Silver Lead Mine, Llywernog, Ponterwyd, Aberystwyth, Ceredigion
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Ddraig Ddu
N 52° 24.695 W 003° 51.899
30U E 441165 N 5807168
Llywernog Silver-Lead Mine is an award winning all weather tourist attraction in Mid Wales, close to Aberystwyth. It has guided tours, gold panning, tea rooms and gift shop all under the authority of the National Trust.
Waymark Code: WMAJPN
Location: South Wales, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 01/22/2011
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member RakeInTheCache
Views: 5

Known locally as Gwaith Poole or Poole's Minework, the original discovery of the mineral vein was made around the year 1742, during the reign of George III.

The names of the original prospectors are not know but they would have possessed a Mining License or 'Tack Note' issued by the Agent of the Gogerddan Estate on behalf of Sir Lewis Pryse, the 'Mineral Lord'.

The first workings consisted of two shallow shafts connected by a level driven along the lode. The location of the early trials was in woodland, southwest of the great 'opencut'; visible on the present 'Miners Trail'. By 1790, two 'adits' or levels were being blasted into the hillside using techniques of hand-drilling and gunpowder charges. Both of those original tunnels are now accessible to visitors.

At Llywernog, mine, adventurers came and went, as the shaft grew ever deeper. Robert Dunkin of Llanelli, a lead smelter in 1840, Joseph Holdsworth of Leicestershire in 1852 and then a series of mining companies, floated on the London Stock Exchange, such as Llywernog Mining Company Ltd of 1868.

With depth, the mineral vein became increasingly unproductive and pumping costs grew in proportion. In 1869, in addition to the 40ft diameter waterwheel, the company installed a 16 h.p. steam engine to assist with the pumps when surface water supplies were short. Around 1874, a giant 50ft diameter overshot waterwheel was buit at the Llywernog Mine in a final attempt to explore the lode at greater depth and to realise John Balcombe's dream.

The great wheel, clearly visible from the main road to Aberystwyth, became a sad symbol of a once mighty industry. By the 1880's huge new mines were being opened up all over the world at places like Broken Hill in Australia and Leadville in Colorado, and the silver-lead ore marked crashed. In Cardiganshire, mines closed and whole communities emptied of people as they left to seek work in mines overseas or digging for 'Black Gold' in the valleys of south Wales.

In the 1900s Llywernog Mine saw a little renewed mining activity as a Scottish Company pumped out the flooded tunnels and went prospecting for 'Black Jack' or zinc ore. By 1910, this venture was finished and the giant waterwheel gently rotted. In 1953, this monument to the mining engineers of yesteryear was blown up for scrap iron and a famous landmark was gone, seemingly for ever.</>

During 1973, the old mine was awoken from its slumbers and began life as a mining museum, privately developed by a young mining historian Peter Lloyd Harvey, and his father, the late Dr Stephen Harvey of the University of Leicester. Now, the Museum is still evolving and the traditions of the old mining district live on for future generations.

With thanks to the Silver-Lead Mine site for the History

Mine Type: Tourist Mine

Mineral Collecting: Yes

Material Mined: Precious Metal

Operation: Underground Mine

Surface Features: Yes

KNOWN DANGERS:
None, seek the tourist areas.


Any associated website: Not listed

Any Other information: Not listed

Visit Instructions:
Optional photograph welcomed.
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