Quarries Old and
New
The County of Worcestershire has seen
extensive quarrying over many years. Extraction has mainly taken
place on sand and gravel (aggregate) river terraces, but smaller
scale removal of limestone and other hard rock is also
present.
Aggregates have been extracted predominantly along the Avon and
Severn Valleys, but quarrying has also taken place along the Rivers
Stour and Teme, and other water courses, where small pockets of
these deposits are present. This type of quarrying has a very long
history, with archaeological excavations on several sites revealing
large irregular pits dug into sand and gravel deposits, and
interpreted as evidence for mineral extraction, dated from the
Roman period onwards.
Evidence of
quarrying becomes clearer in more recent history through
documentary and cartographic (map) records. During the late
18th and 19th centuries many parishes had
their own small sand and gravel pits, and these are often shown on
tithe maps (for example, at Lindridge) and early editions of the
Ordnance Survey. They can also be located through recorded field
names of the time, obvious examples including ‘Sandpits’, ‘Parish
Gravel Pit’ and ‘Quarry Pit Field’. Up until the middle of the
20th century these small quarries remained commonplace
and were largely dug by hand, providing material for a local
market. It was not until after the Second World War (1940 to 1945)
that the regular use of machinery to extract the sand and gravel,
enabled operations to grow to an industrial scale. This had the
effect of reducing the number of quarries in operation, but made
them much larger, with modern quarries typically covering many
hectares.
Stone quarrying, both historically and more recently, has
created much smaller quarries in Worcestershire. Many old limestone
quarries lie on and around Bredon Hill, and on other outcrops of
oolitic limestone, for example at Cleeve Prior. These provided much
of the local building stone used in the county from at least the
Iron Age onwards, (500BC to 43AD) although today the only active
stone quarry in the county is that at Fish Hill, just outside
Broadway, in the far south-east corner of the county. Granite used
to be quarried for roadstone in the Malvern area until recently,
while Silurian limestone was also quarried in the Abberley Hills.
However, both of these areas now lie within Areas of Outstanding
Natural Beauty and associated environmental constraints make it
unlikely that any quarrying will be undertaken here in the
future.

Our quarry stories are explored more fully, by area, on the
accompanying pages.
This page was last reviewed 9 March 2012 at 11:20.
The page is next due for review 5 September 2013.