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David Wilson Homes helps honour memory of 35 miners who died in 1898 Whitwick Mining Disaster

Some 42 men were working in Number 5 Pit at Whitwick Colliery, when an underground fire broke out

Whitwick Parish Councillor Susan Colledge and actor Stephen Graham lay a wreath at the Whitwick Mining Disaster Memorial

A Leicestershire housebuilder has helped honour the memory of 35 miners who lost their lives in a coalmining accident more than a century ago.

The bodies of 12 of the men were never recovered following the Whitwick Mining Disaster, on April 19, 1898.

Some 42 men were working in Number 5 Pit at Whitwick Colliery, when an underground fire broke out, cutting off both their air and means of escape.

The pit was on the outskirts of the North West Leicestershire town of Coalville which one stood at the heart of the region’s thriving coalmining industry.

Only eight men were able to get out – but one of them, Charles Clamp, went back into the workings to help his fellow miners only to succumb to the smoke and die.

Over the following 10 months, 23 bodies were recovered, while 12 were never found.

A memorial remembering their deaths has been erected by the Whitwick Colliery Disaster Memorial Project – a partnership between David Wilson Homes, Hugglescote and Donington Le Heath Parish Council, Whitwick Parish Council, Leicestershire Coal Industry Welfare Trust Fund, Coalville Heritage Society, Whitwick Historical Group and the Snibston Heritage Trust.

A key feature of the memorial is a headstock pulley wheel from Whitwick Colliery given to the project by Leicestershire County Council’s museums service.