Site overview

The Grube Viktoria at Püttlingen was the principal hard coal mine in the Köllertal, operating from 1866 until its closure in 1963. Named after Victoria of the United Kingdom, the wife of the later Emperor Friedrich III, the mine began as a Nebenschachtanlage of the Grube Gerhard; it became an independent Grube only under French administration between 1920 and 1935. Schacht Viktoria I was sunk in 1866 and completed in 1869; Schacht Viktoria II followed in 1881; and the Aspenschacht was sunk in 1891.

A third shaft complex, Schacht Viktoria III, was sunk at Köllerbach-Engelfangen from 15 September 1902. A 1,250-metre underground Stollen connected Engelfangen to the Viktoria I/II complex at Püttlingen. The mine was served from 1872 by a dedicated Grubenanschlussbahn to the Völklingen Bahnhof.

At its closure in 1963 Grube Viktoria was the most significant coal operation in the Köllertal. Schacht Viktoria II was retained for mine water management until October 2013, when the shaft was filled to 60 metres depth with concrete. The listed ensemble of the Schächte I/II site in Püttlingen includes the headframe over Schacht II, the Fördermaschinenhaus, the 1910 Zechenhaus with Waschkaue, and associated structures.

The site stands within the settled valley landscape of Püttlingen, where the surviving buildings form a substantial and still legible former colliery group.

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 Grube Viktoria has its origins in the first shaft sunk at Püttlingen in 1866, at the western edge of the town, to exploit the coal seams in the Köllertal. The mine was founded as a Nebenschachtanlage of the Grube Gerhard; the Grube Gerhard and the Grube Viktoria were connected by the 3,705-metre Veltheimstollen, whose Stollenmundlöcher in Luisenthal and Püttlingen are both well preserved. The name Viktoria honoured Victoria of the United Kingdom (1840–1901), wife of Crown Prince Friedrich of Prussia (later Emperor Friedrich III); it is one of only two Saarland coal mines named after a woman, alongside the Grube Franziska. Schacht Viktoria I was begun in 1866 and completed in 1869. Production began in July 1872, simultaneously with the opening of a 6-kilometre Grubenanschlussbahn connecting the mine with the Bahnhof Völklingen on the Saarbrücken–Trier railway and the Saar shipping route.

Schacht Viktoria II was sunk in 1881. The Aspenschacht, a further shaft, was added in 1891. On 15 September 1902 the Schacht Viktoria III was begun at Engelfangen in the Köllerbach district. By the time Schacht III was in operation, an underground Stollen of 1,250 metres connected the Engelfangen surface complex to the Viktoria I/II complex. During the French administration of the Saargebiet from 1920 to 1935, the mine was given independent status as Grube Viktoria separate from the Grube Gerhard. Schacht Viktoria III was renamed Edward-Schacht under French administration; this name was relinquished when German administration returned in 1935. In October 1964 Schacht Viktoria III was closed.

During the Second World War, the Veltheimstollen was used as a civilian Schutzstollen. On 13 December 1944 an American artillery shell struck a Klärbecken above the Stollenmundloch, causing sludge to inundate the Stollen; 19 people sheltering inside were killed. A Gedenktafel at the Stollenmundloch commemorates this event. The mine was also the site of a seilfahrt accident: on 16 March 1907, miners were killed in the Mathildenschacht at the Grube Viktoria; a granite Denkmal in pfeilerartiger Ausführung commemorates those victims.

The Grube Viktoria was closed in 1963, at which point it was the most significant Kohleförderanlage in the Köllertal. Schacht Viktoria II was retained open for mine water management. In October 2013 the Betriebsfähigkeit of Schacht Viktoria II was ended after fifty years of water pumping: the shaft was filled from the surface down to 60 metres depth with concrete while a narrow pipe remained open to 6,000 m³ per day of Grubenwasser pumping into the Schlehbach. The Tagesanlage Viktoria I/II, including the Fördergerüst of Schacht II, the Fördermaschinenhaus, the Zechenhaus mit Waschkaue (Backsteinbau of 1910, now used as a Gewerbezentrum), the Schalthaus, and the Umformergebäude, was placed under Denkmalschutz as a Gesamtensemble. The Fördermaschinenhaus at Engelfangen — a Sandsteinquaderbau of 1904 with Rundbogenfenster and Lisenengliederung, now used as a Reitstall and Scheune — and the Zechenhaus Engelfangen are also well preserved. The Stollenmundlöcher of the Viktoriastollen are visible on the Engelfangen site. Adjacent to the mine site stands the Bergehalde Viktoria, a prominent Landmarke in the Köllertal with an informal designation Monte Schlacko shared with other Saar Halden; it was incorporated from 1976 into the Erholungsgebiet Espenwald with footpaths to the Haldenplateau and its Gipfelkreuz.

Timeline

Heritage

Listed ensemble of Tagesanlage Viktoria I/II preserved; Bergehalde Viktoria incorporated into Erholungsgebiet Espenwald

The Tagesanlage Viktoria I/II ensemble — headframe over Schacht II, Fördermaschinenhaus, Schalthaus, Umformergebäude, and the 1910 Zechenhaus with Waschkaue — was placed under Denkmalschutz. The Bergehalde Viktoria was incorporated from 1976 into the Erholungsgebiet Espenwald with footpaths and a Gipfelkreuz. The Haldenrundweg was created around 2000 as part of the Regionalpark Saar.
1866–1869
Construction

Schacht Viktoria I sunk and completed; mine founded as Nebenschachtanlage of Grube Gerhard

Schacht Viktoria I was begun in 1866 and completed in 1869 at Püttlingen, as a Nebenschachtanlage of the Grube Gerhard. The mine was named after Victoria of the United Kingdom, wife of Crown Prince Friedrich of Prussia.
1872
Operation

Coal production begins; Grubenanschlussbahn opened to Völklingen Bahnhof

Production began in July 1872 simultaneously with the opening of a 6-kilometre Grubenanschlussbahn connecting the mine to the Bahnhof Völklingen on the Saarbrücken–Trier railway.
1881
Construction

Schacht Viktoria II sunk

Schacht Viktoria II was sunk in 1881, expanding the Tagesanlage Viktoria I/II complex.
1902
Construction

Schacht Viktoria III begun at Engelfangen

The Schacht Viktoria III was angehauen on 15 September 1902 at Köllerbach-Engelfangen, connected to the Viktoria I/II complex by a 1,250-metre underground Stollen.
1920–1935
Legislation

French administration; Grube Viktoria becomes independent mine; Schacht III renamed Edward-Schacht

Under the French Mines Domaniales Françaises de la Sarre from 1920, the Grube Viktoria was constituted as an independent mine separate from the Grube Gerhard. Schacht Viktoria III was renamed Edward-Schacht during this period.
1944
Operation

19 civilians killed by artillery strike at Veltheimstollen entrance

On 13 December 1944 an American artillery shell struck a Klärbecken above the Veltheimstollen Mundloch, causing sludge to inundate the Stollen. 19 people sheltering inside were killed. A Gedenktafel at the Stollenmundloch commemorates them.
1963
Closure

Grube Viktoria closed after 97 years of operation

The Grube Viktoria was closed in 1963. It had been the most significant coal operation in the Köllertal. Schacht II was retained for mine water management.
1964
Closure

Schacht Viktoria III (Engelfangen) closed

Schacht Viktoria III at Engelfangen was closed in October 1964.
2013
Closure

Schacht Viktoria II filled to 60 metres; mine water pumping continues via narrow pipe

In October 2013 the Betriebsfähigkeit of Schacht Viktoria II ended, exactly 50 years after the mine's closure. A platform was installed at 60 metres; from the surface to 60 metres the shaft was filled with concrete, leaving only a narrow pipe for Grubenwasser pumping of up to 6,000 m³/day into the Schlehbach.

Sources and records

German Wikipedia article: Grube Viktoria
DeWiki: Grube Viktoria
Saarlandbilder.net: Grube Viktoria, Püttlingen (structural descriptions)
Saarland Industriekulturportal: Tagesanlage Viktoria mit Halde, Püttlingen
Saarland Landesdenkmalamt: Denkmäler des Steinkohlenbergbaus im Saarland (DocPlayer 2011)
Der Landgraph: Zechen im Saarland (Grube Viktoria section)
Saar-Nostalgie.de: Grube Viktoria Püttlingen
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