Oranje Nassau Mijnen
The Oranje Nassau Mijnen was a coal mine company, established in 1893 by Friedrich Honigmann (1841-1913) and Carl Honigmann (1842-1903) to exploit the rich coal deposits in and around Heerlen. That there were coal deposits around Heerlen was already known for centuries (coal had been dug up since the 13th century around Rolduc), but efficient transportation was lacking. In 1886 Henri Sarolea (January 18, 1844, Maastricht - September 12, 1900, Heerlen) had the idea of building a railroad between Herzogenrath, Heerlen, and Sittard, which was finished in 1896. It was this plan that prompted the building of the first mine (Oranje Nassau I, production from 1899 to 1974).[1]
Oranje Nassau Mijnen | |
Industry | Coal Mining |
Fate | Acquired by the Wendel Investissement group |
Founded | 1893 |
Founder |
|
Defunct | 1908 |
While Oranje Nassau Mijnen was the public name of the company, the legal name was N.V. Maatschappij tot Exploitatie van Limburgsche Steenkolenmijnen. It was the largest private mining company in the Netherlands and is now owned by the French Wendel Investissement group, which acquired the founders' shares in 1908.[2]
Mines
- Oranje Nassau I (1899-1974), Heerlen, Production: 31,978,000 tons
- Oranje Nassau II (1904 - 1971), Landgraaf, Production: 34,064,000 tons
- Oranje Nassau III (1917 - 1973), Heerlerheide (Heerlen), Production: 38,265,000 tons
- Oranje Nassau IV (1927 - 1966), Heksenberg (Heerlen), Production: 13,754,000 tons
Total production: 111,016,000 tons
The ON I and ON III are now part of the Minewater Project, ON IV is now the Sigrano a silversand mine, part of Sibelco.
References
- ON-algemeen Archived 2006-06-27 at the Wayback Machine
- "Oranje Nassau Groep B.V. - History". Archived from the original on 2006-03-24. Retrieved 2006-06-03.