Monument record 8456/1/5 - Osbourne's Quarry Pit
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Summary
No summary available.
Map
Type and Period (1)
Full Description
{1} Further extensions to the system took place early in the C20th; about 25 acres were offered to Burton Ironstone in 1899, and in 1900 Staveley leased 900 acres of the estate of the Harpur family of Burton Latimer Hall, for 21 years. The former area was probably that south of the lane to Burton Wold, to which a tramway passed under the lane and then over a stream with quarry branches on both sides of the small valley. Quarrying commenced art faces on both sides of the lane bridge shortly after 1900 and continued along the valley sides, in Osborne’s Pit, north of the stream, and in Finedon End Pit to the south. Osbourne’s Pit (sometimes called Limekiln Pit) was closed in 1914 but the others continued to the end. The Finedon End Pit was also called The Wilderness locally; it was continually subject to flooding, and eventually the two small pipes under the embankment that carried the tramway over the stream were ranged on each side of a larger pipe.
<1> Tonks E., 1991, The Ironstone Quarries of The Midlands (History, Operation and Railways): The Kettering Area, p.16-20 (checked) (Book). SNN44039.
Sources/Archives (1)
- <1> SNN44039 Book: Tonks E.. 1991. The Ironstone Quarries of The Midlands (History, Operation and Railways): The Kettering Area. 5. Runpast Publishing. p.16-20 (checked).
Finds (0)
Related Monuments/Buildings (1)
Related Events/Activities (0)
Location
Grid reference | Centred SP 90747 74809 (362m by 217m) Approximate |
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Civil Parish | BURTON LATIMER, North Northamptonshire (formerly Kettering District) |
Protected Status/Designation
- None recorded
Other Statuses/References
- None recorded
Record last edited
Oct 30 2014 12:52PM