Mr Reg Brownlow.
An initial trip was made into the mine some years ago, and due to the
dangerous state of parts of the workings, only one further visit has
been made (up till March 2005). This perhaps a shame as it would
have been useful had maps been drawn of the tunnels purely for
historical purposes. The tunnels explored do not appear on the main
Montcliffe Colliery map I have in my possession.
The workings are entered via a long adit which is around 3 foot 6
inches in height. Movement is extremely uncomfortable due not only
to the low height but also to the pipe which occupies part of the floor
space and a sort of crouching crab like shuffle is the only way to
progress. The adit is perhaps several hundred yards long (it was not
measured - but it felt like several hundred yards from my
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recollections). The tunnel is cut through gritstone. A rockfall is
encountered which almost blocks the passage but can be negotiated
by a crawl underneath some “hanging death” types of rock.
Once through the rockfall, the coal measures are encountered along
with an entrance to one of the main shafts (now fully filled in). I have
no recollection of seeing any fire clay either above or below the coal
seam at this point and the coal lies directly beneath the sandstone
bedding plane. The coal seam is around 3 foot in thickness.
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The condition of the passages within the coal seam are generally
good, although in some areas the sandstone has shaled off the roof.
There are a lot of unknowns about this part of Montcliffe Mine. Why
was it called Margery Mine? Why does very little coal seem to have
been extracted? Why is there a tunnel which just doubles back on
35
itself? All very odd.
I will admit that although I've only been in this mine once, I wasn't
too keen on it at all and I left whilst others in the party explored
further!
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Copy of mine abandonment plan for Montcliffe Colliery dated 1968
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3. The Wilderswood & Wildersmoor Collieries.
These mines cover a vast area with a very complex tunnel system in
which it would be very easy to get lost. The mines operated on two
levels, each working a different seam of coal. The seams are the
Little Mine and the Great Mine, with Little Mine being some 25 feet
above the Great Mine.
The main rock of the area is sandstone/gritstone and the Little Mine
coal seam is only around 10 inches thick but it is underlain with
several feet of fireclay which was also extracted for use in Horwich.
38
The average extraction of material was about 5 feet and the lower
levels of fireclay was often left in situ as can be seen in the next
photograph.
There were a number of entrances into Little Mine along with some
underground links into Great Mine. The entrances were a mixture of
adits and shafts but as the coal seams lay only just underneath the
surface the shafts were only shallow. All the shafts and adits have
been filled in and sealed.
39
original entrances have been breached whatsoever and entrance has
only been gained through new holes appearing on the surface.
40
Whatever the rights or wrongs of the explorations of the tunnels of
Winter Hill, I am grateful to those explorers who have let me have
copies of their underground photo’s so that we can all share in the
history of Winter Hill.
Over the past five years, two entrances to the Wilderswood and
Wildersmoor complex have been discovered and explored.
One entrance was on the lower slopes of Winter Hill and one was
near the top of the hill. The upper entrance (SD 65633 13842) was
first spotted on a cold and frosty day when a walker saw steam
coming from a small hole in the ground. The steam was obviously
warm air coming out of the mine and condensing on contact with the
cold air outside. The “team” were alerted, and the small hole was
enlarged until easy entrance to the mine tunnel beneath could be
effected. A metal lid was used to cover the hole and grass was placed
on top. On a later date, the shaft was lined with wood for safety
purposes, and a ladder installed, making it easy to enter the tunnels
that lay about 8 feet below the surface.
The tunnels radiating from this entrance were explored over the next
12 months but only on a very intermittent basis due to the proximity
of public footpaths and roads. Eventually the entrance was
discovered by the “authorities” – probably because most of the grass
covering the entrance had died and on at least one occasion I found
the entrance lid partially off. Due to the presence of bats in the
tunnels the entrance was sealed with a concrete surround, topped
with an iron grill to enable the bats to enter and exit. Within months,
the grills were sawn through by unknown parties and the authorities
had no option other than to fill in and completely seal the entrance.
There is now no sign of the entrance – nor of the nearby shakehole
which some naughty people might have decided to excavate once the
main entrance had been sealed! Both have now been totally filled and
sealed.
Adjacent to this part of the tunnel system was an area where the coal
was extracted in 1960/1 by opencast to recover the pillars of coal left
by the earlier mining operations. When the coal had been removed at
the opencast, the tunnel entrances in between the pillars were sealed
41
with large timbers and the entrances collapsed and filled with earth
and stone. At times in the past, these entrances have been semi-
exposed but around 3 years ago the area was totally sealed and
covered.
The entrance lower down the hill is still “intact” but the mine is
inspected and visited only about twice a year to protect the location
and any further comments from me would be inappropriate!
42
Exploring a timbered roadway in the vicinity of Sportsman’s
Cottage.
The photo above shows a portion of the mine very near to Two
Lads. Roof collapses are evident and have occurred in relatively
recent times.
43
44
An amazing find! The main winding wheel for hauling tubs up the
incline from the drift entrance - still intact.
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4. Mountain Mine. Winter Hill.
The mine was operated by Messrs J Crankshaw & Co Ltd and
opened in 1860, closing in October 1908. The mine was part of
“Wildersmoor Colliery” but may have been a separate enterprise
from what we now refer to as “Wildersmoor Colliery”.
Mountain Mine was located mainly to the east side of the road
leading to the TV masts on Winter Hill, although considerable
workings also extended to the other side of the mast road. The
earliest major mining enterprise on Winter Hill apart from small bell
pits, outcrop workings and the small coal extraction mines would
appear - according to old mining maps of the area - to be those
workings entered via the Winter Hill Tunnel on the Belmont side of
Winter Hill just beyond the masts. It is difficult to determine exactly
where the Winter Hill Tunnel “mine” and Mountain Mine started and
ended for plans of both mines show common areas of coal extraction.
The earliest recorded date of coal extraction that I have so far found
in the whole complex is 1833.
On most Ordnance Survey maps - even the very latest edition of the
Explorer West Pennine Moor chart - the Winter Hill Tunnel (SD
66329 14676) is marked just to the north west of the TV mast on the
left hand side of the footpath running down to Belmont Road. All
through my life I have wondered where this tunnel went to, but have
never ever managed to find anyone who knew any details about it.
The location of it is easy to spot and there were obviously two
entrances next to each other. There is also a fairly obvious track
leading from the mine to the present footpath so it is safe to assume
that coal extracted from this entrance was taken down to Belmont
rather than being hauled across to moor to Horwich.
If you walk down the footpath about 100 yards lies the remains of the
“New Tunnel” entrance to the coal workings on the right hand side
of the path. The location can be easily spotted due to the spoil heaps
– and the millstone grit sidewall of the entrance can be easily found.
Judging from the state of the surface above the line of the tunnel
50
heading up the hill, it is safe to assume that that it has all collapsed
since the mine was closed.
The ground surrounding the Winter Hill Tunnel entrances also shows
signs of extensive underground collapses near to the entrance.
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
The attraction of the landscape and all that it holds has made the
moors a traditional recreational venue for many generations of local
people from the surrounding towns of Bury and Bolton in the south
and Accrington, Blackburn, Chorley and Preston to the north and
west.
As this pressure has increased, management of the area has been co-
ordinated through the West Pennine Moors Recreation and
Conservation Plan. The work of the plan is taken forward by
Lancashire County Council with support and funding from North
West Water, Bury and Bolton Metropolitan Borough Councils and
the Countryside Commission.
March 1991. The previous winter's build-up of dead grass was burnt
off. At the same time strips were burnt into existing heather stands on
the north west slopes of Anglezarke Moor, to prepare for heather
seed collection.
August 1991. The area was left until the resulting fresh growth of
grass was flowering. Roundup herbicide was then applied to kill off
the grass.
September 1991. The grass had completely died back, six weeks
after the application. The area was then burnt again to get rid of the
dead material.
November 1991. The remaining tussocks and top two inches of
peat/soil were rotavated.
December 1991. The area was fenced out from the rest of the moor
to protect the plot from sheep grazing.
The seed trash collected from Anglezarke Moor using a vacuum
technique was applied. These seeds germinated and appeared as
seedlings in July 1992. These are now very healthy plants.
52
February 1992. Some of the area was covered with trash from
heather bales donated by the North York Moors National Park.
Germination has taken longer but there is now a high density of
young seedlings.
May 1992. More seed trash was collected from the burnt strips and
put down in July 1992. These have now germinated and the young
seedlings are easily seen. The remaining areas of the plot were
seeded in April and July 1993 and should germinate in 1994.
Heather seed
Seed has been collected from the Moores Estate adjacent to Wycoller
Country Park using a vacuum technique, and seed collected from
North West Water's Longdendale Estate in the Peak District, using a
harvester made available by the Joseph Nickerson Reconciliation
Trust.
The heather seed trash was applied at a rate of 10 grams/square
metre, i.e. less than a handful. We have estimated that there are
approximately 320 seeds/10 grams and it is expected that 65% will
germinate.
Herbicide
Roundup was applied at a rate of 6 litres/ha. A high concentration is
required to kill off the Molinia. This herbicide has been approved as
safe to use in catchment areas by North West Water.
Regrowth
Disturbance of the peat by rotavating has resulted in a fresh growth
of rushes and rose-bay willow-herb. The rushes have been spot
treated with Roundup, while the willow-herb has been handpulled.
The grasses are now beginning to grow back. This does not present a
problem as the heather seedlings are now established and should be
able to compete.
Grazing
53
It is hoped that light summer grazing will be introduced in 1995 or
1996 to keep grasses down and encourage the heather to till out. The
fence is unlikely to be removed as the plot will offer good grazing on
the edge of a large unproductive moorland, so the sheep would over-
concentrate on it.
Future work
The present plot is a very small proportion of Anglezarke Moor
(0.3%). We would like to continue and extend the work but this is
dependent on the farmer agreeing to give up more land. Constraints
will be long fence lines and finding sufficient heather seed.
One option would be to restore large areas without fencing thus
reducing the impact of grazing damage. The scheme is intended to
start the ball rolling and encourage others to take on the initiative or
at least become more involved.
Monitoring
Monitoring of progress on the first plot will start this November
using quadrats and fixed point photography. We are discussing a
system for monitoring both the extension of the work on to the wider
area of moorland and the effect of changing sheep grazing regimes.
This will involve Lancashire County Council Planning Department.
It is quite possible that changes in grazing will have positive effects
and lead to overall improvement in heather cover.
Problems
The biggest difficulty with the project has been establishing a
reliable source of heather seed, which is not commercially available
at a realistic price:
• It is not possible to keep collecting from Anglezarke Moor as
there are few heather stands suitable for strip burning.
• The heather bales from North Yorks Moors National Park
were of great value, but this is not a realistic source for the
much bigger schemes we are now working on, for which a
larger number of bales would have to be transported.
• The seed from the Moores Estate, Wycoller, was collected by
contractor using a vacuum technique. We will continue to
pursue this as a supply, but there are constraints of time and
weather.
54
• The seed from Longdendale is a good source and we are
currently looking into the possibilities of ensuring a regular
supply of large quantities of seed.
Where we go from here on the large scale is a complex issue
involving the tenant farmer, the landowner North West Water and
possible shooting interests. To carry out large scale works would
require a major cash input which means that the farmer and
landowner would be looking for a return.
The conservation budgets available through West Pennines
are limited and intended to prime projects.
Clive Weake was Head Countryside Ranger, West Pennine Moors.
Ian Harper was Access Area Countryside Ranger, West Pennine
Moors.
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
The Whimberry Hill Area.
This is an area of Winter Hill which is much ignored by most people
and on many days it is possible to walk all over the moorland from
Scout Road to Belmont, without even seeing a living soul let alone
meeting one - even in summer. Although superficially it appears
totally bleak and desolate with nothing of any real interest, for the
searcher, there is much to be seen and many mysteries to be
explained.
55
Perhaps one of the reasons for the lack of visitors, is the fact that
there is no really easy access point to the area despite the main
Belmont Road passing nearby. The nearest access points are either
from the quarries on Scout Road or the path starting opposite the
Wright Arms at Belmont.
56
We’ll start with the quarries. By far the biggest ones are Horrocks
Fold Quarries on either side of Scout Road but on the moorland there
are many others to be seen …. Spakes Delph, Martha Tree Dell,
Sandstone Delph, and Higher Height Delph, Coal Road Delfs
……..all are – or were, the main ones. All produced
sandstone/millstone grit. There is no evidence of any form of drilling
in the early quarries so the rocks were probably removed with
wedges and other implements.
The culvert was obviously dug out and roofed ….. but for what
reason? The place forms a natural valley anyway and a stream would
have flowed down it quite naturally. Why was it covered? More to
the point, where does it start and finish? Is there a connection
57
between the shaft and the watercourse for the two are right next to
each other. At various places along the course of the tunnel, the roof
has collapsed but I have still not been able to trace either its exact
course or it’s start and finish point. Perhaps others may be luckier!
On the Ordnance Survey map of 1849 the wells and tunnels are
shown, but again there is no hint to the exact purpose of them. On the
map, the course of the tunnel (or rather tunnels as there are
apparently two of them although I’ve only managed to find one) is
shown with the word “Well” at the “entrance” of it. All rather odd!
58
sides. The beds of many of the streams are covered with pieces of
this shale (some contain fossils).
On the modern day maps there is little marked on the chart but on
earlier maps.
Shaly Dingle lies at the confluence of three streams, the water being
channelled into Springs Reservoir which lies on the other side of
Belmont Road. In this small area, there are wells, an old coal mine
and a quarry.
On the hill in between the south eastern and south western tributaries
60
lie a number of walled shafts. On old maps four of these are marked
as “wells”. They all lie fairly near to springs where the water comes
out of the ground. At present I can find no information about these
wells or their purpose ….. were they for nearby homes, or perhaps
for the local mine or were they connected in some way with the
nearby reservoirs?
The wells are all fairly shallow, a deeper one is covered with a wire
grill and all are filled with stone rubble, some have a small amount of
water at the bottom and most are beautifully decorated in moss and
ferns. Well worth a look! In summer the grass and bracken
surrounding them will be much higher and it may be difficult to find
some of them at that season.
Each of the tributaries are worth investigation if only for the geology
visible in some of them. The northern heading tributary is perhaps
the most interesting. The stream has cut through the boulder clay and
near the surface it contains a large number of rounded stones formed
by glacial action many years ago. Lower down, the stream has cut
through the gritstone rock which is greatly faulted and the current
bed of the stream is formed of the carboniferous period shales.
Several coal seams are visible in the sides of the stream along with
the associated fireclays. Leaf and tree fossils can be found near the
coal seams.
Also visible in the walls and beds of the streams are small rocks
whose composition clearly illustrates the moving power of early
61
glacial action in the area, lumps of granite probably carried
southwards from Cumbria or Scotland along with quartzite rocks
from who knows where. Go take a look!
There is a fairly large and active spring in the eastern bank of the
main stream (the middle one!) but all over the place are bits of fairly
modern clay piping indicating that that perhaps in Victorian times
attempts were made to “pipe” this water to some other place. Anyone
got any ideas or information about this?
62
On the opposite bank is the Martha Tree Delph Sandstone Quarry
along with a rusted piece of rail, presumably used for tubbing the
stone out of the quarry. A pipe with flowing water sticks out into the
stream from underneath the quarry but there is no clue as to where
this water originates. Perhaps the quarry was considerably deeper
than it is today (it was in use in the early 1800’s and perhaps even
earlier) and the water is coming from the original floor of the quarry.
63
This woodland is one of the beauty spots of the whole area, and it is
a great pity that it is closed to the public. In the middle of the wood is
a magnificent waterfall in a majestic setting especially when the
64
The foundations of the TV mast.
The base for each of the 1265 ft masts consisted of a large reinforced
concrete raft to carry the six columns of the superstructure. These
rafts were 35 ft square and 5 ft 6 in thick. However, due to the
presence of old mine workings under Winter Hill, an extensive soil
investigation was necessary. A search through the records of the
National Coal Board showed that these mines had been worked
between 1861 and 1881 but the extent and size was not at all clear
from the available maps.
One borehole was taken at the mast base to a depth of 120 ft and one
at each of the outer anchor block positions down to 50 ft. Seismic
soundings were also taken but owing to a heavy overlay of peat these
were not considered reliable.
The shafts were lined with precast tunnel sections for their full depth,
the sections being added to the bottom as the work progressed. When
nearing the mine workings special precautions had to be taken in
case either gas or water was encountered with the breakthrough.
Fortunately, however, neither was encountered. When all four shafts
65
had been sunk, the
workings in the
immediate vicinity of the
mast base were
compacted with a mixture
of sand and weak
concrete. The columns
were constructed so they
were free standing within
the shafts to allow for a
limited horizontal
movement of the ground.
The columns were
founded about 5 ft below
the workings on good
quality rock (see
diagram).
66
TV Mast Construction Photo’s
(Thanks to Bill Learmouth for the photo’s)
67
WINTER HILL TV COVERAGE AREA. (Analogue
TV only)
68
The Making of the Mast ….. by William Kay of
Adlington …… by William Kay
The television station on Winter Hill in Lancashire was built for the
Independent Television Authority, (later the Independent
Broadcasting Authority), which had been set up by Parliament to
broadcast and control the Commercial TV services then coming into
being
The Winter Hill station was built during 1956 and '57 and
broadcasting of Granada programmes commenced in Sept 1957, the
transmitting aerials for the service being mounted at the top of a
450ft steel tower which resembled a large electricity pylon. The
services at that time were in the 405 line VHS system, but with the
proposed introduction of 625 line UHF system and a requirement
that BBC1 & 2 should also transmit from Winter Hill, it became
obvious that the 450 ft tower would be inadequate for the job. The
ITA therefore decided to erect a new mast and to this end
commissioned a 1000 ft one of novel design from British Insulated
Callender Construction (BICC).
The tubular mast body was then erected by the process of bolting
half cylindrical sections of galvanised steel each 10 ft high and 9 ft
diameter to each other, work thus progressing at the rate of 10 ft per
2 lifts of steel. The early lifts were accomplished by the use of a
transportable crane. At this stage an ingenious device was brought
into play consisting of a long steel tube with a jib crane head fixed to
69
its end. This was mounted vertically inside the mast cylinder and
used to lift the sections. As these were added, the jib crane was
jacked up and relocated into the next section, and so was always in
position for the next lift.
Two further masts of this type were built, both 1250ft tall at Emley
Moor near Huddersfield, and the other one in Lincolnshire, giving
ITV and BBC services to those regions.
Then, Horror of Horrors, in March 1969, in the face of severe icing
up and adverse weather conditions, the Emley Moor mast collapsed.
Anxious eyes, (particularly my own, as I was on duty under the
Winter Hill one at that time), were directed to the Winter Hill mast
and its remaining sister in Lincolnshire, both of which were heavily
iced up. Luckily they survived, but both of them were subjected to
intense investigation and to a programme of modification and
strengthening over the past ten years. Now it is probably true to say
that they are as safe as any mast in Europe.
70
any further cylindrical masts of the Winter Hill type and height will
ever be erected. Also, as terrestrial Digital TV and Satellite services
progress, the need for these structure will recede. Footnote: When the
1000 ft mast came into operation, the original 450 ft tower at Winter
Hill was dismantled and rebuilt in Scotland where it continues to
give sterling service.
________________________________________________
The Night the Welsh invaded Winter Hill! ….. by William Kay
It was 21.05 hours on a typical Winter Hill early March evening (the
4 March 1977 to be exact) when the assault was made. The night was
clear and stars were shining, however a thin ground mist wreathed
the road and moor land. I was the senior shift engineer on duty that
night along with two other shift engineers, Mike Ingram and Peter
Dennis.
Peter was manning the control desk, whilst I was in the test room
repairing some piece of equipment. By a stroke of good fortune Mike
was just heading for the kitchen via the entrance hail when the
incident began. He rushed to the test room and informed me that we
had intruders on the premises. I immediately followed him to the hall
where I saw that the glass panel in the front door had been broken to
gain access and I was just in time to see someone going away from
me down the corridor leading via the garage to the UHF transmitter
hall. I shouted to Peter to contact the Police and then, accompanied
by Mike, followed the intruders into the UHF transmitter hall I
switched on the lights as I went for the intruders were using torches.
On entering the transmitter hall I saw four people, two young men
and two young women in the room. One of the women was operating
the HT Isolator and earthing switches of the ‘A’ transmitter, (almost
the quickest way of switching off).
I immediately challenged her but she continued to operate the
switches. I went up to the transmitter and switched it back on again.
In all there was a break in transmission of about 15 seconds. I
subsequently found out the ‘B’ transmitter had also been switched of
by the same method. The intruders made no effort to stop me re-
powering the transmitters; they just stood back from me whilst I did
it. As I stood there guarding the ‘A’ transmitter whilst Mike stood by
71
the ‘B’ I noticed that one of the women was carrying a carpenter's
hammer. I was glad I hadn't spotted that before.
At about 20.25 hrs the Police arrived, first the Horwich police, then
those from Chorley and lastly the PC from Adlngton. As the Winter
Hill station is actually on the Chorley side of the boundary, and in
the Adlington section of the Chorley Police area, then the privilege
or pain of arresting the culprits fell to the Adlington PC.
When the prisoners were searched, there was found in the handbag of
one of the women, a quantity of 6in nails. The idea had been to
disrupt the transmission and then to barricade themselves in the
transmitter hall by nailing all the doors shut, thus preventing early re-
powering of the transmitters. This part of the plan luckily was
thwarted by our good luck and Mike’s prompt actions. This was of
course the reason the woman was carrying the hammer. The Police
questioned me closely as to whether at any time they had threatened
us with the hammer, but in all truth, I had to say that the group
behaved impeccably after being challenged. In fact it seemed a major
part of their policy was to get arrested and go to court to extract the
maximum publicity for their cause.
As the Police were leaving they asked what would be the cost of
replacing the glass door. Just off the top of my head I said ‘£100’. It
was eventually replaced at a cost of £30 but the damages set by the
court and paid by the miscreants was the sum of £100, so that night I
72
made a profit of £70 for the IBA. The group pleaded guilty and were
sentenced to some months in prison I believe.
The Welsh finally got their 4th channel but when 1 look at the
programmes that appear on all channels in general, I often wonder if
those four people still think it was worth their sacrifice.
William Kay
Ex ITA/IBA/NTL engineer, Winter Hill.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
A glance at the map of Horwich and district shows the surface of the
ground studded over with reservoirs, some of them an extent as to be
denominated lakes. On the North, the Belmont watershed is
appropriated by the Bolton Corporation Waterworks, a series of
bleachworks extending right away down to Bolton. On the East are
the large reservoirs of the Halliwell Bleachworks, and Dean Mills.
To the South-east the Bolton Corporation have been tunnelling for
years in the Millstone Grit, and are now constructing a large
reservoir for storage of the water found. On the West the Liverpool
73
Waterworks appropriates the upland waters from Rivington Moor
and a large share of Wildersmoor. In the township itself the staple
industry, up to quite recently, was bleaching, for which a large
quantity of good water is required. In 1876 the Blackrod Local
Board obtained power to construct a reservoir which impounds a
portion of the surface water from Wildersmoor, and also springs in
Wilderswood and underground waters from old coal workings.
It will thus be seen that the district Is one in which there is plenty of
water, and the water, whether in streams from the breezy uplands, or
in springs which gush forth from the millstone grit, is of good
quality.
Up to 1884 there was no town water supply. The place was sparsely
populated, and each group of cottages had its spring or well, and
although there were dry seasons when the wells and springs dried
up, and the inhabitants had to carry water from considerable
distances, still they never suffered anything like the same
inconveniences from scarcity of water as other districts, or even as
the neighbouring townships of Blackrod and Aspull. After the public
spirit shown by Blackrod in constructing their large reservoir in
Horwich, and appropriating the best available supply, the Horwich
Local Board seemed to think that something should be done, and a
considerable sum of money was dribbled away, in making half-
hearted enquiries into various schemes which were afterwards
abandoned, and ultimately an arrangement was made with the
Blackrod Local Board for 50,000 gallons of water per day at 6d per
1,000 gallons. In 1885, the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway
Company decided to bring their Locomotive works to Horwich, and
the place, after being at a standstill for years at once became a busy
scene of activity, building being carried on in all directions, and a
largely increased water supply being required. The dry season of
1887 completely exhausted the Blackrod storage, and the Horwich
Local Board were informed that they would have to look elsewhere
for their requirements for over 50,000 gallons per day. Under the
circumstances the Blackrod supply could never be anything but
partial, as the level of the reservoir was far too low to supply the
higher parts of Horwich.
74
The Horwich Local Board found that they had allowed the whole of
their watershed to be appropriated, and the only water supply
available was from the Moncliffe Colliery belonging to Messrs H
Mason & Son. Popular prejudice was very much against this water,
as it was imagined that because it was pumped at a colliery it must of
necessity be contaminated, but this had to some extent been
overcome by the dry season, when temporary arrangements were
made for pumping the water into the Blackrod reservoir, where it
constituted practically the whole water supply.
The Local Board also found that it was a case of Hobson’s Choice,
one or none, this being the only feasible scheme available, so
Messres Frank France and James Atherton, of Bolton, were
authorised to inquire into this supply, and the following extract from
their report fully explains the scheme, and may be of some interest to
the members of this society :-
The water is found near to the bottom of a shaft which was sunk
many years ago at Montcliffe, in the higher part of Horwich, for the
purpose of winning a mine of coal and fireclay. The shaft is 130
yards deep, and is sunk through strata which consists mostly of
sandstone and shale, the geological formation being that known as
“Millstone Grit”. No water appears in the mine on the higher side of
the shaft, nor along the level proceeding from the bottom of the shaft,
but at the inspection recently made by us we found the water made in
some straight roadways which had been driven on the deep of the
shaft, and only a short distance away therefrom. In these roadways
the water poured in continuous streams from the roof, and as it had
passed through beds of sandstone of so great a thickness, it seemed
75
evident that it must be well filtered. In appearance the water was
bright and clear, and the floor on which it continually gathered
showed that it contained the merest trace of iron. This is not often the
case in water associated with coal mines.
We found all the coal lying on the easterly side of a 26 yards fault,
hereafter referred to, had been won with the exception of pillars left
to support the roadway between the pumping and ventilating shafts,
and a small area now being worked some 150 yards on the rise of the
first-named shaft.
The mine has been worked out to the beforementioned fault, which
runs in a direction SW to NE, and at a distance of about 200 yards
on the W side of the pumping shaft. And about 170 yards to the west
of it, and the coal still remaining to be got under the present lease
lies to the north and west of this fault, throwing the mine down 26
yards. To win this coal (which has not hitherto been worked) the
ventilating shaft (which is 170 yards on the west or rise of the
pumping shaft) will have to be sunk 26 yards, and the coal raised
there, instead of (as at present) at the pumping shaft. In this case this
76
shaft would only be used for pumping. This would be a further
guarantee against the possibility of pollution of the water. Whether
any water might be found in the new workings, could only be
ascertained by proving, and if there was, it would be at a lower level.
The hamlet of Montcliffe can be seen at the top centre of the picture. The
water from the mine travelled along a pipe from the pumping shaft, this
being located in a tunnel which emerged just to the north of the reservoir.
The reservoir is now no longer used and is dry (not surprising as there is a
huge gap in one of the retaining walls!)
We found the pumping shaft in very good condition, and the rams
and pump stocks which were in the shaft in perfect order. The
pumping engine is of a very good make (Messrs Hathorn, Davies and
Co, Sun Foundary, Leeds) and of recent construction. To raise all
the water made at present requires only 4.5 to 5 strokes per minute,
equal to about 140,000 gallons per day of 24 hours, besides which
9,000 gallons are pumped to the surface for the supply of the houses
at Montcliffe. This we consider (after the exceptionally long drought
of the past summer) may be taken as the minimum yield. In winter the
engine is said to run at about 6 strokes per minute, if it was run at 10
strokes 358,000 gallons would be delivered in the 24 hours. The
77
pumps are in duplicate, there being two rams each of 10 inch
diameter, and two sets of pump stocks. These are arranged so that
either set can be worked in case of accident. The pumping
arrangements are very good.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
78
last few decades.
The first mast to be built was the large one located to the east of the
OS survey column that was erected in 1948 initially for police
communications. It now houses a lot more than antennas for the
police! The next mast to be built was the original IBA TV mast
which arrived in 1955 but this was soon replaced by the present
structure which is over 1,000 feet high (328 metres). The Post Office
mast was built in 1955.
The exact figures I have for the height is that it is 1,015 feet 4 in tall
and the transmitters have a range of round about 50 miles covering
the Manchester and Liverpool conurbation’s and within it’s area it
reaches over 7 million people. It’s known as an “enclosed cylindrical
mast” and it used to have a lift inside it – but now the engineers and
riggers have to climb up a vertical ladder – or rig up a cradle to one
of the cables on the outside. They have to climb up to maintain the
aerials, paint the mast and to ensure that the red aircraft lights are
working.
All the masts at the top of the hill are used for a variety of
communications purposes for local services, businesses and
organisations.
In the early days when the original TV mast was built, it was thought
that there may have been a risk to the resident engineers in times of
inclement weather. In view of this a building was erected part way
79
down the moorland road where the staff used to be housed at those
times. The wooden structure was removed many years ago but the
metal fence that used to house it, still remains. The mast still presents
dangers for the unwary in the winter months, when icicles can form
on the support cables which crash to the ground if a sudden thaw
occurs. You have been warned!
Dean Ditch.
From the mast heading
eastwards towards Horrocks
Moor and Scout Road is the
seemingly endless drystone
wall which was built to mark
the municipal boundaries. On
modern maps this is marked as
the County Constitutional and
Metropolitan District/European
Constitutional and Borough
boundary. The wall is quite a feat of engineering and must have
taken some considerable time to build. It seems to vary in height
between six and seven feet for its whole length of almost 3
kilometres. There are few quaries near the hill top and although rocks
can be found on the surface the bulk of the material to make the wall
must have been carried up the hill. I have not spotted any gates or
breaks in the original wall although parts of it are now in a fairly
poor state.
The path along the wall has few surprises except for several spots
where rocks appear to be in fairly unnatural formations forming
circles.
82
Rivington Terraced Gardens.
Introduction.
The area covered by the gardens was was deciduous forest until the
early 16th century when it was felled. With grazing and regular
burning of the vegetation it became rough grazing moorland, with
only a few trees left in the Lower Gardens below what is now
Roynton Lane. It remained so until 1900 when William Hesketh
Lever bought the site, having enquired whether Liverpool
Corporation, who owned the reservoirs in the valley below, were
interested and found they were not. Lever was born in Bolton and
became wealthy through manufacturing soap from vegetable oil and
formed the Unilever Company at Port Sunlight in Cheshire.
Landscape design and architecture were among his main interests.
83
The first building to be erected on the site of the gardens was
“Roynton Cottage” in 1901. The cottage (or “Bungalow” as it is
often called) faced west and was built of pine timber and glass. It
was designed by Johnathon Simpson, a local architect.
84
pigeons to fly in and out of the shed which originally occupied the
site between the wall and the road.
In 1919 the gardens were opened to the public for the first time.
Work on the gardens was begun again in the 1920’s following its
delay by the first world war. Many paths were laid out with irregular
crazy paving, and flightsof stone steps and archways constructed.
The Japanese Gardens with a waterfall, large lagoon, garden
ornaments and shelters, built to resemble Japanese tea houses, were
completed. Also at this time the Italian Gardens were created.. A
series of waterfalls and ponds were formed by diverting a small
stream, and four inter-connecting caves were made partly by
excavation and partly by construction. Rock ledges and steep
pathways were made adjacent to the stream and two footbridges also
crossed it. As in other parts of the gardens use was made of the
horizontally-layered local rock.
87
Since the 1970’s beneficial changes have taken place in the Gardens,
voluntary conservation groups have cleared the once overgrown
paths and ponds and restored some of the stonework, so that people
can enjoy the Gardens more fully and a variety of plants and animals
can co-exist. (this description does not give full credit to the massive
amount of work done by the British Trust for Conservation
Volunteers who totally transformed the Gardens from a total
overgrown jungle to the beauty we now enjoy today, thanks!)
Introduction
Trees.
88
Oak, Birch and Rowan are the most common deciduous
broadleaved trees. Others are infrequently seen: Elm (2), Willow
(3), Alder (4), Whitebeam (5), Ash and Wild Cherry are noticeable
near the paths through the gardens. A cultivated variety of Ash,
“Weeping Ash”, with drooping branches can be seen near the
Japanese Lagoon.
Exotic Cherry trees are also fairly common in the kitchen garden
area. They have smooth shiny reddish bark and produce prolific
blossom in summer.
Conifers.
89
These are identifiable by their narrow, needle-like leaves and the
fact that they bear cones. Larch is the only deciduous conifer and
occurs in considerable numbers in the gardens (10).
Several species of Pines (Pinus spp.) are present, the most common
ones (all of which have needles in pairs) are:- Scots Pine (with blue-
green needles about 1.5 inches long), is very common particularly in
the Lower Gardens. Corsican Pine has needles about 4 inches long;
there are some large specimens by the south west garden house.
Mountain Pine (pinus mungo) is a small bushy pine with many
bright green needles grouped in whorls on the branches (unlike other
pines), the bare twig can be seen between the whorls. This pine
occurs in large numbers near the seven arch bridge.
Another group of conifers are the Spruces which have very sharply
pointed , short stiff needles growing singly on small woody pegs
which are left when the needles fall, thus the twigs are very rough
when touched. Sitka Spruce is the most common, the underside of
its needles are blue-grey. There are only three or four Blue Spruce
trees (12) but they are easily noticeable as their needles are blue-grey
all over, and they point in all directions from the twigs.
Silver Firs (Abies spp.) are quite common in the gardens – their
needles are set in two distinct layers, the lower ones being horizontal
so that the foliage looks flattened. The needles grow singly (unlike
the paired needles of the pines) and leave a flat round scar when
removed unlike the Spruces. The bark is dark and not channelled, but
has small resin bubbles on it. Three very tall Silver Firs can be seen
by the SW summerhouse (13).
Cedars (14) have needles set in tufts or dense bunches like larches
but they are of different lengths and remain over winter. Also their
cones may be8 cms long whereas those of larch are only 2 or 3 cms
long. Only three ceder trees have been found in the gardens but all
are adjacent to paths.
90
Another conifer which has overlapping small leaves but which does
not have flattened spreading branches is Cryptomeria japonica (15)
of which there is only one tree in the gardens.
Yew is the only native conifer besides Scots Pine present in the
gardens, here it grows as a small bushy tree particularly between the
kitchen gardens and the Japanese Lagoon. The leaves are soft to
touch and often yellowish-green.
Shrubs.
Introduction.
Mawson planted thousands of Rhododendrons and many other
shrubs including Gaultheria, Kalmias, Vaccineums, Hollies,
Berberis and many others. Some of these species originally planted
are no longer present, having been lost through theft and neglect with
some shrubs such as Rhododendron, Gaultheria and Pernettya
spreading rapidly at the expense of other species. However 29
different shrub plants are to be found in the gardens today, nearly all
of them introduced species, some of them fairly rare. Many of the
shrubs planted appear to have been chosen because of their hardiness
and tolerance of, or even preference for, an acid soil, e.g. many
members of the Ericaceae (Heather) family and Rhododendron. The
latter, together with Gaultheria and Pernettya, are the most common
shrubs in the gardens, having spread rapidly by means of
underground suckers. A number of varieties of Rhododendron are
present, all characterised by untoothed leathery leaves and trumpet
shaped flowers of various colours. Some of them have unusually
small leaves (only 0.75 inches wide and 2 inches long but the most
common is Rhododendron ponticum with large tough dark green
leaves. The deciduous Azeleas occur in several places in the
gardens.
Above the swimming pool are two small Quince ( 18) bushes and
adjacent to the square lawn by the bungalow site you can see the only
site where Dogwood Cornel grows in the Gardens (19). It is a
deciduous shrub easily recognised by its bright red stems and shoots.
92
The other shrubs likely to be seen are native to the area, although
some of them may have been planted: Elder, Hawthorne, Hazel
and Gorse.
Although there are large areas of the gardens where there is little
ground vegetation, particularly where not much light penetrates the
tree and shrub leaf-canopy, a large variety of plants (over 70 species)
are present. Although Mawson originally planted introduced species
such as Alpine varieties, most of the ground vegetation now consists
of native species that one would expect to find growing naturally in
this area.
93
Pool” (21). The flat basal rosettes of leaves of Hairy Bittercress are
common especially near the stream in the Italian Garden.
Animals.
The variety of plants and presence and shrubs offer food and shelter
for many animals that otherwise would not be found here.
Birds.
Thirty species of birds have been identified. They include birds of
prey such as the Owl and Kestrel; typical woodland birds like the
Great Spotted Woodpecker and Wood Pigeon. Some birds such as
the Goldcrest ( a very small bird with a golden-yellow stripe on top
of its head) have benefited from the planting of conifers in the
gardens, preferring to nest in them rather than in deciduous trees.
The birds most likely to be seen apart from the above species are:
Robin, Blackbird, Blue-, Great-, and Coal Tits, Magpie, and
Chaffinch, Wren and Tree Creeper. The latter is noted for its habit of
94
creeping up tree trunks looking for insects and its prominent white
front in contrast to its mottled brown back. Other species present
include Bullfinch, Redstart, Redpoll, Jay, Starling, Hedge Sparrow,
Chiff-chaff, Carrion Crow, Cuckoo, Linnet, Fieldfare, Nuthatch,
Long Tailed Tit, Willow Warbler and Redwing.
Rabbits, Hedgehog, Wood Mice, Fox, Weasel and Stoat have been
seen and recorded in the gardens but only the rabbit is a common
sight. Frogs and Smooth Newts are the only amphibians to have been
seen in the gardens.
Please Remember:-
A lot of time, energy and money has been spent (and will continue to
be spent) trying to conserve the variety of features in the gardens
which make them interesting for the large numbers of people that
visit them now and in the future. In some cases damage and erosion
has occurred, therefore for everyone’s benefit PLEASE:
- be careful not to start a fire
- don’t drop litter
- keep to the paths so plants are not damaged and wildlife is not
disturbed
- don’t damage walls and buildings
- keep to approved vehicle/bike routs and car parks.
95
BTCV (North West Region), Oakham Court, Averham Lane,
Preston, PR1 3XP, Lancashire. Telephone: 01772 204647
Fax: 01772 257106
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Our past callouts have involved crashed aircraft, hang gliders and
96
parapenters. Generally, however, where there is a problem locating
victims, or the terrain surrounding a casualty is difficult to access, it
is likely that your mountain rescue team is involved.
Several times a year we also provide standby rescue cover for events
held within our area. We can often be spotted at orienteering events,
fell races, sponsored walks, and mountain bike races.
97
Founded in 1968 by 3 Rossendale Fell Rescue Team members, who
lived in the Bolton area, the Team has grown from its small
beginnings to be one of the busiest and best equipped teams in the
country.
The first vehicles owned by the Team were all old "second-hand"
ones past their best before date, they were cherished and nursed by
the dedicated membership. Much is owed to these early pioneers,
most of whom have long left but two remain in the team - Alan
"General" James, one of the original founder members, now a life
Vice President, only stopped active service in early 1999 due to a job
move to the London area. Geoffrey H. Seddon, currently Deputy
Team Leader, joined within a few months of the Team's inauguration
and has served as Team Leader (7 years) and Chairman.
98
The advent of the West Pennine Moors Recreation Area, coupled
with years of liaison meetings with the Lancashire and Greater
Manchester Police Forces and the Lancashire and Greater
Manchester Ambulance Services saw a dramatic rise in call out
activity from 1994 onwards as the professional expertise and
resources of the team were recognised on a wider basis. We can now
expect upwards of 100 incidents attended by the team per year.
1999 also saw the team with its very first new vehicles - 2 Landrover
110" County Station Wagons and a Landrover 110" hardtop. The
first two being first response vehicles and the hardtop van an Incident
Support Unit. The team also utilises an ex-Ambulance as a Personnel
Carrier.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
99
Geological Walk. The River Douglas North of Horwich.
By Rodney J Ireland.
(This was, I believe just one of a number of walks around the area contained in a
booklet published by the Wigan Geological Society - which seems to no longer
exist.. I have been unable to obtain a full copy of this booklet, merely a photocopy
of this article)
Introduction.
Itinerary.
100
In the river banks and on the bed, exposures of shales, mudstones
and siltstones with occasional thin sandstones (less than 0.2 metre)
can be seen. These rocks form part of the strata between the
Crutchman Sandstone and the Old Lawrence Rock (sandstone)
within the Lower Coal Measures. Carefully note the stratal dips.
Initially the beds are horizontal but some 200 metres upstream the
same beds can be seen dipping at 20 degrees. Careful examination of
the siltstone/mudstone sequences hereabouts reveals the presence of
fossil plant debris. Another 10 metres upstream the siltstones,
dipping even more steeply, are abruptly truncated by a fault. This can
be clearly seen on the south side of the river and trends in a north-
westerly direction. The fault surface contains a fault breccia
consisting of angular pieces of sanstone and siltstone occurring
within a matrix of sand and mud. The hade, or slope of the fault
surface, indicates a south-westerly downthrow. Upstream the Ousel
Nest Grit (or Horwich Grit) and its underlying shales and occasional
flagstones are exposed. The stratal juxtaposition indicates a vertical
displacement on the fault of about 250 metres. The increasing dips
observed downstream are features common to many such
displacements.
101
on the right bank above the ravine displays a particularly well-
exposed fault surface exhibiting white slickensides. Further upstream
observe the feature created by the Ousel Nest Grit on the left bank.
Here the sandstone is well-jointed and cross-stratification can be
demonstrated. As the footbridge is approached note the sandstone is
terminated against shales. Here again, faulting can be demonstrated.
102
including ripple marks, may be seen on the bedding surfaces. Joint
frequency and direction may also be examined. (Great care is
required as hereabouts much of the river bed is very slippery). Near
the top of the gorge the overlying shales crop out and rest on the top
of the flagstones. Above here, the base of the Rough Rock, a
feldspathic sandstone, and the highest member of the Millstone Grit
Series can be examined.
At the top of the gorge it is necessary to again climb through the old
boundary fence. Upstream the stream bed is incised in the Rough
Rock which, between the fence and Belmont Road, exhibits several
well-developed pot holes. Above and left of the stream two slope
changes can be seen on the hillside. These represent the outcrops of
the Upper and Lower leaves of the Sand Rock Mine. Both coal seams
occur within the Rough Rock. However, only the upper seam was of
workable thickness. Spoil heaps can be seen beneath Brown Hill
where a drift mine formerly worked the coal. Crossing Belmont Road
and continuing upstream, well developed cross-stratification occurs
in the Rough Rock.
From here traverse due West towards Brown Hill. Immediately east
of the hill a northerly trending fault is visible in the small stream.
The fault truncates the Rough Rock and throws down the overlying
shales. From the steam climb up the side of Brown Hill where the
shales pass upwards into the Margery Flags. These form the capping
of the hill and dip at 8 degrees to the south. Descend Brown Hill on
the north-west side towards Rivington Pike. In the saddle between
the two hills, and to the right of the track, a circular depression with a
surrounding raised lip can be seen. This probably represents an old
bell pit which worked the Sand Rock Mine. From here it is well
worth completing the excursion by walking to the top of Rivington
Pike. There are several limited exposures of the Marjory Flags en
route.
From the Pike one can return to the School by descending through
the plantations and the terraced gardens to Rivington Barn.
Alternatively a more direct route may be followed by descending
across the fields to Roynton Lane and thence to the rear of the
school.
103
References.
JONES R C B et al (1938) Wigan District Mem. Geol> Surv
Maps
Geological (IGS)
1:63,360 (1 in to 1 ml) Sheet No 84 – Wigan (solid)
1:10,560 (6 in to 1 ml) Lancs. Sheet No 86 NW
Ordnance Survey
1:50,000 Series, Sheet 109
1:10,560 Series, Sheet SD 61 SW
Good Friday is the day of the “Pike Fair”. On that day each year, the
“fair” arrives at the Pike along with hot dog vans, children’s
entertainment’s complete with bouncy castles and tacky stalls selling
all sorts of things that we don’t really want. At the end of the day
when all the traders have gone, the Pike area looks something like a
giant rubbish dump. It must be the only “fair” in the country to be
held near the top of a fairly inhospitable hill whatever the weather!
Nobody really seems to know when the Pike Fair originated, but it is
undoubtedly of fairly ancient origin, possibly dating from the Middle
Ages. It used to be held at the Whitsuntide weekend and in the early
1800’s the fair seems to have been a rather rowdy event and -
according to a local newspaper – the road round the Pike was filled
with “nut stalls and drinking booths”. Add to this, the proximity of
the public house, the Sportsman’s Arms, just a few hundred yards
from the Pike and it must have been quite a lively spot especially as
the festivities lasted from the Saturday morning, through the night,
through the Sunday finally closing on the Monday! Sunday was the
104
day when people from all around always walked to the peak of
Rivington Pike – and still do.
After The Sportsman’s Arms lost its licence (I don’t know the exact
date or the reason but I believe it occurred around 1880), the fair
seemed to calm down and local interest in it began to wane. An
article in the Bolton Chronicle of 1884 commented that “Pike Fair
has lost much of its rowdyism since the removal of the public house
licence”
The fair was moved to Good Friday in 1900 and since that time the
numbers of stalls and visitors have fluctuated wildly decade by
decade. According to one article I have read, it would seem that
things were fairly quiet in the 1930’s and 40’s but by the 1960’s,
crowds of over 50,000 were reported (along with increasing crowd
and litter problems). Nowadays, the fair seems much quieter than I
remember it 20 years ago and the number of stalls is well down in
numbers.
So why do I keep going to the fair if it that’s awful? Pure habit and I
love things that are a bit out of the ordinary – especially when it’s a
tradition.
Aerial view of the Pike, taken prior to the building of the southern
“staircase”. The photo is taken from my microlight flying about 800
feet above the Pike
105
Rivington Pike and the Tower.
When driving along the motorway past Horwich, two things
immediately catch the eye, the Reebok Stadium and the Tower on
Rivington Pike. I wonder how many thousands of people have driven
past and wondered what the Tower is? Many local history books tell
you all you could ever want to know about the Tower but any book
about Winter Hill would be incomplete without a few words about
the Pike and its Tower so I’ll try to give a potted version of what
you’ll find in the other books.
Rivington Pike is the last high point at the south western edge of
Winter Hill and is 1,198 ft or 365 metres high. A surveyors bench
mark can be seen carved onto one of the large boulders halfway up
the Pike on the main footpath leading from the Brown Hill area.
Geologically the Pike is composed of gritstones, shales and several
layers of the Margery Flags. The Pike is circled by two coal outcrops
– but they are fairly speculative on the eastern side, although coal has
been extracted there in days gone by.
There are three major routes up the Pike, the Brown Hill footpath,
the paths from Winter Hill and that from the Terraced Gardens.
There is a road going round the hill. Due to the erosion occurring on
the Terraced Gardens Path (which was getting quite severe with the
footpath forming an ever-deepening gully) a staircase was built up
the Pike in latter years.
The summit of the Pike was once the site of a beacon. The first
recorded use of it was in the 12th century when those awful Scottish
people invaded our part of the UK. At that time, the whole country
was linked with a chain of fire beacons to alert the population in
times of crisis. Apart from this occurrence, there seems to be only
one other record of the beacon chain being lit in anger, this being on
the 19th July 1588 when the Spanish Armada threatened our shores.
The beacon was held in readiness for lighting at a time in the early
1800’s when a French invasion was threatened, but the beacon was
never lit. The beacon site has only been used since that time on the
odd occasion to celebrate war victories or royal occasions.
106
The Tower.
The builder of the tower on Winter Hill was John Andrews in 1733
and it is reputed that he built it as a sign of his authority and
ownership following an earlier land dispute with another landowner.
The tower was built to function as a shooting hut and initially
107
The Pike as it used to be (photo taken in 1979) before the building of
the “grand staircase”. The erosion was a great deal worse than this
by the time the new steps were built.
108
Photo of the tower taken in the 1880’s. Note the chimney!
In the 1890’s, Rivington Hall and the surrounding lands were bought
for £60,000 by William Lever - Vicount Leverhulme - who was a
Boltonian who had made his fortune in soap manufacturing starting
the company that was to end up as Unilever. After Levers death he
bequeathed his lands to the “people of Bolton” on condition that it
was preserved as a park with total public access. Liverpool
Corporation objected to parts of this bequest as portions of the land
lay within the Liverpool Waterworks water catchment area. As a
result of various court cases, Parliament decreed that although the
park remained as a gift to the people of Bolton, the property would
be managed by Liverpool Corporation. As a result of this
arrangement the tower started to fall into a state of disrepair.
109
A few lesser known facts about Rivington
Pike!
Vegetation.
So what types of plants are actually growing on and around the Pike?
By far the most dominant grass is Nardus Stricta (Mat Grass), but
Molinia Caerulea (Purple Moor Grass/Flying Bent) becomes
especially abundant in the southern half of the site, especially in the
wetter south-western corner. Other plant species noticeably present
are:
The weather.
Due to its exposed and high elevation, the Pike does experience
severe weather conditions with the prevailing strong winds coming
from the west. Rainfall is heavy and frequent. Measurements were
taken in 1977 and during that year a total rainfall of 1169 mm
110
(approx. 46 inches was recorded. No month by month rainfall figures
have been recorded for the Pike but they are available for Brown
Hill, a few hundred yards to the south east. These show that the
monthly rainfall throughout 1977 was:
January 79.2mm
February 157.0
March 70.0
April 79.2mm
May 46.5
June 161.5
July 38.5
August 73.2
September 89.0
October 124.3
November 151.8
December 98.9 (source NWWA)
“The sudden rise of the land to form the oval shaped ridge on which
the Tower stands can be partly explained by the Lower Coal
Measures present which are also oval in shape, and the base
coincides approximately with the 351 metre contour. At the summit
of the Pike, some of the bedrock has been exposed and strongly
bedded, fine grained, vertically jointed sandstone can be seen to be
underlain by very easily disturbed thin shale bands which are readily
fragmented.”
The Soil.
111
“The soil profile generally consists of, in decending order: a thin
layer of humus; a layer of peat which varies in thickness; a bleached,
greyed, browny, clayey, very acidic alluvial horizon containing small
fragments of sandstone and shale; a thin iron pan; a relatively thick,
partly iron stained, darker brown, less clayey, more sandy alluvial
horizon within which are larger fragments of sandstone and shale;
the parent rock.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
The Hole Bottom Area of Winter Hill.
“Hole Bottom”. What a name! Don’t expect me to explain why the
place has this name because I haven’t a clue! If anyone has any
explanation then please get in touch then we can all share this
invaluable and fascinating information!
90% of people reading this are going to ask where Hole Bottom is!
It’s no wonder you don’t know where it is, for today it’s one of the
most insignificant spots on Winter Hill and is totally ignored by most
walkers and drivers unless you happen to be a “local”. To find the
place, go up the road leading to the TV mast from Montcliffe, go
over the cattle grid and
eventually you’ll reach
a left bend in the road
with a metal crash
barrier on the right side
of the road. This is Hole
Bottom! Welcome to
one of the most
fascinating spots on the
hill!
If you stand at Hole Bottom and look around, what do you see? Not
much ………… for little now remains of what was once here. This
was once a thriving, working small community with a brick & tile
works, coal mines, houses (including an ale house – wish it were still
112
there) and was on a major route from one part of the county to
another. If you look carefully at the photo below, there are clues to
the past history. Look uphill towards the mast. Over a century ago
you would have seen a number of pit heads all the way up to the
present TV mast. There is a clear track leading up the hill that was
once a tramway. Also on the hillside looking uphill there are a large
number of blocked remains of adit entrances and a number of
“collapsed” areas where the underground coal and clay workings
have fallen in.
In the small “valley” to the right of the photo, there used to be three
major adits leading from the valley into the Mountain Mine coal
workings. Two of these adits are now completely filled in and sealed,
and the third one seems to have been commandeered by the water
department as the entrance is covered by a modern brick built
structure (which is just about visible from the road as it’s surrounded
by a fence).
To the right of the photo and directly behind the crash barrier is the
site of the old Winter Hill Brick & Tile works, now demolished. Less
than 100 yards higher up the road on the left hand side there used to
be a row of houses called “Five Houses”. The Five Houses appear
113
on many old maps of the area but are not shown on the 1894 First
Edition maps.
The brick works were probably once known as “Five Houses Fire
Brick and Tile works” as can be seen from an advert in the Bolton
Chronicle on the 19th February 1849 which read:
114
At one time there was, I understand, a cottage (illustrated above) near
to the brickwork
known as the
“Hole Bottom
Bungalow”. The
bungalow was
latterly used as a
Scout Hut until
some point in the
1960’s when it
was demolished. The photo is merely a scan of a photocopy of the
original photograph and I have no further information on the subject
– although I presume this is a property which was marked as “Winter
Hill House” on some maps produced around 1950.
Five Houses.
The earliest mention I can find of Five Houses is in connection with
the 1838 murder of George Henderson (see an earlier article). Old
maps indicate that this was a row of five houses as the name implies.
One of these properties was used as an “ale house” and it was at this
house that the murdered man, the travelling salesman George
Henderson, used to meet his fellow salesman Benjamin Birrell every
other Friday for a drink at 11.am. After Henderson was shot he was
carried down to Five Houses where he was seen by a doctor but he
later died. The alleged killer, a James Whittle, miner, also lived at
Five Houses.
Looking at the 1881 Census it is noted that two families lived in the
properties at that time:
115
Fred Thompson U 19 M Rainow Cheshire Terra Cotta
works
Samuel Thompson U 16 M Rainow, Cheshire Terra Cotta
works
Fanny Thompson 11 F Rainow Cheshire
Sarah A Thompson 9 F Horwich, Lancs Scholar
Frank Thompson 8 M Horwich, Lancs Scholar
Ada Thompson 6 F Horwich, Lancs Scholar
George Wilkinson 11months M Bolton, Lancs Boarder
116
The photo above shows all that is now left of the Hole
Bottom Brickworks.
117
TWO LADS HILL.
In between Rivington Pike and the road to the TV mast lies a small
hill with an obvious cairn on top of it. This is “Two Lads”, or “Twa
Lads” as it has sometimes been called in the past (or still seems to be
called this by some with a strong local accent). There are several
major routes used to get to the top of the hill, two from the TV mast
road and the other starting next to Sportsman’s Cottage on George’s
Lane.
There are many conflicting stories about the history of Two Lads and
how it got its name. One tale has it that the cairn (an earlier one, not
the present one) was built in remembrance of two boys who were lost
in a snow storm some 400 years ago “their rigid bodies discovered
frozen to each other in a final vain attempt for warmth". The other
tale goes back a lot earlier to Saxon times (the name Rivington is
believed to be of Saxon origin derived from “The Town of the
Ravens”) when there was some sort of encampment on Two Lads. It
is said that the two sons of a local Saxon “king” had the monument
built for the funeral of their father. As T Morris in the first issue of
the “Rivington Review” pointed out, the latter theory for the name is
quite credible, as Saxon funerals tended to be on higher ground
where this was possible.
Just to confuse the issue, there is yet a third tradition of the story
which has it that the two lads who perished in the snow were orphans
of a Saxon King who was himself killed in battle. Another writer has
suggested that the name Wilders Moor derives from the fact that the
“two lads” became “wildered” (bewildered) or lost on the moor.
Gladys Sellers in her book “Walks on the West Pennine Moors” says
that “Two Lads Moor” used to have two Bronze Age burial mounds
close to the track and not far from the top. In fact they gave the moor
its name. They were excavated long ago and no records of their
contents were ever made. Not even their sites can be seen today”
Anyone any other theories to add? We’ll never know the truth but
what a fascinating story - whichever of them might be true.
The present cairns on top of the hill are not the original ones. These
were reputed to have been located in a slightly different spot but no
remains of them now exist.
The hill is part encircled by a ditch. Some folk claim this was once
part of the hills ancient defences, but others tell me this is a modern
development, and is purely to do with water drainage. Still others say
it’s a mixture of the two.
119
In the late 80’s there was a local “storm” in the Bolton Evening
News both in articles and especially on the letters pages. Over the
years the Two Lads cairn had virtually vanished and was in ruins. In
1988 a “mystery man” started to rebuild the cairn ( I have since
learned that the “mystery man” was David A Owen!). This task was
then taken over by amateur historian Robin Smith who took over the
task of restoring the monument to its original glory and he added a
further four feet to the structure both by adding to it in height as well
as clearing away rubble from the base.
During the digging he found the remains of old pots, jars, pieces of
leather and clay smoking pipes he believed could date back one or
two centuries. His most amazing discovery came when he dug to the
bottom of the cairn and hit solid stone. He believed this could be the
top of another ancient construction, adding weight to many historians
view that the cairn marks the site of a Bronze or Iron Age fortress.
One reason for the council pulling it down is a bit rich – it is too big!
A sketch of Two Lads was drawn by Albison of Bolton 200 years
ago which clearly showed that even in those days it was about eight
feet high and thirteen feet in diameter!
120
Springs and Dingle Reservoirs
Although this book was only intended to cover the main area of
Winter Hill, as the Springs and Dingle reservoirs take all their water
from the north-eastern flanks of the hill, it was felt worthy of
inclusion. The reservoirs lie next to the A657 on Belmont road
between Bolton and Belmont. The two reservoirs lie next to each
other with Dingle being a little lower and near to Bolton. Springs
holds 134 million gallons and has a maximum depth of 48 feet whilst
Dingle can contain 79 million gallons and is 30 feet deep. The total
length of the embankments of both reservoirs is over three quarters
of a mile in length, quite an undertaking for when they were
constructed in the early 1800’s.
Springs reservoir takes its name from the source of its water, from
the springs on Daddy Meadows and was Bolton’s first major
reservoir supplying water to the town. Dingle reservoir takes its
name from Shaly Dingle where the stream was diverted in order to
supply the water to the new reservoir.
The major water supply for Springs reservoir comes from a man
made well on Daddy Meadows. A friend once commented that at one
121
time he had come across an old map which indicated that in this area
there were “wind pumps”. I have never seen a copy of this map. He
went on to explain that in the 1960’s he had a vague recollection of
seeing old metal “mast type” structure (old USA style wind pump
perhaps) in the area. Whilst looking through some photo’s lent to me
by to this person, I found the photograph shown below (I think it
came from an old Bolton Waterworks publication). When checking
on a 1947 Waterworks plan I note that “Springs Well” is the direct
feed point for Springs reservoir – along with “Daddy Meadows
Springs”. The date of the photo is unknown.
122
123
More Winter Hill Mining Remains.
Since writing volume 1 of this book, I have received many enquiries
about the coal mine’s and tunnels under Winter Hill. A large number
of people have asked “Are there any other mining remains other than
the things you have written about”. A very difficult question to
answer! As explained earlier, it would be foolish to fully describe
ALL details of mines under Winter Hill because this would merely
encourage every adventurous minded person in the area to descend
on them and to explore them. I am however tempted to give details
of a few other finds in the area just to educate people as to what is
there. So here goes. I’ll give a few more brief descriptions of other
interesting things to see – but please don’t pester me via email for
any EXACT details other than what is written below. All workings
mentioned below are either fully sealed up, have a blockage near to
the entrance (rockfall, roof collapse etc) or have been filled in by the
explorers after finding nothing of interest.
Apart from the main Montcliffe Mine and the associated Margery
Drift, there is another rather odd mine in the same general area.
Entrance to this mine was effected by squeezing through a small hole
at the top of a wall and for this reason (and because it was VERY
wet) I declined to enter and so my description is merely what I have
been told. I nearly always decline to physically explore tunnels these
days!
124
Dropping through the hole you enter a concrete roofed flooded area
with man made stone walls and after a few yards there is a passage
on the right hand side, the tunnel straight ahead being chest deep in
water. The RH tunnel goes nowhere. Following the main tunnel, the
water shallows and eventually becomes reasonably dry underfoot.
I am told that parts of this mine are somewhat “cave like” with a
running stream in one section which heads off downhill.
Wilderswood area.
There are at least two old tunnels in this area which can be clearly
seen by any passing walker so I am giving away no secrets. Both are
a waste of time exploring internally for they are both totally blocked
after a few yards with major roof falls – and I mean “major”!
Taking the path from Ormston’s farm (from the bottom of Ormston
Lane) that heads towards the bottom end of Wilderswood, you pass
over a bridge spanning the stream. Look over the upstream parapet
and on the right hand bank you will be able to see the entrance to a
125
small tunnel. This is blocked only a few yards in and any attempt to
excavate would probably collapse the roadway that passes over it.
Nothing is known about this tunnel and I have seen no maps or charts
relating to any underground workings under Wilderswood.
Carry on up the path and after 100 yards or so, pass through the hole
in the right hand wall (where a “cabin” once stood, reputedly to
record the amounts of coal coming out of the local workings) and go
up the steps to the footpath. After a few yards drop down to stream
level and head upstream and soon you will find another tunnel
entrance. This one is strange and nobody has so far been able to
explain its purpose. The size of the tunnel indicates a fairly major
mine entrance, but in order to enter it, you first of all have to drop
down into a sort of well about 3 feet deep. Whether this “well” is a
later development is not known, but for this to be any sort of working
mine entrance, there should not be a well or wall there which would
have prevented any easy coal extraction from the mine. Yet another
of this areas mysteries! This tunnel is also blocked after a few yards
and the site of the collapse can be seen from the banking higher up
the slope.
There are other suspected mine workings in the area but all are either
totally sealed, collapsed, or can no longer be found despite being
marked on early maps. In a later volume I’ll try to get round to
giving a step by step guide to this general area so to make a visit here
more interesting.
128
On Wednesday afternoon a flurry of excitement was caused by the
discovery of a squarely cut piece of wood (birch) lying on the last
layer of turf at a depth of 3 feet from the surface and 13 feet from
the centre of the mound. The wood was very soft and wet and to
prevent it drying out and crumbling after measuring, it was covered
with a wet sack. The stick was 2 foot 2 inches long by 2 inches wide
and almost one inch thick. I suggested to Mr Rosser that perhaps it
had been used as a measuring stick. Later two samples about 3 inches
long were taken for tests. I was promised one of these at some future
date with a report.
We had photographed and measured Noon Hill two years ago and I
had taken Dr Bullock and a small party there whilst we were
working on Winter Hill. Dr Bullock gave the opinion that it had been
dug. I visited Noon Hill on the Wednesday of the second week of the
excavation and found a south-eastern quadrant excavated to the inner
wall. In the south-eastern quadrant the inner wall had been
completely taken out and evidence of three burial found there. One
had a shattered urn but only a small heap of burnt bones were found
to mark the other two.
Two tanged and barbed flint arrowheads were unearthed and a small
flint knife blade with one edge fine toothed like a saw and the other a
straight sharpened edge. All probably votive from the burials. The
bones had apparently been broken up to go into the urns, and some of
129
these were later found to be a child’s. The shattered urn of a dirty
yellow colour has now been rebuilt and is on exhibition at Bolton
Museum (it is now no longer exhibited but is held in the museum
storage area). The excavation showed an outer circle formed of a
double ring of large stones, this circle is about 52 feet in diameter, an
inner wall of smaller stones, mostly boulders, was strengthened by
several buttress stones. The wall is three feet high and forms a ring
33 feet in diameter, the burials were found built into this wall.
The filling of this mound was much darker than that on Winter Hill,
more loam and less clay so the turf lines were not so plain. The urn is
10 inches in height, 9 inches in largest diameter, base 4 inches
diameter and a simple design of straight lines covers the top half. The
excavation was stopped soon after my visit to be resumed next
summer under C.B.A. direction.
Two Lads is a hill 1275 feet above sea level and almost a mile south
east from Rivington Pike. On the summit is a large pile of stones and
between the summit and the 1150 feet contour there are 1 mile &
1500 yards of earthworks. In places these have been altered and
adapted for water conservancy purposes but sufficient can be seen to
lead one to believe that they constituted a breastwork and trench
system of defences. The cairn on the summit has been built from two
cairns, and a surrounding wall around the year 1800 by a local lord
of the manor so that it could be discerned from his residence. The
famous antiquary Durning Rasbotham visited this hill in 1776 and
our reconstruction is from his description. The hill has been a prolific
source of flint finds for a long time. I cannot find any mention of an
excavation here but I hope to take a Yorkshire Archaeologist who
has had experience on Pennine Sites over the hill.
John Rawlinson.
Chorley and District Archaeological Society Bulletin.
An unexplained mystery.
Since the writing of Volume 1 of this scrapbook, I have received a
number of e-mails from various people around the world who have
all added a little bit to my knowledge of Winter Hill. One such
person lived for a period at Sportsman’s Cottage in the mid 1950’s
130
and I repeat below exactly what that person wrote because not only is
it a fascinating story, but I also wonder if anyone has had any other
“strange” experiences either on Winter Hill or on the nearby moors.
Any similar information received will be most welcome for us all to
share (e-mail me at d.lane@btinternet.com ).
“I would like to tell you something that happened on the moors one
night. My Grandad was a no-nonsense man who had been a
policeman in Liverpool for many years before his retirement to
Rivington. He was not a fanciful man nor a liar. I was staying with
them , as usual, and when I got up this particular morning I knew
something was wrong....my Nan packed my stuff and some for her
and Grandad and took me home to Liverpool.......they never went
back to Rivington, to Sportsmans Cottage !! It was not until many
years later that I found out what made them abandon their home
overnight.
My Grandad had got up in the night to use the toilet and, as you
would, had looked out of the window over the black moors. He saw
something out on the moors that made him tell my Nan he wouldn’t
spend another night there and they came to stay with us until they
could find somewhere to live. They never went back there to stay,
only to pack up and move out.
My Grandad would never tell anyone what he saw, not even my Nan,
and the secret died with him. All I know is that it scared him to death
and made him move out straight away. I missed Rivington a lot. Do
you know of anything that my Grandad could have seen? Are there
any tales of strange things up there? I have wondered about it all my
life and if anyone else has ever seen anything that affected them” .
131
Another “ghostly” occurrence in the vicinity.
Although not strictly on Winter Hill, Anderton is near enough to the
base of the hill to include the following snippets! They are taken
from the Bolton Evening News dated December 4th 1982 and from a
letter written in the same newspaper on Thursday the 23rd December
1982.
Headless Cross is 200 yards from the pub and there have been many
reports of a monk crossing the road. The sightings are based on an
age-old story about Father Bennett who was head of Lady Chapel –
132
now covered by Lower Rivington reservoir. During the Reformation
Father Bennett, fearing that valuables in the chapel would be
plundered, decided to hide them. He entered a tunnel that was
supposed to lead to the chapel and was never seen again.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
My daughter Tracy, who was then eight, saw her in May 1978. The
“lady” was standing in the centre of a small stone hump backed
bridge in Grimeford Lane, leading from near the Millstone to the A6
at Blackrod. We had been to the Millstone with my parents and two
children and were taking my parent’s home to Blackrod at the time
she was sighted. It was about 10 o’clock on a lovely summer night as
we were driving down the Lane.
No one else in the car saw her except Tracy insisted she was there
and started to describe her in great detail. At this a cold shiver ran
down my spine as I remembered my parents telling me of a ghost that
used to haunt the lane when I was a child. She said she was rather
tall and seemed old but she did not see her features clearly. She also
wanted to know what a lady was doing down a lonely lane on her
133
own at that time of night. She said that the dress was so long that “I
thought she’d been to a party”.
Later I started to draw pictures of what she said she had seen and,
after drawing lots of different headwear, the thing she wore on her
head turned out to be a barreta, the small four cornered cap that
priests wear. Tracey has maintained all along that what she saw was
a lady but when the Pope visited Britain in May and she saw a full
length shot of him on television she said “that lady” was wearing
exactly the same clothes but they were grey.
Last year we got a book from the library about Rivington and the
story of Father Bennett was in it. We think this is what Tracy saw as
he used to travel round from village to village blessing the people.
We were also told by someone that priests around those times used to
stand at the crossing of a ford and bless the travellers as they went
by. The bridge where Tracy saw the ghost was across a small stream
which probably many years ago could have been the crossing of a
ford.
The horses and carriage were turned with great difficulty and taken
home another way. Both the coachman and servants averred that the
road was haunted and would not travel the road again after dark.
134
Aeroplane Crashes on and around Winter Hill
There have been a remarkably large number of plane crashes either
on Winter Hill itself or in the surrounding area. Various people have
compiled lists of these crashes and more information has come to
light following articles in the Bolton Evening News. Unfortunately I
can’t give credit to the people who have provided this information
for all I have are unsigned sheets of paper with the information on
them. Below is a list of the crashes I am aware of:
When the Silver City Airlines plane took off from Ronaldsway all
was in order. Charlie Sierra, flew over the Irish Sea at 1,500 feet,
with the crew expecting a lift in altitude when they reached the
136
Lancashire coast. It never came and Captain Edward Cairns was
asked if he could maintain the same height by Air Traffic Control at
Preston. He agreed, and was told by his First Officer William
Howarth that the planes radar compass was tuned to the beacon at
Wigan. What the crew did not realise was that through an elementary
mistake they had picked up the wrong beacon call sign. Instead of
being on course for Wigan – call sign MYK, the ill-fated plane was
heading for MYL – the Oldham beacon.
A total of 35 people lost their lives in the crash and there were seven
survivors including the crew. The planes First Officer staggered the
350 yards from the scene of the crash to the Winter Hill ITA
transmitter to raise the alarm. The aircraft had broken into three
pieces, with only the tail recognisable as part of a plane
137
The commemorative plaque on the wall of the TV station.
138
Access to the Moors.
All high moorland should be treated with respect, and Winter Hill is
no exception. Whilst researching material for this scrapbook, I have
come across numerous references of people who have had their lives
at risk purely because they were “there”. The bulk of the cases
involve broken or twisted limbs or joints but a large number are due
mainly to either the extreme weather or the pure physical conditions
which exist at times and in certain places on the Hill.
It is not always the weather or broken bones that can cause problems.
In some isolated parts of the Hill the ground underfoot is not always
141
as it seems! There are boggy areas and many people who love to get
away from the recognised tracks have tales to tell …. me included! I
am not referring to merely getting feet wet in a bog. Frequently one
can go in up to the thighs. An article in the Bolton Evening News on
Monday January 5th 1987 illustrates the dangers:
Speaking for the first time about his ordeal Mr Gill said “I would
like to thank the teenager who saw me and the police. I apologise for
any trouble I have caused. I was up to my waist in the bog and was
stuck completely. I struggled for hours to get out. I shouted for help
but it was useless at that time of night and in a gale. When I got out
of the bog by pulling at tufts of grass, I was exhausted and could not
feel my hands or feet. I thought I was going to die. The bog was like
quicksand – I was sinking fast the more I struggled”
Mr Gill, set out for a walk at 8.45pm but was found close to death
nearly five hours later. He said “I remember the police finding me
and the next thing I woke up in hospital and was being brought
round with tea and an injection. I had suffered severe hypothermia”
142
the possible dangers and we dress and equip ourselves to minimise
the risks.
DO take care on Winter Hill ….. but enjoy it! Remember. It CAN
bite!
143
A photo taken in the 1940s or 1950’s showing a tank lying alongside
the Belmont to Rivington Road. People used to take their children to
the moors "“to see the tank”, which had been used as target practice
during the late war.
This photo is perhaps one of the most famous of all the “sightings” as
it was taken in 1996 by a professional photographer who spotted the
Another UFO “incident” occurred on the hill in 1999 which has been
widely publicised on the Internet:
145
(http://www.maxpages.com/mapit/THE_WINTER_HILL_MIB_CA
SE). The excellent Winter Hill website at:
http://www.winterhill.org/ufos.htm carries an article on the 1999
subject which describes the claims better than I could ever do and is
reproduced below.
The case of the "Winter Hill MIB UFO" sighting is one of the great
mysteries of Winter Hill. In 1999, a farm worker by the name of
Murphy spotted a strange object hanging over his cattle field. When
he came out to investigate, the object seemed to move away towards
Preston. So odd was the sighting that Mr. Murphy decided to
telephone the police and report the incident.
He then returned to the field to check on the cattle, only to find the
object return and hover over the area for several more minutes. He
became very distressed and, the story goes, called the number for
MAPIT (the Manchester Aerial Phenomena Investigation Team) -
apparently provided by the police. He left a disturbing message
stating that he had witnessed a UFO and was scared.
146
I’m afraid I have no real views on the subject of any Winter Hill
sightings only to comment that after a decade of flying a microlight
around Winter Hill in all weathers and at all times of day I have
never spotted a thing that could not be fully explained. Whilst
walking on the hill however, I HAVE spotted a number of people
who obviously come from another planet.
You can spot these “aliens” all over the place, causing damage,
dropping litter, causing general problems for the more normal
inhabitants of the area. There must be an invasion of aliens on the
Easter weekends!
______________________________________________________
Richard Brownlow lived at Rock Haven until his death in 1899 but in
his latter years he became something of a recluse rarely appearing in
147
public and suffering from a “terrible disease” which involved some
form of facial disfigurement. He is reputed to have worn a mask to
hide his illness on occasions and local people thought he was
suffering from leprosy - but in fact he seems to have had a severe
case of eczema.
The whole site was planted with trees and although I am no great
lover of “forestry-type” plantations, a walk through parts of the
woodland is a delight today. When walking in the woods one often
comes across the remains of parts of the castle along with small
quarries where the stones were obtained for the original building. In
M D Smith’s book “About Horwich” he mentions that after the
demolition, some of the stonework was used “to build a bungalow in
Lytham whilst the remainder was carried as ballast in grain ships
travelling to America”. Fascinating!
148
mining remains, but these have all been totally sealed, some with
brickwork and others with cement blocks. A shaft in the area known
as Cabin Pit still exists but again, this is sealed. Don’t bother
searching for it, it is well secured and I can assure readers that there
is nothing of interest down it!!
Carry on up the track. On the left hand side is another track. On the
small hill in between the two tracks is another old pit shaft, now
completely filled in. Nearby are the huge blocks of stone used as
engine beds and supports for the machinery involved in winding the
coal up the shaft. The counterbalance (a large circular stone with a
central hole) for the pit head gear now stands in Ormstons farmyard.
The remains of Holden’s Bleachworks can be found just to the north
west of the pit shaft. Return to the main track in the bottom of the
clough.
Go uphill on the main path. Where the path goes to the right through
the gateposts, go straight on up the smaller path (i.e. leaving the main
track) for a short distance. On the right hand side of the path you will
see a large diameter metal pipe sticking out of the ground. This was
an air vent to the mines below. Although clearly marked on mining
maps, the base of this pipe has never been found (it is a bit of a maze
underground so it is no surprise that the bottom of the pipe has not
been found – yet!). Carry on up the path.
There is a prominent large holly tree on the left hand side of the
track. Behind the tree lies the remains of Higher Meadows Farm, the
foundations of which are still visible in the undergrowth. Careful
searching will reveal half of what appears to be the bottom section of
an old grinding wheel.
Opposite the holly tree but down in the bottom of the clough, is a
magnificent clump of wild iris growing in the waterlogged ground, a
beautiful sight when in full flower. “Somewhere” in the clough is the
entrance to an old mine marked as “old level” on old maps. Despite
frequent and extensive searches, this tunnel entrance has never been
found despite its map location.
Carry on up the path until you reach another main track which leads
up to Georges Lane. On the left hand side of this track, beneath
149
Georges Lane are two “valleys” which look very artificial and are
repeated many times on this hillside if one headed towards the Pike.
These are thought to be old surface workings for either coal or clay
although no proof of this has yet been found. This hillside is a
magnet for whimberry pickers every autumn!
Rivington Pike and Winter Hill have been used as beacon sites for
hundreds of years. Perhaps the most memorable beacon at these sites
was in 1981 at the time of the wedding of Charles and Diana. A
chain of beacons was planned around the country
151
On the night of the beacon, the two-mile uphill track from Horwich
to the Trig point on Winter Hill (where the bonfire was located) was
jammed with revellers who slogged to the top of the hill for the
official lighting time of 10.19pm. The beacon was “officially” lit by
10 year old spina bifada sufferer Janet Lomax of Hillfield Drive,
Bolton. She was given VIP treatment and driven through the crowds
of walkers to the site along with the mayors and mayoresses from
surrounding towns. Many people arrived late – or even missed the
lighting of the fire as it had been wrongly announced in the Press,
that it was at Rivington Pike! This caused total chaos on the
Rivington/Belmont road which was blocked till the early hours by
trapped vehicles.
It was estimated that over 5,000 people made it to the top of the hill
in time to see its lighting only a few hundred yards from the TV
mast. The sight of the flames ended a nail-biting 24 hours for the
152
beacon builder Peter Veevers and his helpers who camped out on the
moor to ensure there was no premature lighting. The team had
brought wood up the hill twice every week over a two-month period
to prepare for the bonfire.
It was an enjoyable and memorable occasion for all those who were
there.
There are the commercial flights that pass high over Winter Hill. The
LOWEST height they are allowed to fly over the Hill is 3,500 feet.
Smaller general aviation aircraft (such as those from Barton
Aerodrome) have to keep BELOW this height and can often be seen
in the area along with microlights and the occasional powered
paraglider. In theory, these aircraft must remain above 800 feet from
the ground.
Flying from the hill itself are hang gliders and paragliders, usually on
days when the wind is in a northerly direction and not too windy and
they fly on the northern side of the hill, overlooking the
Rivington/Belmont road. On a busy weekend in summer I have seen
up to 40 people flying at the site and if the thermals are good an
awful lot of them seem to fly in close proximity to each other vying
for the best updraughts! Most of the pilots belong to local hang or
paragliding clubs with details easily found on the Internet via a
search engine.
153
Fireclay on (and under) Winter Hill.
In earlier volumes, mention has been made of fireclay (sometimes
known as Seat-earth) being found below (and sometimes in a tiny
layer above) coal seams. This material is especially relevant as in
earlier days, it played a considerable role in the industries and
ventures that sprung up on and around Winter Hill.
Fireclay is a grey muddy clay. It usually lies below most coal seams
and on Winter Hill many of the mining ventures were specifically for
fireclay - with coal being almost a by-product. Coal was formed by
compression of decaying vegetation existing in swamp-like areas.
The fireclay represents the sediment or soil in which the swamp
vegetation grew.
You can still find the remains of some of the brickworks on the Hill,
with perhaps the one at Hole Bottom being the most easily
accessible. Firebricks still remain there, all made from the local clay.
An excellent example of locally made firebricks can found right at
the summit of Winter Hill where a number are stacked next to - and
on top of - the boundary wall adjacent to the most southerly radio
mast. A photo of the wall can be seen on the next page.
In several places on the Hill, the fireclay can be seen on the surface.
The best example I have recently seen, is in a small "shakehole"
(formed by the collapse of an underground adit tunnel) about 300
yards to the rear of Sportsmans cottage and around 50 yards from the
boundary wall on the top bank of the nearby stream. The grey clay
can be found on the sides of the hole and can be taken home,
moulded and baked. The collapsed adit tunnel used to exit on the on
the banks of the nearby stream but is now totally filled in and
covered in vegetation. It is clearly marked on mine abandonment
plans.
All of the coal seams on Winter Hill are underlain with a seam of
fireclay.
155
Firebricks near to the most southerly radio mast on top of Winter
Hill.
The layer of grey fireclay can be clearly seen below the coal seam.
This picture was taken under the summit of Winter Hill fairly close to
156
the moorland road leading to the TV mast. This tunnel is now not
accessible and this may be the last picture you ever see of it.
The flowers appear between late May and early July ….. and if you
often walk on the very top of Winter Hill I'm willing to bet that at
sometime or another you'll have passed within 10 foot of them!
157
When you've found the cranberries, then you can start looking for the
Cloud Berries!
If you can't find the cranberries OR the Cloud Berries, then there are
simply acres of whimberries for you to pick! Bon Appetit.
Probably one of the most ignored organisms on Winter Hill are the
lichens in all its different guises. The grasses, mosses, shrubs and
trees are all too obvious to most observers, but somehow the lichens
get overlooked or ignored by most folk interested in the plant life of
the area. You tend to only take note of them, once they've been
pointed out.
Lichens can exist in the most unlikely places even in spots where no
other plant life grows - such as directly on the surface of rocks or
bricks. They are complex plants rather than being simple as most
people imagine, and are something of a mini ecosystem consisting of
at least two life-forms, a fungus and a photosynthetic partner which
is usually an algae (but can be others things as well). Lichens can
exist in extreme environments and often grow under conditions that
other plant life cannot tolerate.
Forms of the "reindeer moss" types of lichens, "pixie cup" lichens are
all to be found on top of the Hill. Perhaps the most colourful variety
to search for is the "British soldier", a bright red tipped member of
the "cladonia" family which is easily spotted from June onwards on
Winter Hill. All of these types of lichens can be found within 100
yards of the Hole Bottom brickworks. In this vicinity I have also
spotted a lichen I have never ever seen anywhere else in the area, it
grows on one of the bricks which once formed the inside of one of
the brick kilns, a sort of melted looking stone.
If anyone can identify this lichen for me I'd love to hear from you!
159
Two photo's of "British Soldier" types of lichen - fairly common in
the Hole Bottom area. The name originated with the red caps worn
by British soldiers in earlier centuries. The plants red caps are
actually the sexual fruiting structure of the lichen, the apothecia.
British soldiers are members of the "Cladonia" family of lichens.
160
A lichen
similar to
those found
on Winter
Hill -
although the
maximum
size I have
ever found
right at the
top is about
1 inch in
size. The
usual variety
found on
Winter Hill is "Cladonia Arbuscula".
161
One of the commonest lichens growing on the lower flanks of Winter
Hill, Hypogymnia Physodes, usually on tree bark.
Sheep are both a blessing and a curse on Winter Hill. They are a
blessing because they look nice, they sound nice, they eat what's left
of my butties to save me taking them home and most importantly,
they provide a livelihood for local farmers. They are a curse because
they seem to eat everything and the Hill looks as it does now, mainly
because of the sheep. Unless an area is fenced off, no trees or shrubs
grow, they are quickly devoured. Where sheep are present, the
vegetation is usually very short and certain plant species are unable
to survive the continuous close grazing. The presence of sheep
maintains the generally deforested top of Winter Hill.
162
There are three main varieties of sheep grazing on Winter Hill.
Also seen on the Hill is the Swaledale, dark upper face with grey
muzzle and a tuft of wool on the forehead. Both sexes are horned. It
is found in the fells,
moorlands and high
ground of the six
counties of
Northern England
and it lives easily in
exposed places.
Many Swaledale
ewes are used for
breeding the very
popular Mules, and
the finer quality
wool from this
breed of sheep (the Swaledales that is!) is used for the manufacture
of tweeds, rug wool and some of the thicker hand-knitting wools.
Much of the wool is of coarse quality but this is ideal for the making
of carpets.
163
The final variety found on the Hill is the Cheviot.
The Cheviot is distinguishable by its erect ears, white face and legs
with a ruff of wool behind the ears. There is no wool on the face or
legs below the knee or hock. The males are occasionally horned. The
wool quality varies from fairly course to quite fine and is used for
manufacture into clothing - ranging from rugged sportswear to
lighter town suitings. Cheviot wool is also used for making blankets,
rugs and hosiery yarns.
You need never again wonder what type the sheep are on Winter
Hill! However, just to confuse you, the breeds listed are only those
you will find on the Hill itself - in the fields on the lower flanks of
the Hill you will also find Mules, Dalesbred and Lonks plus a few
other crossbreed varieties.
The sheep on the upper parts of the hill are free to roam and are
brought back down the hill several times a year for mating (known as
"tupping") usually around October/early November, lambing around
April and for clipping in June/July. They may also be brought off the
hill for dipping and worming although some farms dip the flock at
164
clipping time, whilst others delay the dipping for a month or so until
a little fleece has re-grown.
165
More ancient remains from Winter Hill.
In an earlier volume I mentioned that someone had written to me
saying that some years ago they had found a flint spear or axe in the
vicinity of the Winter Hill Burial Mound. Thanks for the info John
McDonald. Several weeks after receiving the information - and after
the last volume had been finished a computer scan of the object
turned up in my mailbox. Wow ….. what a magnificent find.
This is a five and a half inch long axe head, in what looks like
excellent condition. Why is it that everyone else seems to find flint
chippings, flint arrowheads, flint axes etc on Winter Hill … except
me! Thanks for the excellent photograph John, you lucky devil!
There are by the way, several well known sites (at least they are well
known within archaeological circles) on Winter Hill where flint
chippings have been found in some quantities. These would be areas
where someone once sat whilst working on a block of flint producing
arrowheads, spears, scrapers etc. These sites are marked on copies of
a few privately produced maps. I have still found nothing! Any
additional photo's of other peoples "finds" would be appreciated.
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Gritstone - what is it - and how was it
formed.
When you look at rocks on the summit of Winter Hill, they all look
the same, a dark coloured, rough textured, gritty or sandy rock. The
term "grit" is a useful - if non-scientific" - term for a course
sandstone. There are of course other types of rock around, but by far
the most predominant one is the substance some people call
"millstone grit". The term "millstone grit" does in fact (in geology)
refer to a whole "series" of massive and different layers of
sandstone's, grits, conglomerates and shales. The type of rock - or the
"species" of gritstone - you find on top of Winter Hill is known as
"Rough Rock", a coarsely grained stone containing large amounts of
feldspar and is sparsely pebbly. Lower down the hill you will find a
different type of Gritstone…. the "Haslingden Flags".
The rocks of the area were formed during the Carboniferous period
(especially during the Namurian phase of that era), that is somewhere
around 290 to 363 million years ago. How do we know this age? We
know it by the study of a mixture of geological evidence, the study of
the stratigraphic structures, the fossil remains, the study of the
radioactive decay rates of rocks and finally by the modern technique
of paleomagnetic studies.
Park your car in the upper car park at Lower House car park (that's
the one below the Pigeon Tower at the end of the road leading from
Rivington Road). Take the footpath going north from the car park
and on the right hand side of the path, drop into the small dry valley.
After a few minutes walking, you'll spot some small gritstone or
sandstone/mudstone outcrops on your right hand side. Take a look at
the rocks. The first thing you'll notice is that the rocks appear to be
layered horizontal beds of sediment. This indicates repeated "floods"
of varying strengths over a period of time, maybe years - or even
centuries, maybe millennia. Different floods deposited different sizes
of granules and these can all be seen in the revealed strata. In this
particular example, the flows seem to have been of different
strengths at different times. Some strata contain large rounded rocks
amongst the small grains, other layers are totally graded fine
granules. Some layers are very thin, some are much thicker. Perhaps
each "layer" represents a major "flood" each year … your guess is as
good as mine as to what the layers actually represent.
How did the granules turn into "rocks"? The various layers of silt and
granules were endlessly covered by yet more layers. As they became
thicker and thicker, the pressure on them increased, and they became
compressed. There were still spaces between the grains or granules.
These spaces were however often filled with moisture or water and
this, combined with the increased pressure and its associated heat,
caused chemical changes in some of the substances within the
sediment. The quartz grains remained the same, but if there was any
CaCO3, Fe(OH)3 or SiO2 present, then the warmth and the pressure
168
would precipitate these chemicals and "glue" the deposits together.
That is how the "rock" was formed - through compression, water,
heat and chemical action. The major "cement" is silica (a form of
quartz), others "cements" include calcite (only recognisable with a
chemical test) and iron compounds (shown by their rusty red colour).
The strength of the "cement" governs how easily grains may be
broken away from the rock. Most Winter Hill cements are strong!
Oh one other thing. Right now, the UK lies at about 53 degrees north
of the equator. When our carboniferous and millstone grit series of
rocks was being formed, our country lay ON the equator, Winter
"Hill" would have been really hot! Over the period since then, plate
techtonic movements have moved our Hill (and most of Europe)
about 5cms a year northwards, until today - when it reached it's
present location.
169
A Victorian engraving of Rivington Pike. The date
is unknown, but it appeared in a book called "England in
the Nineteenth Century" page 280. Note the church with
the small steeple at the left hand of the Pike
170
Another Winter Hill Brickworks.
One of the remote ones is much higher up the hill. To find what
remains of it, go up the moorland road from Montcliff towards the
TV mast. A few hundred yards before reaching the TV station you
will spot a wire fenced off area on the left hand side of the road (this
used to be the site of a small wooden hut where the TV station
employees used to move to in inclement weather many years ago).
Take the track behind the fenced off area, cross over the battered
wooden bridge across the ditch and head straight ahead to the brow
of the hill. When you get there, look down and you will spot the
mounds of the brickwork below. It is easily recognised as the
vegetation of the site is different from the surrounding moor.
The view of the brickwork's from half way down the hill. There is no
sign of any path or track leading to the site.
171
Taking a look around the site gives a few clues to exactly what may
have been there years ago. There are two mounds on the site, both
covered in vegetation. Whether these are both the remains of brick
kilns or whether the site had only one kiln plus one building cannot
be determined without considerable digging. The smaller mound on
the left of the picture was almost certainly a kiln for traces of fused
brick (those forming the inside of the kiln) can be spotted nearby.
There are also two spits of raised earth heading downhill from this
mound which I had long suspected as being where the kiln ash and
cinders were tipped. On my latest visit to the site a large rabbit/fox or
other large animal had very kindly dug a hole into the side of these
raised areas exposing solid ash, clinker and cinders. My theory was
proved right without having to do any digging around.
It seems from looking at the site, that the clay was obtained from the
immediate area surrounding the kilns and in several places the rather
poor clay is exposed. I can find no traces of any underground
entrances although from the surface collapses I suspect that some of
the clay may have been taken from just beneath the surface. I have
not checked the geology maps for this exact site but there were
surface coal outcrops in this vicinity so the brickwork would have its
own clay and coal almost on its doorstep this probably being the
reason for its isolated position.
172
The biggest mound on the site, whilst it "may" have been a kiln
shows little real evidence of it so far - despite someone having had a
dig into it at some time (it wasn't me). Without striping some of the
soil and vegetation off it is impossible to guess any more.
Bogs on Winter Hill come in all shapes and sizes. There is the real
muddy bog, the one where one second you're walking on firm ground
then within a split second one foot sinks to the thigh in glutinous
mud which often has a powerfully bad odour as well. This is a
normal bog - a trap for the unwary!
Then we have the other type of bog, the "sitting water" bog. This is a
place which is an obvious bog, a place where you know that you're
going to get your feet wet unless you carefully try to step from one
bit of dry or raised grass to the next. The worst that will happen in
this type of place is that you just could get wet up to mid calf. This
type of bog is also a normal bog!
Whilst you're in the area take a look at the sphagnum mosses. You
can't confuse sphagnum with any other type of moss. They are "mat"
plants the topmost, live part, consisting of rosettes of densely packed
174
branches facing upwards. The "mat" builds on itself, accumulating an
underneath branch depth of several inches or feet, browning and
dying close to the surface, decaying lower down. The only "live" part
of the plant is the green (they can be other colours too) bit at the top,
the dead part of the "stems" are merely used to "wick" up the water
to the living part of the plant.
Sphagnum Cristatum
175
The Coal Mines of Rivington Pike!
In the first part of this Scrapbook, mention was made of two coal
mine shafts to the north of Rivington Pike plus a nearby level - all
now long since filled in and virtually unseen today.
There are however, other coal mining remains nearer to the Pike -
and you can still see the remains!
The photo is a rather poor quality winter aerial view of the area
surrounding Rivington Pike, the Pike being upper centre. On the
right of the picture can be seen mining remains on the right hand
bank of the stream. The "crater" on the right hand side of the road
going up to the Pike at the base of Brown Hill is an old mine shaft.
Just to the right of extreme bottom centre of the photo are what looks
like 3 more pits - but these are in fact the remains of an old
farmhouse!.
Surrounding the Pike is a coal outcrop, an area where the coal seam
emerged at the surface. In the early 1800's (or even earlier) this coal
would have been worked using "bell pits" and it is this type of pit
which is clearly evident on the banks of the stream on the right hand
side of the photo. The dark oblong shape near the pits is the remains
of a stone structure, probably a sheep fold. A further photograph
176
taken at ground level (on the next page) clearly shows the sheepfold
(or whatever it was) with the heavily mined ground at the rear of it.
I have no details whatsoever about the pit shaft visible near to the
road up to the Pike, nor the ones next to George's Lane at the bottom
of the photo.
Just when you thought you'd heard everything there was to know
about Winter Hill ……….. well, now I've found THIS on the UFO
Information web page at:
http://www.ufoinfo.com/news/humanoid1950.shtml
This photo is
said to be taken
on Winter Hill –
but I suspect it is
the Chipmunk
which crashed
on Smithills
Moor.
179
After almost two years of watching my grandchildren learn to ride
there, I can assure you that this is a real friendly place and everyone
seems to be welcome there both adults and children, total beginners
and experienced riders. It's been in existence for over 20 years and
they have over 30 horses. You can take horse riding lessons there or
you can join a "hack" going out in a group into the countryside
surrounding the riding centre. On a clear day the views are superb.
They seem to run rides and courses in just about everything, from
hacks, class lessons, private lessons, stable management lessons,
children's holiday courses, BHS Riding and Road Safety courses and
Stage 1, 2 & 3 career courses. They even cater for children's birthday
parties.
The Riding Centre is open all day, every day and you can book a
lesson on 01204 693323. The emphasis is on enjoyment - whether
you just want to learn to ride or to improve your existing skills.
The one thing that has always struck me about this place is the
friendliness of all who work there - and I take my hat off to the
instructor who teaches my grandchildren, she remains cheerful,
180
offers constant encouragement and praise whatever is happening and
whatever the weather.
stone scraper found in the vicinity of "his" stone rows. The stone was
found by someone else … who unfortunately does not live in the
Bolton area …. So this picture is probably the only record of the item
which will be seen by Boltonians. If YOU have found anything …
send me a picture!
181
A wonderful old painting of Rivington Pike and Two
Lads
182
The "Geo-Caches" of Winter Hill.
What is a Geocache? …… "The basic idea is to have individuals and
organisations set up caches all over the world and share the locations
of these caches on the internet. GPS users can then use the location
co-ordinates to find the caches. Once found, a cache may provide the
visitor with a wide variety of rewards. All the visitor is asked to do is
if they get something they should try to leave something for the
cache". That's the official description as laid out on the official geo-
caching web site at: http://www.geocaching.com/
Almost ALL cache's have a visitors book to sign and when you've
found a cache it is good manners to log on to the
www.geocaching.com web site to leave a message there also. In this
way the person who hid the cache in the first place can get instant
feedback on his computer as to who has visited it.
There are MANY caches both on and around Winter Hill but you'll
have to go to the "Hide and Seek a cache" page on the Geo-caching
web site and have a root around to see what is available. As this is
being written, I can see caches listed on the top of Winter Hill,
Rivington Pike and many more nearby. New one's pop up all the time
so any list given here would soon be out of date.
Take a look for them! It's great fun, a real excuse to get out in the
fresh air and see new places and kids just love it.
183
A documentary film called "Scotsman's Stump" has been
made about the murder of George Henderson on Winter
Hill. Further details can be found at:
http://reelvisionfilms.co.uk/shop.html
185
"In Chorley, we are fortunate to have on our doorstep at Red Moss,
Horwich, (which is adjacent to the Middlebrook/Reebok Shopping
Centre) one of the best studied sites of peat deposition in the whole
of the British Isles. Pollen analysis from Red Moss gives us a picture
of the vegitational history of the area and therefore an understanding
of past climatic changes. Perhaps they can give us a clue to future
developments.
Since the end of the Pliocene, some 2 million years ago, we have had
four ice Ages in the Northern Hemisphere, known as the Gunz,
Mindel, Riss and Wurm, separated by three interglacial periods. Each
glacial period was interrupted a number of times by a period of
ameliorated conditions. The Wurm Ice Age had two such periods of
slight improvement of the climate. We are now in the Flandrian -
either the fourth interglacial or a past glacial period - only time will
tell. This post-glacial period began about 10,000 years ago as the ice
caps melted.
The Red Moss shows six major assemblages of tree pollen after the
improvement from the first tundra type vegetation following the slow
change in the climate and the gradual movement of the ice sheet
north. These are:
186
f. Oak, alder period. About 5,000 before present to the present
day. Elm, lime and ash decline and oak becomes dominant.
There is a marked increase in pollen from plants of open and
disturbed land such as Nettles, Dock, Ribwort Plantain, and
compositae such as Artemesia and Wild Chamomile.
Note that the above dates are derived from radiocarbon dating and
are necessarily approximations.
Man, 10,000 years before the present, was still in the Palaeolithic or
Old Stone Age and had little impact, as a hunter-gatherer, on his
environment. It was only about 5,000 years before present that man
entered his Neolithic stage and slowly introduced farming and stock
rearing. The Bronze Age began roughly 4,000 years before the
present and so, with improved axes, did the felling of trees and the
slow clearance of the forests. This accelerated with the coming of the
Iron Age, about 2,500 years before the present, and the combination
of a slowly increasing human population with increased tree felling
and increased grazing intensity from domestic stock, reduced tree
seedling regeneration, and led to the treeless moors now so familiar
to us".
Robert Yates.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Is there anyone else out there that can throw any light whatsoever on
this tunnel as I have never come across it before. Although I was
aware of the coal mines up on Smithills Moor I've never seen any
187
maps of diagrams of any locations nor have I met anyone who
remembers any open drift entrances.
There are however other coal seams in the locality and several of the
outcrops can be clearly seen on the surface. One to outcrop right next
to the road, can be found in the stream by the side of the Rivington to
Belmont road about 200 yards past the Moses Cocker farmhouse.
The coal seam can be seen jutting out from the bank at water level
about 10 yards from where the stream passes beneath the road. There
are at least two further coal outcrops further up the valley. According
to some geology books there were levels in the stream banks to
extract the coal. These are all part of the Holcombe Brook Coal Seam
which is also known as the Margery Mine.
On Rivington Moor and Smithills Moor, lie the Sand Rock Mine
Coal seams which formed a “double seam”. These seams plus the
associated fireclay were extensively used in the Horwich area in the
stone-ware industry.
There are other coal seams - but they’re so thin they’re not worth
mentioning!
188
The panoramic view below is courtesy and copyright of Jonathan de
Ferranti at: http://www.viewfinderpanoramas.org/
189
190
A view, circa 1905, of George's Lane (as we know it today)
under construction. The view is taken soon after passing
Sportsman's Cottage heading towards Rivington Pike. Note
the "old" moorland road on the left hand side of the
picture.
191
More stone axes!
And yet ANOTHER stone axe has been found in the area to add to
the two already found on Winter Hill. The latest find is shown above
and was found in April 2006 by Ian Harper on the banks of
Anglezarke Reservoir near to the Waterman's Cottage.
which can be seen near the bottom edge. The tiny flint arrowhead
found by myself (and illustrated earlier in this book) was found
within a mile of the axe ....... so who knows what else is lying there
to be found. Needless to say, if you DO make any new finds in the
area PLEASE let me know so that we can ALL share in the history
of our area.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
192
The Horwich Borehole.
Whilst walking around the lower flanks of Winter Hill, especially in
the stream valleys, those of us who like looking at rocks are often
aware that the nature and of the fabric of the rocks changes when we
are heading either up or down the hill. Some rocks are grey and fine
grained, others have a very rough texture and are large grained
Just across the road from the entrance to Curleys Fisheries (near the
bottom of Georges Lane) is a pumping station hidden in the bushes.
Prior to this being built, a borehole was drilled to over 1,100 feet to
test the rock strata and all the different rock layers were identified
and their depths and thicknesses recorded.
193
The “gaps” in the depths given, are composed of mudstones and
shales and do not have any “names”.
ANOTHER small free book about Winter Hill now available on the
Internet …. “Carboniferous Fossils of Winter Hill and surrounding
areas”. To download a copy go to
http://www.daveweb.co.uk/whfossil.htm
194
Has anyone ANY idea what these dates represent? Who might have
engraved them? ANY information would be welcomed!
This book contains the research and information compiled by many people. Below
is a list of those who have contributed to this publication. In every case where I am
aware of the writer, I freely acknowledge use of their work and have mentioned
them below. In those cases where I have been able to contact them I give my
thanks for their permission to use their work. In those cases where I have been
unable to contact the writer (only a couple), I apologise in advance for not
consulting with them. If they would care to contact me I will either add their name
and reference to this list - or even remove their contribution from the book if this is
what they would prefer. As this publication is not “for sale” in any normal fashion,
I hope people will not be too offended if their contribution is not acknowledged
below or if I have not been able to obtain their prior permission.
197
Appendix 2
198
David Holding Murder in the Heather (published in
1991 by The Friends of Smithills Hall)
199
Other Books by Dave Lane - and Mik Rolight (his
“other” writing name).
"The Salt Enthusiasts' Scrapbook"
"Mars Exploration Rover "OPPORTUNITY" Vol 2 2005-2006"
"Mars Exploration Rover "OPPORTUNITY", Vol 1 2003-2004"
“Mars Exploration Rover “OPPORTUNITY”, Vol 3 2007-2008
"Astley Green Colliery"
"Winter Hill Scrapbook"
"Pit Brow Lasses"
"Isn't religion weird? Quotations for Atheists"
"Carboniferous Fossils of Winter Hill & surrounding areas"
"Photographic Catalogue of Ursa Major using the Sloan Digital
Telescope"
"Wet Earth Colliery - the complete guide"
"Wet Earth Colliery - Photographic Memories Volume 1"
“Wet Earth Colliery Scrapbook”
“Wet Earth, Clifton & Kearsley Scrapbook”
“Wet Earth Colliery Bits and Pieces”
"Index of Tudge births, deaths and marriages in the UK Records
Office"
"The Geology of the Scafell Caldera" Not on general Sale.
"Catalogue of Space Objects Vol 1" ..... 3 further volumes are also
available. Not on General Sale
"Photographic Catalogue of Deep Space Objects in Canes Venetici.
Vol 1, the NGC Objects"
"International documents on Israel and Palestine 1915 to 2008"
"Swinton Precinct Youth Club 1979-1982" A collection of
Photographs
"Altricham Ice Rink Vol 1 2008-9" A collection of Photos"
"Altrincham Ice Rink Vol 2 Jan -May 2010"
“Altrinchamn Ice Rink Vol 3 Jun-Dec 2010”
“Altrincham Ice Rink Vol 4 2011”
“Altrincham Ice Rink Vol 5 2011”
"Mount Etna - eruption history & latest research" - Not on General
Sale
"Jules Verne ESA Automated Transport Vehicle to the ISS 2008"
"Volcano's of the World" – 7 Vols Eyjafjallajokull, Iceland
Erta Ale, Ethiopia
Karangetang, Indonesia
Sheveluch, Russia
200
Sakura-Jima, Japan
Fuego, Guatemala
Popocatepeti, Mexico
“Antidote to Zionism” – 5 volumes
“The Palestinian Cartoons of Carlos Latuff 2003-2010”
“Palestinian Graffiti and Cartoons”
“The Gaza Tunnels”
“Dave Lane, Merchant Navy 1963- 1966”
“Quotations for Living”
“Boothstown Youth Club 1982-1993”
“You’ve got one life – now use it!”
“Altrincham Ice Rink (Devonshire Road) Scrapbook”
“Swinton and area old photo’s”
“The Messier objects using the SLOOH Robotic Telescope”
“Islamic State – a brief explanation”
“Boko Haram – a brief explanation”
“The Jet Stream”
“A Very Lucky man”
“The ESA MicroSCOPE Satellite Mission. All you need to know”
“The World Guide to Meteorite Impact Craters on Earth”
201