Site overview

Důl Doubrava sever identifies the northern sector of the former Důl Doubrava colliery in the village of Doubrava near Orlová, comprising the intake shaft Doubrava III (Sever) and the ventilation shaft Do-IV. Důl Doubrava as a whole was the deepest mine in the Karviná coalfield, with its main hoisting shaft reaching the tenth working level at a depth of 930 metres and the shaft itself extending to over 1,000 metres. The northern shaft area reached a maximum absolute depth of 1,176 metres (jáma Doubrava III).

The mine originated in 1822 with early prospecting activity by baron Anton Mattencloit, passed to Salomon Mayer Rothschild in 1845, and after nationalisation in 1945 was constituted as Důl Doubrava through the merger of the Bettina and Eleonora shafts. Coal production continued until 27 April 2007. The northern shaft sector suffered a catastrophic shaft-lining failure at jáma Do-IV on 28 July 1998, which caused the collapse of the shaft building and headframe into a crater approximately 62 by 49 metres.

Progressive surface liquidation of the entire Důl Doubrava complex began in 2004 and was completed by 2011, leaving no standing structures.

The site lies in a flat post-industrial landscape near Doubrava, where liquidation has removed the former pithead and the former mine reads only weakly in open ground.

Map

Map markers and directions links are provided for location reference only and do not indicate public access or permission to enter a site.
No site photograph is currently available. Images will be added as field visits are carried out.

History

The earliest recorded mining activity in the Doubrava cadastral area dates from 1822, when baron Anton Mattencloit had an exploratory shaft — known as Versuch (Pokus) — sunk on the hill known as "U havírny" (near Vidrholec). In a shallow depth coal was encountered. Over the following decades further shallow shafts were sunk, most of which later fell into disuse. In 1845 Salomon Mayer Rothschild acquired the mining rights across the Orlová and Doubrava area. In 1854 an exploratory shaft was deepened to 152 metres and named Eleonora; in 1855 the sinking of the Versuch shaft was resumed, deepened to 120.8 metres and renamed Bettina — after Rothschild's daughter. In 1845 the first ventilator, a wooden-wheeled device of 80 cm diameter and 15 cm width, was placed over the Bettina shaft. The first mechanisation came in 1864 in the form of steam pumps for drainage and the first steam winding engine on the Eleonora shaft. The Doubrava mine was the first in the coalfield to introduce electric power on a significant scale, from 1896 onwards, applied to pumps, the coal-preparation plant, the chain conveyor, and the hoists.

Connection to the Košicko-bohumínská dráha railway in February 1869 provided a first rail outlet, but the decisive transport link was the Báňská dráha section from Michálkovice to jáma Bettina with a spur to Eleonora, brought into service on 12 September 1870. By 1914 both shafts had been deepened to 578.2 metres and ownership had passed to the Vítkovické kamenouhelné doly. In 1942, during the German occupation, jáma Eleonora was converted to a materials transport shaft.

Following the end of the Second World War, mining was formally resumed on 29 May 1945 under the merged Důl Doubrava, created by the combination of the Bettina and Eleonora shafts. The mine was absorbed into the state enterprise Ostravsko-karvinské kamenouhelné doly, later OKD. From 1 July 1995 Důl Doubrava was incorporated into Důl ČSA as a shaft enterprise. By this reorganisation jáma Eleonora served as a ventilation and media-transport shaft (degas gas, process water, compressed air, fly ash, and nitrogen) rather than a production shaft.

The northern sector of the mine field was served by jáma Doubrava III (Sever), which in its final configuration reached an absolute depth of 1,176 metres with a surface elevation of 281 metres, placing its bottom 895 metres below sea level — the greatest absolute depth recorded in the Důl ČSA complex. The intake shaft Do-IV lay immediately adjacent and reached a depth of 1,176.5 metres. By 1985, following a major reconstruction that brought the mine's tenth level into service, the mine field of 9.54 km² was divided into nine working panels. The operational mine field was served by jáma Doubrava I (skip, primary winding), jáma Doubrava II (intake), jáma Eleonora (ventilation), a pair of Orlová ventilation shafts, and the two northern shafts: jáma Doubrava III and jáma Do-IV.

On 28 July 1998 a catastrophic failure occurred at jáma Do-IV: at approximately 04:08 hrs, the shaft lining on the south-west side failed at a depth of approximately 86 to 90 metres below the shaft collar (an opening of approximately 3 by 3 metres). Progressive failure of the shaft lining above and below the breach followed rapidly, and the upper portion of the shaft, the shaft building, and the headframe collapsed into a crater measuring approximately 62 by 49 metres on the surface and 36 metres deep, with a volume of approximately 65,200 m³. Two miners in the vicinity of the ventilation shaft were struck by the pressure wave from the collapse but sustained only minor injuries; no fatalities resulted. The crater was subsequently backfilled with approximately 60,000 m³ of mine spoil. Work at the Doubrava sector, which employed approximately 1,500 underground workers at the time, was suspended during the emergency and resumed after stabilisation measures were completed.

Throughout its operational life Důl Doubrava was classified as a methane-hazard mine of the second degree of danger (class II), with high propensity for spontaneous combustion and risks of water inrush and rock outbursts. A methane explosion on 12 February 1949 in the Hubert seam above the eighth level killed 19 miners; a rescue team of five mine rescue workers also perished. The subsequent attempt to extinguish the underground fire led to the first application in world mining history of nitrogen inertisation, pumped from the surface: between 8 August 1949 and 12 September 1950, a total of 5,056,644 cubic metres of nitrogen at 99.5% purity were introduced into the sealed mine. A further methane explosion on 7 May 1985 killed 25 people, including 6 mine rescue workers of the Důl Doubrava colliery rescue station.

Coal winding at Důl Doubrava ended on 27 April 2007, timed to allow the reserve panel within the mine's protective perimeter to be extracted by the adjacent Důl Jan-Karel. The second headframe — over jáma Doubrava II — was demolished by explosive demolition on 2 November 2007 as the fifty-first headframe to be liquidated in the OKD rationalisation programme. The skip headframe over jáma Doubrava I (Bettina) had been demolished by controlled explosive on 23 October 2006. The 18.5-metre headframe over jáma Eleonora was demolished by collapse on 26 February 2010 following shaft backfilling. Progressive demolition of surface structures at the Doubrava complex began in 2004 and by 2011 the shaft buildings, headframes, and shaft collars had all been liquidated. Total coal extraction over the mine's history amounted to approximately 112 million tonnes.

Timeline

1822
Exploration

First exploratory shaft sunk at Doubrava

Baron Anton Mattencloit had an exploratory shaft — Versuch (Pokus) — sunk on the hill known as "U havírny" in the Doubrava cadastral area. Coal was encountered at shallow depth. This date is regarded as the founding year of mining operations at Doubrava.
1845
Legislation

Mining rights acquired by Salomon Mayer Rothschild

In 1845 Salomon Mayer Rothschild acquired the mining rights in the Orlová and Doubrava area. The doubravské důlní pole was sold to Rothschild, and coal extracted from this area thereafter played an important role in the supply of the Vítkovické železárny ironworks.
1854–1855
Construction

Shafts Eleonora and Bettina deepened and named

In 1854 an exploratory shaft was deepened to 152 metres and named Eleonora. In 1855 the Versuch shaft was deepened to 120.8 metres and renamed Bettina, after the daughter of Salomon Mayer Rothschild. These two shafts became the foundations of the later Důl Doubrava.
1864
Construction

First mechanisation: steam pumps and winding engine installed

In 1864 the first mechanised equipment was installed at the mine: steam pumps for drainage and the first steam winding engine on jáma Eleonora.
1870
Construction

Báňská dráha railway connection to jáma Bettina and Eleonora

The section of the Báňská dráha from Michálkovice to jáma Bettina with a spur to jáma Eleonora was brought into service on 12 September 1870, enabling direct coal despatch to industrial Ostrava and connection to the Ferdinand Northern Railway.
1896
Operation

Electrical power introduced on significant scale; first in the coalfield

As the first mine in the Ostrava-Karviná coalfield, Důl Doubrava introduced electrical power on a significant scale in 1896, applied to pumps, the coal-preparation plant, the chain conveyor, and hoisting equipment.
1914
Legislation

Shafts reach 578.2 metres depth; ownership transfers to Vítkovické kamenouhelné doly

By 1914 both the Bettina and Eleonora shafts had been deepened to 578.2 metres. In the same year ownership passed to the Vítkovické kamenouhelné doly.
1945
Operation

Důl Doubrava constituted by merger of Bettina and Eleonora; mining resumes

Following nationalisation and the end of the Second World War, mining was formally resumed on 29 May 1945 under the merged Důl Doubrava, constituted by the combination of the Bettina and Eleonora shafts. The mine was absorbed into the state enterprise Ostravsko-karvinské kamenouhelné doly.
1949
Operation

Methane explosion kills 19 miners; nitrogen inertisation used for first time worldwide

During the night shift on 12 February 1949, a methane explosion occurred in the Hubert seam above the eighth level, killing 19 miners. A five-man rescue crew also perished during the subsequent recovery operation. From 8 August 1949 to 12 September 1950 the first ever application of nitrogen inertisation of a sealed mine from the surface was carried out: 5,056,644 m³ of 99.5% purity nitrogen were pumped underground. The bodies of the 19 primary victims were never recovered.
1985
Operation

Methane explosion kills 25 people

On 7 May 1985 a methane explosion in the 37th seam of the first working panel killed 25 people, including 19 miners and 6 mine rescue workers of the Důl Doubrava colliery rescue station. The disaster was among the most serious post-war mining accidents in the Ostrava-Karviná region.
1985
Construction

Major reconstruction completed; tenth level brought into service

In 1985 a comprehensive reconstruction of the mine was completed with the commissioning of the tenth working level. The mine field of 9.54 km² was organised into nine working panels. The mine's main hoisting shaft reached the tenth level at a depth of 930 metres, with the shaft extended to over 1,000 metres.
1995
Operation

Důl Doubrava incorporated into Důl ČSA

From 1 July 1995 the previously independent Důl Doubrava was incorporated into Důl ČSA as a shaft enterprise. Jáma Eleonora thereafter served as a ventilation and media-transport shaft rather than a production shaft.
1998
Operation

Shaft lining collapse at jáma Do-IV; headframe and shaft building destroyed

At 04:08 hrs on 28 July 1998 the shaft lining of jáma Do-IV failed at a depth of approximately 86 to 90 metres below collar. Catastrophic failure of the lining ensued and the shaft building and headframe collapsed into a surface crater measuring approximately 62 by 49 metres and 36 metres deep (volume c.65,200 m³). Two miners sustained minor injuries. The crater was backfilled with approximately 60,000 m³ of spoil. Mining operations at the Doubrava sector, employing approximately 1,500 underground workers, were suspended during the emergency.
2004
Closure

Progressive surface liquidation of Důl Doubrava begins

Progressive liquidation of the surface complex of Důl Doubrava began in 2004, including the dismantling of the coal-preparation plant and other surface infrastructure.
2004–2011
Redevelopment

Full surface liquidation completed; no structures remain

By 2011 the demolition of all shaft buildings, headframes, and surface infrastructure at the Důl Doubrava complex was complete and shaft collars had been sealed. The former spoil heap of the mine was subsequently converted to the DinoPark Ostrava leisure park. No mining surface structures survive.
2006
Closure

Skip headframe over jáma Doubrava I (Bettina) demolished

The skip headframe over jáma Doubrava I (Bettina) was destroyed by controlled explosive demolition at 15:30 hrs on 23 October 2006, as the fiftieth headframe to be liquidated in the OKD rationalisation programme.
2007
Closure

Coal winding ends; headframe over jáma Doubrava II demolished

Coal production at Důl Doubrava ended on 27 April 2007. The headframe over jáma Doubrava II was demolished by controlled explosive on 2 November 2007, representing the fifty-first headframe liquidation in the OKD programme.
2010
Closure

Headframe over jáma Eleonora demolished following shaft backfilling

On 26 February 2010 the 18.5-metre headframe over jáma Eleonora, weighing approximately 50 tonnes, collapsed following shaft backfilling. This ended the 170-year surface history of the last remaining shaft and headframe in the former Důl Doubrava complex.

Sources and records

Czech Wikipedia article: Důl Doubrava
Zdař Bůh mining heritage site: Důl Doubrava
Zdař Bůh: Havárie jámy Do-IV Dolu Doubrava
Zdař Bůh: Likvidace těžní věže jámy Eleonora bývalého Dolu Doubrava
Zachranar.cz: Připomínáme si smutné 75. výročí výbuchu metanu na Dole Doubrava
Zachranar.cz: 30 let po Doubravě (1985 accident account)
Technický týdeník: Jedenapadesátá hornická těžní věž padla
Moravskoslezský deník: Karvinský Důl Doubrava definitivně končí (2007)
Wikipedia Czech: Těžní věž (headframe types and incidents article)
Doubrava municipality Wikipedia and Kultura.cz district history
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