Fan House and Winder House (Koepe) No. 2 at Snowdown Colliery Aylesham, England

Listed Building Data

Fan House and Winder House (Koepe) No. 2 at Snowdown Colliery has been designated a Grade II listed building in England with the following information, which has been imported from the National Heritage List for England. Please note that not all available data may be shown here, minor errors and/or formatting may have occurred during transcription, and some information may have become outdated since listing.

List Entry ID
1391968
Listing Type
listed building
Grade
II
Date Listed
18 May 2007
Name
FAN HOUSE AND WINDER HOUSE (KOEPE) NO. 2 AT SNOWDOWN COLLIERY
Location
FAN HOUSE AND WINDER HOUSE (KOEPE) NO. 2 AT SNOWDOWN COLLIERY
Parish
Aylesham
District
Dover
County
Kent
Grid Reference
TR 24729 51244
Easting
624729.4350
Northing
151243.8580

Listed Building Description

Text courtesy of Historic England. © Crown Copyright, reprinted under the Open Government License.

AYLESHAM

1409/0/10008 Fan House and Winder House (Koepe) No. 18-MAY-07 2 at Snowdown Colliery

II Fan house, 1920s or perhaps earlier, and attached winder house no. 2, built between 1952 and 1956, at the former Snowdown Colliery. Fan house is red brick, and winder house has concrete frame faced in red brick. Late-C20 closure of the site has resulted in the loss of machinery.

DESCRIPTION: The Fan house may survive from the first phase of colliery development here (1907), or from the 1920s modernisations. It features a tall brick chimney shaft, known as the evasé, which houses parallel, non-communicating chambers, flanked by a pair of fan housings which formerly held the Cappel fans. These are now open to the air, the fans having been removed, but the circular brick enclosures and some of mostly ruinous metal casings remain to both sides. The process, which entailed feeding fresh air into the mine shaft (no. 2 in this case) and removing fumes, is entirely legible and was of a type where the air flow could be reversed in case of fire in the shafts. The engine house that powered the fan house is mostly demolished, with areas of glazed tile on the now external party wall. Attached to the south is a low brick gabled link building (believed to be a former engine house) which links to the winder house.

Winder house (Koepe) no. 2)is a tall cubic building with a lower side wing, with several prominent square pane windows (50 panes in the main range and 18 in the lower) set within slightly proud concrete frames, and with a run of 4 square windows more widely spaced above; this pattern is repeated on the rear elevation. There are now-blocked openings indicating the former position of the winding gear as it left the winder house and connected to the headstocks. Early photographs show the interior much as it is in 2007, albeit with the loss of the Koepe winding machinery, the chambers for which have been in-filled, but the large overhead gantry survives. It is a large open space, generously lit and a striking cubic volume. Inside, the walls have an expressed concrete frame with brick infill.

HISTORY: The coalfields of Kent were developed from the end of the C19, which is late in national terms, but nonetheless its discovery and harvest is an interesting story of entrepreneurship. From the mid-C19, discovery of coal in northern France led to exploration of whether coal measures would extend beneath south eastern England as well. At the same time, consideration of a Channel tunnel was being investigated and it was suggested from 1886 that the same borings could be used to search for coal. The Kent Coalfields Syndicate Ltd was formed in 1896 to take over the rights of the Channel Tunnel Company at Dover, and a further consolidation of a number of enterprises 1899 formed the Consolidated Kent Collieries Corporation Ltd in response to the realisation that fortunes were not guaranteed. The history is a complicated tale of companies and ventures, but in summary, four sites became productive areas of mining, including Snowdown. Snowdown was the first, with initial sinking in 1907 and the first hoppit of Kent coal brought to the surface in 1912. The others were Betteshanger, Tilmanstone and Chislet, but almost all traces of the buildings here have gone. Snowdown was also the deepest site, with the coal bed being more than 3,000 feet below ground, and the hottest, bearing the nickname of 'Dante's Inferno', with miners apparently working naked to bear the extreme heat.

Snowdown was the initiative of Arthur Burr's Foncage Syndicate in 1907, but it had early sinking problems, with 22 miners drowning when the first shaft was sunk. They persevered, however, and Kent's first hoppit of coal was recorded proudly in a 1912 photograph taken at the foot of Snowdown's winding gear tower, or headstock. Following a miner's strike and subsequent receivership, the colliery closed in 1922, but th