Petite-Rosselle is intimately bound up with the Wendel-Vuillemin pit, also know as Carreau Wendel. Its imposing complex of pithead towers, coal washeries, a power station and the vast network of railway lines add up to the very essence of an industrial landscape. At first sight Carreau Wendel looks like a typical coal mining site from the era between the two World Wars. Most of the buildings are framed in steel and reinforced concrete, and lined with burnt clinkers from mining waste or the slag from blast furnaces. But the history of the mine goes back along time before that. The decisive turn in its fortunes began in the mid 19th century when a dynasty of French manufacturers called de Wendel incorporated the business into the family Empire. In 1945 Carreau Wendel was nationalised. In the 1960s 5,000 tons of coal were brought to the surface every day and the pit employed around 5,000 coal miners. But by 1986 all available supplies of coal were exhausted and the pit was shut down. Some years later local towns and parishes in the centre and to the east of the colliery area joined together to set up an organisation to establish and run a communal coal mining museum in the immediate neighbourhood. In 2001 Carreau Wendel was officially recognised as a state industrial museum.
Parc Explor Wendel
F 57540 Petite-Rosselle
Moselle
France
+33 (0) 387 - 870854
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