Today looking out over
what once was Brandwood Quarry it is quite pleasing to the eye and
is described as "A former quarry now reclaimed to provide
pleasant walks". A far cry away now from the days when there must
have been nothing at all pleasant about working in Brandwood or any
other Quarry in the area. Many wife's and mothers had the quarries
to thank for putting bread on the table and food in their
children's mouths but equally they also took many husbands and
fathers to early graves

Looking North East over
Siddalls quarry at Greens Moor or the head of Hell Clough
previous to first world war. Farholme Mill chimney can be seen
down in the valley. The buildings house machines such as stone
saws, flag facers. You can also see the reservoirs which
were used for the steam cranes and locomotives.
A close up
view of the above left corner portion of picture showing
the trucks in their sidings in background and the tipping
area down Hell Clough.
A close up
view of the middle of the picture showing the railway line
leading into the stone masons and to the right the line to
Helm Clough colliery.
Richard Siddall first
became a tenant then owner of quarries at Lee, Law Head,
and Greens Moor. His quarry supplied stone for the building of
the reservoir at Clow Bridge. Richard Siddall was friend
with Henry Heys but did not start in the quarry business until
twenty years after Heys. Cowm Top quarry was also worked by
Richard Siddall and a quarry rail line ran from Siddalls
Greens Moor quarry over the hill to Cowm Top. Richard Siddall died in
1898 and the firm was carried on by his sons James and Henry.

Siddalls
quarry 1930's without machinery or quarrymen.
Another
close up view of the above picture the one of the left shows a
workman bent over in the foreground. To his left is a three foot
shafted quarry hammer above the man and to his left is a
crowbar leaning against the rock face. Over to the right are two
wooden ladders which gave access to another height in the
quarry.

Head on the incline at Siddalls
Hell Clough the line on the
right with the engine on it ran to the quarry.
Henry Heys was fondly
known as "Old Harry" and was apparently unable to
read or write and yet he was able to calculate by a method that
no-one else under stood exactly how many yards of stone would be
needed to build/finish a mill or chimney. Such a thing occurred
at India Mill when one morning the owner Edward Hoyle met Henry
and his friend Richard Siddall in the yard. When asked by
Edward what he was doing Henry replied that as they had a couple
of hours to spare he thought he would come and measure up.
Edward Hoyle's surveyor who was also present stared in
astonishment at Mr Heys and replied that it would take at least
three weeks to do such measurements. " Ill bet thee four Baggins
it doesn't "replied Henry at which
point he told Richard to write down the measurements and again
his method proved to be correct. Henry supplied the engine beds
for Olive Mill, Ilex Mill and Rawtenstall Mill all at the same
time. Another story is told as
to how Henry used his favourite horse " Old Rig " to get the
stone out of the quarry at Rakehead using his carter, a
bunch of burly quarrymen and ropes to hold back the
wagon on the steep road.
Henry came to Stacksteads
from Higher Cockham Farm Helmshore about 1848, he was one of the
first to bring steel wedges and tackle into use at his
quarries. In 1870 Brandwood quarry was owned and occupied
by Henry Heys and was described as having a boiler house one
storey in
height, a rubbing mill, with two tables in a building
of one storey. One chimney 18 yards in height. One railway line
siding of one line. Also at this time Brandwood was worked
by Butterworth & Brooks.
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At the time of his death Henry
Heys owned quarries at Brandwood, Facit, and Hambeldon, his sons
became the owners. Eleven years after his death the company
Messrs Henry Heys and Sons bought the brickworks formerly
belonging to the County Brick & Tile Co Rakehead. In 1902 the
eldest son of Henry Heys died and a limited company was formed
Henry Heys and Co Ltd. The Chairman of the Company Alderman
James Heys of Greens House died in 1914. The same year his son
John Hardman Heys who is shown on the picture right second from
the left passed his law examina tions.
Others shown on the photograph taken at Facit Quarry are W Heys,
J H Heys, E G Stott, William Taylor, J
Heys (legs crossed). The men on the engine are given
as Blackburn and Skinner.
In 1917 after having been in
disuse for some time the chimney of the company brickworks at Rakehead
was pulled down. The chimney had reached a height of 114 feet and was
constructed from some 90,000 bricks and had been in use for about 13
years. The brickworks was at the time owned by Thomas Ratcliffe.
Henry Heys & Co moved from Brandwood to Britannia in 1919.

Thomas Ratcliffe
was working Lee Quarry, in 1919 and was summoned to appear in court for
storing explosives illegally. He was storing over 8 tons in three
different places, in a matter of 150 yards radius near to Holts sidings
which can be seen in the photograph above which was taken at the
time of Thomas Ratcliffe working Lee Quarry. He was fined £20.00.

The same
year Thomas Ratcliffe applied for a license as old metal dealer,
and submitted plans for alterations to Springbank Farm which
were approved. Others working Lee in 1920 was W Lovick &
Co and at this time they placed and advert for six quarrymen
masons @ 2/6d per hour.
In 1924 Thomas
Ratcliffe was killed in a shot firing explosion, born at Shuttleworth
near Edenfield he had spent nearly all of his life in Bacup. His father
was James Ratcliffe, and at the time of his death he left a widow, four
sons, two daughters and twelve grandchildren and was survived by
four brothers and four sisters. In 1926 the firm became a limited
company Thomas Ratclife Ltd was registered on the 16th October 1826. At
this time donkey stones were still in use by many housewives and
Ratcliffes had a donkey stone plant at Lee quarry siding. By 1827 Thomas
Ratcliffe Ltd owned a tract of land from the River Irwell, including
Height Barn Moss as well as the Lee Quarry area but did not own Greens
moor.
By 1930
Thomas Ratcliffes had purchased three steam wagons, but they still
employed horses to move stone wagons up and down the quarry. By 1939
Ratcliffes had moved to the East of Lee quarries. Castleton Sand &
Gravel Quarries took over the old firm of Thomas Ratcliffe in
1956/57.
The quarries
were in general at their most active during the late Victorian
era. Rossendale stone was widely used in the many buildings of
Rossendale and many paving stones came from local quarries.
Following the Great War many of the quarrymen were
reluctant to return to the primitive working conditions on the
hillsides surround Britannia, Bacup and Stacksteads, and refused
to work for the lower wages that they had previously worked for
before the war. Added to the rising costs of transport these new
demands from the returning quarrymen led to the decline of many
of the smaller quarries in and around Bacup.


Workers Of Lee
Mill Quarry man holding dog on the photograph left and man in cart
on right is Henry Amyes.
A early steam crane mounted on its
standard which is held vertical by means of timber guys. Boiler and
water tank at the rear act as a counter balance.This crane is using
steel wire rope for haulage therefore it must have been after 1870. The
crane also as a timber jib, bolted with cast iron fittings the whole
traversed on a pin mounted at the base of the standard.
The
last travelling steam crane in local quarries, Hall Cowm June 1976 by
1980 it had disappeared. In the foreground is a mobile air compressor
and the jibs of two mechanical excavators peeping over the edge of the
quarry.

Left
photograph shows Richard Henry Bellam about 1913 he was a Stone Mason
at Ratcliffe
Quarry and on the right sawn flags in the making. The first stone
cutting was done by hand.
Whilst the first mechanical saws were made of timber and powered by
a water wheel.

Mason Jimmy Caygill

Neville & Clifford Caygill
J Caygill & Jimmy Greenwood
Many of the
quarries used standard or narrow gauge rail transport to
transport the stone from their quarries. Some of the Locomotives
used in the various quarries were.

Minnie shown right Herbert,
Prince Of Wales, Buffalo Bill,
Lymm, Shanter,
Brooks &
Brooks Locos.Jumbo,
Scotsman, Ant, James, Tom and Angel.
Richard
Siddall., Harlequin.
Others used
Shamrock ,
Bessy, Alice and Nancy.

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