CORNWALL'S TIN MINESThey
say that if you look in any hole in the ground around the world
you'll find a Cornishman looking for metal. Nowhere
in the world is hardrock mining so engrained into the local culture
than Cornwall. In
the 18th and 19th centuries the men who dug and the women who worked
up top produced millions of tons of copper and tin, valuable commodities
which were exported around the world. Growth
of miningThe
phenomenal growth in mining was made possible by the harnessing
of new technologies. Cornwall
became a hotbed of experimentation, attracting Britain's top engineers.
But
it was a native son, Richard Trevithick, who developed high pressure
steam engines, used to drain water from the deep mines- and eventually
to power the world's first road vehicle. The
importance of this mining heritage will hopefully be recognised
soon with the awarding of world heritage status to nine areas of
Cornwall and West Devon. This
would place the mine engine houses, Methodist chapels, surviving
smallholdings and all the other remnants of the area's industrial
past on a par with the Great Wall of China and the Pyramids. A
new World Heritage SiteThe
archaeologists in charge of the bid have surveyed more than 2,000
engine houses, although there are also remnants of the associated
industries, the ports, mineral tramways and mining villages included
in the bid. | Remains
of former mines are common |
The
Methodist preacher John Wesley spoke many times at Gwennap Pit,
in the heart of the richest mining district in the world, to thousands
of miners. But
there were rival attractions in the newly-emerging towns - beer
halls and gin palaces sprang up. Millions
have already been spent on conserving some of the engine houses
and other sites, but millions more are needed. It's
hoped that the awarding of world heritage status by 2005 will attract
that funding. Life
inside a Cornish tin mineThe
tin mining heritage of Cornwall is now a distant memory but what
was the life of a Cornish tin miner like? | A
miner's life was hard and brutal |
Men
often began underground work at the age of 12. Younger
boys and women, or "Bal maidens" as they were known, worked mainly above ground breaking
rock. 7,000 children employed in 1839. There were 340 mines employing 50,000 people in 1862. Most
mines were cramped and hot, with temperatures underground sometimes reaching 60 C, with air that
could barely sustain a candle. Mines
were small, cramped and vertical. They were no cages to haul
miners up and down. Access was by a ladder. Miners often snuffed
their candle and worked in complete darkness in order to conserve
air. Death
and injury were a fact of everyday life. Rockfalls and explosions
not uncommon. Many miners developed Bronchitis,
TB and rheumatism from their time underground. Few miners fit to work beyond age of 40. |