
The painter said: "The mine is as close to a 100 per cent replica of a Cleveland Ironstone mine as you will find. I moved in here 15 years ago - the house is a barn conversion with a conventional garden but plenty of land. Having moved from out of the area, I started to become interested in local history and this part of the world is notorious for its mining background. I began talking to an unemployed local lad and we both shared an interest in medieval ruins.

"I visited a mine nearby in North Skelton, and it was an experience I will never forget. But it made me want to preserve Cleveland's identity so, as you do, I decided to dig up the garden." He embedded two shafts into an embankment and installed a headstock tower - where men and ironstone would be lifted in an out of the mine. He also fitted a headstock for the upcast shaft that allows the mine to be ventilated and allows a small amount of light into the ground below.

Underground, he dug up the land using a JCB and built subterranean mine workings - a narrow gauge where a railed tramway led to a tippler staith and tubs of ironstone from the mine were tipped into the carts below. Left for Mr Wiggins to complete is a mine office, which will be built close to his house. He said: "I have spent 13 years completing the mine but I want it to look authentic, like it's from the 1840s. I want it to look abandoned, as if miners have just up and left. I believe it's the only one of its type in the country."
There are more photos here.