The New Zealand Herald

Two women waited d one of their men cam m

An explosion sent flame flashing out of a mine shaft and claimed the lives of 43 men

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When a William Brockleban­k was rescued after the Huntly mine explosion 103 years ago, a wife and a girlfriend were waiting at the pithead for a father and son who shared that name.

The women knew it was likely only one of them would get her man back.

“It’s Billy Brockleban­k,” someone shouted, and the crowd at the pithead broke into cheers, according to the first of many stories in the about the disaster in which 43 men died. William junior was alive. The explosion on September 12, 1914, is one of two coal-mining disasters that mark September as a dark month in the history of northern Waikato. The second was on September 24, 1939, when 11 men in the Glen Afton mine were killed by carbon monoxide gas.

The Ralph’s Mine tragedy ranks as the second-worst coal-mining disaster in New Zealand, after the one at Brunner in the Grey Valley in which 65 were killed by gas in 1896.

In more recent history, the bodies of 29 men remain in the Pike River mine, also in the Grey area, after explosions in 2010.

William Brockleban­k the fifth, aged 74, is a retired teacher who lives in Cambridge. He shares his first and last names with — among other forebears — his grandfathe­r and great- rushed with other townsfolk to the main shaft, the pithead, in Huntly after the explosion at 7.20am on a Saturday which sent thick smoke and dust and a sheet of flame roaring out of the shaft.

When the shout went up that “Billy Brockleban­k” was rescued, Mary and Margaret knew that one of them had their man back, but not which one.

Mary called her future husband — they married in 1915 — Will, not Billy, says their grandson.

He says Mary later recalled standing with her mother-in-law-to-be “and she said — although they weren’t married — she knew that ‘one of us was a widow and one of us possibly wasn’t’.”

Billy resumed mining and lived until 1949.

Margaret still had two of her eight children at school when she lost her husband. She was advised against trying to see his body, as the men killed in the explosion were so badly burned.

William the fifth understand­s Margaret received a small compensati­on package and pension.

Ralph’s Mine passed underneath the Waikato River and had a shaft on each side. The explosion was so big it was heard all around the Huntly area.

“Men who were near the eastward shaft at the moment of explosion say that there were two dull, heavy reports, separated by only a moment,” the Herald wrote. “Then came the belching dust, smoke and flame, and a hissing noise, like an engine letting off steam, which lasted for some seconds.”

One of the elevator cages weighing a tonne was “shot up like a bullet” from the top of the eastern, main shaft in Huntly and wrecked on the frame of the elevator winding-gear.

As it was a Saturday, only about 60 men were at work, far fewer than if it had been a weekday.

Rescue parties weren’t able to get into the mine until the afternoon, but fires and poisonous gases meant the last body was not recovered until 15 days after the explosion.

Eleven men managed to escape from the mine up its western shaft, the ventilatio­n intake.

The mine was closed.

The explosion was caused by the naked flame in a miner’s lamp igniting firedamp, a collection of gases, mainly methane. Safety lamps, with a covered flame, were demanded by a commission of inquiry.

The reported that Huntly mines “have always been regarded as so safe that safetylamp­s were never considered necessary, and never stocked. The miners habitually worked with naked lights”.

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