HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Thomas Coutts Lamb (3 May 1928 – 24 February 2016) was a British coal miner and artist in the North East of England. Tom Lamb was one of many young coal miners, at the age of 14 he started working in Busty Pit at Craghead Colliery near
Stanley, County Durham Stanley is a former colliery town and civil parish in County Durham, North East England. Centred on a hilltop between Chester-le-Street and Consett, the town lies south west of Gateshead. Stanley was formerly divided into three distinct set ...
. Lamb did not realise his artistic talent until he was hospitalised with diphtheria at a young age, from then on Lamb brought sketch books underground with him. Here he was able to capture the atmosphere of the coal mine, depicting his and many others every day working environment.


Early life and family

Tom Lamb was born to William Lamb, born 1899, and Jennie Coutts, born 1904, along with his older brother call John, born 1924. Tom’s dad and brother were also miners and they all lived in one of the houses on Black Horse terrace. Although the signs of mining could be seen around the family home, this area was in the middle of the countryside. Here Lamb would play with his older brother and friends as well as practice drawing the landscape and activity he experienced around him. Tom lamb as a child had been hospitalised with diphtheria, whilst he recovered from this illness he discovered his ability to draw. Tom went to school until he turned 14 years old, here his teacher noticed we had a great talent for art. After this he went to work in the Busty Pit in Craghead Colliery near Stanley in Co. Durham.


Coal mining 1942 - 1969

At the age of fourteen Lamb left school and started work in the mining trade.‘In 1942 there were over 130 pits in the County of Durham employing about 120,000 men and boys’. Lamb's first job was above ground as he was too young to start working underground, and he was an assistant attendant in the pit head baths from 1942 to 1946. He would have to hose down the shower cubicles, keep the locker rooms clean and look after the boilers. In the summer of 1946 Lamb turned eighteen, the age that pit boys started to work underground. Before he could go underground he had three weeks training at the Morrison Busty Colliery in Annfield Plain as well as being given the equipment he would later need to use. Lamb then started work at the Busty Pit at Craghead Colliery, his 'first job was on the landing as a datal hand and was to send sets of four full tubs outbye (to the shaft bottom) on the haulage rope and then to make sure the putters had plenty of chumins (empty tubs) that came back on the haulage rope' In 1948 Lamb's job was hand-putting until 1950 although for Lamb this work was too physically demanding he would scrape his spine on the low roofs which would never heal properly. After these two years of working in these poor conditions Lamb asked to be transferred back to datal work; here he worked until the pit closed in 1969 and he was made redundant.


Artwork

Lamb documented his entire career underground through taking his sketch books to work with him every day. He was able to capture the true emotion and daily tasks that miners experienced on the day to day. Lamb’s sketches and paintings shows a realism to mining that some other artists are not able to capture. Lamb used his brother frequently as a model when working underground as he was able to ask John to hold certain positions. He would start by taking quick sketches of the scenes that were taking place underground as well as making notes and comments about each sketch he produced. It was in his later years that Lamb began to turn his sketches into the artwork one can see today in exhibitions. Some of Lamb's artwork is still available to view at the
North of England Institute of Mining and Mechanical Engineers The North of England Institute of Mining and Mechanical Engineers (NEIMME), commonly known as The Mining Institute, is a British Royal Chartered learned society and membership organisation dedicated to advancing science and technology in the N ...
, Newcastle.


Personal life

Lamb married his wife Margaret in December 1972. 'They travelled widely, something Tom had never been able to do when a miner', they visited Italy, Germany, Switzerland and France. In 1984 Lamb and his wife moved 'to York Crescent, Newton Hall'


Notable exhibitions

Exhibitions include:Dyson, Henry, ''Tom Lamb'', Henry Dyson Fine Art Ltd
accessed 2 December 2016
/ref> *1998 Fading Memories, The Mall, Crook *1999 Fading Memories exhibited at the Town Hall Gallery,
Bishop Auckland Bishop Auckland () is a market town and civil parish at the confluence of the River Wear and the River Gaunless in County Durham, northern England. It is northwest of Darlington and southwest of Durham. Much of the town's early history surro ...
*2001 Returned to Crook to hold an exhibition entitled My Mining Days *2004 The Footprints Of My Years, Town Hall, Bishop Auckland *2008 My Mining Days, Town Hall, Bishop Auckland *2008–9 My Mining Days exhibited at the Mining Museum for England in Wakefield *2010 My Mining Days exhibited at Grey College,
University of Durham Durham University (legally the University of Durham) is a collegiate university, collegiate public university, public research university in Durham, England, Durham, England, founded by an Act of Parliament in 1832 and incorporated by royal charte ...


Notable works

*
Towneley bank bottom
' *
Despair
' *
Putting the lazy man in
' *
Lowse
' *
The Kist
' *
Having a nap
' *
Mum and Dad
' *
Raw sausage for his bait
' *
The stretcher trolley
'


References


External links

* * *http://www.ashingtongroup.co.uk/exhibition.html {{DEFAULTSORT:Lamb, Tom People from Ashington 1928 births 2016 deaths English miners Pitman painters People from Pelton, County Durham