| JOB | No. | |
| Deputies | 4 | |
| Underground Labourers | 7 | |
| Surface Labourers | 4 | |
| Chemist's Assistant | 1 | |
| Navvy Driver | 1 | |
| Lorry Driver | 1 | |
| Electricians | 2 | |
| Apprentice Electricians | 2 | |
| Fitters | 3 | |
| Smiths/Welders | 5 | |
| Bricklayers & Labourers | 3 | |
| Carpenters | 1 | |
| Painters | 1 | |
| Cook | 1 |
back to Pine Lodge (fig. 2),
where it remained until its closure in 1976.
All ventilation shafts and the Steps Entrance were filled, using either ore from the Irthlingborough stock banks or brick rubble from surrounding buildings; the adits, including two at Finedon, were bricked up.
The final sealing of the Irthlingborough adit was completed in December 1966 exactly 50 years from its inception in 1916.
The original commemorative plaque above the entrance arch was left in position, stating laconically 'E.V. 1916'.
It is now no longer visible.
All concrete and brick rubble, apart from the kiln lining bricks, was the property of Birds, who were permitted to bury it in the White Lodge Quarry,
north of Wellingborough Road.
The coke crushing plant, known as the Rod Mill (fig. 5), which was used for a short time after closure by the Company's Scunthorpe works for tests,
was excluded from the contract, as were the workshops, former office building, the main-line weighbridge (known as 'the bottom weighbridge') with
its associated structures and the recently constructed main loco battery-charging building.
The latter building was the last structure to remain upstanding, being used for some time by Whitworths Mills for storage purposes.
Some electrical switchgear was also retained for use by the Company as follows :-| 7 - | 440 volt Ferguson Palin oil circuit breakers | |
| 6 - | 440 volt Allen West contactor starters | |
| 1 - | 3,300 volt to 440 volt Hackbridge transformer |
Soon after September 1965 the loco. was decommissioned; its driver, however, Mr Arthur (Sonny) Horn, was retained until January of the
following year to enable him to complete 50 years of continuous service with the Company.
He had started work in January 1916 as a horse boy, and was among the first 14 men to be employed
at the mine.
During his long years of service he had turned his hand to most labouring jobs, eventually becoming a locomotive fireman in 1947.
Although it is certain that he was never known to drive a motor car, he was able, when the loco. driver retired, to step naturally into his shoes, having had no
formal training or ever having passed any formal tests - a prime example of 'on the job' training.
It should be noted that, although the Company acknowledged his long service as being unbroken since 1916,
the employment register does show that there were three periods when he was not employed during the 1920's and 1930's.
He was, however, distinguished in being the only worker to be present at both the opening and final closing of the mine.
Open Hearth furnaces.
Various further suggestions were put forward, including the building's use as a hospital, refugee
camp or for warehousing, but the Ministry of Transport would not countenance any development north of the A6 highway.
Eventually, in 1972, the Company, while looking for a building in which to store its more sensitive documents and records, which at that time were
required to be stored for long periods and were at present being held in their London Offices, found the hostel to be eminently suitable and adaptable for this purpose.
The hostel was promptly converted and, despite their Chief Archivist in London requiring the building to be extremely secure, and the local fire service, on the contrary,
calling for easy means of escape,
the conversion to a Record Office was completed successfully; it remained in use for 27 years, after which it was sold.
can be seen,(fig. 12) emerging into a small lake.