Unlike parts of South Yorkshire this area has very few workable coals above the Barnsley or Top Hard coal. This results from a mixture of seam thinning and erosion.A few pre-1998 papers on Nottinghamshire mining have been listed by Brook and Griffin gives an overview of the pre-nationalised industry there.1,2

Thoresby, Nottingham’s last colliery, ended coal production on 10th July 2015.

When the coal industry was nationalised in 1947, there were 49 collieries in Nottinghamshire; now there are none. The last pits to close were Calverton (1999), Annesley (2000), Clipstone (2003), Harworth (2006), Wellbeck (2010) & Thoresby (2015).

  1. Brook, M. A Nottinghamshire Bibliography: Publications on Nottinghamshire History before 1998 (The Thoroton Society of Nottinghamshire in association with the Nottingham Civic Society, 2002).
  2. Griffin, A.R. Mining in the East Midlands, 1550-1947 (Routledge, 1971)

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Collieries after Nationalisation in 1947

Colliery Location Opened Closed
Bevercotes Bevercotes 1952 April 1993
Bilsthorpe Bilsthorpe 1925 March 1997
Clipstone Mansfield 1915 June 2003
Creswell Creswell 1895 September 1991
Langwith Mansfield August 1978
Mansfield Mansfield 1904 March 1988
Manton Manton 1900 February 1993
Ollerton Ollerton 1923 February 1994
Rufford Rainworth 1911 November 1993
Sherwood Mansfield 1902 January 1992
Shirebrook Shirebrook 1896 April 1993
Shireoaks Shireoaks 1854 June 1990
Shireoaks, No.3 Shireoaks 1924 June 1990
Steetley Steetley 1873 (March) (1983) Merged with Shireoaks
Thoresby Edwinstowe 1925 July 2015
Warsop Shirebrook 1893 August 1989
Welbeck Meden Vale 1912 May 2010
Whitwell Whitwell 1890 June 1986
Dates in brackets indicate the date that the colliery merged with another
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