Polkemmet Moor has always been a place that has been dear to me ever since I was a Child back in the 1980s. It’s a place where, despite the dire warnings about the dangers by the adults, I was always fascinated with the place and loved to explore it. This was due to the areas Post Industrial landscape, rich history and hidden secrets like that of the Lost Village of East Benhar.
The Lost Village of East Benhar
If you’ve ever travelled between West Lothian’s Village of Fauldhouse, over Polkemmet moor to Greenrigg. then you would have most certainly passed through the village of East Benhar. Although, you would have probably never noticed it.
This is because the Village is completely gone now except for a few ruins which is mostly buried amongst the thick coniferous landscape that now carpets this area of the Moor. This is not to mention the Bing that now covers most the Streets that was Once the main bulk of East Benhar Village.
But a Hundred Years ago, this little village was a bustling little place with around 160 houses where almost a Thousand People lived and worked. It also had a main street with shops as well as Public buildings like its Bar, Miners Welfare Hall and School. East Benhar is Indeed another Once thriving village that is now all but vanished.
The History Of East Benhar
The Watershed that is Polkemmet and Fauldhouse Moors that lies to the Far West of West Lothian and reaches into the East side of North Lanarkshire has always been an area rich in Minerals and especially Coal – The Black Diamonds. When the early Coal mining Industry started mining the area in the early Nineteenth century, they dug small pits. These holes were big enough for about 15 men to climb down into and mine coal. Theyd then lug this coal out on their backs as the pits were only shallow. Once the company had extracted what coal they could get from these pits, theyd start another. As a result, the area had hundreds of little pit holes which would later end up buried by the spoil of the next pit.
However, come the 1850s, most of the Big mining companies had started pioneering “Deep Shaft mining”. In 1851, George Simpson, a Coy Coalmaster and Entreprenuer in the area did Lease the 160 acre stretch of Moorland on the West of polkemmet Mor that would become the Benhar Coal Field from the Duke of Hamilton.
A Company Town
In 1855, the Benhar Mining Company decided to Invest in the building of a village for their workers. This was a mining Village in its raw from. It wasn’t just a village where the residents were Miners. But it was built and owned by the Mining Company, as were most villages like this back in the Mid 19th century. Residences in these mining rows came with the job. If you lost your job down the pit, you were out and there was no Welfare State back then as a safety net. You’d had it. Unless you found another job. But these mining companies kept Blacklists and if you were sacked from one pit, it would be very hard to be taken on elsewhere.
The School
For a Village like East Benhar at a time where there was little empathy between the rich and poor, it was very lucky to have it’s own school. Back in these days, the common attitude of the middle class colliery owners would have been “Why do these people need schooling? They’re only gonna end up below the ground digging coal anyway”. Most Children became adults at age 14 and many Kids a lot younger were sent down the pit to do the less physically demanding jobs like running messages, looking after the pit ponies that were used ton pull the coal up to the surface before the introduction of modernisation and machinery in the pits and jobs of the like. So the Idea of schooling these kids, to some was
No Place for the Feint Hearted
Let’s make No Mistake about it, East Benhar Village was a hard little Town indeed and was certainly No place for the Feint Hearted. But these were hard times and came with it Hard people. Many of the residents who worked the mines across the central Scottish belt would have mostly come from the Highlands, Ireland, Poland, as well as the Baltic and Balkan States. This was the age of the Industrial revolution and the fast advancing Coal and Shale mining around the area brought people from all over in search of work and a better life. So these were already hardy people.
Yet even at that, the times brought so much added hardship as a result of Low wages and poverty, bad living conditions and the pioneering of New Technology which would often be at the expense of lives and limbs due to the danger these new Industries brought with them. The loss of life caused by mining accidents and explosion was commonplace in these times and many miners from the East Benhar would become casualties of these disasters. Many losing eyes and limbs and often their lives. Tough places in Tough times Indeed.
When Times got Tough
Like many of these types of villages of their time, they came with No shortage of casualties and disaster.
An excerpt from a 1915 article in the Lothian Courier, highlights an Industrial Tribunal at Linlithgow Courts. It explains how One miner from East Benhar suffered a smashed skull when a bogey came off the rails and struck him. The court heard how a Doctor was summoned. The Doctor examined the man and realising he was almost a goner, ordered an ambulance to come and take the man home. He was “expected to die any day now” and his Widow to be was granted the sum of £15.
Enough was Enough
By the Mid 1930’s, East Benhar had become seriously dilapidated with a high case of poverty. So in 1936, the local Council were forced to step in to help resolve the [problem. As a result, the luxurious houses of the Lanrigg Area of Fauldhouse were built to accommodate the East Benhar residents and the village was subsequently evacuated.
Buried
After the evacuation of the East Benhar village in 1935, rather than demolish and clear the village, it was instead buried. In 1936, the Benhar Mining company opened up a new pit – East Benhar. The Pit head was situated close to the main street on the south side of the village and the spoil pile created from the mining, commonly known in Scotland as a “Bing” was dumped on top of the streets of Benhar, burying an entire village and its history under a pile of excavated aggregate.
East Benhar Today
When you drive over the moor on the Harthill to Fauldhouse road, you will drive along the existing main street of East Benhar. But unless they were already aware of this lost village’s past existence, One could be forgiven for being completely oblivious to the fact there was ever any village there. Instead, the remnants of the short lived East Benhar Coal Pit are far more visible than any remnants of the village. This is also partly due to the thick coniferous woodland that has been planted around this area since the d3emise of the village and the moors mining endeavours.
But there are still a few remaining ruins of the village there to be seen if you know where to look. The most prominent of these is the Old East Benhar School. Set back from the road on the East side, the ruins of the school still stand, albeit not very high. Most of the walls have been reduced to only Two or Three Feet high and surrounded by Scrugg and Moss.. But there are still a couple of rooms that still stand about 10 feet tall with the doors and window spaces till prominent.
I remember playing up there as a kid in the late 80’s and stumbling upon the school. Of course, back then I had no idea about the lost village of East Benhar so I’d no Idea what the ruined building was. But I seem to remember it being much bigger with all the walls intact. I don’t think the roof was on it at the time but the walls were still their full size. Hopefully what’s left of these ruins can be preserved that future generations may still see the very little remains of what was Once a thriving little mining village.