North of England Institute of Mining and Mechanical Engineers

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North of England Institute of Mining and Mechanical Engineers
Logo of the North of England Institute of Mining and Mechanical Engineers.jpg
AbbreviationThe Mining Institute
Formation1852
Legal statusRoyal Chartered Learned Society
PurposeThe advancement and promotion of Science and Technology in the North
Location
  • Neville Hall, Westgate Road, Newcastle, NE1
Membership
Academics and Industrialists across Science, Technology and Industrial History in the North and across the UK
President
Mr Steve Martin
Hon. Secretary
Mr Andrew Dobrzański
Hon. Treasurer
Dr David Bell
Websitemininginstitute.org.uk

Neville Hall and Wood Memorial Hall, Westgate Road, Newcastle upon Tyne

The North of England Institute of Mining and Mechanical Engineers (NEIMME), commonly known as The Mining Institute,[1] is a British Royal Chartered learned society and membership organisation dedicated to advancing science and technology in the North and promoting the research and preservation of knowledge relating to mining and mechanical engineering. The membership of the Institute is elected on the basis of their academic and professional achievements with Members and Fellows entitled to the postnominal MNEIMME and FNEIMME.[2] The Institutes’ membership is predominately from local industry and from academics at Durham and Newcastle Universities, though members are also located further afield across the UK.

The Institute was founded in 1852 in Newcastle upon Tyne, and was granted a Royal Charter by Queen Victoria in 1876. The Institute developed one of the largest collections of mining information in the world.[3] Its library, named after the first President Nicholas Wood contains more than twenty thousand volumes of technical literature,[4] in the fields of mining, geology, mechanical engineering, government blue books, mine rescue, mineralogy, mineral chemistry, mining statistics, mining law, seismology and other related topics. In 2019 the assets of the Institute - building, library and archive collections and staff - were transferred to a new charity The Common Room of the Great North which intends to 'celebrate the region's engineering history through education and engagement, with a vision to inspire the next generation of innovators and engineers'. The Institute building is closed for refurbishment until Autumn 2020.

History[]

Origins and Formation[]

John Buddle

The origins of the Institute stem from William Turner, minister of the Hanover Square Chapel,[5] just behind the position of Newcastle railway station. He began Newcastle's first Sunday School, 'a focus of light and learning' for the town.[6] One of his students, John Buddle, became a viewer (mining engineer) and wealthy mine owner, and member of the Literary and Philosophical Society and the Natural History Society of Northumberland, Durham and Newcastle upon Tyne (now the Natural History Society of Northumbria). Buddle became a major influence on the Durham and Northumberland Coalfield, "the King of the Coal Trade". In 1816, Buddle devised a system of diverting underground ventilating currents that is in use today. He did not live to see the impact of his legacy, as he died in 1843, nine years before the founding of the Institute.[7] His papers and 'place books' were deposited at the institute.

Following an explosion at Felling in 1812, the Sunderland Society was set up to improve safety where gas was present in mines.[8] The committee secured the services of Sir Humphry Davy, inventor of the safety lamp, in 1815.[9] Despite changes, explosions continued, culminating in a devastating explosion at St Hilda Colliery in which 52 persons were killed. The South Shields Committee recommended the introduction of government inspections of mines the education of mechanical engineers, leading to the first Government Inspection Act of 1850.[10] A coroner's court held at the Mill Inn at Seaham in 1852 suggested it would be advantageous to form a society to consider the prevention of accidents in coal mines.

Nicholas Wood statue in the Wood Memorial Hall

At a meeting of “colliery owners, viewers, and others interested in the Coal Trade” on 3 July 1852, it was proposed to form a society to discuss the ventilation of coalmines, prevention of accidents and other items connected with the general working of coalmines. It was to be called "The North of England Society for the Prevention of Accidents and for other purposes connected with mining", and Nicholas Wood would be chairman.[11] The title actually adopted was the North of England Institute of Mining Engineers, changed in 1870 to North of England Institute of Mining and Mechanical Engineers.[12] A committee was appointed to draw up rules and the inaugural meeting was held on 3 September 1852 at which Wood delivered the inaugural address at the lecture theatre of the Literary and Philosophical Society. In this address he gave the aims of the Institute:

First, - By a union or concentration of professional experience, to endeavour if possible, to devise measures which may avert or alleviate those dreadful calamities, which have so frequently produced such destruction to life and property, and which are always attended with such misery and distress to the mining population of the district; and Secondly, - to establish a Literary Institution, more particularly applicable to the theory, art, and practice of Mining, than the Institutions in the locality present, or which are within the reach of the profession in this locality.

— Nicholas Wood, Inaugural Address, printed in the Transactions of the North of England Institute of Mining Engineers[13]

Wood was president from the Institute's inauguration in 1852 until 19 December 1865 when he died aged 70.

A Royal Charter was awarded by Queen Victoria incorporating the Institute in the 28th of November 1876.

A School of Medicine founded in 1834, a predecessor of Newcastle University, occupied the site the Institute was built on. It was in this building part of the 1838 British Association meeting was held. The College of Physical Science in Newcastle, linked to Durham University, was founded in 1871 following some years of discussion and promotion by the Institute. Its classes were taught in the Institute's lecture theatre. It was renamed Armstrong College and was for many decades part of the University of Durham, later to become Kings College and then Newcastle University.

Similar institutions to the Institute were set up in other parts of Britain and informal collaboration led to the creation in 1889 of the Federated Institution of Mining Engineers, comprising NEIMME; Chesterfield and Midland Counties Institution of Engineers; Midland Institute of Mining, Civil and Mechanical Engineers; South Staffordshire and East Worcestershire Institute of Mining Engineers and later the North Staffordshire Institute of Mining and Mechanical Engineers, the Mining Institute of Scotland and the Manchester Geological and Mining Society. The name was changed to the Institution of Mining Engineers in 1898. The constituent societies kept their identity within the national Institution and many, like NEIMME, exist today as local societies of the Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining.

20th Century[]

Historically the Institute was concerned not just with measures to reduce accidents, but with the theory, art and practice of mining in general.[13] So through meetings, presentation, discussion and publication of research papers, investigations, experimental work, and so on, the Institute tried to fulfil these aims. Working groups were set up, for example on tail ropes;[14] flameless explosives;[15] mechanical ventilators[16] and mechanical coal cutting.[17][18] There were research committees on such as strata control, set up in 1924[19] and safety in mines reporting, for example on horse haulage.[20] In the 1900s there was also collaboration with Armstrong/Kings College in areas such as ventilation and mine lighting. The Institute also worked with National Coal Board committees such as the Divisional Strata Control Research Committee.[21]

The Common Room of the Great North[]

During the later 20th Century NEIMME's role and importance declined as the coal industry changed and shrank in size. Its finances became precarious and by the beginning of the 21st Century its continued existence was in doubt. A working group of the Institute concluded that a widening of its role was needed and suggested it used its heritage and collections as a basis for a programme of training, conference, debates, etc about the future engineering, cultural, infrastructure and so on of the North East. A working title for the new body was the Great North Institute.[22] Heritage Lottery grants enabled the development of the ideas and the creation of a new charity and limited company now named The Common Room of the Great North.[23] Neville Hall and the NEIMME Library collections - books, journals, reports, maps, photographs, archives, etc - all legally transferred to The Common Room on 1 March 2019. Most of the material is in store until Neville Hall reopens in Autumn 2020 after refurbishment.[24] There is a continuing digitisation programme of archives and other resources in the collection and a process to provide online access to digitised material is being developed.

Currently The Common Room has an exhibition, Graft and Glory, that explores the North East’s industrial heritage and is touring various venues in the region from the Tweed to the Tees. It is associated with a public programme of family activities, public lectures, oral history workshops and community engagement.[25]

Institute building[]

Inside the Wood Memorial Hall

In early years meetings of the Institute were held in the Literary and Philosophical Society and other local premises, but the need for its own building became apparent. Robert Stephenson, son of George Stephenson, a colleague and contemporary of Nicholas Wood, was his pupil at Killingworth Colliery[26] and when Robert Stephenson died in October 1859 he left £2000 to the Institute which started a fund to build its permanent home.[6] In 1867 plans were made and the building constructed in 1869-72 in Grainger's new town on the site of the medical school on land traditionally held by the Dukes of Westmorland, the Nevilles. It comprises the Wood Memorial Hall containing the Library, lecture theatre and other small rooms and Neville Hall which was primarily office space that from the beginning until recently was let to various mining and other organisations, such as the Coal Trade Association, Blyth and Tyne Railway, Freemasons and the Law Society.

The architect was Archibald Matthias Dunn, whose father, mining engineer and Mines Inspector Matthias Dunn, had been present at the Institute's inaugural meeting. It was built at the height of the English Gothic Revival and shows a mixture of gothic and Tyneside Classical themes. The Library has high windows and a sky lit barrel-vaulted ceiling - the highest point 39 ft above the floor - with stained glass windows by Cooke of London. It includes a monumental statue of Nicholas Wood mounted on a throne in the setting of an iconstasis. There are other works of art including marble busts of John Buddle and Thomas Forster, the Institute's second president[4] and a carving of the River God Tyne including the Institute motto Moneo et munio - I advise and I protect. The original lecture theatre was replaced by the current one in 1902 designed by local architects Cackett and Burns Dick, and modelled on that at the Royal Institution in London. It features a steep rake of seating constructed from Cuban mahogany and the walls display portraits of all the Institute's Presidents since 1852.

Activities[]

Membership and Postnominals[]

The Institute is a Royal Chartered membership organisation with members drawn from local industry and academia. The Institute has particularly good links with Durham and Newcastle Universities and with the local geotechnical industry. The Institutes' higher membership grades are judged upon academic and professional achievements, with unqualified but interested members of the public able to join in the lower category. The membership grades are:[2]

  • Student
  • Affiliate
  • Associate
  • Member (MNEIMME)
  • Fellow (FNIEMME)

Professional and Public Lectures[]

The Institute has a monthly series of public lectures public lectures on developments in science and technology. These lectures range in topic from current and historical mining projects, active industrial developments with speakers from manufacturing industries, and research talks given by local PhD students. The Institutes' Younger Members Group arranges lectures and events for under-35s.

The Institute also arranges field trips to sites of geological and industrial interest for its members. Many of the Institutes' members have conducted research into the North Pennine Orefield with trips to mines and geological outcrops recorded in its Transactions since the late 1800s to the present day.

Partnerships with other Organisations[]

The Institute works with other learned and professional organisations to provide its members and the wider public with lectures and events across a range of disciplines. The Institute is a 'local society' of the IOM3 and runs events promoting the study and research of materials science. The Institute holds an annual joint-lecture with the Geological Society of London on strategic geological topics, and has had links with the Society dating back to the 1800s when the British Association meeting was held in Newcastle. The Institute also holds joint events with the Mineralogical Society of Great Britain and Ireland on applied mineralogy and petrology subjects, and with the Stephenson Locomotive Society on industrial heritage and transport topics.

Library collections and Publishing[]

The collections include books, statistical compendia, Mines Inspectors reports, journals, Government committee reports, archives, tracts, maps, photographs, technical reports, artworks and there is a searchable catalogue.[27] In recent years library material has been transferred to the Institute following the closure of institutions such as the NCB Coal Research Establishment at Stoke Orchard, the NCB Mining Research and Development Establishment at Bretby, the British Coal Utilisation Research Association and the Centre for Lifelong Learning at the University of Newcastle.

The Institute regularly publishes articles in its online Transactions on topics ranging from mining engineering and industrial heritage, to materials science and industrial policy.

Governance[]

The Institute is governed by a Council - as dictated by the Royal Charter - comprising the President, two Vice Presidents, the Honorary Secretary, the Honorary Treasurer, the immediate fifteen Past Presidents, and members elected from the membership. The current Council is composed of representatives from the local geotechnical industry, academics from Durham University, industrial historians, active exploration geologists, as well as former coal miners from the North East collieries.

Other uses of the building[]

In recent years the main hall of the Institute has also been used as a 100-capacity music venue, predominantly by local bands.[28] The space has been described as "brilliantly atmospheric",[29] and "an intimate setting for live music".[28] The Mining Institute has also been used as a venue for Home Gathering Festival[30] and is also available for conferences and weddings. The Institute building is currently closed for refurbishment until Autumn 2020.

Gallery[]

Notable members[]

References[]

  1. ^ Henderson, Tony (8 May 2014). "Historic Newcastle hall opens its rooms to public for the first time". The Journal. Retrieved 11 July 2016.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b Membership Grades of the North of England Institute of Mining and Mechanical Engineers
  3. ^ Home of the Black Diamond - The Nicholas Wood Memorial Library (PDF), p. 2, .. the Nicholas Wood Memorial Library, reputed to be the largest mining library in the world. Formed by The North of England Institute of Mining Engineers in 1852 ..
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b North of England Institute of Mining and Mechanical Engineers The Mining Institute Renaissance - Anniversary Celebrations 1852–2002. 2002.
  5. ^ 'Protestant Dissent: Chapels and meeting-houses', Historical Account of Newcastle-upon-Tyne: Including the Borough of Gateshead (1827), pp. 370-414. URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=43362 Date accessed: 07 February 2014
  6. ^ Jump up to: a b Harding, J.T. (1986), "A History of the North of England Institute of Mining and Mechanical Engineers", The Mining Engineer - Journal of the Institution of Mining Engineers, 146: 252–6
  7. ^ Hiskey, C.E. John Buddle (1773–1843): agent and entrepreneur on the North-East coal trade. MLitt thesis, University of Durham, 1978. Available online
  8. ^ The first report of a society for preventing accidents in coal mines consisting of a letter to Sir Ralph Milbanke, Bart. Author: Buddle, John Milbanke, Ralph (Sir) Society for Preventing accidents in Coal Mines. (Sunderland) Newcastle upon Tyne : Printed by Edward Walker, 1814. NEIMME In: Tracts 3, p. 15-62; 53, p. 93-140; 60, p.1-48; 94 p. 61-108; Bell collection, 4, p. 71-107. With list of members.
  9. ^ Leifchild, J. R. (1856), Our Coal and Our Coal-Pits; the people in them and the scenes around them (2 ed.)
  10. ^ North and South Shields Gazette, "Government inspection of mines: report of the proceedings at a public meeting in South Shields, called by the magistrates, 7 June 1850", NEIMME Tracts, 45: 94–118, Extracts from the North and South Shields Gazette
  11. ^ Anderson, Wm. Meeting of Colliery Owners, Viewers, &c Transactions - North of England Institute of Mining Engineers 1 1852-3,1-2
  12. ^ Report of the Rules Committee Transactions - North of England Institute of Mining and Mechanical Engineers 19 1869-70, 99-100
  13. ^ Jump up to: a b Wood, Nicholas. Inaugural address Transactions - North of England Institute of Mining Engineers 1 1852-3, 11-32
  14. ^ North of England Institute of Mining and Mechanical Engineers On the haulage of coal: being the report of the committee appointed by the Mining Institute to investigate the subject. 1869
  15. ^ Kayll, A.C Report of the proceedings of the flameless explosives committee of the North of England Institute of Mining and Mechanical Engineers NEIMME, 1896
  16. ^ Brown, M Walton Mechanical ventilators: report of the Committee of the North of England Institute of Mining and Mechanical Engineers and the Midland Institute of Mining, Civil and Mechanical Engineers Transactions - North of England Institute of Mining and Mechanical Engineers 48 1898-99, 171-266; Transactions - Institution of Mining Engineers 17 1898-99, 482-576
  17. ^ North of England Institute of Mining and Mechanical Engineers Report of the committee upon mechanical coal cutting. Part 1 - Longwall machines. 1903
  18. ^ North of England Institute of Mining and Mechanical Engineers Report of the committee upon mechanical coal cutting. 1905
  19. ^ North of England Institute Strata Control Research Sub-Committee Control of the strata in mining: investigations in the Durham and Northumberland Coalfield Mining Engineer 113 1953-54, 83-95
  20. ^ North of England Safety in Mines Research Committee First report of an investigation into the causes of accidents due to haulage: derailments in horse-haulage operations Transactions - Institution of Mining Engineers 971938-39, 340-359
  21. ^ North of England Institute of Mining and Mechanical Engineers Centenary brochure, 1852-1952. 1952
  22. ^ Great North Institute brochure.2017
  23. ^ Common Room Corporate Brochure. 2019
  24. ^ Whetstone, D. Mining Institute closes for multi-million-pound transformation Only-in-Newcastle.co.uk 4 September 2019. Retrieved 23 February 2020.
  25. ^ Materials Processing Institute hosts exhibition celebrating the best of North East innovation RecognitionPR.co.uk 17 January 2020. Retrieved 23 February 2020.
  26. ^ Doubleday T. Memoir of the late Nicholas Wood, Esq. Transactions - North of England Institute of Mining Engineers 15 1866, 49–59.
  27. ^ North of England Institute of Mining and Mechanical Engineers Collections Accessed 30 August 2016.
  28. ^ Jump up to: a b Jeffery, Sarah (21 December 2015). "Independent music venues in the North East mapped: Where to see the best live music". Evening Chronicle. Retrieved 11 July 2016.
  29. ^ Whetstone, David (2 March 2016). "Singer songwriter Kathryn Williams lines up another North East gig". Evening Chronicle. Retrieved 11 July 2016.
  30. ^ Jeffery, Sarah (27 May 2016). "The Unthanks' Home Gathering Festival returns to Newcastle with stellar-line-up". Evening Chronicle. Retrieved 11 July 2016.

Main sources[]

  • Harding, J.T. A history of the North of England Institute of Mining and Mechanical Engineers Mining Engineer 146 1986, 252–6
  • Harding, J.T. A short history of the Institution of Mining Engineers' North of England Branch and the North of England Institute of Mining and Mechanical Engineers Mining engineer 148 1988-9, 356-358
  • North of England Institute of Mining and Mechanical Engineers Centenary brochure, 1852-1952. 1952
  • North of England Institute of Mining and Mechanical Engineers The Mining Institute Renaissance - Anniversary Celebrations 1852–2002. 2002.
  • Wood, Sir L. Address [for NEIMME Jubilee] Transactions - North of England Institute of Mining and Mechanical Engineers 52 1902-03, 66-77; Transactions - Institution of Mining Engineers 24 1902-03, 68-79

Coordinates: 54°58′10″N 1°36′51″W / 54.9694°N 1.6143°W / 54.9694; -1.6143

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