Great Work Mine

Coordinates: 50°07′40″N 5°21′55″W / 50.1279°N 5.3654°W / 50.1279; -5.3654
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Great Work
Great Work Mine (Leeds Engine House)
Location
Great Work is located in Cornwall
Great Work
Great Work
Location in Cornwall
LocationGreat Work
CountyCornwall
CountryUK
Coordinates50°07′40″N 5°21′55″W / 50.1279°N 5.3654°W / 50.1279; -5.3654
Production
ProductsCopper, Lead & Tin
History
Opened1538
Closed1939

Great Work Mine was a Cornish mine between Godolphin hill and Tregonning Hill and is in the hamlet of Great Work on Bal Lane. Great Work is notable for its unusual chimney stack with the upper brick-work in two stages.[1] The remaining ruin of the mine sits 400 ft above sea level,[2] and is part of the Cornwall and West Devon Mining Landscape.

The site is owned by the National Trust and forms part of the Godolphin Estate along with Godolphin House.

History[edit]

It had opened by 1538. John Leland visited the mine and was quoted as saying "There are no greater Tynne workes yn al Cornwal than be on Sir Wylliam Godolcan's Ground". By 1584 at least 300 employed were there, and the annual profit was £1000.[3] Until 1816 the mine exploited the surface and shallow pits. Deep mining started then and continued until 1873. The mine worked five lodes, ran five engines and employed 500 people.[4]

The mine was put up for sale as a going concern in January 1885. While the mine was not exhausted, new machinery and investment was needed and if the mine was not sold, it would close.[5] Machinery, included three engines, plant and materials were put up for auction on 30 November 1885.[6]

1930 onwards[edit]

Fig 1, Great Work Mine, late 19th-century

In 1930 the mine closed. Some miners continued working above adit level. The mine was de-watered in the mid-1930s in an attempt to reopen it. The effort was abandoned and the mine closed permanently in 1939. During this time, on Bal Lane a terrace of twenty-six houses were built for miners. The ruins at Great Work reveal a fraction of the mine's extent. In the photo the engine house on the far left is the Leeds shaft and is all that remains.

In 2005 the Leeds shaft engine house was restored.[7] This shaft and Burnt Whim were capped with a metal grate, for safety and to promote nesting bats within the shaft.[8]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Stanier, Peter (1988). Cornwall's Mining Heritage. Cornwall: Twelveheads Press. p. 33. ISBN 0 906294 14 2.
  2. ^ Trounson, J. H. (1981). Mining In Cornwall. Vol. Two. Ashbourne: Moorland Publishing Co. p. 41.
  3. ^ Aslet, Clive (2010). Villages of Britain: The Five Hundred Villages that Made the Countryside. Bloomsbury Publishing. pp. 38-39. ISBN 978-0747588726.
  4. ^ Barton, D. B. (1965). A Guide to the Mines of West Cornwall (2nd ed.). Truro, Cornwall: Truro Book Shop. p. 19.
  5. ^ "Mining. Great Work Mine". The Cornishman. No. 341. 29 January 1885. p. 5.
  6. ^ "Valuable Mining Machinery, Plant, Materials, and Other Effects For Sale". The Cornishman. No. 384. 26 November 1885. p. 1.
  7. ^ "Great Work Tin Mine Information". mindat.org. Retrieved 2 April 2019.
  8. ^ "Mining in Cornwall Database". cornwallinfocus. Retrieved 2 April 2019.

Further reading[edit]

  • Thomas Lean, On the Steam Engines in Cornwall, 1839. Engine information, weights and measurements. "Table IV, Great Work, Leeds"