I've just come across a "coal ash labourer". Anyone any ideas of what he would have done?
Coal ash is obviously the residue left from buring coal, but I wonder what this chap would have done with it. He was in Ramsgate, so not in an industrial area.
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27-03-2008 08:37 PM #1Famous for offering help & advice.
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coal ash labourer
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27-03-2008 08:47 PM #2Daft Bat and Super Moderator
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Hello Davran,
I did a search with the words "coal ash labourer" in this site and it brought up a couple of hits. Click on search at the left of the page:
http://www.victorianlondon.org/
A lot of reading is involved but it seems to refer to dockside labourers in one part.
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28-03-2008 09:56 AM #3A fountain of knowledge.
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Could coal ash refer to the powdered coal rather than lumps? I wonder if they were responsible for the clean up of 'slack'? At present, coal ash refers to the mineral content in coal (ie the rock as opposed to the carbon-based material), which is washed out as part of clean coal technology. Not sure if this relates though
. I am interested to find out what the job of coal ash labourer is, as I am a mining engineer at a coal mine
.
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28-03-2008 02:07 PM #4Famous for offering help & advice.
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Thanks for the link, Jan, but I couldn't find anything specifically relating to coal ash.
Bunty, I doubt it was anything to do with mining. Ramsgate is a small sea port with a hinterland of farmland. There were no mines in the immediate vicinity, though there were several within a 20-mile radius - now all closed down.
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28-03-2008 03:17 PM #5Loves to help with queries.
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Hi Davran,
What year was this?
Could it be that he was the forerunner to what (in my day
) was called a dustman, who collected the ashes from open fires? (in modern times referred to as 'refuse collectors' ?)
Regards Helen
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28-03-2008 03:22 PM #6Famous for offering help & advice.
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It was 1861. I had considered someone who collected ash from open fires, but I think most people used to chuck the ashes down the garden or maybe used them in the privy. And why specifically coal ash? I believe wood ash was used in soap making at one time, but I don't know about coal ash.
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28-03-2008 03:31 PM #7Famous for offering help & advice.
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Just found this website:
http://www.ukqaa.org.uk/AboutAsh1.html
Seems like coal ash can be used in concrete/building blocks, but would this have been the case in 1861?
Oh dear, I'm off at a tangent again! This chappy was nothing at all to do with my own family and there I am finding out about his job!
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29-03-2008 06:03 AM #8A fountain of knowledge.
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Yes, a dustman sounds like a possible job. Fly ash from coal wasn't used in concrete until the 1930s though. It may have been used in some other product though. Perhaps brick making?
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05-01-2010 11:28 PM #9Settled in very nicely!
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Not sure when the 'job' was done , but could the 'coal ash' be the residue of ANTHRACITE' which was used to cut down on the 'pea-soupers' we experienced in the waely 1950's?
Colin
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06-01-2010 08:13 AM #10Famous for offering help & advice.
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Did he, I wonder, clean the ash from some sort of coal-fired boiler? And dust was considered very valuable if my memory serves me well - it's a long time since I've read Our Mutual Friend with Mr Boffin and his dust heaps.
Colin
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