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Clee Hill (Titterstone) Other Rock Quarry (United Kingdom)


Titterstone Clee has been subject to much quarrying for dhustone or basalt. It is because of this that the hill is littered with many abandoned quarries. In medieval times ironstone and, later, coal were mined, in particular from bell pits: localised mine shafts, one of which has now flooded to form a lake. The largest quarries have sheer drops of up to around thirty metres (one hundred feet). Before the Second World War, the area would be described as industrial, because of the presence of wide-scale quarrying and associated activity. Men came from places such as Bridgnorth and Ludlow to work in the quarries, and the villages of Bedlam and Dhustone on Titterstone Clee were built especially for the quarry workers. Crumbling remains of quarry buildings now litter the hill, reminders of a bygone industry that once employed more than 2,000 people here.

Photos of Clee Hill (Titterstone) Other Rock Quarry

Photographs Of Clee Hill (Titterstone)
Photographs Of Clee Hill (Titterstone) (32 photos)
Last updated March 29th 2017 by ttxela
Historic Photographs Of Clee Hill (Titterstone)
Historic Photographs Of Clee Hill (Titterstone) (0 photos)
Last updated January 20th 2017 by ICLOK

Google Earth Map of Clee Hill (Titterstone) Other Rock Quarry


Other location/mapping information:

Latitude: 52.3936416546843
Longitude: -2.59523890080638
Landranger grid reference: SO595775
Easting: 359500
Northing: 277500

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Major Mining Region



Clee Hill (Titterstone) Other Rock Quarry belongs to the Shropshire region.