Orgreave, South Yorkshire Explained

Official Name:Orgreave
Static Image Name:Orgreave - River Rother.jpg
Static Image Caption:The River Rother at Orgreave
Coordinates:53.3701°N -1.3732°W
Os Grid Reference:SK425860
Population:739
Population Ref:(2011 Census)
Civil Parish:Orgreave
Metropolitan Borough:Rotherham
Metropolitan County:South Yorkshire
Region:Yorkshire and the Humber
Country:England
Post Town:Sheffield
Postcode District:S13
Postcode Area:S
Constituency Westminster:Rother Valley

Orgreave is a village and civil parish on the River Rother in South Yorkshire. It is in the Metropolitan Borough of Rotherham, about 4.5miles east of the centre of Sheffield and a similar distance south of the centre of Rotherham.

The 2011 Census recorded its population as 739.[1] This is a slight decline since the 2001 Census, which recorded its population as 761.[2]

History

Coal and coke

Two halls stood at Orgreave, Orgreave Hall, built in 1684 was occupied by John Sorsby of John Sorby & Sons. Rotherwood Hall was later occupied by his son Richard Sorsby (1806-1862), coal producer.[3] The halls were demolished in the 1990s.

Coal mining in the area began with Dore House Colliery in 1820. The first shaft of Orgreave Colliery was sunk in 1851. In the 20th century the Orgreave Coking Plant was established, and the colliery began to supply the plant. The National Coal Board closed Orgreave Colliery in 1981.

In the 1984–85 Miners' Strike, National Union of Mineworkers members picketed the coking plant to prevent employees and coal from entering or products from leaving. On 18 June 1984, three and a half months into the strike, a large number of South Yorkshire Police officers, including mounted units, were deployed against the pickets. There was large-scale violence between police and pickets, which became known as the Battle of Orgreave.

The coking plant closed in 1991. In 1995, British Coal Opencast was authorised to remove the spoil tip of the former colliery and conduct opencast coal mining on a site totalling 700acres. BCO removed some 12 million tonnes of spoil, extracted coal from it, and also realigned almost of the River Rother. In 2005 BCO completed its work at Orgreave and handed over the land for redevelopment.

Redevelopment

100acres of the site has been redeveloped as the Advanced Manufacturing Park. In 2008, Harworth Estates submitted a planning application to redevelop 300acres as the Waverley community, which will include 4,000 homes and some commercial development. 222acres is being restored as green space including recreation areas, parks, woods, three lakes and a reservoir.

Between 2012 and 2016, housebuilder's Taylor Wimpey, Harron Homes and Barratt Homes delivered the first 500 homes on the site. In 2017, Avant became the fourth housebuilder on site, purchasing two plots of land to build a total of 281 homes, and in the same year, Taylor Wimpey purchased further land to build another 130 new homes. In 2019 Harworth sold the latest residential phase to Barratt Homes to build 177 new homes.[4]

Waverley Junior Academy, located within the redeveloped area, is operated by Aston Community Education Trust.[5]

At the same time further land reclamation activities had increased the size of the Advanced Manufacturing Park to 150acres.[6]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Area: Orgreave (Parish): Key Figures for 2011 Census: Key Statistics . Neighbourhood Statistics . . 10 March 2016.
  2. Web site: Area: Orgreave CP (Parish): Parish Headcounts, 2001 . Neighbourhood Statistics . . 31 August 2008.
  3. Web site: Timothy-M-Sorby - User Trees - Genealogy.com. 2020-10-19. www.genealogy.com.
  4. Web site: Waverley Development Progress . www.harworthgroup.com . Harworth Group. 27 April 2020.
  5. Aston Community Education Trust, Waverley Junior Academy, accessed 18 July 2022
  6. Web site: Multi-million pound Advanced Manufacturing Park set to grow further . www.bdaily.co.uk . Bdaily Ltd. 27 April 2020.