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  1. The report of the causes and the circumstances attending the underground fire which occurred at the Auchengeich Colliery, Lanarkshire, on the 18th September 1959 by T.A. Rogers, C.B.E., H.M. Chief Inspector of Mines.

  2. Official Report. Underground fire at Auchengeich Colliery Lanarkshire. Report on the causes of, and the circumstances attending, the fire which occurred at Auchengeich Colliery, Lanarkshire on 18th September, 1959. by T. A. ROGERS, C.B.E. H.M. Chief Inspector of Mines and Quarries.

  3. 21 de jul. de 2020 · FORTY-seven miners died in a fire 1,000ft underground at the Auchengeich Colliery at Chryston, Lanarkshire, on September 18, 1959. After eight hours of rescue work a National Coal Board spokesman...

  4. 19 de jun. de 2012 · This 3 minute film tells of the Auchengeich Mining Disaster of 1959 in which 47 miners lost their lives. This Mine was situated in a Moodiesburn near Glasgow. The film was part of a project by...

    • 3 min
    • 6.8K
    • John Kennedy
  5. On Sunday 16 September 2018, several hundred people gathered by the Auchengeich Mining Disaster Memorial in the village of Moodiesburn, North Lanarkshire. They included retired miners, trade union representatives and local councillors alongside members of local football teams and a choir made up of schoolchildren.

  6. 22 de sept. de 2022 · The Auchengeich pit, which had opened in 1905 and employed 830 miners who produced 730 tons of coal per day, closed six years after the disaster; with the homes of the nearby mining village of...

  7. The largest fatal accident in the post-Second World War Scottish coal industry took place on 18 September 1959, when 47 men were killed at Auchengeich Colliery in Moodiesburn, North Lanarkshire.