Coal mines and collieries

coal mines and collieries found in and around Efail Fach, Pontrhydyfen, Tonmawr and Pwll y Glaw

who lived in my house Oakwood Colliery and Rhyslyn

The alphabetical list we have provided is by no means comprehensive as there were numerous individual drift mines worked locally, sometimes by a single individual or a small number of men. Often, these were worked under licence from landowners and following nationalisation after the Second World War, coal was mined under licence from the National Coal Board.

We are by no means experts in this area, and we have relied on several sources that have tried to reproduce faithfully here. We acknowledge and thank them all in producing such a wealth of information that we have been able to access. Any errors are ours alone.

Scope of the List

You will find an alphabetical list of collieries and mines worked in the Pelenna and Afan Valleys.  We have only sought to show the vast number of mines, pits and levels that were worked by our ancestors, relatives or neighbours over the past 200 years or so. However, coal mining appears to have started several hundred years earlier in the wider Neath Port Tabot area, overseen by the monks in Margam & Neath Abbeys.

Early Mining Activity

Mynydd Bychan and Oakwood Ironworks 

In this locality, the earliest mines (for coal and ironstone) appeared at Mynydd Bychan, likely during the late 18th or early 19th century.  These appear to have expanded rapidly in the 1820’s to 1830’s to meet the demand for coal when the Oakwood Ironworks was built.  This led John Reynolds to build the aqueduct (1823 -27) to carry water to the ironworks which was said to have been the largest waterwheel in the UK. This endeavour bankrupted him (see newspaper report).

Colliers after a shift abt. 1908

Working Conditions and Fatalities 

Miners of that time comprised largely of men and boys who worked in what we would consider as horrendous conditions, for very little pay, often working piece meal and in incredibly dangerous surroundings.

We have not made a comprehensive list of all fatalities and have only printed out examples of how accidents and fatalities were reported at that time.

Impact on Families

Many families were often left destitute when the breadwinner, usually a father and husband succumbed to working in what we would call today as an unsafe working environment.

Very rarely, would a coalmine owner be found accountable for negligence. We have only found one solitary newspaper report of this. Individual fatalities were not collected on a national basis unless more than 3 men perished in a given incident.

Lack of Social Support 

The formation of the Welfare State had not yet happened and there was no government led safety net to support families in these situations. Many women and children would seek support from the Poor House, Workhouse or the Board of Guardians. 

Economic Hardship Post-WWI 

According to the 1921 Census, over 90% of men and boys in Pontrhydyfen, Efail Fach, Oakwood, and Tonmawr were ‘out of work’, largely due to strikes or lockouts following the decision by Prime Minister David Lloyd George to return the mines to private ownership post-World War I. The ensuing strike persisted for several months, after which workers returned under reduced pay and extended hours.

Photos of our industrial past

Aberhondda Tonmawr

Year Company/Owners Number Employed Details
1883 – 1921 Aber-rhondda Colliery Co Ltd Situated in Tonmawr, the level was worked for house coal. Managed by Thomas Oakley
1922 13 Glyn Gwilym seam
1923 12
1927 Wenallt Seam abandoned

Argoed

Year Company/Owners Number Employed Details
1890s Llewellyn Howell & Co 50 underground (u) / 9 on the surface (s) Slant, No.3. Rhondda seam (house coal)
1896 Manager: Watkin Morris
1909 Manager: Gwilym Lewis
1911 96 men
1913 85 men
By 1922 125 men
1923-7 Herbert Hudson Ltd, Port Talbot 250, which dropped to 134 Manager: G. Llewellyn. Fatalities: 1925 – W Thomas (60) 1926 – H Williams (57) 1927 – William Thomas (30)
1950 7 men Other Levels mined: White Seam – No.2 Rhondda – Wernpistyll Rider
1953 NCB, licenced to Argoed Farm Cynonville

Cwmbach

Year Company/Owners Number Employed Details
1926 DJ Heycock Small level in Tonmawr
1927 Cwmbach Colliery Co 25
1929 WS Wardlow 7
1931 Abandoned

Cwm Evan Bach

Year Company/Owners Number Employed Details
1937 Llwywyffynon Colliery Co Ltd of Cwmavon 9 Small mine
1938 12 Abandoned in April 1938 Levels mined: Wernddu rider No.2 Rhondda rider Wernpistyll Field vein
1942 -46 Some mining occurred during these years

Cynon

Year Company/Owners Number Employed Details
1894 David Rees & Co. Port Talbot Shaft & slant mine, producing house and manufacturing coal
1896 30 (u), 4 (s) Fatalities : Richard Davies (46)
1902 143 Managed by David Rees
1908 Cynon Colliery Co. 373 (u), 44 (s) Sited and sunk a shaft 20ft in diameter at Cynonville to the Rhondda No. 2 seam at a depth of 200yds. Managed by John Beamand
1910 500 Fatalities : David Evans (27)
1911 Fatalities: John David (24) – John Stone (45) – Thomas W Williams (21)
1913 Samuel Rees, Manager. Building of Cynonville Garden Village began, never finished due outbreak WW1. Fatalities: Homer Morgan (27)
1914 460 (u), 60 (s) 11 month strike Fatalities: Benjamin Evans (37)
1938 J Evans, Beverley St, Port Talbot 19 (u), 3(s)19 (u), 3(s) Managed: T Redshaw Other Levels mined: Wernpistyll – Wernpistyll Rider
1947 31
1950 50 Closed mine but licenced out during 1950s & 60s

Duffryn Rhondda

Year Company/Owners Number Employed Details
By 1880 Duffryn Rhondda Coal Co. Slant and 2 shafts
1908 439 Manufacturing coal
1910 1,500
1918 Imperial Navigation Coal Co. Ltd 1,191 (pit) 190 (slant)
1923 Powell Dyffryn Co. Ltd 300 (slant) 839 (No. 1 pit) 523 (No. 2 pit) House coal (no. 2 Rhondda seam) Steam coal produced from seams 6 ft, 2ft 6 & 7ft seams
1938 1,291 (combined) Slant used only for pumping with 2 attendants Coal produced from seams ranging from 2ft 6 & 9ft seams
1945 842 (combined)
1966/7 CLOSED

East End Levels

Year Company/Owners Number Employed Details
1926 James Herbert Wenallt seam
1928 East End Colliery Co, Sleeman & Farraday 6 Closed in 1929

Engine Pit

Year Company/Owners Number Employed Details
1837 A small mine. Located on the southern side of the Foel Mountain. Very little is known about this pit, sunk to 300 feet, which was the first to use a steam winding engine of raising coal.

Garth No 4 Level

Year Company/Owners Number Employed Details
1937 – 1940 Garth Collieries Ltd 11 Closed in 1940

Graig Baglan & Graig Baglan Isaf Pontrhydyfen

Year Company/Owners Number Employed Details
1933 worked until 1937 Harrison & Pritchard 2 Men recorded as prospecting, but very little known Situated on the Foel Mountain, opposite Morgans Tce. Men recorded as prospecting, but very little known Situated on the Foel Mountain, opposite Morgans Tce. A small level

Graig Lyn near Cwmavon

Year Company/Owners Number Employed Details
1911 Charles Owen & Bevan and Co 16
1913 21
1916 Graiglyn Colliery Co, Pontrhydyfen 23
1923 61 (u), 11 (s) Managed by Idris James. Producing house coal from the Field, Wernddu and Wernpistyll Rider seams
1927 29 Managed by Gwilym Llewellyn
1929 29 Managed by DT Walters

Hafon

Year Company/Owners Number Employed Details
1917 Hafon Colliery Co Ltd A small level

Hillside – Pontrhydyfen

Year Company/Owners Number Employed Details
1920 Oakwood Colliery Co Small mine, located on Penhydd mountain, opposite the rugby playing field
1923 Hillside Colliery Co 13
1931 Jonathan Owen Worked Wenallt rider, abandoned that year reopened another level
1933 Hillside Colliery Co
1937 10
1938 5
1940 -45 J & E Griffiths, Pontrhydyfen 10 (u), 1(s)
1947 Mine worked under licence
1957 NCB 19
1959 Hillside No.2 listed working both the Field & Wernddu seams Abandoned

Mercantile – Tonmawr

Year Company/Owners Number Employed Details
1893 – 1896 Powley, Thomas & Co, Cardiff Small mine
1899 150 The No 1 was also called Fforchdwm, No 2 Nantybar
1900 170
1901 95
1903 Worked the Wenallt rider seam

Merthyr Llantwit Tonmawr

Year Company/Owners Number Employed Details
1888 Llantwit Merthyr Colliery owned by John Evans Son of a Skewen vicar, colliery went into production in 1889. Originally a level and shaft
1899 Reynolds Thomas Name change
1900 94 Managed: Thomas Lloyd
1907 205 Managed: Edward Garside
1908 Merthyr Llntwit Colliery Co. 160 (u), 18 (s) Managed: T Thomas
1918 83 (u), 18 (s) Slant
1923 74 (u), 14 (s) Producing manufacturing coal from Wenallt seam
1926 Closed
1928 Briefly reopened as Blaenavon, then Penlan
1930 Closed Seams later reworked by Garth

Mynydd

Year Company/Owners Number Employed Details
Early 1920s Oakwood Colliery Co Ltd 31 Located on Penrhys and part of Hillside & Oakwood Levels. This small level which worked the Jonah seam. Abandoned in 1922

North End

Year Company/Owners Number Employed Details
1911 Opened
1913 North end Colliery Co. Swansea 60 Agreement with John Beamand (Colliery proprietor) Pontrhydyfen made for a siding.
1918 66 (u), 12 (s) Managed by JH Pugh
1920 Reformed as North End Ltd
1923 Producing 24,000 tons of coking, house & manufacturing coal from Wenallt Seam

Oakwood

Year Company/Owners Number Employed Details
1840s English Copper Co. Numerous slants (63) and pits driven for coal & ironstone. No. 10 Ironstone was abandoned by 1851
1850s Fatalities:1853: Richard Owen (27) William Williams (14) 1854: David Morgan John Griffiths (24) 1858: Evan Rees Jones
1860s Governor & Co Following 1862 other Levels were abandoned Fatalities: 1865: Joseph Aubrey (23) 1868: Thomas Hawking (33) John Morris (18) 1869: E Evans
1870s Fatalities: 1870: J Jones (49) 1871: J Helper (15)
1880s Cwmavon Estate & House Co. Other levels mined: Jonah Seam Wernddu seam Oakwood slant (Top). Fatalities: 1880: David Stephens (43) 1882: William Tippott (14) 1884: James Lewis (74) William Bevan (37) Zacharias Richards(30) 1885: Robert Hickey (16) 1888: Jenkin Thomas (33)
1890s Baldwins Ltd Fatalities: 1896: John Davies (57)
1914 Fatalities: Samuel Bennett (55)
1920 Explosion 4 dead, injured
1923 Tymaen Colliery Co.
1926 Fatalities: George Mansel Jones (46)

Penhydd- Penhydd mountain

Year Company/Owners Number Employed Details
1921 – 1924 Penhydd Colliery Co 5 – 15 Listed as developing, working the Field & Wernpistyll seams
1928 5 Abandoned working Field seam
1932 Amalgamated Anthracite Collieries Ltd
1947 NCB Licenced to Penhydd Colliery Co Ltd, Port Talbot
1950 18
1955 – 1957 30 (u), 5 (s) Working the Clay seam
1960 Closed
1992 New Parc Fuels Ltd In 1992 it was listed at Penhydd Newydd

Pennant – Cynonville

Year Company/Owners Number Employed Details
1955 -7 NCB A small level, licences given to CL Jose of Cymer
1958 – 60 JW Jones & TG Griffiths
1960-66 TG Williams who opened the No 2

Penrhys Graig

Year Company/Owners Number Employed Details
1919-1925 Penrhys Colliery Co, Port Talbot 25 Small mine, managed by S Jones

Penstar – Maes y Bettws

Year Company/Owners Number Employed Details
1905 Penstar Rhondda Colliery Co 25 Small level, worked the Penstar seam
1920s Herbert Hudson Ltd
1922 200 Manager: Evan Powell
1923 33
1924 Graigyfedw seam abandoned
1927 110 Managed: T Walters, abandoned in 1927

Rhydavon – Pontrhydyfen

Year Company/Owners Number Employed Details
1907 24 Situated on land behind and adjacent to Macpelah Chapel. Small level abandoned Graig seam in 1908

Tonmawr

Year Company/Owners Number Employed Details
1839 Messers Parson & Strange Small mine opened
1840 Despite a steam engine ordered from Neath Abbey Iron Works, the site was idle as the owners soon became bankrupt
1845 Mr Sturge
1860 -1870 Weymouth & Green
1865 Fatality: David Stephens(14)
1878 Closure
1900 A second Tonmawr Mine was listed in 1900, but failed to find a seam

Tor-y-Banwen – Tonmawr / Cymmer

Year Company/Owners Number Employed Details
1918 Lewis & Davies 20 Small mine. A second mine called Tor Y Banwen or Glanravon could be found in Cymmer
1922 Tor y Banwen Collieries Co Ltd 117
1923 13
1924 26
1925 117

Tor-y-Mynydd – Pwllyglaw

Year Company/Owners Number Employed Details
1860-1870 Margam Tin Plate Co. Consisting of a series of levels, it produced both house and manufacturing coals. It was served by Rhondda & Swansea Bay Railway
1878 D Jenkins & Son Manager: W Richards A new slant was developed on site
1910 145
1912 Tor y Mynydd Rhondda Colliery Co Ltd, Burrows Chamber, Swansea 231
1913 245 Manager: P Williams
1918 New Caepontben Colliery Co. Ltd, Cardiff 237 (u), 35 (s) Working the Tor y Mynydd Slant
1921 Torymynydd Colliery Co 300 Jonah seam abandoned
1945 25 (u), 4 (s)
1947 Estimated reserves of 708,800 tons
1948 Licenced by Ivor Griffiths 51 Working: Torymynydd, Jonah, White seams
1950 Closed

Ty Maen

Year Company/Owners Number Employed Details
1910 -1924 May actually refer to the company that went on to own Oakwood collieries

Welsh Freehold Mercantile / Garth Blaenmawr

Year Company/Owners Number Employed Details
1864 Welsh Freehold Mercantile Blaenmawr All occupied the same site in Tonmawr, ventilation stack can be still seen
1899 170
1901 Reopened as Blaenmawr Navigation, D Edwards & Sons
1913 2 slants
1918 50 (u), 8 (s) Managed by WJ Jenkins
1920 Blaenmawr Colliery Co Ltd 81 (u), 12 (s) Managed by DG Jones, produced manufacturing coal from Wenallt seam
1929 Went into administration Mine was in the hands of the receiver
1932 Garth Collieries Co Ltd Swansea Struck off the companies register by 1932
1935 150 (u), 45 (s) Working Wenallt seam, Managed by G Lloyd
1942 One of the first collieries to have a canteen in the S Wales coalfield, catering for 200 miners
1945 205 Half employed at the coalface
1955 205
1964 Thomas James (39) was the last miner to be killed underground in Tonmawr following a roof fall in Feb 1964 NCB closed colliery in June of that year as coal reserves had been exhausted

Wernavon

Year Company/Owners Number Employed Details
1903 Originally listed as Ynysavon Colliery Co A single level
1908 21
1910 Skewen- Wernavon Colliery Co 20 Listed as owned 20 ‘local gentlemen’ most of whom were shareholders. A Francis Howell, shareholder was a fatality injured in April 1910, married with 6 children
1915 79
1919 70 Voluntary liquidation Seams worked: Wernpistyll Wernpistyll rider Wernddu rider

Wenallt Merthyr – Tonmawr

Year Company/Owners Number Employed Details
Before 1878 West Rhondda Coal & Coke Co Small mine. Known as New Forest
1881 Produced 200 tons per day
1888 Wenallt Merthyr Coal Co Abandoned

Whitworth – Tonmawr

Year Company/Owners Number Employed Details
1905 Registered by a number of directors One of the largest freeholder developments (10 square miles) in the area led by a German company based in Hamberg.
1906 Directors JCA Henderson (S African) & Col JR Wright resign Poor preparatory work begins, no drilling of test holes had taken place
1907 65 – 172
1911 Men were employed during sinking, but during this time various technical difficulties arose One shaft reached 500yds, the second 450 yds had passed through No 2 Rhondda seam. Director Carlos Pedro de Freitas dies, sinking was suspended. Pit was put up for sale without interest. Further technical issues arose. Closed in 1911
1912 – 1913 New Rhondda Collieries & Baldwins Ltd Site repeatedly bought, cleared of surface equipment. Percy Jacob managed the site until 1916

Ynys Afon / Ynys Aafon

Year Company/Owners Number Employed Details
Small level

Ynys Dafydd (also called No. 43 Pit) Pwll y glaw

Year Company/Owners Number Employed Details
Before 1844 Governor & Co, part of Oakwood colliery Small pit, named after Ynys Dafydd Farm. Some claim that it was the first pit sunk in the area
1844 Deepened to 231 feet
1856 Explosion resulted 13 following fatalities – Jason Evans (21) John George (13) Henry Griffiths (35) Hopkin Hill (50) David King (25) John Lewis (30) David Morgan (19) Walter Morgan (26) ? Thomas (45) David Thomas (16) David Williams (19) Hopkin Williams (27)
1872 Abandoned

Ynysfawr – Pontrhydyfen

Year Company/Owners Number Employed Details
1900 Ynys Fawr Colliery Co 18 Small level, probably worked Rhondda No 2 seam
1901 13
1903 Closed abandoning Penrhys seam

Ynyslas – Pwll y glaw

Year Company/Owners Number Employed Details
1919d Ynys Las Colliery Co Ltd 45 Small level, managed W Rees Worked Five-Feet seam & ironstone
1920 74
1923 36 (u), 9 (s)
1925 7
1926 Abandoned working Four-feet seam Abandoned working Little Vein Seam

Sources and References 

A glossary of terms has been provided to clarify the classification of mines, pits, levels, and drifts. In closing, we would like to formally acknowledge the sources that contributed to the information used: