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Compagnie des mines d'Anzin

50°24′N 3°30′E / 50.40°N 3.50°E / 50.40; 3.50 The Compagnie des mines d'Anzin (Anzin Mining Company) was a large French mining company in the coal basin of Nord-Pas-de-Calais in northern France. It was established in 1756 and operated for almost 200 years.

Compagnie des mines d'Anzin
Fosse Saint Louis c. 1900
IndustryCoal mining
Founded19 November 1757 (1757-11-19)
FoundersViscount Désandrouin, Prince de Croÿ, Marquis de Cernay
Defunct17 May 1946 (1946-05-17)
Headquarters
Anzin, Nord
,
France

The company used innovative pumping technology to support deep mining operations in the rich bituminous coalfield. At its peak in the mid-19th century it was one of the largest industrial enterprises in France, with about 12,000 miners. Émile Zola visited the region during a strike in 1884 which he used as the basis for his novel Germinal. The work was dangerous and unhealthy, but the company paid the miners well compared to other industries, provided housing, welfare and pensions, and sponsored social activities. The mines reached their peak of prosperity before World War I (1914–18), but were badly damaged during the war. They struggled to regain profitability in period leading up to World War II (1939–45). The mines were nationalized in 1946. Many were closed in the 1970s and 1980s. The last ceased operation in 1990. The landscape has been partly restored but traces of mining such as slag heaps, ponds and railway cuttings remain, and a few heritage sites have been preserved.

Location of the mining basin and other coalfields in France

Location edit

 
The mining basin in Nord-Pas-de-Calais, Anzin is in the east

The Nord-Pas de Calais Mining Basin extends for 100 kilometres (62 mi) from the Valenciennes region in the east past Douai and Lens to Béthune in the west. It is 4 to 12 kilometres (2.5 to 7.5 mi) wide. For many years it was the most important coalfield in France. Over two billion tons of coal were extracted from the basin between the early 18th century and late 20th century. The concessions granted to the Compagnie des mines d'Anzin lay in the east of this basin, named after the town of Anzin, to the north of Valenciennes.[1]

Early years edit

 
Jean-Jacques Desandrouin, founder of the company

Coal was mined in the pre-industrial era for use by blacksmiths, but was seen as an inferior fuel to wood for heating a home. Demand began to rise in the early 18th century due to population growth and limited wood supplies.[1] The Mons-Charleroi coal basin was lost to France in 1713 by the Treaty of Utrecht.[2] The Viscount Jean-Jacques Desandrouin (1681–1761) bailli of Charleroi, had made a fortune at his seignurie of Lodelinsart from a coal mine, forges and glassworks. In 1716 he began to explore the region of French Hainaut in the hope of finding a westward extension of the Mons-Charleroi deposit. In 1720 Désandrouin and his research director Jacques Mathieu, with a team of twenty miners, found coal at Fresnes-sur-Escaut.[2] The government gave Desandrouin a 20-year exclusive mining privilege and a subsidy of 35,000 livres. He struggled on with many setbacks and great loss of money, and finally found bituminous coal at the village of Anzin in 1734, when he was on the verge of ruin. By 1756 his company had 1,500 workers and sixteen pits.[3]

When he learned of the discovery the Prince de Croÿ, lord of Valenciennes, asserted his rights to the deposit and a prolonged legal battle began. On 14 January 1744 the king decreed that all minerals below the soil were the property of the crown, and could only be exploited by the landowner after a formal concession had been granted. Eventually in 1757 the Viscount Désandrouin, Prince de Croÿ, Marquis de Cernay and others founded the first mining company in the Nord, the Compagnie des Mines d'Anzin.[1] The company was formally created by the merger on 19 November 1757 of the Société Desandrouin-Taffin, the Société Desandrouin-Cordier and the Société de Cernay.[4] Desandrouin received twelve shares of the new company, Cernay eight and Croy four.[5] It was one of the first large industrial companies in France.[6]

The total concession area of 28,000 hectares (69,000 acres) was the largest in the Nord-Pas de Calais Basin.[7] The company introduced steam engines to operate pumps that removed water from the mines, which could reach a depth of 200 metres (660 ft).[8] In 1789 the company had 25 mine shafts, 12 steam engines and 4,000 miners, and produced one third of French coal.[9]

Most of the workers were recruited locally and some were highly skilled. Typically they worked in family teams, a practice encouraged by the company, and were paid by performance. To retain workers the company supported families after death or disability, and provided health services and pensions.[1] A mine worker might start as a child of seven, dragging wagons of coal, then graduate to working on the coal face. Typically the miner worked lying on his side since the veins of coal were rarely more than 1 metre (3 ft 3 in) thick. After the age of 35 they would be given less demanding work in the mine or on the surface. The mines were worked around the clock, on three shifts. Sometimes explosives were used to open new galleries. The work was dangerous and unhealthy, but was well-paid.[1]

Revolutionary period edit

The French Revolution caused the status of the company to be questioned. The company employed Honoré Gabriel Riqueti, comte de Mirabeau in 1791 to defend its interests, and then Jean Jacques Régis de Cambacérès as legal counsel.[9] Between 1792 and 1794 the mines were badly damaged during fighting between the French revolutionary forces and the monarchist Allies.[10] The assets of the emigrant nobles were sold to Stanislaus Désandrouin in June 1795. A month later he resold a large share to a group of financiers from the French East India Company.[9] The pits were repaired and production expanded again, with a new shaft sunk in early 1796. Production rose to 248,000 tons in 1799, and by 1800 the company had almost completely recovered.[11]

Claude Périer (1742–1802) obtained 27.5 deniers of the Anzin Mining Company during this financial reorganization.[12] In addition to Désandrouin the new owners included the leading members of the East India Company including Pierre Desprez, Jean-Barthélémy Le Couteulx de Canteleu, Augustin-Jacques Perier, Guillaume Sabatier, the widows of the directors Pierre Bernier and Pourrat, Thieffries (the partner of Périer) and smaller shares held by the two legal advisers of the company, Berryer and Cambacérès. With the financial support of Sabatier the Périers gradually took control of the Mines d'Anzin.[9] When Claude Périer died in 1801 his shares were divided between his eight sons and two daughters. In 1805 Scipion Périer became director of the mining company, and Casimir Pierre Périer became assistant director.[12] The Périers held a large block of shares in the company, and their bank managed the company's finances, including investments, changes in shareholdings and loans to shareholders. The machine shops of Jacques-Constantin Périer at Chaillot supplied steam engines and equipment for mining from 1818.[12]

First Empire and Bourbon restoration edit

 
Chauffour pit around 1800

The company was the first to build housing for miners in 1810 near Valenciennes. There are still 79 settlements founded by the company including villages, towns and garden cities. The company generally only provided housing, and did not introduce community facilities in these settlements.[7] From 1820 there were increasing numbers of exploratory mines throughout the concession area. The pits sunk at Abscon in 1823 and 1824 were disappointing. The company decided to exploit the promising deposits in the Denain area more intensively, and opened multiple mines in this area between 1826 and 1831 including Villars, Turenne, Bayard and la Pensée.[13]

When Scipion Périer died in 1821, Casimir Périer became director of the Anzin mines and Joseph Périer became assistant director.[12] In 1823 Casimir Périer replaced his brother Scipion as head of the company, and initiated a thorough reorganization to improve profitability. Wages were reduced, older workers retired, and modern equipment installed.[1] In 1831 King Louis Philippe named Casimir Périer president of the council and Minister of the Interior.[14] From the time of the Revolution until 1833 there was only one short and partial strike in 1824.[15]

Joseph Périer was concerned that productivity might suffer if the mines supervisory staff became too close to the workers. In 1826 he asked the general agent of the Anzin company "to arrange a kind of police that would inform him if the director, the under-director and the master foremen were doing their job."[16] Joseph Périer became director after Casimir died in 1832, and Casimir's son Auguste became assistant director.[12] 4,000 miners went on strike in May 1833, and almost all the pits were closed by shutting down the pumps. The miners held out for eight days against the management, authorities and 5,000 troops who were brought in to "restore order". The strike then collapsed. A few of the leaders were tried and let off with light punishments. The cause is obscure but may have been due to general dissatisfaction with Perier's efficiency measures.[15][17]

 
The railway was the main artery of the Compagnie d'Anzin.

The company was quick to exploit steam-powered railways, and in 1834 built a line for coal trucks between Saint-Waast and Denain.[13] The Somain-Péruwelz Railway, built by the Compagnie des mines d'Anzin, was one of the first passenger railways in France. The concession was granted on 24 October 1835 and work started immediately.[18] On 21 October 1838 the "Train d'Anzin" opened to passenger traffic. It was not until 1846 that the official railway line reached the region, making Saint-Waast the first railway station in the Nord. The line was soon extended to Abscon.[13] The census of 1842 shows that Joseph Périer may have been the most wealthy property-owner in France, paying 56,503 francs, mostly for the Anzin mines.[19]

The Renard (Fox) pit was opened in 1836, later to be the subject of Émile Zola's novel Germinal. The dialect poet Mousseron ("Cafougnette") worked there for 46 years.[13] The Joseph Périer mine was opened in 1841, and reached coal at 75 metres (246 ft). By 1867 it had reached a depth of 380 metres (1,250 ft).[20] Pits proliferated in the Valenciennes region at Saint-Waast (Réussite, Régie), Anzin (St Louis) and Escaudain (St Mark). The company was the largest coal producer in France, but soon faced competition from companies operating nearby, notable the Aniche company to the west of the concession.[13] The main shareholders and executives included leading French businessmen and politicians such as such as Adolphe Thiers (1797–1877).[21] The wife of Auguste Casimir-Perier (1811–76), a member of the board, was sister of the wife of Gaston Audiffret-Pasquier (1823–1905) who also sat on the board. Audiffret-Pasquier was an Orleanist leader, president of the national assembly and then of the senate.[22]

Second Empire and 3rd Republic edit

 
Hérin c. 1900

During the Second French Empire (1852–70) companies exploiting the deposits of the Pas-de-Calais to the west began to increase output. In 1878 Pas-de-Calais produced more coal than Nord. By 1890 the Société des mines de Lens had become the largest mining company in France, displacing Anzin. Technology had changed little since the 18th century, with coal still extracted manually, but towards the end of the century laws were implemented to reduce child labor.[1][a] The mining company was paternalistic, providing housing, clinics, schools, canteens and shops, paying relief and pensions, and sponsoring sports and social activities. There were improvements to workers' rights, with strikes allowed from 1864 and trade unions from 1884.[1]

Émile Zola visited the area in 1884 to obtain background for his novel Germinal. He arrived at the time of a strike by 12,000 miners.[23] The strike began at Anzin in February 1884 after 140 workers, mostly union members, were dismissed. The company called in troops to defend the mines, and refused to make any concessions. The strike lasted 56 days, and was headline news in France, but failed completely.[1] During this strike Émile Basly emerged as a leader of the miners. He became secretary general of the Nord miners' union, president of the Pas-de-Calais miners' union, deputy and mayor of Lens.[21] A strike began in Marles-les-Mines in the winter of 1891 and spread throughout the region, mainly for higher wages. The outcome was the first collective labor agreement in France, the Convention of Arras, which established insurance funds and pensions. Women were banned from underground work in 1892, and boys under twelve in 1906. In 1910 the working day was set at eight hours, with a mandatory day off each week.[1]

During World War I (1914–18) the front lines ran across the mining area, and many of the mines were systematically destroyed by the Germans. After the war the mines were reopened. An influx of Polish miners made up for the huge casualties among French miners during the war. During the depression of the 1930s many of these workers and their families were forcibly returned to Poland. The communists and socialists struggled for control of the mining region. During World War II (1939–45) the mines were occupied by the Germans in 1940 and ruthlessly exploited using laborers from the Ukraine, Russia, Serbia and elsewhere.[1]

 
Railway line from the Lambrecht pit.

Nationalization and closure edit

A decree of 13 December 1944 created the state-owned Houillères Nationales to acquire the privately held mining properties. Shareholders of the former companies received compensation of 8 francs per ton, higher than the profit per ton they had made in 1938. The state assigned managers to the new company and set wages and prices, but the company otherwise operated independently.[7] The law of 17 May 1946 created the Charbonnages de France, completing the transfer to the state. An administrative council represented workers, consumers and the state.[7]

Over the years that followed there were various administrative changes. Efforts were made to restore the landscape as pits were closed, and a government program was launched in the late 1970s to clean up the main urban centers. There were accelerated pit closures during the 1980s. The last pit in the Nord-Pas de Calais region closed in October 1990. The old railways have been converted to walking and hiking routes, and ponds converted for recreational use or made into ecological reserves. A few sites have been preserved as mining heritage sites for tourists.[7]

Notes edit

  1. ^ The work was still unhealthy. An 1878 book was devoted to the study of miners' anemia, called "Anzin anemia".(Manouvriez 1878, p. 3)

Sources edit

  • Barker, Richard J. (June 1961), "French Entrepreneurship During the Restoration: The Record of a Single Firm, the Anzin Mining Company", The Journal of Economic History, Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Economic History Association, 21 (2): 161–178, doi:10.1017/S0022050700101949, JSTOR 2115186
  • "Compagnie des Mines d'Anzin" (PDF). Archives Nationales du Monde du Travail (in French). Ministry of Culture. Retrieved 2015-12-12.
  • Dormoy, Émile (1867), Topographie souterraine du bassin houiller de Valenciennes (in French), Imprimerie impériale, retrieved 2017-08-30
  • Dussart, Michel (2006-12-08). "La compagnie des mines d'Anzin" (in French). Diocèse de Cambrai. Retrieved 2015-12-13.
  • Geiger, Reed G. (1974), Anzin Coal Company, 1800-1833: Big Business in the Early Stages of the French Industrial Revolution, University of Delaware Press, ISBN 978-0-87413-108-6, retrieved 2015-12-14
  • Grar, Édouard (1848), Histoire de la recherche, de la découverte et de l'exploitation de la houille dans le Hainaut français, dans la Flandre française et dans l'Artois, 1716-1791 (PDF) (in French), vol. II, Valenciennes: Impr. de A. Prignet
  • Hardy-Hémery, Odette (2005). "Diana Cooper-Richet, Le peuple de la nuit. Mines et mineurs en France (XIXe-XXe siècle), Paris, Perrin, 2002, 441 p., 22 €". Revue d'histoire moderne et contemporaine (in French). 52 (4). Retrieved 2015-12-13.
  • . Atlas du Patromoine (in French). Archived from the original on 2015-12-07. Retrieved 2015-12-13.
  • Jolly, Jean (1960–1977). "Jean, Paul, Pierre PERIER DIT CASIMIR-PERIER". Dictionnaire des parlementaires français; notices biographiques sur les ministres, députés et sénateurs français de 1889 à 1940 (in French). Paris: Presses universitaires de France. ISBN 2-1100-1998-0. Retrieved 2015-12-13.
  • Leroy, Jean-François (2002-02-08). "Émile Basly". Nordmag (in French). Retrieved 2015-12-13.
  • "Les trois âges de la mine". Bulletin de Liaison des Professeurs d'Histoire-Géographie de l'Académie de Reims (in French) (27). 2002. Retrieved 2015-12-13.
  • Manouvriez, Anatole (1878), De l'anémie des mineurs, dite d'Anzin, Giard
  • Mayeur, Jean Marie; Corbin, Alain; Schweitz, Arlette (1995-01-01), Les immortels du Sénat, 1875-1918: les cent seize inamovibles de la Troisième République, Publications de la Sorbonne, ISBN 978-2-85944-273-6, retrieved 2015-12-13
  • Michel, Joël (1969), "La découverte du charbon dans le valenciennois", La Magazine du Mineur (in French), ORTF, retrieved 2015-12-13
  • Mitterrand, Henri (2002), "Zola à Anzin : les mineurs de Germinal", Travailler (in French), 1 (7): 37, doi:10.3917/trav.007.0037
  • Prunaux, Emmanuel (2006-08-19). "La Société des Mines d'Anzin". Cambacérès (in French). Retrieved 2015-12-13.
  • Reid, Donald (October 1985), "Industrial Paternalism: Discourse and Practice in Nineteenth-Century French Mining and Metallurgy", Comparative Studies in Society and History, Cambridge University Press, 27 (4): 579–607, doi:10.1017/S0010417500011671, JSTOR 178593
  • Statistique archéologique du Département du Nord - seconde partie (in French). Librairie Quarré et Leleu à Lille, A. Durand 7 rue Cujas à Paris. 1867.
  • Tudesq, A.-J. (1961), "La Banque de France au milieu du XIX e siècle. Étude des structures sociales", Revue Historique (in French), Presses Universitaires de France, 226 (2): 339–356, JSTOR 40949498

compagnie, mines, anzin, anzin, mining, company, large, french, mining, company, coal, basin, nord, calais, northern, france, established, 1756, operated, almost, years, fosse, saint, louis, 1900industrycoal, miningfounded19, november, 1757, 1757, foundersvisc. 50 24 N 3 30 E 50 40 N 3 50 E 50 40 3 50 The Compagnie des mines d Anzin Anzin Mining Company was a large French mining company in the coal basin of Nord Pas de Calais in northern France It was established in 1756 and operated for almost 200 years Compagnie des mines d AnzinFosse Saint Louis c 1900IndustryCoal miningFounded19 November 1757 1757 11 19 FoundersViscount Desandrouin Prince de Croy Marquis de CernayDefunct17 May 1946 1946 05 17 HeadquartersAnzin Nord FranceThe company used innovative pumping technology to support deep mining operations in the rich bituminous coalfield At its peak in the mid 19th century it was one of the largest industrial enterprises in France with about 12 000 miners Emile Zola visited the region during a strike in 1884 which he used as the basis for his novel Germinal The work was dangerous and unhealthy but the company paid the miners well compared to other industries provided housing welfare and pensions and sponsored social activities The mines reached their peak of prosperity before World War I 1914 18 but were badly damaged during the war They struggled to regain profitability in period leading up to World War II 1939 45 The mines were nationalized in 1946 Many were closed in the 1970s and 1980s The last ceased operation in 1990 The landscape has been partly restored but traces of mining such as slag heaps ponds and railway cuttings remain and a few heritage sites have been preserved Location of the mining basin and other coalfields in FranceContents 1 Location 2 Early years 3 Revolutionary period 4 First Empire and Bourbon restoration 5 Second Empire and 3rd Republic 6 Nationalization and closure 7 Notes 8 SourcesLocation edit nbsp The mining basin in Nord Pas de Calais Anzin is in the eastThe Nord Pas de Calais Mining Basin extends for 100 kilometres 62 mi from the Valenciennes region in the east past Douai and Lens to Bethune in the west It is 4 to 12 kilometres 2 5 to 7 5 mi wide For many years it was the most important coalfield in France Over two billion tons of coal were extracted from the basin between the early 18th century and late 20th century The concessions granted to the Compagnie des mines d Anzin lay in the east of this basin named after the town of Anzin to the north of Valenciennes 1 Early years edit nbsp Jean Jacques Desandrouin founder of the companyCoal was mined in the pre industrial era for use by blacksmiths but was seen as an inferior fuel to wood for heating a home Demand began to rise in the early 18th century due to population growth and limited wood supplies 1 The Mons Charleroi coal basin was lost to France in 1713 by the Treaty of Utrecht 2 The Viscount Jean Jacques Desandrouin 1681 1761 bailli of Charleroi had made a fortune at his seignurie of Lodelinsart from a coal mine forges and glassworks In 1716 he began to explore the region of French Hainaut in the hope of finding a westward extension of the Mons Charleroi deposit In 1720 Desandrouin and his research director Jacques Mathieu with a team of twenty miners found coal at Fresnes sur Escaut 2 The government gave Desandrouin a 20 year exclusive mining privilege and a subsidy of 35 000 livres He struggled on with many setbacks and great loss of money and finally found bituminous coal at the village of Anzin in 1734 when he was on the verge of ruin By 1756 his company had 1 500 workers and sixteen pits 3 When he learned of the discovery the Prince de Croy lord of Valenciennes asserted his rights to the deposit and a prolonged legal battle began On 14 January 1744 the king decreed that all minerals below the soil were the property of the crown and could only be exploited by the landowner after a formal concession had been granted Eventually in 1757 the Viscount Desandrouin Prince de Croy Marquis de Cernay and others founded the first mining company in the Nord the Compagnie des Mines d Anzin 1 The company was formally created by the merger on 19 November 1757 of the Societe Desandrouin Taffin the Societe Desandrouin Cordier and the Societe de Cernay 4 Desandrouin received twelve shares of the new company Cernay eight and Croy four 5 It was one of the first large industrial companies in France 6 The total concession area of 28 000 hectares 69 000 acres was the largest in the Nord Pas de Calais Basin 7 The company introduced steam engines to operate pumps that removed water from the mines which could reach a depth of 200 metres 660 ft 8 In 1789 the company had 25 mine shafts 12 steam engines and 4 000 miners and produced one third of French coal 9 Most of the workers were recruited locally and some were highly skilled Typically they worked in family teams a practice encouraged by the company and were paid by performance To retain workers the company supported families after death or disability and provided health services and pensions 1 A mine worker might start as a child of seven dragging wagons of coal then graduate to working on the coal face Typically the miner worked lying on his side since the veins of coal were rarely more than 1 metre 3 ft 3 in thick After the age of 35 they would be given less demanding work in the mine or on the surface The mines were worked around the clock on three shifts Sometimes explosives were used to open new galleries The work was dangerous and unhealthy but was well paid 1 Revolutionary period editThe French Revolution caused the status of the company to be questioned The company employed Honore Gabriel Riqueti comte de Mirabeau in 1791 to defend its interests and then Jean Jacques Regis de Cambaceres as legal counsel 9 Between 1792 and 1794 the mines were badly damaged during fighting between the French revolutionary forces and the monarchist Allies 10 The assets of the emigrant nobles were sold to Stanislaus Desandrouin in June 1795 A month later he resold a large share to a group of financiers from the French East India Company 9 The pits were repaired and production expanded again with a new shaft sunk in early 1796 Production rose to 248 000 tons in 1799 and by 1800 the company had almost completely recovered 11 Claude Perier 1742 1802 obtained 27 5 deniers of the Anzin Mining Company during this financial reorganization 12 In addition to Desandrouin the new owners included the leading members of the East India Company including Pierre Desprez Jean Barthelemy Le Couteulx de Canteleu Augustin Jacques Perier Guillaume Sabatier the widows of the directors Pierre Bernier and Pourrat Thieffries the partner of Perier and smaller shares held by the two legal advisers of the company Berryer and Cambaceres With the financial support of Sabatier the Periers gradually took control of the Mines d Anzin 9 When Claude Perier died in 1801 his shares were divided between his eight sons and two daughters In 1805 Scipion Perier became director of the mining company and Casimir Pierre Perier became assistant director 12 The Periers held a large block of shares in the company and their bank managed the company s finances including investments changes in shareholdings and loans to shareholders The machine shops of Jacques Constantin Perier at Chaillot supplied steam engines and equipment for mining from 1818 12 First Empire and Bourbon restoration edit nbsp Chauffour pit around 1800The company was the first to build housing for miners in 1810 near Valenciennes There are still 79 settlements founded by the company including villages towns and garden cities The company generally only provided housing and did not introduce community facilities in these settlements 7 From 1820 there were increasing numbers of exploratory mines throughout the concession area The pits sunk at Abscon in 1823 and 1824 were disappointing The company decided to exploit the promising deposits in the Denain area more intensively and opened multiple mines in this area between 1826 and 1831 including Villars Turenne Bayard and la Pensee 13 When Scipion Perier died in 1821 Casimir Perier became director of the Anzin mines and Joseph Perier became assistant director 12 In 1823 Casimir Perier replaced his brother Scipion as head of the company and initiated a thorough reorganization to improve profitability Wages were reduced older workers retired and modern equipment installed 1 In 1831 King Louis Philippe named Casimir Perier president of the council and Minister of the Interior 14 From the time of the Revolution until 1833 there was only one short and partial strike in 1824 15 Joseph Perier was concerned that productivity might suffer if the mines supervisory staff became too close to the workers In 1826 he asked the general agent of the Anzin company to arrange a kind of police that would inform him if the director the under director and the master foremen were doing their job 16 Joseph Perier became director after Casimir died in 1832 and Casimir s son Auguste became assistant director 12 4 000 miners went on strike in May 1833 and almost all the pits were closed by shutting down the pumps The miners held out for eight days against the management authorities and 5 000 troops who were brought in to restore order The strike then collapsed A few of the leaders were tried and let off with light punishments The cause is obscure but may have been due to general dissatisfaction with Perier s efficiency measures 15 17 nbsp The railway was the main artery of the Compagnie d Anzin The company was quick to exploit steam powered railways and in 1834 built a line for coal trucks between Saint Waast and Denain 13 The Somain Peruwelz Railway built by the Compagnie des mines d Anzin was one of the first passenger railways in France The concession was granted on 24 October 1835 and work started immediately 18 On 21 October 1838 the Train d Anzin opened to passenger traffic It was not until 1846 that the official railway line reached the region making Saint Waast the first railway station in the Nord The line was soon extended to Abscon 13 The census of 1842 shows that Joseph Perier may have been the most wealthy property owner in France paying 56 503 francs mostly for the Anzin mines 19 The Renard Fox pit was opened in 1836 later to be the subject of Emile Zola s novel Germinal The dialect poet Mousseron Cafougnette worked there for 46 years 13 The Joseph Perier mine was opened in 1841 and reached coal at 75 metres 246 ft By 1867 it had reached a depth of 380 metres 1 250 ft 20 Pits proliferated in the Valenciennes region at Saint Waast Reussite Regie Anzin St Louis and Escaudain St Mark The company was the largest coal producer in France but soon faced competition from companies operating nearby notable the Aniche company to the west of the concession 13 The main shareholders and executives included leading French businessmen and politicians such as such as Adolphe Thiers 1797 1877 21 The wife of Auguste Casimir Perier 1811 76 a member of the board was sister of the wife of Gaston Audiffret Pasquier 1823 1905 who also sat on the board Audiffret Pasquier was an Orleanist leader president of the national assembly and then of the senate 22 Second Empire and 3rd Republic edit nbsp Herin c 1900During the Second French Empire 1852 70 companies exploiting the deposits of the Pas de Calais to the west began to increase output In 1878 Pas de Calais produced more coal than Nord By 1890 the Societe des mines de Lens had become the largest mining company in France displacing Anzin Technology had changed little since the 18th century with coal still extracted manually but towards the end of the century laws were implemented to reduce child labor 1 a The mining company was paternalistic providing housing clinics schools canteens and shops paying relief and pensions and sponsoring sports and social activities There were improvements to workers rights with strikes allowed from 1864 and trade unions from 1884 1 Emile Zola visited the area in 1884 to obtain background for his novel Germinal He arrived at the time of a strike by 12 000 miners 23 The strike began at Anzin in February 1884 after 140 workers mostly union members were dismissed The company called in troops to defend the mines and refused to make any concessions The strike lasted 56 days and was headline news in France but failed completely 1 During this strike Emile Basly emerged as a leader of the miners He became secretary general of the Nord miners union president of the Pas de Calais miners union deputy and mayor of Lens 21 A strike began in Marles les Mines in the winter of 1891 and spread throughout the region mainly for higher wages The outcome was the first collective labor agreement in France the Convention of Arras which established insurance funds and pensions Women were banned from underground work in 1892 and boys under twelve in 1906 In 1910 the working day was set at eight hours with a mandatory day off each week 1 During World War I 1914 18 the front lines ran across the mining area and many of the mines were systematically destroyed by the Germans After the war the mines were reopened An influx of Polish miners made up for the huge casualties among French miners during the war During the depression of the 1930s many of these workers and their families were forcibly returned to Poland The communists and socialists struggled for control of the mining region During World War II 1939 45 the mines were occupied by the Germans in 1940 and ruthlessly exploited using laborers from the Ukraine Russia Serbia and elsewhere 1 nbsp Railway line from the Lambrecht pit Nationalization and closure editA decree of 13 December 1944 created the state owned Houilleres Nationales to acquire the privately held mining properties Shareholders of the former companies received compensation of 8 francs per ton higher than the profit per ton they had made in 1938 The state assigned managers to the new company and set wages and prices but the company otherwise operated independently 7 The law of 17 May 1946 created the Charbonnages de France completing the transfer to the state An administrative council represented workers consumers and the state 7 Over the years that followed there were various administrative changes Efforts were made to restore the landscape as pits were closed and a government program was launched in the late 1970s to clean up the main urban centers There were accelerated pit closures during the 1980s The last pit in the Nord Pas de Calais region closed in October 1990 The old railways have been converted to walking and hiking routes and ponds converted for recreational use or made into ecological reserves A few sites have been preserved as mining heritage sites for tourists 7 nbsp Villars in Denain c 1900 nbsp Roeulx in Escaudain c 1900 nbsp Vieux Conde start of 20th century nbsp Haveluy 1900 nbsp Blignieres in Wavrechain c 1920 nbsp Reussite c 1920 nbsp Bleuse Borne in Anzin 1920 nbsp Lambrecht 1949 nbsp Thiers in Bruay c 1950 nbsp Saint Mark in 1960Notes edit The work was still unhealthy An 1878 book was devoted to the study of miners anemia called Anzin anemia Manouvriez 1878 p 3 a b c d e f g h i j k Les trois ages de la mine 2002 a b Geiger 1974 p 16 Geiger 1974 p 17 Grar 1848 p 110 Geiger 1974 p 20 Compagnie des Mines d Anzin Archives p 2 a b c d e Histoire du Bassin minier Atlas du Patromoine Michel 1969 a b c d Prunaux 2006 Geiger 1974 p 23 Geiger 1974 p 29 a b c d e Barker 1961 p 167 a b c d e Dussart 2006 Jolly 1960 1977 a b Geiger 1974 p 46 Reid 1985 pp 593 594 Hardy Hemery 2005 Statistique archeologique du Departement du Nord p 391 Tudesq 1961 p 342 Dormoy 1867 p 230 a b Leroy 2002 Mayeur Corbin amp Schweitz 1995 p 203 Mitterrand 2002 pp 37ff nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Compagnie des mines d Anzin Sources editBarker Richard J June 1961 French Entrepreneurship During the Restoration The Record of a Single Firm the Anzin Mining Company The Journal of Economic History Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Economic History Association 21 2 161 178 doi 10 1017 S0022050700101949 JSTOR 2115186 Compagnie des Mines d Anzin PDF Archives Nationales du Monde du Travail in French Ministry of Culture Retrieved 2015 12 12 Dormoy Emile 1867 Topographie souterraine du bassin houiller de Valenciennes in French Imprimerie imperiale retrieved 2017 08 30 Dussart Michel 2006 12 08 La compagnie des mines d Anzin in French Diocese de Cambrai Retrieved 2015 12 13 Geiger Reed G 1974 Anzin Coal Company 1800 1833 Big Business in the Early Stages of the French Industrial Revolution University of Delaware Press ISBN 978 0 87413 108 6 retrieved 2015 12 14 Grar Edouard 1848 Histoire de la recherche de la decouverte et de l exploitation de la houille dans le Hainaut francais dans la Flandre francaise et dans l Artois 1716 1791 PDF in French vol II Valenciennes Impr de A Prignet Hardy Hemery Odette 2005 Diana Cooper Richet Le peuple de la nuit Mines et mineurs en France XIXe XXe siecle Paris Perrin 2002 441 p 22 Revue d histoire moderne et contemporaine in French 52 4 Retrieved 2015 12 13 Histoire du Bassin minier Atlas du Patromoine in French Archived from the original on 2015 12 07 Retrieved 2015 12 13 Jolly Jean 1960 1977 Jean Paul Pierre PERIER DIT CASIMIR PERIER Dictionnaire des parlementaires francais notices biographiques sur les ministres deputes et senateurs francais de 1889 a 1940 in French Paris Presses universitaires de France ISBN 2 1100 1998 0 Retrieved 2015 12 13 Leroy Jean Francois 2002 02 08 Emile Basly Nordmag in French Retrieved 2015 12 13 Les trois ages de la mine Bulletin de Liaison des Professeurs d Histoire Geographie de l Academie de Reims in French 27 2002 Retrieved 2015 12 13 Manouvriez Anatole 1878 De l anemie des mineurs dite d Anzin Giard Mayeur Jean Marie Corbin Alain Schweitz Arlette 1995 01 01 Les immortels du Senat 1875 1918 les cent seize inamovibles de la Troisieme Republique Publications de la Sorbonne ISBN 978 2 85944 273 6 retrieved 2015 12 13 Michel Joel 1969 La decouverte du charbon dans le valenciennois La Magazine du Mineur in French ORTF retrieved 2015 12 13 Mitterrand Henri 2002 Zola a Anzin les mineurs de Germinal Travailler in French 1 7 37 doi 10 3917 trav 007 0037 Prunaux Emmanuel 2006 08 19 La Societe des Mines d Anzin Cambaceres in French Retrieved 2015 12 13 Reid Donald October 1985 Industrial Paternalism Discourse and Practice in Nineteenth Century French Mining and Metallurgy Comparative Studies in Society and History Cambridge University Press 27 4 579 607 doi 10 1017 S0010417500011671 JSTOR 178593 Statistique archeologique du Departement du Nord seconde partie in French Librairie Quarre et Leleu a Lille A Durand 7 rue Cujas a Paris 1867 Tudesq A J 1961 La Banque de France au milieu du XIX e siecle Etude des structures sociales Revue Historique in French Presses Universitaires de France 226 2 339 356 JSTOR 40949498 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Compagnie des mines d 27Anzin amp oldid 1143004978, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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