The Times, 22 November 1867:
THE FERNDALE EXPLOSION. MERTHYR TYDFIL, Wednesday Night. The bodies which had been cut off from the exploring parties on Thursday by a sudden fall were reached on Tuesday morning by the workmen under Mr. Herbert Kirkhouse, and on that day about 20 were recovered and sent to the bank. They were seen by their friends, and after identification by means of the clothing taken to the mountain churchyard for interment. a few of them were taken to Merthyr and Aberdare and still more distant places for burial. Men from the remotest corners of England have been killed by this explosion, among the missing being some men from Derbyshire and two or three from Yorkshire. Parents walked the distance from Herefordshire and Worcestershire to the pit in search of their children. One of them was a poor woman who arrived on Sunday; the sympathetic bystanders made a collection for her on the spot. The incidents which have come under the notice of the mining engineers in the pit are very affecting, and, could space be devoted, would doubtless be read with interest. One of them can hardly be passed over. A father and son were found locked in each other’s arms. So firmly were they clinging to each other, and with such rigidity, that the arms had to be broken before they could be separated. This was related by one of the engineers now in charge of a working party. On Saturday something like organization in conduction operations below the surface was made, and four gentlemen,—Mr. Richard Bedlington, of Rhymney; Mr Harrison, of Dinas; Mr. Morgan Joseph, of Treherbert; and Mr. Herbert Kirkhouse, of Aberdare.—were placed in charge of the pit to to relieve each other once in 36 hours. Besides them several other engineers have been at work at the head of workmen from their own pits, and it is worthy of remark that the Ferndale men have demonstrated the most decided hostility to the strangers who have come to their assistance, and open fight having been apprehended at one time. They seem anxious to do all the work themselves. After the removal of the great fall of Thursday, which was accomplished by Tuesday morning, the recover of the bodies proceeded rapidly. Twenty were brought up during that day, and during last night and to-day 23 others have been brought up, making in all 145 persons who have been brought out dead, and 148 fatal casualties, three of the injured having died. The bodies when got at in the pit are so far advanced in decomposition that they cannot be lifted from the ground, and are consequently rolled into canvas and packed up mummy fashion, in which state they have to be dragged over falls—a series of miniature hilly ridges—to the tramways. Notwithstanding the free use of powerful disinfectants and an incessant supply of over 100,000 cubic feet of are per minute to the workings, yet in the front where the bodies are found the stench is so intolerable that some of the workmen were obliged to abandon the work for a time. During the clearance of the falls a considerable number of lamps were found with their tops off, but in such a condition as would be altogether incompatible with the supposition that the tops had been blown off by the explosion, and three or four lamp keys were also found. The introduction of these were contrary to the rules of the pit, and, to show that there was a rigid inspection of the miners sometimes before they went down, an instance has been found of a collier sewing a lamp key inside his cap. The cap was found among some rubbish with a fastened to the crown inside, and was to be seen as found at the office to-day. The exact number of persons missing from the houses at Ferndale appears to be 170, but there is some doubt as to whether there may not have been some men down the pit who have not been inquired for. Certain it is that some bodies have been buried as unknown. Two were so taken away to-day, after lying a couple of days exposed to public view. As may be expected, the effluvium of the decomposing bodies is all pervading, and everything around the pit throws off the noisome odour. Disinfectants were freely distributed among the houses where the dead bodies lay last week, and now the whole of the buildings about the pit have been covered with gas tar, which, from the presence of carbolic acid, is a powerful disinfectant. It has undoubtedly contributed much to the purification of the atmosphere around the pit. Mr. Wells, the Government inspector, was at the pit to-day, and thought there could be not many more than 20 bodies still to be brought up. The inquest is expected to be further adjourned from the 25th inst. to a fortnight from this date, in order to give the inspectors time to complete their reports.