Site overview

Szyb "Witold" is a former hard coal mine shaft located in the Gorce district of Boguszów-Gorce, Lower Silesia, in the Wałbrzych Coal Basin. Mining at Gorce is documented from the second half of the eighteenth century, with the first recorded mention dating to 1769. The shaft, initially known as "Gustaw", was sunk in 1791 and served for the transport of personnel and mine support materials.

During the Second World War the mine was incorporated into Kopalnia Węgla Kamiennego "Victoria" in Wałbrzych. After the war the shaft was renamed "Witold" and continued in operation under the Victoria combine until the closure of the Wałbrzych coalfield in 1993. Following closure the complex was recorded in the Voivodeship Heritage Register.

Between 2012 and 2013 the headframe building and winding tower were adapted with European Union funding into the Centrum Kulturalno-Kongresowe "Witold", which opened on 21 June 2014. The complex now houses a mining heritage room, a library branch, a conference hall, and an observation tower open to the public.

The restored shaft complex stands within the settled hillside townscape of Boguszów-Gorce, where the preserved buildings and tower remain a prominent landmark.

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

Szyb "Witold" stands in the Gorce district of Boguszów-Gorce, at the foot of Góra Mniszek in Lower Silesia, within the former Wałbrzych Hard Coal Basin. The earliest documented reference to coal extraction at Gorce dates to 1769, placing the origin of mining here in the second half of the eighteenth century. The shaft itself was constructed in 1791 under the name "Gustaw" and from the outset served as a transport shaft for miners and the materials required to support underground workings.

The mine at Gorce operated through periods of changing political and economic conditions over the following century and a half, its landscape defined by the accumulation of shaft infrastructure, coke ovens, timber yards and chimney stacks that characterised the coalfield. During the Second World War, in 1943, the mine was incorporated into the extractive operations of Kopalnia Węgla Kamiennego "Victoria" in Wałbrzych, the dominant mining enterprise of the basin, and underwent an intensive period of development. Following the end of the war, the shaft underwent renaming: "Gustaw" became "Witold", under which designation it continued to function within the Victoria combine.

The shaft reached a depth of 586 metres. Hard coal extraction at "Witold" continued until 1993, when it was closed as part of the broad restructuring and progressive liquidation of the Wałbrzych coalfield that followed the economic transformation of the early 1990s. Szyb "Witold" was among the earliest of the Wałbrzych-area shafts to be decommissioned in this process.

Following closure the surface complex — comprising the headframe building, the winding tower, and associated structures, the oldest of which date to the nineteenth century — was entered in the Dolnośląskie Voivodeship Heritage Register, securing legal protection for the surviving fabric. The buildings stood largely unused for nearly two decades, during which time deterioration progressed. In 2011, the municipality of Boguszów-Gorce signed a funding agreement with the Urząd Marszałkowski Województwa Dolnośląskiego for the adaptation of the headframe building and winding tower.

The project was co-financed by the European Union through the European Regional Development Fund under the Dolnośląskie Regional Operational Programme 2007–2013, with total project costs of approximately 3.5 million złoty, of which approximately 2.4 million złoty came from EU sources. Adaptation and renovation works were carried out between 2012 and 2013. The complex opened as Centrum Kulturalno-Kongresowe "Witold" on 21 June 2014.

The former headframe building now contains, on its ground floor, a branch library (Filia nr 4 of the Miejska Biblioteka Publiczna – Centrum Kultury), and on the upper floor a conference and events hall of approximately 400 square metres that also serves as the Izba Pamięci Górnictwa i Kopalnictwa — a heritage room housing mining artefacts, photographs, documents, historic plans, lamps, protective equipment, uniforms, and tools donated by former miners and their families. The former winding engine building has been fitted out as a restaurant. The shaft's winding tower, standing 34 metres high, has been adapted as a public observation tower accessible by 117 steps, offering views over Gorce and the surrounding hills.

The centre hosts educational programmes for schools, cultural events, concerts, and exhibitions, and provides a venue for gatherings preserving the mining traditions of the locality.

Timeline

1769
Exploration

First recorded evidence of coal mining at Gorce

The earliest documented mention of coal mining in the Gorce locality of what is now Boguszów-Gorce dates to 1769, establishing the site's origins in the second half of the eighteenth century.
1791
Construction

Shaft "Gustaw" constructed

The shaft, then named "Gustaw", was sunk in 1791. It served as a transport shaft for miners and the materials used in mine support, and formed the principal shaft installation of the Gorce coal mine.
1943
Operation

Mine incorporated into KWK "Victoria"; shaft renamed "Witold"

In 1943, during the Second World War, the Gorce mine was incorporated into Kopalnia Węgla Kamiennego "Victoria" in Wałbrzych and underwent intensive development. After the war, the shaft was renamed from "Gustaw" to "Witold".
1943–1993
Operation

Hard coal extraction under KWK "Victoria"

Szyb "Witold" operated as part of the Victoria combine, extracting hard coal from a shaft reaching 586 metres in depth. The mine contributed to the Wałbrzych coalfield's output through the post-war decades until closure.
1993
Closure

Mine closed; shaft decommissioned

In 1993, Szyb "Witold" was closed as part of the restructuring and progressive liquidation of the Wałbrzych Hard Coal Basin following Poland's economic transformation. It was among the first of the Wałbrzych-area shafts to be decommissioned.
1993
Heritage

Complex entered in Dolnośląskie Voivodeship Heritage Register

Following closure, the surviving surface complex — including the headframe building, winding tower, and nineteenth-century associated structures — was listed in the Dolnośląskie Voivodeship Heritage Register, providing legal protection.
2011–2013
Redevelopment

EU-funded adaptation project initiated and completed

In 2011, the municipality of Boguszów-Gorce signed a funding agreement for the adaptation of the headframe building and winding tower, co-financed through the EU European Regional Development Fund. Works were carried out 2012–2013 at a total cost of approximately 3.5 million złoty (approximately 2.4 million from EU sources).
2014
Redevelopment

Centrum Kulturalno-Kongresowe "Witold" opened

The adapted complex opened on 21 June 2014 as Centrum Kulturalno-Kongresowe "Witold". The former headframe building now houses a library branch and conference hall with the Izba Pamięci Górnictwa i Kopalnictwa; the winding tower serves as a 34-metre public observation tower; and the engine building contains a restaurant.

Sources and records

Powiat Wałbrzych tourist information: Szyb "Witold" — Centrum Kulturalno-Kongresowe "Witold", Boguszów-Gorce
Boguszów-Gorce municipal website: Warto zobaczyć
Znaczki Turystyczne No. 646: Szyb "Witold" w Boguszowie-Gorcach
Wałbrzyszek.com: Witold na szlaku (August 2020)
Wałbrzych Nasze Miasto: Szyb Witold w Boguszowie-Gorcach (April 2024)
Investmap.pl: Centrum Kulturalno-Kongresowe WITOLD, Boguszów-Gorce
Dolny Śląsk Travel: Szyb Witold w Boguszowie-Gorcach
Szlaki dziedzictwa, Centrum Nauki Kultury i Sztuki Stara Kopalnia, Wałbrzych
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