The Sinking of the Lady
Vie
Dalkeith Advertiser, 6 March 1890: "THE LOTHIAN COAL
COMPANY. - The Newbattle Collieries, &c., belonging
to the Marquis of Lothian, and the Whitehall, Dalhousie,
and Polton Collieries, &c., belonging to Mr. Archibald
Hood, have been acquired, and will be worked on and after
Wednesday next, 12th March, the The Lothian Coal Company
(Limited)."
Dalkeith Advertiser, 13 March 1890: "THE LOTHIAN COAL
COMPANY (LIMITED). - The prospectus of this Company has
been issued. It has been formed for the purpose of acquiring
and further developing the collieries at Newbattle, carried
on by the Marquis of Lothian, and Whitehill, carried on
by Mr. Archibald Hood, together with the leases held by
Mr. Hood of the Whitehill and Eldin, Carrington, and Polton
mineral fields, the whole forming an extensive mineral field
of nearly 15,000 acres. The purchase consists of the whole
plant, including 700 cottages, 600 waggons, buildings, locomotives,
and machinery of every description, also the extensive brick
and fireclay works carried on for many years at Whitehill.
The purchase price has been fixed at £200,000, and
the vendors have agreed to take payment of this amount in
fully paid-up Ordinary shares, being the whole present issue
of these shares. There are issued to the public 12,500 5
per Cent. Cumulative Preference shares at £10 each,
and these will share ratably in the annual profits with
the Ordinary shares after both have received 5 per cent.
The present output is at the rate of 310,000 tons per annum,
but a large increase is expected after the expenditure of
£100,000 on extensions and improvement, to meet which
the capital to be raised by the Preference shares will be
applied. At the present rate of output the supply of coal
will last 600 years. After this expenditure, the engineers,
Messrs. M'Creath, Glasgow, and Geddes, Edinburgh, estimate
the annual pro-tits at £24,000, while Messrs. William
Armstrong & Sons state the same at £30,000. The
chairman of the board of directors is the Marquis of Lothian,
and the managing director is Mr. Hood. The subscription
list will close to-morrow."
There was a great demand tor coal in Great Britain in the
late 1880s and the price went sky-high as production failed
to keep pace with the demand. Many pits throughout the country
were being worked out simultaneously, their owners having
failed to invest in the opening of new coal seams.
The main partners in the Lothian Coal Co. were Archibald
Hood, who became managing director, and the Marquis of Lothian,
who was chairman for the first ten years. Archibald Hood
was a colliery entrepreneur with business interests in Wales
and Scotland. He had leased the Whitehill coalfield from
Robert Wardlaw Ramsay of Whitehill in 1856 and, over a number
of years, added the leases of adjoining coalfields belonging
to three other proprietors, the Earl of Rosebery, Robert
Dundas of Arniston and the Earl of Dalhousie.
It was estimated that £100,000 would be needed to
create a modern pit at Newton Grange and to build houses
for additional workers. The sinking of the shaft at the
new pit took four years and was completed in November 1894.
It was 1,650 feet deep and was one of the deepest in Scotland.
The shaft reached the Lower Coal measures giving access
to vast reserves of coal, the upper coal measures being
largely worked out.
The pithead workings were completed by 1895 and comprised
an extensive range of new buildings with the most up-to-date
machinery. Large railway sidings were built with direct
access to the main Edinburgh to London railway line.
"The sinking and fitting of the Lady Victoria pit
at Newbattle colliery which began in 1890, inaugurated a
new era in mineral developments in the two counties (Mid
and East Lothian). From every point of view the colliery
was one of the best equipped in Scotland." (Andrew
Cunningham, Mining in Mid and East Lothian, 1925). The Lothian
Coal Company were amongst the earliest in Scotland to generate
their own electricity and provide electric light underground.
They also experimented with compressed air coal cutters
in 1890 and electric coal cutters in 1895.
The new pit was called the Lady Victoria Colliery after
Lady Victoria Scott, eldest daughter of the Duke of Buccleuch
and wife of the chairman of the Lothian Coal Company, Schomberg
Henry Ker, 9th Marquis of Lothian, the miners have always
known it as 'the Lady Vie' or just 'the Lady'.
The opening of the Lady Vie was not, however, an altogether
happy affair. Coal production elsewhere in Britain had caught
up with demand, prices had dropped and wages had been substantially
reduced. The daily minimum wage had fallen from 5/-in 1892
to 3/- in May 1893. It rose to 3/6 in August, but a claim
for 4/6 a day was refused in October 1893 to the anger of
the men, who decided to take action. A series of one day
strikes was planned by the union, the Mid and East Miners
Association.
The 700 men at the three Newbattle pits (East and West
Bryans and Dixon's) took Wednesday 1st November off and
the next day the first shift was locked out by the management.
The lockout lasted nine weeks. The I/- a day (which had
been granted elsewhere) was offered to the men but only
on condition that they worked an eleven day fortnight instead
of the usual ten days. The men refused. The other Midlothian
miners paid a levy of 2/- a head each week to support them
and from the funds accumulated the Newbattle men got 8/-
a week, plus I/- extra for each child under thirteen. A
fair number of men left Newbattle to work elsewhere. At
the end of the year a compromise was reached, the I/- rise
was awarded and the men agreed to take their idle days at
different times and keep a shift of men at work on alternate
Saturdays.
In June 1894 the colliery owners throughout Mid and East
Lothian notified the men of a reduction from 4/6 a day to
3/6. At a mass meeting in Dalkeith the miners voted by 3203
votes to 230 to strike for no reduction. The strike was
long and bitter and there were angry and violent incidents
on picket lines. After 17 weeks the men went back. They
had to accept the reduction and got no guarantee that there
would be no further reductions.
Early in 1895 the Lothian Coal Company reduced the pay
to 3/- a day and made an eleven day fortnight compulsory.
Elsewhere in Midlothian a ten day fortnight still prevailed.
Thorough research by Mike Cotterill and Colin Denovan on
behalf of the Scottish Mining Museum has revealed that the
minute books and account books of the Lothian Coal Company
have been lost or destroyed. Such information as has been
discovered about the early days of the company comes mainly
from newspaper reports and other sources researched by Messrs.
Cotterill and Denovan. The Dalkeith Advertiser carried reports
of most of the earliest annual general meetings of the company,
but not 1890 - 1895 nor 1897. Details of share ownership,
summaries of current accounts and other details from 1908
onwards had to be lodged with the Board of Trade and are
available for study.
The following is part of the Lothian Coal Co. Annual Report
of 1895-96.
Dalkeith Advertiser, 29 October 1896: "The year has
been very free from labour troubles and accidents, the only
important interruptions to work having arisen from want
of orders owing to the depressed state of the coal market.
Since the date of last report, the output from the Lady
Victoria Pit, which then was about 500 tons a day, had increased
to about 800 tons a day, the quality of the coals continuing
to be satisfactory. Before the tonnage from this pit could
be much further increased, it would be necessary to obtain
houses for the additional miners who were required to develop
the output, the Company's present accommodation being fully
occupied, and there being no available dwellings within
convenient distance of the colliery. A building company
was in process of being formed to erect workmen's houses,
a sufficient number of which were to be leased by the company.
The Chairman, in moving the adop tion of the report, said
that the coal trade during the past year had been in a very
depressed condition. Many companies had suffered large losses,
and some had suffered so much than they had been obliged
to shut up altogether. Considering the position of the Lothian
Coal Company, it was satisfactory to say that this Company
had been able to show a profit on the year. The directors
felt great regret that they were unable to declare a divided,
but they could not do so until they had altogether wiped
out the debit balance, which they hoped to do next year."
The profit that year was £8,000 and this had risen
to £19,000 by 1897 - 1898, which was the Lothian Coal
Company's best year up till then. The chairman stated that,
"In consequence of the strike in Wales, the coal trade
in Scotland had shown considerable activity, though it had
not done them very much good..." A wage increase at
the company's pits had meant, "additional and unavoidable
expenditure of many thousand pounds." 1899-1900 was
an even better year with profits of £44,500.
The company set up by the Lothian Coal Co. in 1896 to build
houses at Newton Grange was the Newbattle and Whitehill
Building Co. The first houses in a scheme called Dean Park
were completed in 1898 at a cost of £12,000 - approximately
£128 a house. A further 93 houses were finished in
1899 and 1900 as part of a large scheme named Monkswood.
The population of Newton Grange and Cowden Grange doubled
in ten years from 1,210 in 1891 to 2,406 in 1901.
Census Returns |
Year
|
Newton Grange
|
Cowden Grange
|
1843
|
220§
|
|
1851
|
*
|
|
1861
|
787
|
|
1871
|
677
|
|
1881
|
1010
|
|
1891
|
957
|
253
|
1901
|
2406
|
**
|
§ contemporary estimate |
* no recorded figure |
** recorded with Newton Grange |
There were a number of societies springing up in the village
and some amenities had been established. A park had been
made in the field on the south side of the village. There
was a cricket team, a junior football team, a cycling club,
whippet racing, and quoiting. The village had a district
nurse (from 1889) and a new school near the Bryans (built
1893). The old colliery schools then became the Lothian
Halls which were used for village meetings, concerts, displays
and dances. Newton Grange had its own brass barid, an annual
flower show, an amateur dramatic society and a Burns Club.
Other organisations in the village included the Newbattle
Girls Friendly Society, the Good Templars' Lodge and the
Lothian Lodge of Scottish Mechanics.
The history of licensed houses in Newbattle parish prior
to the opening of Newton Grange's two pubs at the end of
the nineteenth century is the subject of the next chapter.
|