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Stanford Main No. 2 Colliery

City of CessnockCoal mines in New South WalesUse Australian English from May 2024

Stanford Main No. 2 Colliery, also known as Paxton Colliery, was a coal mine located at Paxton, New South Wales, Australia. The mine was named Stanford Merthyr No. 2 until 1 May 1931. The mine was started in the 1920s, by the East Greta Coal Mining Company. The Greta coal seam has been mined using bord and pillar mining methods. Coal was transported from the mine via the Paxton Branch of the South Maitland Railway.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Stanford Main No. 2 Colliery (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Stanford Main No. 2 Colliery
Stanford Street, Cessnock City Council

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Latitude Longitude
N -32.904 ° E 151.278 °
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Stanford Street

Stanford Street
2325 Cessnock City Council
New South Wales, Australia
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Millfield, New South Wales

Millfield is a town in the City of Cessnock municipality of New South Wales. It had a population of 1,006 as of the 2016 census. Millfield contains a general store and the historic Rising Sun Inn, which now operates as a museum. Millfield Public School opened in 1868. The school had an enrolment of 62 students in 2015. A second school in Millfield, Crawfordville Public School, operated from 1929 to 1970. Millfield Post Office opened in 1854. St Luke's Anglican Church was built in 1880. It was flagged for potential closure and sale in June 2018 as part of a diocese plan to raise funds for redress of survivors of child sexual abuse, with services to be consolidated with St John's Church in Cessnock. The church had absorbed the congregation of St. Thomas's at Ellalong when that church closed in 2014. Millfield Cemetery, located in Hayes Road, is managed by the Cessnock City Council. A new 100-lot residential development, the Rosehill Estate, was released for sale in May 2017. The development was controversial: the original plan for 700 houses did not go ahead, and 500 residents signed a petition against the revised plan on the grounds of overdevelopment of the historic village; however, the rezoning was approved in 2014, with a subsequent council rescission motion lost by one vote. A further 222-block development is proposed off Mount View Road. This has also been the source of controversy, as residents have protested that it could almost double the population of the village.