EPW035952 ENGLAND (1931). Mobberley and Perry Brick Works and The Hayes, Lye, 1931

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EPW035952
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EPW035954
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Details

Title [EPW035952] Mobberley and Perry Brick Works and The Hayes, Lye, 1931
Reference EPW035952
Date July-1931
Link
Place name LYE
Parish
District
Country ENGLAND
Easting / Northing 392987, 284389
Longitude / Latitude -2.1032193613495, 52.457034756532
National Grid Reference SO930844

Pins

my great grans washing at 7 hill street

Craig
Thursday 22nd of December 2022 01:48:37 PM
Tubs on the tramway.

Brian T
Thursday 16th of April 2015 09:51:52 PM
Standard Gauge wagons awaiting loading.

Brian T
Thursday 16th of April 2015 09:50:23 PM
The lower terminus of the tramway which connected the Hayes with Oldnall Pit and Beech Tree colliery. The tramway was 2 tracks, one for loaded tubs descending, one for empties returning to the Colliery. The tubs were cable hauled. I do not know if the system was gravity operated or if there was a winding house at the Colliery. In the late 1940s Beech Tree Colliery was operated by the National Coal Board and at this time coal was loaded into standard gauge railway wagon at the Hayes and then despatched via sidings to Stourbridge Junction. In 1931 it may be that the whole of the mined coal was consumed in the brick kilns near to the Hayes. There was a third coal mine in the system, the Hayes Colliery which had a tramway descending to the Hayes. Adjacent to Park Lane there were additional railway sidings.

Brian T
Thursday 16th of April 2015 09:47:55 PM
A horse and two wheeled cart. A young "Old Joe" perhaps. "Old Joe" was a coal merchant who delivered to homes in the Lye and Cradley districts using a horse drawn wooden two wheeled cart. To a child of 10 years of age in 1950 the wheels were enormous. The horse was a proper cart horse, very hairy. Old Joe lived in a cottage near to the brickyard and kept his horse overnight in a field opposite the brickyard, a little further towards Halesowen than the image shows. As he tipped the purchased coal at the kerbside, he didn't use sacks, Joe's coal was probably a little cheaper per hundredweight (112 pounds) than that of other merchants, who delivered using motor lorries and weighed sacks, which they carried onto the property and emptied into the coalhouse. If Joe sourced his coal from Beech Tree colliery, loading his cart at the Hayes, there must have been a weighbridge. Alternatively he could have loaded at Cradley Heath railway Goods Yard, as there was a weighbridge available but not at Corngreaves Goods Yard. Merchants who loaded coal into sacks here had to carry weighing scales on their motor lorries and weigh each sack as they filled it by shovelling coal from the railway wagons.

Brian T
Thursday 16th of April 2015 09:18:25 PM

reg instone
Saturday 21st of February 2015 02:56:56 AM
Valley Road School

Craig
Sunday 26th of January 2014 07:43:54 PM
Lye Railway statio

Craig
Sunday 26th of January 2014 07:43:04 PM

Craig
Sunday 26th of January 2014 07:41:52 PM

Craig
Sunday 26th of January 2014 07:41:10 PM

Lee Herrington
Sunday 26th of January 2014 05:35:14 PM

Lee Herrington
Sunday 26th of January 2014 05:34:51 PM
Attwood Street

Lee Herrington
Sunday 26th of January 2014 05:34:27 PM
Lye Church ( High Street )

Lee Herrington
Sunday 26th of January 2014 05:33:50 PM

User Comment Contributions

looking almost due west

reg instone
Saturday 21st of February 2015 02:55:54 AM