• Make a contribution
  • Get the Print Edition
  • Sign up for our daily newsletter
Saturday, December 20, 2025
  • Login
Reading Today Online
  • HOME
  • YOUR AREA
    • All
    • Caversham
    • Central Reading
    • East Reading
    • Katesgrove
    • Reading
    • Southcote & Coley
    • Tilehurst & Norcot
    • Whitley

    Defunct food court to be replaced with town centre convenience store

    Reading stabbing: Man from Winnersh jailed for life after frenzied knife attack

    Closure extended for road in Whitley amid underground water network repairs

    Shuttered Oxford Road pub receives protected status following failed Greggs conversion bid

    Abbey School marks 250th anniversary of the birth of Jane Austen

    Put on the glitter to win an annual Hollywood Bowl pass

    Thames Water puts pause on ‘retention’ payments to senior staff totalling over £2M

    Police release CCTV following fatal collision in Calcot

    ‘Antisemitism is a threat to us here in Britain’: Rabbi from Reading reacts to Sydney attack

  • COMMUNITY
  • CRIME
  • READING FC
  • SPORT
    • All
    • Basketball
    • Football
    • Rugby

    ‘He’s a traitor’: Reading FC fans react after Nigel Howe serves club with winding up petition

    Reading Football Club hit by winding-up petition from former chief executive

    Reading FC provide medical update on player after Women’s match was postponed

    Former Reading FC boss reveals bizarre story of how Premier League club tried to purchase Lionel Messi

    Young Reading FC duo head out on loan to Slough Town

    Is Reading FC’s 106 Championship points record under threat?

    Reading FC manager Richardson makes admission following Bradford defeat

    ‘First-half excellent, second-half disappointing’: Reading FC boss Richardson assesses Bradford defeat

    Howden Christmas racing weekend returns to Ascot racecourse this December

  • ENTERTAINMENT
    • ARTS
    • READING FESTIVAL
    • READING PRIDE
    • WOKINGHAM FESTIVAL
  • READING FESTIVAL
  • BUSINESS
  • MORE…
    • ADVERTISE
    • CONTACT US
No Result
View All Result
Reading Today Online
No Result
View All Result
Home Community

IN THE COMMUNITY: The hidden chalk mines of Emmer Green discovered by Wargrave Local History Society

Guest Contributor by Guest Contributor
Saturday, January 20, 2024 7:01 am
in Community
A A
An Emmer Green mine tunnel Picture: Rob Wallace

An Emmer Green mine tunnel Picture: Rob Wallace

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Wargrave Local History Society’s January meeting was a well-illustrated presentation on Chalk, Caverns and Commandos by retired geophysicist Rob Wallace.

It was about the formation 94 million years ago of the chalk that lies below the Thames Valley, and the uses these deposits and the workings were put to in later times.

He explained that the time scales used by geologists are different to those in ‘normal’ use – to most people 1,000 years is a long time, but geologically it is ‘recent’, and ‘a million years’ is not very long for geologists.

The Thames Valley area was quite different 94 million years ago, with shallow warm water like the present Florida Keys.

Into the large areas of quite shallow relatively static water, layers of chalk were laid down, made of microscopic marine creatures forming millions of fossils which settled on the bottom eventually making significant thicknesses of chalk.

In the UK the oldest rocks are to the north and west, with younger ones to the south and east.

Related posts

47-year-old woman arrested after two pedestrians die in road traffic collision in Caversham

Boy, 15, left with broken jaw after being attacked by three teenagers in Reading

Police release CCTV of man in relation to assault in Reading

Man and woman jailed for GBH, fraud and robbery in Reading, including assault on a man in his 80s

For the area to the south east of a line drawn from Flamborough Head, in Yorkshire, to the Dorset coast, the underlying strata is chalk, with younger rocks overlying the chalk in some areas and the local area (including Wargrave and Emmer Green) is on the upper chalk layer, formed when the area was a sub-tropical coastal marsh, and the chalk is very clean with very little grit or wood derived particles in it.

At the end of the Ice Age, water from melting glaciers spread a lot of material like gravels and clays, and iron oxide, some of which were left above the chalk.

Rob then told the history of how these were used locally. In Tudor times, brick making increased – using silica, clay, lime, iron oxide and magnesia which could all be found locally in the chalk or younger rocks above it, and Reading became famous therefore for their production – Thomas Hardy in Jude the Obscure calling Reading Aldbrickham – with the last brickworks staying in operation until 1967.

In the mid-Victorian era, a local brickworks could produce half a million bricks a year, but that represented only 100-200 houses, so Reading needed many such places.

One of the mines providing chalk for brick making was located at Milestone Wood, at Emmer Green, running under Kiln Road, with an extensive range of tunnels in the upper chalk strata. This is very white and clean with some layers of flint, about 20m below the surface.

Although the chalk is hard, miners working by candlelight could remove the rock using hammer and chisel without needing explosives – some of their tools being found in the tunnels.

There is no water in the mine – the tunnels being high above the river level.

As in many such caves, there is graffiti on the walls, the earliest date written there being 1776, the names including various notable Reading citizens.

In the late 1930s, it became obvious war would soon break out, and plans to save national treasures well away from possible enemy targets.

The ‘Peppard Road disused mine’ is mentioned as a place to store some National Archives and maybe Berkshire Archives.

Few people were needed to look after it, and it was safe from enemy bombs. Winston Churchill believed that auxiliary units of commandos would be necessary to fight a guerilla campaign against any invading forces, and is possible that a Nissen hut in the tunnels was for one of these units. They had modern armaments and supplies of explosives, intending to slow down an enemy advance.

Although there were a number of bases for auxiliary units, there is no formal record of where they were.

The brickworks associated with the mine appears to have ceased working during the 1950s, and the mine remained dormant for another 20 years or so, until the 89th Reading Scouts set about finding what lay beneath their Scout hut.

For more information about the society, or a more detailed report, visit the website at: www.wargravehistory.org.uk

PETER DELANEY

Keep up to date by signing up for our daily newsletter

We don’t spam we only send our newsletter to people who have requested it.

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

Tags: berkslocal newsnewsrdg newsrdgukrdguk berkshirerdguk newsreadingreading berkshirereading newsUK News
Previous Post

Reading Phoenix Choir to hold come and sing day for Mozart’s Requiem

Next Post

IN THE COMMUNITY: Inner Wheel dances for 100 years

FOLLOW US

POPULAR STORIES

  • Man in his 60s dies following incident near The Oracle in Reading

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Reading Buses rolling out new ticket machines across its services

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Eight men given football banning orders after violent disorder ahead of Reading FC v Oxford United match

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Reading FC sign young star on permanent move from Liverpool

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Shane Long set for warm welcome on return to Reading FC this weekend

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

RDG.Today – which is a Social Enterprise – provides Reading Borough with free, independent news coverage.

If you are able, please support our work

Click Here to Support RDG.Today

ABOUT US

Reading Today is dedicated to providing news online across the whole of the Borough of Reading. It is a Social Enterprise, existing to support the various communities in Reading Borough.

CONTACT US

news@wokinghampaper.co.uk

Reading Today Logo

Keep up to date with our daily newsletter

We don’t spam we only send our newsletter to people that have subscribed

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

The Wokingham Paper Ltd publications are regulated by IPSO – the Independent Press Standards Organisation.
If you have a complaint about a  The Wokingham Paper Ltd  publication in print or online, you should, in the first instance, contact the publication concerned, email: editor@wokingham.today, or telephone: 0118 327 2662. If it is not resolved to your satisfaction, you should contact IPSO by telephone: 0300 123 2220, or visit its website: www.ipso.co.uk. Members of the public are welcome to contact IPSO at any time if they are not sure how to proceed, or need advice on how to frame a complaint.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • HOME
  • MY AREA
    • Central Reading
    • East Reading
    • Bracknell
    • Calcot
    • Caversham
    • Crowthorne
    • Earley
  • CRIME
  • COMMUNITY
  • SPORT
    • Reading FC
    • Football
    • Rugby
    • Basketball
  • ENTERTAINMENT
    • ARTS
    • READING PRIDE
    • WOKINGHAM FESTIVAL
  • READING FESTIVAL
  • OBITUARIES
  • BUSINESS
  • ADVERTISE
  • CONTACT US
  • SUPPORT US
  • SIGN UP FOR OUR NEWSLETTER
  • WHERE TO GET THE PRINT EDITION

© 2021 - The Wokingham Paper Ltd - All Right Reserved.