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Report - - Deep Mine Headstocks, Part 2, Wales & Cornwall, Various Locations, 2022-23 | Noteworthy Reports | 28DaysLater.co.uk

Report - Deep Mine Headstocks, Part 2, Wales & Cornwall, Various Locations, 2022-23

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Webbs0710

28DL Full Member
28DL Full Member
Here's part two of the remaining headframes in the country. Other than Chatterley Whitfield, the South Wales Coalfield definitely has the best remaining colliery infrastructure I would say. The amount left in Cornwall was rather surprising, made for a decent day out though! Be a while until part 3, unless something changes, I've no plans to head up to Scotland until September.

Cornwall

Botallack

This Headframe is a peculiarity. It's the youngest on the list, not including replicas.

Archeological evidence suggests mining occured at Botallack as early as the Bronze Age, with the first recorded activity taking place in the 1500s. The mine was fully active from the late 1700s, with the first steam engine being installed in 1795 at Carnyorth Moor. Botallack Tin was £64 4 shillings per ton in the early 1800s, falling to £45 by 1838. The losses from this decline were offset by the abolition of the Tin duty to the Duke of Cornwall, which was 4 shillings per 120 lbs.

In the early 1860s, a diagonal shaft (Boscawen) was driven. It was 3,000 feet long, extending 1,800 feet under the seabed, and was 1,440 feet deep at the bottom. In 1865, the Prince and Princess of Wales visited the mine, descending this shaft. This caused a boom in tourism, which the mine owners capitalised on by charging 1 Guinea per person.

The mine was put up for auction on the 2 October 1883, as an ongoing concern requiring £20-25000 of investment. It failed to sell. The mine closed in 1895 along with many others due to the fall in Tin prices.

There was an attempt to breathe new life into the mine in the early C20th. A new deep level shaft, one of the largest ever sunk in Cornwall was commenced in 1906. It had five compartments, and the internal measurements were 19ft 6 inches, by 6ft. It was named the Allen Shaft, after Francis Allen, one of the directors of the new company.

In 1908, a horizontal steam winder was installed, along with a new mill with 40 Californian Stamps, and a dedicated power station to power the pumps and the mine workings. Unfortunately due to the reserves being far out to sea, the venture ended up failing, with the site closing again on the 14th March 1914, with the shaft having reached a depth of over 1,400 feet.

The Headframe that remains in situ today was erected by the nearby Geevor Mine in 1985 so they could expand their sett into the Botallack workings as the price of Tin was at an all time high. Unfortunately, only a small amount exploratory work took place before the collapse of the International Tin Agreement in October 1985, which sent the price of Tin plummeting. The mine was subsequently abandoned again.

No drone here, was lazy and used photos from a prior visit, sorry 😂
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Wheal Concord

Situated within an active Firewood business, I was surprised to see the shaft was wide open. Wheal Concord and Wheal Briton were two small Tin mines located in Blackwater, Cornwall. Their respective opening dates are unknown, other than some time in the 1790s. Both were failures, and ended up closing again. They reopened together as a single entity in 1810, and remained open until 1868.

The wooden Headframe is another relatively recent affair, being erected in 1980 for exploratory work to reopen the mine. Small scale production occured for 2 years, before closure again due to a lack of investment in processing facilities. The Headframe was relocated from the Nangiles mine in Twelvehead, which was owned by the Wheal Jane Mine, so I'm unsure of it's actual age.
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Levant

Situated on the coast, this Headstock is located directly on the cliff edge, powered by it's original Steam Engine which has been restored. Levant exploited Tin seams that stretched out over a mile under the sea bed at a depth of 1,969 feet

There are more shafts located slightly further inland, including one exclusively for winding men. Levant made use of a 'Man Engine', rather than ladders. Installed in 1847 it was used to send men to and from the workings faster. The Man Engine suffered a catastrophic failure in 1919, collapsing machinery down the shaft, resulting in the death of 31 miners. It wasn't repaired, and the deep levels were never worked again.

The mine closed in 1930, and subsequently flooded from a breach in the seabed. In the 1960s, nearby Geevor needed new seams to exploit, so they plugged the breach, and began exploratory work in the mine. They decided to reopen the mine, working it from an inclined shaft dug down from the Victory Shaft at a 25° angle. It was opened on 28th November 1980, closing again when Geevor itself closed.
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Geevor Tin Mine

Was surprised to find two Headstocks here, was only expecting the massive one.

Workings at Geevor date from at least 1791. Geevor Tin Mines Limited was formed in 1911, primarily working the Wethered Shaft, named after the chairman of the mine. Sinking of the shaft began in 1910 from within an Adit. In 1911, shaft sinking from the surface began to intersect with it, which was achieved the same year. It measured 14ft x 5ft 6 inches, and had three compartments, two for skips, and one for a ladderway.

The shaft continued to deepen as the levels were worked out, with it reaching a final depth of 800 feet by the 1930s. It was decommissioned in 1944, but was retained as secondary access until the mid 1950s.

The Wooden Headframe suffered extensive storm damage in 2002, but was rebuilt with most of the original parts, and from the original plans.
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Expansion of the operation westwards towards other seams facilitated the need for a new shaft, so in 1919 a new shaft was sunk 500 metres away from Wethered, which was named Victory. The shaft had 5 levels initially, with it being sunk deeper as the mine developed, reaching a final depth of 1,575 feet in 1975.
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The mine entered a care and maintenance program in 1990, with all miners laid off, and the pumps were switched off allowing the mine to flood in May 1991.

South Crofty Mine

There are extensive workings under the town Pool, with the mine being 2.5 miles wide and 3,000 feet deep. The first recorded workings at South Crofty date from 1592, although it is believed mining was taking place as far back as 2300 B.C. It is a mineral rich area, producing Copper and Tin. Copper production ceased in 1880 when the shallow reserves were exhausted, with the mine financially dependent on Tin, which was being mined at the 1,560 feet level at this time.

In February 1896, mining activities were suspended and the mine allowed to flood due to costs and the low price of Tin. New investment was found, and the mine gradually reopened from 1899, with South Crofty acquiring the old Cook's Kitchen Mine. Work on sinking a new shaft down to the old workings began in 1908. The New Cook's Kitchen Shaft replaced the Robinson Shaft as the primary means of access in 1996, and was 2,523 feet deep when the mine closed in 1998.
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The Headframe over the Robinson Shaft was originally made from wood, with the steel frame being added over the top in 1925 to maintain working during the upgrade.

The Robinson Shaft is currently part of a museum in Pool. Sinking of the shaft probably occurred some time in the 1800s, with it being recorded on a mine plan in 1833. In 1900, work began to deepen and upgrade the shaft, as it was to be the principal shaft of the mine. The Headframe was erected, and a pumping engine dating from 1855 was installed in 1903. It had three compartments consisting of Man riding, Haulage and Services and ladderway, with the shaft measuring 18ft x 6ft.

The shaft reached a depth of 1,860 feet by 1914. The shaft reached a final depth of around 2060 feet. It was abandoned on safety grounds in 1996 after the discovery of movement from a 'tooth' of rock between 2 Stopes next to the shaft. If the rock collapsed, it was feared it would seriously damage the shaft, causing it to collapse.
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The workings are currently owned by Cornish Metals, who have been carrying out feasibility studies to restart production. They have a mining licence valid until 2071, and they own four useable shafts and a 300m decline which provides access to the upper workings.

South Wales

Dolaucothi Gold Mine

Dolaucothi is an ancient Gold Mine, first worked by the Romans. It is of great significance, because the Roman workings are very well preserved, showcasing their technological advancements. The mine was rediscovered in the 19th century, with attempts to make a successful venture out of it in the early 20th century.

In the 1930s, a 430 feet deep shaft was sunk in order to locate new seams. This venture failed, so the shaft quickly fell into disrepair, and was dangerous due to flooding on the lower levels. It closed for good in 1938. The Headgear and winding shed situated over the shaft was saved from the Olwyn Goch Shaft at Halkyn Lead and Zinc Mine in North Wales, so it's a long way from home! The Olwyn Goch Shaft was 490 feet deep.
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Kidwelly Museum

This Headframe was saved from the nearby Morlais Colliery at Llangennech which was demolished in 1999 I believe.

It was first listed as a Colliery in 1883, and was the last colliery in the South Wales Coalfield to still have a steam powered winder. By 1947, the two shafts were apparently at a depth of 322 feet. And were worked alongside two Drifts.

In 1976 a roadway was driven under the Llwchwr Estuary to link up with the Brynlliw Colliery, which operated on the opposite side. The two collieries were subsequently worked as a single operation, with all the coal brought to the surface via the Brynlliw shafts, and the Morlais shaft was used for men and material. It closed in 1981.
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Tower Colliery

Tower Colliery was the oldest continuously worked coal mine in the UK, with drift mines working from Hirwuan Common as early as the late C18th. The first significant workings were begun in the late 1860s.

The remains of Tower Colliery today are centred around the No.3 Drift Mine, work on which began in 1920. The Headframe is situated over the shaft for Tower No.4, with work beginning to sink the 495 feet to the workings in 1941 and finishing in 1944. It was used for the winding of man power only. In 1958, the No.3 drift was extended to reach the No.4 shaft workings, and became the primary means of moving coal and material.

The Colliery was closed in 1994 by British Coal, but was saved by the miners pooling their redundancy and buying out the mine. It remained active until the 25th January 2008, when it closed due to its reserves becoming exhausted. An Opencast operation was conducted on the other side of the Rhigos Mountain road to extract remaining coal on the surface at the site of the old coal washery.

Weather hasn't favoured me twice, so no drone here unfortunately.
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Webbs0710

28DL Full Member
28DL Full Member
Continued

Cefn Coed Colliery

Another Museum, been closed for a while though I believe. The local authority recently voted to keep the museum as a heritage asset, but flattening everything on site for redevelopment was one of the options on the voting list. Absurd that it was even considered, as the Headstocks were both only restored in 2020!

Cefn Coed was once the deepest Anthracite Coal mine in the world, with the shafts extending down to a depth of 2,500 feet. Shaft sinking begun in 1921 by the Llwynonn Colliery Company, but three attempts proved unsuccessful. The mine was bought by Amalgamated Anthracite Collieries Ltd, and significant investment was put in, allowing the shafts to be completed by 1928. The delays in sinking were caused by a thick layer of Blue Pennant Sandstone.

The colliery produced it's first coal in 1930, and the pit quickly gained the nickname 'The Slaughterhouse' due to having a relatively high accident rate courtesy of roof falls and Methane build up. The No.1 Pit was the upcast at the north end of the site.

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The No.2 Pit to the South was the downcast.
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Seams worked included the Big Vein, Peacock, Nine Feet and White Four Feet. Brammalite was identified in the Dulais Seam, making Cefn Coed one of only two sites in all of Wales with Brammalite. The Colliery remained open until 1968, with one of the shafts retained for access and ventilation of the New Blaenant drift mine until that also closed in 1990.

Penallta

Both Headstocks remain here, along with their shared Engine House. Check out my report Here for more detail.
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Downcast
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Upcast
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Big Pit

Beginning life around 1810 as an Iron mine, work begun on sinking the shaft that would later become Big Pit in 1860. This shaft started out as Kearsley's Pit, being widened and deepened in 1878. This was due to the Coity Pits (sunk in 1840, 404 feet deep, serviced by a wooden Tandem Headstock) not having enough capacity to keep up with the demand for higher coal production. The Coity Pits were sealed and fitted with a ventilation fan, acting as the upcast shaft for Big Pit in 1895.

The name is derived from the pit's elliptical shape, with the shaft measuring 18ft x 13ft, making it the first mine in Wales big enough to allow two tramways. The coal seams were very close to the surface, with multiple Drift workings around the site. Big Pit started out at a depth of 128 feet, reaching around 300 feet when it was deepened. The colliery closed in 1980, quickly reopening as a museum in 1983.
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Lewis Merthyr Colliery

The site started out life as the Hafod Pit and Coedcae Colliery, but these pits encountered geological issues and were abandoned. They were reopened by William Thomas Lewis, the later Lord of Merthyr when he established the Lewis Merthyr Navigation Colliery. The company became the Lewis Merthyr Consolidated Collieries by the late 1890s, working the Coedcae, Hafod, Bertie and Trefor shafts. with the site undergoing extensive development during the 1870s.

I can only find one source for the dates on these, the Welsh heritage listing is muddying the waters by only having the dates of the Winding Houses, which definitely don't tally with the apparent shaft construction dates, so if it's wrong, it's wrong 🤷🏻‍♂️😂

The Bertie Shaft was sunk in 1880 to a depth of 1,391 feet, and produced Steam Coal (winding house dated 1890 by Coflein) The Trefor Shaft was sunk to a depth of 984 feet in 1881, and produced House Coal (winding house dated dated 1878 by Coflein) Both were named after Lewis' sons.

Trefor Shaft ceased production in 1958, and Bertie followed soon after in 1960 when the colliery was merged with the nearby Tymawr Colliery. The shafts were maintained to supply materials to the workings, and this continued until the closure of Tymawr in June 1983.

Bertie Shaft
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Trefor Shaft
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It is the best surviving example of a South Wales colliery, with the oldest Headgear in Wales complete with their Pit Heads, two Engine Houses, one with an electric winder, one with steam, a pair of Fan Houses, and a Lamp Room. It now forms part of the Rhondda Heritage Park.
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Great Western Colliery

Situated over the Hetty Shaft, which has a depth of 1172 feet, with work to sink the shaft taking place by the Great Western Colliery Co. in 1875. The shaft was closed in 1926, but was retained an the upcast shaft for the Tymawr workings. It was abandoned after the closure of Tymawr in 1983.

Disaster struck the colliery on 11th April 1893 when sparks from the wooden brake blocks on a haulage engine ignited a fire. The fire spread rapidly, igniting the timber supports in the mine with the flames being fanned by the strong ventilation. 63 miners succumbed to the effects of the smoke and fumes. The death toll would have been higher had the district fireman, Thomas Prosser, not ventured into the thick smoke to open a set of air doors to divert the fumes out of the mine.
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Webbs0710

28DL Full Member
28DL Full Member
Continued

North/Mid Wales

Bersham Colliery

Was surprised how much is actually left here, I was only expecting the Headframe. There's lots of odds and ends from the colliery within the grounds of the Headframe and it's Engine House.

Originally called Glan-Yr-Afon (Riverside), work on sinking the shaft began in 1864, but ran into difficulties, so the site was abandoned. Work resumed in 1871 under new ownership, with two 10 feet diameter shafts, No.1 sunk to a depth of 1,260 feet, and No.2 to a depth of 1,266 feet.

There were 2 explosions in the mine, one in 1880, and another in 1909, both with fatalities. There was another accident in 1933 in which the original timber Headframe burned down. A replacement was purchased and moved from the nearby Gatewen Colliery.

The colliery was extensively modernised after nationalisation. They were still using nearly 100 pit ponies until 1954. These were replaced with electric traction, and a new building housing Pit Head Baths, a canteen and offices able to accommodate 1,100 men.

Bersham closed in December 1986 due to unfavourable economic conditions. Salvage of equipment continued into 1987, but most was left in situ, and remains buried underground.

There was intent to set up a museum, however, the trust managing the site disbanded due to a lack of local interest. It does appear that another trust is looking after the site though, with occasional open days, which is probably why there was information signs stored in the Engine House.
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Minera Lead Mine

The first written evidence of mining dates from 1296, with mining continuing until the impact of the Black Death in 1349. There was little activity after this, although multiple attempts were made to restart mining activities, especially during the Tudor period, but none were very successful.

In the 18th and 19th centuries, miners worked independently, by bargaining for a price on a vein, dependent upon the difficulty of the work. They assumed all risk, as if the vein yielded poor results, they'd lose out. This drove many miners to head for coal mines instead, as the regular wages were too tempting to resist.

In 1845, John Taylor & Sons formed the Minera Mining Company. They consolidated the leases of all the mines around Minera, constructed a new drainage Adit, and installed new engines and a railway. Lead was once again being mined, and the work carried out was a good investment. £30,000 was put in, and by 1864, the profits peaked at over £64,000 a year.

The mine's fortunes turned with the crash in the price of Lead, and mining Zinc wasn't able to improve things either, as that also fell in price. By 1909, the pumping engines were deemed too expensive to run and were turned off, allowing the mine to flood. All operations ceased by 1914, and the mine was abandoned.

The Headgear is apparently a replica, and is situated over the Meadow/City Shaft, which is 1,220 feet deep, the deepest in the Denbighshire and Flintshire orefield.
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Ffynnongroyw (Point of Ayr)

The first attempts to mine coal from Point of Ayr came in 1865 by Lord Mostyn, the owner of the nearby Mostyn Colliery. The Prestatyn Coal Company was formed to develop a colliery, but it ended up abandoned.

The No.1 shaft was sunk in 1873 to a depth of 300 feet by a new company, the Western Mostyn Colliery Company, but was again abandoned due to the heading out from the shaft hitting a fault. The Point of Ayr Colliery Company was formed in 1883. They drove a heading in a different direction, and struck coal in 1890. The shaft was deepened to 645 feet, and a second shaft was sunk to the same depth.

A third shaft was sunk after nationalisation, with 6 men being killed during the sinking process on the 4th July 1952. The colliery closed on the 23 August 1996, with the entire site being demolished. A section of one of the Headgear was preserved at the Greenfield Valley Heritage Park. It was restored and moved to Ffynnongroyw in 2015 to create a memorial to the area's mining heritage.
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Parys Mountain

Going to keep the main site history brief, as the headstock is situated on a newer site on the opposite side of the road to the main Parys Mountain complex.

Parys Mountain has been mined since prehistoric times. It became the world's largest Copper Mine during the 1780s, with most mining being open cast. By 1810, the Cornish had arrived, and immediately used their expertise to sink shafts and mine from deep levels. All significant activity has ceased by 1910.

In the 60s and 70s, extensive prospecting took place, and new reserves were found in the early 80s by Cominco. Anglesey Mining Plc was incorporated on the 21st September 1984, carrying out a large feasibility study between 1988-90. They sunk a 985 feet deep prospecting shaft, and drove out 1km of workings at the 918 foot level. 2,000 tonnes of ore was extracted, processed in an on-site pilot plant, and the resulting concentrated ore sent to a smelter in Avonmouth.

The site was placed in care and maintenance in 1991. The company estimates they could be mining in less than two years from financing, if the economic conditions favour starting extraction. They own the freehold to the entirety of the western side of Parys Mountain, and lease for the eastern side of the mineral system. They also have planning permission that remains current for mining operations, so they could begin at anytime.
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I'm going to include these two, as I made the effort to visit, even though they were essentially fails 🤷🏻‍♂️😂

Llywernog Silver Mine

This one has really confused me. There is supposed to be two here, both replicas I believe. From what I could see, the larger proper Headframe is no longer in situ. Should have been right next to the much smaller one that looks more like the frame of a teepee.

The photos I've found of it are from 1992. Most recent I could find was on the Google map listing from 3 years ago, with it looking in a somewhat sorry state. The top of the frame with the winding wheel was gone, so I'm assuming the whole thing has now been dismantled.

The museum was closed, (not that that's a concern 😂) and it was very windy, with a lot of power lines about, and didn't want to risk the drone, so I didn't bother. Couldn't get close enough for the camera either, unlike Dolaucothi and Cefn Coed.

The first ore vein was discovered in 1742, but there is no documented evidence of mining taking place until 1789. Mining likely began in the 1770s after the construction of Turnpike road nearby. The mine was worked on and off under a multitude of different companies.

The mine underwent the most development under the Balcombe Co. who owned it between 1861-75. A 40 foot water wheel was installed in 1862 to fully drain the mine, as the 20 foot one wasn't up to the task, and a steam engine was installed in 1868 for pumping during dry periods. The main shaft (later renamed Hanson's Shaft) was also deepened repeatedly during this time, going from a depth of 216 feet, to it's final depth of 432 feet in 1871.

The mine remained in operation until 1891, when the low price of Lead forced it's closure. It was reopened in 1907 to exploit Zinc reserves, with the mine being drained and the Hanson Shaft re-timbered. This was short-lived though, closing in 1911 when the price of Zinc fell. There are reports of a Thomas Jenkins doing some work in as late as 1914, but this wasn't successful and the mine closed for good, falling into disrepair.
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Bwlch Glas Lead Mine

Believe this one to be original. However, it is underground in the Deep Level Adit somewhere, and not readily accessible. For me, it doesn't really fit the criteria I'm looking for as a headstock, as it doesn't bring anything to the surface. It is winding gear though, so I suppose it is relevant in that respect.

Check out @The Kwan 's report (Here) for the history and photos, as it's beyond my skill level, and comfort zone 😂

Thanks for looking everyone 👍🏻
 
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