alb10628172

The New Hartley Pit Calamity: the funeral procession leaving Colliery Row for Earsdon..., 1862. Creator: Unknown.

The New Hartley Pit Calamity: the funeral procession leaving Colliery Row for Earsdon Churchyard, 1862. The Hartley Colliery disaster of 16 January 1862 was a coal mining accident in Northumberland which resulted in the deaths of 204 men and children. '...there were probably 60,000 persons present...carts containing a layer of straw were slowly driven to the door of each cottage, and, amid the weeping and still more agonising signs of silent grief in every sorrowstricken house, the coffins were lifted over the side of the cart and packed in loads of five each...[by] three o'clock, nearly all the corpses had been taken to be interred in the quiet churchyard of Earsdon...Far as the eye could reach up and down the road one unbroken line of heavy-hearted mourners extended till lost in the distance...Round each cart were the immediate relatives of the deceased. All passed along in silence, with their eyes downward cast...along the route spectators had collected, watching, with serious faces and respectful attitude, the passage of the victims of an unparalleled calamity...the churchyard wall was broken through, that the coffins might be borne to the burying-ground through the churchyard...The house in the foreground is the Incumbent's residence'. From "Illustrated London News", 1862.
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Title:
The New Hartley Pit Calamity: the funeral procession leaving Colliery Row for Earsdon..., 1862. Creator: Unknown.
Caption:
The New Hartley Pit Calamity: the funeral procession leaving Colliery Row for Earsdon Churchyard, 1862. The Hartley Colliery disaster of 16 January 1862 was a coal mining accident in Northumberland which resulted in the deaths of 204 men and children. '...there were probably 60,000 persons present...carts containing a layer of straw were slowly driven to the door of each cottage, and, amid the weeping and still more agonising signs of silent grief in every sorrowstricken house, the coffins were lifted over the side of the cart and packed in loads of five each...[by] three o'clock, nearly all the corpses had been taken to be interred in the quiet churchyard of Earsdon...Far as the eye could reach up and down the road one unbroken line of heavy-hearted mourners extended till lost in the distance...Round each cart were the immediate relatives of the deceased. All passed along in silence, with their eyes downward cast...along the route spectators had collected, watching, with serious faces and respectful attitude, the passage of the victims of an unparalleled calamity...the churchyard wall was broken through, that the coffins might be borne to the burying-ground through the churchyard...The house in the foreground is the Incumbent's residence'. From "Illustrated London News", 1862.
Credit:
Album / The Print Collector/Heritage Images
Releases:
Model: No - Property: No
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Image size:
5658 x 3872 px | 62.7 MB
Print size:
47.9 x 32.8 cm | 18.9 x 12.9 in (300 dpi)
Keywords:
19TH CENTURY 19TH ART ARTS BIER BIERS BLACK & WHITE BLACK AND WHITE BRITAIN BRITISH BUILDING BUILDINGS CART CARTS CATASTROPHE CENTURY CHILD LABOR CHILD LABOUR COAL INDUSTRY COAL MINE COAL MINER COAL MINERS COAL MINING COALMINE COFFIN COFFINS COLLIERY COLOR COLOUR CONCEPT CORTEGE COUNTRY LIVING COUNTRYLIFE CROWD CROWDS OF PEOPLE CROWDS CROWDS_OF_PEOPLE DEATH DEATHS DISASTER DUMB (DEAF) ENGLAND ENGRAVED ENGRAVING FEMALE FUNERAL PROCESSION FUNERAL GROUP GUY HARTLEY COLLIERY DISASTER HARTLEY PIT DISASTER HARTLEY HEALTH AND SAFETY HESTER PIT DISASTER HORSE AND CART HORSE DRAWN HORSE-DRAWN VEHICLE HORSE-DRAWN VEHICLES HORSE-DRAWN HORSEDRAWN HOUSE HOUSES ILLUSTRATED LONDON NEWS ILN INDUSTRIAL ACCIDENT INDUSTRIAL INDUSTRY LOCATION MALE MAN MEN MINER MINING MOURNER MOURNERS MOURNING MUTE NEW HARTLEY COLLIERY NEWSPAPER NEWSPAPERS NINETEENTH CENTURY NORTHUMBERLAND PAYING RESPECTS PEOPLE PRESS PRINT COLLECTOR, THE PRINT PROCESIONAL PROCESSION PROCESSIONAL REGIONALISM ROAD TRANSPORT RURAL LIFE RURAL RUSTIC SILENCE SILENT TRANSPORT TRANSPORTATION VICTORIAN ERA VICTORIAN VILLAGE WHITE AND BLACK WOMAN WOMEN WORK XIX CENTURY