Chronology of Glendalough Mines 1795-1883

Artist's impression of Hero Mines
Glens of Lead
Hero dressing floor, Glendasan
Martin Critchley

 Chronology of Glendalough Mines

1795

Thomas Weaver commissioned by the government to undertake a survey of gold in County Wicklow

1807

Started to develop Luganure

1809

Weaver formed a partnership. It is not known how much lead he extracted but he does refer to a discovery of great width up to several tons. There was probably never any great exploitation due to lack of capital and difficulty of access. After he sold out to the Mining Company of Ireland (MCI) he went on to conduct geological explorations in Mexico and U.S.A. He wrote on various geological and paeleon­ological subjects including fossils of Giant Irish Deer

1821

Population 950. The number of houses 150 in 1821 to 269 in 1841 to a peak of 294 in 1871 before dropping to 169 in 1901

1824

MC1 was formed in Dublin by wealthy Irish gentry and merchants for the purpose of developing Irish Mines and more importantly to provide sufficient capital for exploration and exploitation

1825

Mine bought for £826/4/3 and 798 shares from the Weaver partnership

2 miners involved in re‑timbering Weaver’s edit trapped by a fall of rock and had to await 33 hours before being released. Part of the delay was caused by the fact that at least for 6 hours nobody knew until the next shift arrived. This rescue also included miners from Glenmalure who arrived as soon as they heard

1826

A mine road to the Luganure lode opened for carriage of ore and materials replaced men

Dressing floors built at the site

Railway laid in the mine itself for wagons

Accommodation built for agents and workmen

1827

Railway laid to 126ft

Hero mine opened to 30ft

1828

New Hero and Brockagh mountain had been opened (the latter probably was later called Foxrock)

Further building carried out when £28/18/‑ was spent on a mine house at Luganure

Richard Griffith who visited the mine around this time gave the management “much credit”

Further developments continued with machinery installed for un-watering Hero

Government dropped excise duty on lead imports, the price of lead dropped from £30 to £16 per ton which discouraged exploitation and exploration for the next few years

1829

Additional housing for workmen

Contract received from the Wicklow Grand Jury to build a road from Glendalough to the entrance along the bridle track that went over the Wicklow Gap. From 1834 the 1832

Wages decrease

1831

Population 1,200

1834

Lead price remained low which often resulted in losses. Maintained faith and kept investing in plant and machinery

Renegotiated a new lease for 31 years at a rental of £92/6/2 p.a.

MCI who had closed their lead mine in Kildum in Co. Donegal (through flooding) transferred the water wheel to Luganure

Wages rose

1835

Ruplagh was opened with a pump house and machinery

Further 16 houses built

Rev George O’Connor P.P. Glendalough submitted an application for the 8th National School built in the county. Cost £67 to build and the MCI contributed £1

1837

£1,000 spent on crushing Mill at Old Hero

Further 4 houses built

1838

New water wheel installed which replaced horse power

1840 and 1846

Little documentation but Robert Kane reports that Old Luganure and Hero had ceased production which centered in the Ruplagh complex. He states that ore is raised by hand labour and machinery as was the dressing and then taken by cars to Ballycorus for smelting. The machinery was powered by a rivulet sourced from Lough Nahanagan. The veins at the head of Glendalough valley were known at this time but were not worked

1841

Electoral District of Brockagh contained 1,563 people

The number of houses 269

Net 1% increase of population between 1841 and 1851

Parliamentary Inquiry 1841. The inspector found that the 2 places in Ireland without child labour were Avoca and Glendalough. His report for Glendalough showed that neither children nor women were employed. The mine manager was clearly dissatisfied with this state of affairs stating that he had offered to advance money to buy clothing to enable them to come to work without effect. He is quoted as saying that they were too proud but attributed it to laziness even though they had but a bare subsistence. However this should be seen in the context of the total economy of the area of which tourism played an important part

1842

Visit of Fr. Matthew the Temperance Apostle had a deep effect on the people. At this time droves of people gave up the use of alcohol.

1844

Main shaft of Ruplagh drowned when a drought caused the pumping machinery to fail

Visit of Fr. Matthew, the Temperance Apostle

1848

The mines continued unprofitable reaching a low of £3 per ton

1849

MCI reported that an improvement in prices would admit extensive workings and afford wages to labourers

1850 – 1855

Fortunes started to turn for the better, with the improvement of lead prices small profits were made and rapidly increased

1850 a private Protestant National school had been founded which in the mid 1860s had successfully applied to be a National School

1851

Old mine workings re-opened and a new crushing mill erected. From then on extensions and new machinery was invested

1854

Profit rose to approx £4,100 exclusive of £4,500 in improvements

Reported that £1,000 per month in remittances was being sent back by miners who had emigrated to Australia from the county

1856

MCI purchased a further 5,000 acres in the area to prevent claims and liabilities of an onerous character – paid out of net profits which shows growth in confidence

Anonymous publication gave a positive report of the mines with one of the first maps of the area showing the main workings (but not anything on surface workings, in common with all known surviving maps)

Refers to the first explorations of the Van Diemen’s Land lodes as well as adits driven into Camaderry from the Glendalough valley. At this stage the Luganure deep adit had driven under the mountain’s watershed. This part of the mine was the easiest to work due to natural drainage and ore was extracted on railways with one mule drawing 3 wagons each

1857

Further expansion with a Crushing Mill and water wheel built in the Glendalough valley, improve production efficiency

Further building of miners’ accommodation and cottages

MCI started to develop an interest in forestry with a planting of 150,000 trees. The trees planted were larch and fir and by 1867 they had planted a million trees at a cost of £8 per acre on about 200 acres. While this was to provide timbering for the mines it was also planned to supply the general market. In 1867 the forestry was valued at £10,000 by Lord Powerscourt’s forester. It was at this period that they were making £7‑8,000 net profit per annum and raising up to 2,000 tons p.a. Insufficient housing was now a problem and the well known Fiddler’s Row was built (so called because, by tradition, every house had a fiddler). In 1860 they took out a year lease to explore the Glen of Imaal which proved to be negative

1859

Luganure adits connected with the Glendalough valley. Major advantage as ore could be processed in Glendalough valley, saving the awkward path from Luganure to Old Hero which became the main dressing centre for New Hero, Ruplagh, Moll Doyle and Foxrock which were further developed in the decade. There was also constant development of dressing techniques

1861

Announced a six-month net profit of £2,661 with a comment that “The operations at Luganure do not call for any special mention…”

Further building of cottages was planned at 10 to 12 every year as they believed that ‘by promoting the comfort of the people working for us we do a great deal to improve the interest of the Company (Hear Hear)’

1862

MCI reported their plan to build a school whose purpose was to provide ‘good efficient company servants’

1863

Presentation made to Rev O’Neill of a crozier made from St. Kevin’s Yew by the miners

1864

Building gained favourable comment in the Freeman’s Journal of 8 August – noted that formerly the place was noted for its tumble-down cottages which were indistinguishable from the surrounding heather. Underground works were intensely carried out in this decade.

Death due to a fall of earth in Luganure

School completed – last to be built possibly because they did not wish to cause conflict with existing schools. January 1864 report is worth quoting ‘Visitors should go away with the impression that not only do we contribute to the material wealth of Ireland but to the improvement of the intelligence, morality and good habits of the people. There will be no interference with the religious opinions or the prejudices of the children. There will be a 3 guinea reward for good conduct, cleanliness, regular attendance and subordination to the teachers and a further 2 guineas for the most progress in learning’.  Obviously greater emphasises was placed on pliant rather than intelligent students. They mention in passing that there was a weekly deduction of 1/‑ per week for a sick fund for the relief of poor people

1864 – 1899

Between 1864 and 1899 76 miners are registered as having died in the Annamoe registry district. It is likely that this is an underestimate as there is a known shortfall in death registration in this period

1867

MCI reported that there were no Fenians in its workforce

1869

New water courses and dam alterations were undertaken to provide a constant water flow for powering machinery

The inclined railway built to Van Diemen’s Land site in fact superseded another tramway on the southern side of the valley which was described in 1860 as ‘almost a perpendicular line, awful to look at – wagons are rattling at a fearful speed’. The same source passes ‘poor pale faced miners who look up as we pass with lustreless eye’

1870

Van Diemen’s Land site (miners’ nickname) was developed further with an inclined railway costing £2,300. This crossed over the river and was a major improvement to the mule track on the southern side of the Glenealo river (a culvert survives, the path below has been almost eroded away). The MC1 estimated that carriage would be approx 2d per ton as compared to several shillings by pony

Turning point in the fortunes of the mine and the company in general. Production dropped due to emigration of the most experienced miners – due to better wages in the U.K., U.S.A., and Australia

In 1883 it was reported that many had emigrated to the U.K. and America while others, approximately 30‑40 were working in the Balleece quarries near Rathdrum

1870s

William Wilde reports that many miners assisted him in his repairs of various buildings of the Monastic City and some of the carved graffiti in St. Sepulchre’s come from these

Alcohol and attendant petty violence were prevalent

1871

Production down due to drought which caused failure in power, steam power was to be investigated. The next 2 years brought some losses

The population rose over the period to a peak of 1,659

Number of houses 294

Death due to spinal injury

1874

George Booth, Laragh House, was writing to complain to the Lord Lieutenant saying that the miners get paid on a Saturday, get drunk, and indulge in a succession of free fist fights and that the regular R.1.C. force was not sufficient to cope. This resulted in a report by Constable James Dwyer who stated that a miner named William Pim was assaulted by George Hyland and was sentenced to one month’s imprisonment (the standard sentence) but before the issue of the warrant he had absconded to England. He further describes an incident between 2 brothers, John and Hugh Kenny, who were fighting in a licensed premises belong to Richard Mahon. He attempted to separate them, at which point the two brothers commenced to assault every man they met. They wantonly assaulted 2 other miners named Patrick Dealin and Cornelius Hopkins. This now lasted for about half an hour and on several occasions during that time ‘both Kennys threatened Sub Constable Irwin and I that if we interfered with them they would stretch us for dead on the road. 1 did not consider it prudent to arrest the Kennys as I was too far from my Station’. As a result a contingent of constables from Roundwood patrolled the district during paydays

1875 – 1876

Small pick up and was described as the ‘brightest feather in their cap’ to counter some shareholder’s suggestions that the mine should be abandoned

New forge was built between Hero and Ruplagh and further economies in dressing machinery which cut labour costs. From then the MC1 went rapidly downhill. The price of lead had been dropping over the period due to imports from major lead mines in the rest of the world and all the enterprises were suffering due to the recession of the period

MCI report that one of their efficiencies was the installation of dressing machinery that meant that 2/3 boys could now do what used to take 9 men but it is likely that these boys had finished their schooling

1878

By July the situation (crime) deteriorated and James Dwyer was reporting that 5 miners were serving one ­to two and a half months for offences ranging from drunk and disorder to assault. These were Thomas Grafton, John McGrath, William Brown, James Farrell and John Kenny (45)

1880

Mine was reported to be at a stand­still and the following year the company had lost £6,351 over the previous 6 years

In the area the company had run out of lead and had used up most of its reserves and further exploration had yielded little ore

Employment had fallen dramatically – the mine manager was also the travelling officer, reason given to save money. Later in the year they report that the paymaster, purser, and surveyor had also been made redundant

Shareholders were extremely restive and complaints of bad management came thick and fast

Population dropped considerably to 1,357

1882

Against the wishes of the Directors, the shareholders set up a committee to decide if the mine should be abandoned. Committee included some of the main dissidents among the shareholders who complained that the MCI management were using the recession as a scapegoat for a company that was ‘honeycombed with inefficiency’; another complaint was the constant claim that ‘their was hope for the future and good prospects’

1883

New Board of Directors (after a coup) who after reporting a £2,545 loss put in a major cost cutting programme

Continuing fall in the price of lead worked against them and the mine and company collapsed.

35 employed

Reported that many miners had emigrated to the U.K. and America while others, approximately 30‑40 were working in the Balleece quarries near Rathdrum

Drastic cost cutting measures – all school grants discontinued.

 

 

 

 

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