This film is part of Free

The Deepest Delabole Hole

Delabole cuts the deepest.

Current affairs 1973 7 mins

In partnership with:

Logo for The Box

Overview

TV reporter Clive Gunnell visits Delabole Slate Quarry, the deepest hole in Britain at five hundred feet and in operation since the fifteenth century making it the oldest working slate quarry in England. There is a new Museum of Slate where four retired slate miners have been taken on as guides and they reminisce about life in the quarry. The exhibition is full of photographs of quarry life including a visit by the Prince of Wales in the 1920s.

Slate from the quarry has been used in construction throughout Europe for centuries, in 1841 five quarries formed into a single controlled unit known as the Old Delabole Slate Company but the company was liquidated in 1977. Delabole village only became a village after the railway arrived in 1893 before this three hamlets of Rockhead, Medrose and Pengelly were home to the quarrymen. Rumour has it that slate has been quarried here since the reign of King Stephen. The quarry was once the deepest man-made pit in the world, but has long been overshadowed by huge open-cast mines and quarries in America and Australia.