The Huge Disused Slate Quarry of Dinorwig

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  • Опубликовано: 27 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 120

  • @garygriffiths2911
    @garygriffiths2911 2 года назад +19

    This may be a relatively small channel as yet, but it never disappoints when it comes to exploring our industrial heritage and landscape. Your work is appreciated sir!

  • @davidbarr8394
    @davidbarr8394 Год назад +2

    Thanks for this one. From your video I went to "The Slatemakers" (1980); then "The Dinorwig Slate Quarry", Jones Photography, posted on RUclips in 2015. Fascinating stuff. I sympathize with those who gave their lives to forgotten labor and industry. I lost my right hand in a sawmill in Washington state west of Seattle in 1976. The closure of local mills since 1980 has been endemic. Not many old time working men left.

  • @lescampbell4196
    @lescampbell4196 2 года назад +5

    Glad you found the steam engine that ran everything by belt drive, those were the big wheels on everything in the workshop. The name Ingersoll Rand may say New York, but they had a works in Trafford Park! What you thought were steam pipes look like dust extraction ducting. I could also spend all day there too. The double drums might have pulled empty trucks up by the full ones going down

  • @jetsons101
    @jetsons101 2 года назад +3

    How many "slate roofs" made with slate from the Dinorwig Quarry are still in existence today? I would bet it's in the thousands. A well made slate roof will outlast all of us here today. Ollie, this was outstanding!!!!! Your videos are so personal, it's like we're there walking along with you----you talk with us / not to us. So much "history" so little time. Thanks again for a great "one man, one camera" video..........

    • @BeeHereNowuk
      @BeeHereNowuk  2 года назад +1

      Thanks Mike, you're always so kind 😊

    • @jetsons101
      @jetsons101 2 года назад

      @@BeeHereNowuk Well earned, well off to work......

  • @AJ-xv7oh
    @AJ-xv7oh 2 года назад +3

    Went there last year and it's an awesome place to visit. You can spend the whole day exploring.

  • @grahamcarr5788
    @grahamcarr5788 2 года назад +2

    Unbelievable amount of slate still remains. Must be worth millions.
    What a great explore and a reminder of our industrial past. Enjoyed immensely.

  • @stephenjones9153
    @stephenjones9153 2 года назад +2

    @16:57 That's a Stator from the electric lighting generator that was run from the steam pulleys. The thin pipes in the building with the saws where extractor fan ducting to remove some of the Slate dust from the air..
    If you have never been up these Welsh mountains you can really see how magnificent the scenery is. Just near impossible to try and catch the vastness on camera.
    Brilliant effort in trying to let everyone see a bit of the Welsh Slate Mining and Quarrying industry.👍👍👍Very well done.👍👍👍

  • @thomasdieckmann5711
    @thomasdieckmann5711 2 года назад +2

    Thanks Ollie for taking us up there!

  • @stephenjones9153
    @stephenjones9153 2 года назад +3

    It's Amazing how they sent the Slate down the mountain under gravity power which also pulled back up the empty wagon, free energy.😉👍.
    There is also an abandoned Slate village up in the mountains behind Tanygrishiau near Blaenau Ffestiniog and also the LLechwed Slate Caverns to visit.

  • @TheDAT9
    @TheDAT9 2 года назад +4

    Great video. I have just got back from the Nantile Valley and exploring the Doretha Quarry, it took us two full days Fascinating trying to figure out what all the old machines did. The men that worked thee were as hard as the stone they quarried.

  • @ProspectstudiosCoUkBFD
    @ProspectstudiosCoUkBFD 2 года назад +3

    I was amazed when I came across the winding houses and old track up there. Walked up on a whim too. I love north Wales!

  • @lozzarobinson1883
    @lozzarobinson1883 2 года назад +6

    The pipework in the saw shed is extraction ducting. The saws were belt driven through the wall

  • @TheGrifter62
    @TheGrifter62 2 года назад +3

    Very interesting. You went much further up than I have been. Will have to make another visit

  • @Andrewjg_89
    @Andrewjg_89 2 года назад +2

    Dinorwig. Very strange but interesting name for the Quarry in Wales. Amazing background 😍

  • @josephmansfield2875
    @josephmansfield2875 2 года назад +4

    Absolutely fascinating Ollie another epic video. What lengths our forefathers had to go to to put food on the table and we won't mention the words Health and Safety or Risk Assesment . A great piece of history which is being left to rust away into history. Well done keep up the great work

  • @20PhantoM07
    @20PhantoM07 2 года назад +3

    What an awesome place, puts me in mind of the mines of the Dwarves of Middle Earth.
    I like your angle at the end, really enjoyed that mate. 👍🏻

  • @jontibloom6125
    @jontibloom6125 2 года назад +3

    I remember riding the little mine train on a school field trip as a kid. No helmets or safety precautions just "keep you hands inside the cart" It was great

  • @iantwigg6983
    @iantwigg6983 2 года назад +2

    Me and my 10 year old Daughter watch all your videos and I’ve never been one for commenting - however I felt compelled to add one this time.
    Utterly fascinating video (like all of yours are by the way) and your enthusiasm was just in abundance from minute 1.
    We’ve holidayed in Wales for many years now visiting all sorts of mines but this place blew me away and I can’t wait to make a visit of my own after seeing your video.
    Keep up the great work Ollie 👍👍

    • @BeeHereNowuk
      @BeeHereNowuk  2 года назад

      Thank you very much that's very nice 😊

  • @rheingau2011
    @rheingau2011 2 года назад +2

    This place looks awesome. The landscape is something out Lord of the Rings. The industrial remains are fantastic!

  • @amazingdecks1
    @amazingdecks1 Год назад +3

    Great and informative video; is it accessible? It looks awfully dangerous by modern standards. BTW, those are not steam engines but air compressors. Pity the engines are gone - I'd love to see them!

  • @TroyTempest0
    @TroyTempest0 2 года назад +1

    Great - another wonderful and interesting video Olli. Thanks again ! Another great episode from the land of my fathers...

  • @simonfunwithtrains1572
    @simonfunwithtrains1572 2 года назад +3

    we always look forward to every video you make, Ollie. We enjoy them so much and they give us ideas for days out to go and explore further our wonderful island

  • @jimmyviaductophilelawley5587
    @jimmyviaductophilelawley5587 2 года назад +2

    Hi Ollie! Another great video mate. All this abandoned machinery and buildings look like a scene from "Red Dead Redemption" to me. Thanks again!

  • @niceviewoverthere4463
    @niceviewoverthere4463 2 года назад +1

    Thanks for doing all that uphill walking for us.

  • @steveandthedogs
    @steveandthedogs 2 года назад +5

    A cracker! By the way, the big metal pipes in the shed at the Awstralia level were for dust extraction. Added quite late on. Before that, it was said it was almost impossible to see from one end of the shed to another. Pneumoconiosis was rife. The owners of this and Penrhyn lived in amazing luxury and comfort in Vaynol and Penrhyn estates.

    • @derekp2674
      @derekp2674 2 года назад

      It is interesting to visit the three restored miners' cottages at the Nation Slate Museum and then visit Penryn Caste to see how the other half lived.

  • @willcolumbine
    @willcolumbine 2 года назад +3

    You used to be able to take a tour of Dinorwig power station. When I went as a child in the late 90's, the tour was quite extensive and you could see the generator halls and various control rooms and turbine valves etc. When I visited it later as an adult, the tour was much less comprehensive, presumably for security reasons!

    • @ozakki8719
      @ozakki8719 2 года назад +1

      Now completely closed to the public!

  • @keithryan7862
    @keithryan7862 2 года назад +3

    Your videos are brilliant, this being no exception.
    Keep up the great work.

  • @royreynolds108
    @royreynolds108 7 месяцев назад +3

    15:37, Those metal tubes are air ducts, 17:34 is an air compressor, and 18:19 is another air compressor made by Ingersoll-Rand.

  • @Tom_Roberts
    @Tom_Roberts 2 года назад +1

    Another fascinating insight into British history and somewhere well worth a visit. Thanks .

  • @NathanielKempson
    @NathanielKempson 4 месяца назад +1

    The most amazing thing about slate quarries is that, while they mostly all had a railway network. They had MULTIPLE railways, on several different levels of the workings, almost totally cut off from the others.
    Quarry Hunslet locomotives built in Leeds by....Hunslet....were attatched to those winding gears you saw, and dragged up the damn mountain to the level where they are needed. And pretty much lived there their entire working lives, being dragged from level to level as and when needed.
    To the point where some classes of those engines were designed with angled cuts on the rear of the chassis, to gain ground clearence when being dragged up the cable inclines!!

  • @robertmaitland09
    @robertmaitland09 2 года назад +2

    Awesome place. I visited it last summer, just didn't have enough time to fully explore it. Must go back one day.

  • @scottc1589
    @scottc1589 2 года назад +2

    Awesome video! I was planning a trip to northern Wales and the Shrewsbury, England area for the Spring 0f 2020, but I didn't make the trip for obvious reasons. This has made me think about replanning that trip and thank you for that!

  • @deepwoodguy2
    @deepwoodguy2 2 года назад +3

    thanks for all the great info on slate..all new to me, from USA... and just subbed... 👍

  • @simonbradshaw3708
    @simonbradshaw3708 2 года назад +1

    Another really enjoyable video, thank you for sharing it with us. It would be nice to see some of the buildings and equipment returned to their formal state as part of a museum. I look forward to your next video.

    • @derekp2674
      @derekp2674 2 года назад

      The National Slate Museum at the foot of the quarries does that to a certain extent, but I don't think it includes a full recreation of a working slate mill.

  • @adriannorthcott902
    @adriannorthcott902 2 года назад +1

    Another interesting video Ollie keep them coming.

  • @neilfurby555
    @neilfurby555 2 года назад +2

    Great video, super presentation, and such an interesting site.

  • @Alan_Watkin
    @Alan_Watkin 2 года назад +2

    i was thinkin where you gone, im sure i was subbed to you but seems maybe something went wrong there but i am again now, crazy place this, you stick at this man i like what you do

  • @Andy-185
    @Andy-185 2 года назад +3

    Thanks

  • @ianbigland4618
    @ianbigland4618 2 года назад +1

    More of this please, Great!!!

  • @Jacqui332
    @Jacqui332 2 года назад +2

    Epic! Great vid.

  • @jamesjohnstonekyle
    @jamesjohnstonekyle 3 месяца назад

    I was there yesterday an amazing place .Fantastic informative video 👍👍👍

  • @Hairnicks
    @Hairnicks 2 года назад +2

    That was great, love that place.

  • @robertcarter6963
    @robertcarter6963 2 года назад +1

    Thanks for your efforts. I found your video very interesting and informative. I don't think I could do your videos etc

  • @socklesslad
    @socklesslad 2 года назад

    Great video as usual. I always think that industrial dereliction looks very impressive!
    We were in the area a couple of years ago but didn't get up to the quarry, so thanks for showing it. We did visit the museum at the bottom of the hill which was well worth seeing. Further along they've restored one of the inclines and apparently run waggons up and down on special occasions. The quarry hospital has also been turned into a museum but that was just creepy!

  • @SueGirling68
    @SueGirling68 2 года назад +2

    Hi, if you get in touch with a guy named Chris, he does tours inside the slate mines and is very knowledgeable, he has a yt channel called "Shonky Tours" where you can contact him. This was a really well narrated video, thank you for sharing, much love. xx💖

  • @issachunt3159
    @issachunt3159 2 года назад +3

    The place with the shoes - is the wood burner still there? Me and my mates dragged that up the hill about 5 years ago when we did some renovations there!

  • @jennytoole5276
    @jennytoole5276 2 года назад +2

    Brilliant 😍 👏

  • @tomtom4405
    @tomtom4405 2 года назад +2

    I know you didn't film it... but while you were there: did you climb the "snake" (or at least look at it) in California and did you climb up/down those ladders in Australia. How about the stencilled graffiti of the miners, did you see any? You were very close to all those in your video. I was there 2 days ago, always love going back there, always more to see

  • @SAM-zt2uy
    @SAM-zt2uy 2 года назад

    Great video. I have explored many of the North Wales slate mines and have a few videos on my channel... But im still yet to visit Dinorwic,

  • @ahbugger292
    @ahbugger292 2 года назад +1

    definitely got to go there !

  • @mikeclarke3882
    @mikeclarke3882 2 года назад +4

    Nice one Ollie....clearly you were in your element exploring the quarry. All very 'Middle Earth' wasn't it...

    • @eilianwilliams7219
      @eilianwilliams7219 Год назад

      They have ignored all the Welsh names and renamed everything with English names . not welcome

  • @terryalmond8777
    @terryalmond8777 2 года назад +2

    Have another epic....brill vid.

  • @ffrancrogowski2192
    @ffrancrogowski2192 2 года назад +2

    A massive quarrying complex indeed, Ollie. Those workers cottages made out of the local slate there, must have been amazing to live in, though basic, more than likely homely! The long building with all that machinery still in it, and all the other stuff lying about, is an amazement in itself. To get that heavy gear up on to the hillside must have taken some winching, and fitting in! A great job you've done making this video, so many thanks, Ollie

    • @AJ-xv7oh
      @AJ-xv7oh 2 года назад +1

      Actually those cottages were anything but comfortable. They were terribly hard conditions.

    • @ffrancrogowski2192
      @ffrancrogowski2192 2 года назад

      You obviously experienced living in them, I take it?

    • @AJ-xv7oh
      @AJ-xv7oh 2 года назад

      @@ffrancrogowski2192 If you knew anything about the local history or had even visited the area, you would know that conditions for the miners were hell. They were on a mountain top with high winds in freezing conditions with no warmth and minimum food aswell as spending 12 hours a day grafting in a mine. It's very well documented that the conditions were very harsh. Why you getting angry about that?

    • @ffrancrogowski2192
      @ffrancrogowski2192 2 года назад

      I'm not getting angry, you've come to the conclusion that I have. I've been to other area of the UK where conditions were similar in quarry working conditions, where men were virtually working and living on the job. That's how life was in those days, and families had to make the best of their living accomodation.

  • @danbonser7781
    @danbonser7781 2 года назад +2

    Great film. We were meaning to have an explore there next week while we’re in the area. Can you just walk on to it?

    • @comicsshed5381
      @comicsshed5381 2 года назад +3

      Technically you aren’t supposed to go onto the site, but you can literally just hope over a five bar gate to get access 👍🏻

  • @bobwightman1054
    @bobwightman1054 2 месяца назад

    The niche at 6:00 was a shelter for workmen to use when they were blasting the levels above. Some of the blast shelters were actual buildings, including ones for the steam engines.

  • @chrisstaylor8377
    @chrisstaylor8377 2 года назад

    Amazing place ,must visit if I get over your way

  • @fasthracing
    @fasthracing 2 года назад +2

    excellent

  • @bd4_l
    @bd4_l 2 года назад +6

    RIP to all whose lives were cut short while working at this place!

  • @peterdunning2952
    @peterdunning2952 2 года назад +2

    Just imagine working up there during a Welsh winter.

  • @Ayslhyn
    @Ayslhyn 2 года назад +1

    Definitely some Lord of the Rings vibes. One does not simply walk into a slate mine :)

  • @danielroche3862
    @danielroche3862 2 года назад +1

    Wonderful

  • @totherarf
    @totherarf 2 года назад +2

    The Electric Mountain!

  • @tingtongsuzywong1
    @tingtongsuzywong1 2 года назад +2

    RED CAVE
    The skeleton of the "Red Lady", complete with jewellery and the remains of mammoth, was found in 1823 at Paviland Cave on Gower.
    The discovery was made by Professor William Buckland, the first Professor of Geology at Oxford.

  • @henkbarnard1553
    @henkbarnard1553 2 года назад +2

    16:20 The machinery would have been powered by flat belts coming from the celling. This would be driven by a steam engine.
    I lived in Menni Bridge In 1982; not far from Snowden

  • @thomasfilion9064
    @thomasfilion9064 2 года назад

    Hey bro. I was just watching another documentary, I thought it was like that of most, that I'd seen and heard it all. But this is unheard-of English ingredients for what I think put a new horror into just blowing them up. Your like minded and greatly appreciate your videos. RUclips. Flame Fougasse - the secret weapon to turn the sea into fire. Anyways. I was a history buff my whole life and it's repeating itself. Love your videos.

  • @TheSilmarillian
    @TheSilmarillian 7 месяцев назад

    New sub here great upload indeed hello from down under.

  • @AircooledAl
    @AircooledAl 2 года назад +2

    Awesome

  • @donwright3427
    @donwright3427 Год назад +1

    Slate good nice

  • @OliverHollingdale
    @OliverHollingdale 2 года назад

    I am heading here next week, is it free to access? No restrictions no? Really worried that will be turned away!

  • @xboxcrazee
    @xboxcrazee 2 года назад

    Good work the whole area is fascinating. Did you visit the bomb store…?

  • @terryansell6641
    @terryansell6641 2 года назад +2

    Amazing place but awful working conditions I guess low pay 😮

  • @geoffcurrie5508
    @geoffcurrie5508 2 года назад

    I thought the photo at the start of this was of the new zipwire ride!!!

  • @bleakrevel
    @bleakrevel 2 года назад +1

    Perhaps I’m wrong would be interested to know if I am. Never understood why Llanberis doesn’t seem to have a half decent walkers pub. With all those waking tourists it’s hard to work out why.

    • @derekp2674
      @derekp2674 2 года назад

      I thought there were some OK pubs and cafes last time I visited there. That said, I'm not an 'out and out' walker, more just a tourist who enjoys walks, industrial archaeology and heritage railway. But perhaps the sheer numbers of customers at Llanberis tends to drive local establishments towards serving in quantity at the expense of quality? Spooner's Bar at the Ffestiniog Railway is one of my favourite establishments in that area - I've had some very nice meals there.

    • @bleakrevel
      @bleakrevel 2 года назад +1

      @@derekp2674 we often walk as a group so we are looking for a pub with big tables where we can all sit play games have a few pints etc. When we have looked in the past we have been in the town by the chip shop and not by railway. I always thought we may just be missing where the real action was.

  • @tonyclough9844
    @tonyclough9844 2 года назад +2

    You must wear a helmet when walking around these places.
    The big pipes are air extraction for the dust when cutting slate.

  • @eps0m1066
    @eps0m1066 6 месяцев назад

    Seeing that footage of the miners breaking off large chunks of slate from the mountain with just some rope around their legs to protect them. Horrifying. No wonder their were injuries and even deaths esp during winter conditions.

  • @richardwilliams5312
    @richardwilliams5312 Год назад +1

    Wow 👌

  • @vickyking3408
    @vickyking3408 11 месяцев назад

    My friend lived so very close to there😊

  • @almaxx9680
    @almaxx9680 2 года назад +1

    Could be New York, Lincolnshire uk?

  • @PibrochPonder
    @PibrochPonder Год назад

    I need to go back to north wales again soon

  • @simontay4851
    @simontay4851 2 года назад

    When did it close and why. There is still so much slate left there.

    • @eps0m1066
      @eps0m1066 6 месяцев назад

      No longer economic

  • @robbojohnson5759
    @robbojohnson5759 2 года назад +2

    not a sand blasting machin it was a steam engine

  • @williammccoll215
    @williammccoll215 3 месяца назад

    The last time I checked Scotland was still part of Britain

  • @robbojohnson5759
    @robbojohnson5759 2 года назад

    next time get a taxi up the back road to the top of dinorwig quarry and see a lot more and its easyer to come down than to walk up

  • @chrisstaylor8377
    @chrisstaylor8377 2 года назад

    That machinery should be reroofed to protect it

  • @chrisstaylor8377
    @chrisstaylor8377 2 года назад

    Lovely steam engine

  • @juliansadler6263
    @juliansadler6263 2 года назад

    There was a big effort to take slate out again. The railway was cleared and Virgin Trains ran a Virgin Voyager up to prove it. It came to nothing and now in England any slate is imported from Spain. At a price now you have left the EU.

  • @eilianwilliams7219
    @eilianwilliams7219 Год назад +2

    Eryri not Snowdonia and in Cymru not so called" Britain" Kindly do not mention "Britain"

    • @LiamTaylor26
      @LiamTaylor26 Год назад +2

      Paid a fod yn pedantic. Mae o'n trio deud yr enwau yn iawn, ond mae o'n siarad yn saesneg, fellu mae o yn iawn i dweud yr enwau yn saesneg.

    • @eps0m1066
      @eps0m1066 6 месяцев назад

      Surprise surprise (yawn). Sorry guys check your geography. Even if Wales gets independence, it will still be part of geographical region of the British Isles that even Ireland is part of.

    • @lmil0152
      @lmil0152 5 месяцев назад

      Sour grape

  • @peterscotney1
    @peterscotney1 Год назад +2

    The 1983 ww2 horror film THE KEEP was filmed in this quarry