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Report - - Cwmystwyth Lead mine (lower level) Wales, June 2015 | Mines and Quarries | 28DaysLater.co.uk

Report - Cwmystwyth Lead mine (lower level) Wales, June 2015

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The Kwan

28DL Regular User
Regular User
I aint been to busy lately for various unavoidable reasons so I was well pleased to be able to get out and get back to this place to explore the lowest dry accessible level. We knew that there had been rescue training in the mine and that the near vertical skipway shaft had been bolted out so we decided to have a look.
Cwmystwyth is presently recieving TLC from The Cambrian Mines Trust and thanks has to go to them and Roy Fellows for all of the hard work and dedication that they put in.
Visited with Scott Landsker, I have put this in Non public because the work here is ongoing and I was requested to do so.
Excuse me if this is a bit picture heavy, but its been a while.


some history
Cwmystwyth Mines probably constitute the most important mining site in central Wales, and just like many other sites have something of a chequered history making fortunes for some while bankrupting others.

The first recorded history starts in 1184, however stone hammer and mauls discovered on Copa Hill to the east have been attributed to the Romans.

The early mining was controlled by the Abbot of Strata Florida Abbey but it wasn’t until the Elizabethan formation of the Society of Mines Royal that the first intensive mining started. Under the society there were several lease holders including the ubiquitous Sir Hugh Myddleton and Thomas Bushell.

In 1693 the Mines Royal Act ended the monopoly of the society and laid the way open to the Company of mine Adventurers under Mackworth and Waller.

In 1759 the mines passed into the hands of Chauncey Townsend who engaged the services of Thomas Bonsall from Derdyshire to manage the mines. Bonsall stayed on after the death of Townsend in 1770 working the mines for Townsends son who inherited the lease, later in 1785 he took on the lease himself.

Bonsall did quite well out of the job regularly earning £2000 a year out of Cwmystwyth, Castell, and Rhiwrugos mines which he also owned.

A lot of the well known works are attributable to Bonsall, and towards the end of the 18th century his earnings had reached £2000 to £3000 a year from Kingside and Pughes mines alone. He was also responsible for Bonsalls level and Level Fawr.

Bonsall died in 1807 and the lease passed to his son, and then was taken over by the Alderson Brothers from Swaledale and James Raw who has local descendants.

Unfortunately the price of lead plunged in the 1830s and the Aldersons were declared bankrupt. The lease was then taken by Lewis Pugh of Aberystwyth who had the luck of the devil as metal prices started to soar immediately and he made a fortune from stocks of ore in hand when he took over the lease.

In 1848 John Taylor of Norwich took over the mines, another for his collection. The mine was being worked on the cost book system and in 1885 after a period of poor output the mines passed to a new company ‘The Cwmystwyth Company’. Almost immediately the mine was split between two concerns ‘The New Cwmystwyth Company’ and ‘The Kingside Mining Company’ who worked the mines until 1892 and 1893 respectively.

In 1900 the mines were taken over by The Cwmystwyth Mining Company Ltd under Henry Gammon who poured a fortune into development work and investment n new plant and machinery; however the new company struggled badly to make it pay. In 1905 the company was reformed as Kingside Zinc Blende Ltd but still struggled to turn a profit. By 1909 Gammon had blown all his money in the place but managed to attract Brunner Mond to invest in his existing company.

In 1912 the mine was again split into two sections, with part being taken over by The May Mining Company formed by one of the old mine captains John Howell Evans in partnership with a Charles Stocks. This company is notable in one of the few metal mining concerns that used Kell Drills developed by Moses Kellow of the Kelldrill Works at Croesor Slate Mine near Blaenau Ffestiniog.

Kellow was another Cornishman in Wales being born at Delabole in 1862. Besides being the owner of the Kelldrill Company he was manager of the quarry. These drills worked on hydraulic pressure using water, and are arguably the most powerful rock drills ever produced. High pressure water acted on a Pelton turbine, later a reaction turbine, which drove the shaft of the drill by elliptic gears. The drill developed 55h.p. and was twice as efficient as a modern rock drill.

History was to repeat itself however and these two companies went to the wall in 1915 and 1916 respectively.

In 1916 two gentlemen named Thomas and Stocks managed to form a new company Cwm Ystwyth Mines Ltd which struggled on until 1923 when the mines passed into the hands of the British Metal Corporation.

In 1925 the mines were being worked by a partnership of a Craig and Herbert and finally The Gallois Lead and Zinc Mines Ltd until 1950 when the mines were finally abandoned.

Eventually the ownership of the land and mines passed into the hands of the Crown Estate who in 2012 spent a great deal on money consolidating the remaining buildings, and then in 2013 whole site was acquired by Cambrian Mines Trust the present owners.


This is the main adit and it holds in store a few tight squeezes and thigh deep water before you get to the good stuff, wet feet are a certainty.
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There is much to see here
and if you tilt your head up from the same spot without moving your feet, this is what you see, so you know that this mine is all about the timbering and it shows just how awesome this place is, you can imagine the skip carts being hauled up and down this amazing bit of construction..
This is probably the middle of the skipway on Level Fawr, what looks like a ladder is actually steel gauge rails that the carts ran on.

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one of the carts
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I insisted that Landsker go first to test my rigging :D
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At the bottom it was again all about the Timbering but there were some other good bits like this crisp packet..7d...a bargain.
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Stopesville...Check it, there was too much goodness on the lower level.
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There were quite a few sections like this and I could only imagine the weight that these timbers were holding back.
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We followed the pipe, hoping to find a compressor tank or some sort of plant or machinery
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Unfortunately all we found was gloopy welly sucking sludgy passages, although these were very nice with the old sleepers stacked at the side. Eventually they became so deep with water that we turned back when it reached townhall depth.


We were pleasantly surprised by just how extensive the lower level was and we agreed that the 7 hour round trip, for me anyway, was well worth it.
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Whats not to like, Landsker can just be seen in the distance in this shot. we were very Very happy to see this level but it was time to GTF out and start the long trek home.
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here is some video that I took,,check the leaky wellies
 
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Punk

Punkus Explorus
28DL Full Member
Always like your reports :thumb Not sure if I'd be happy relying on those stilts though
Great stuff :thumb
 

The Kwan

28DL Regular User
Regular User
Thanks for commenting peeps, it is a great place and there is plenty to see on level fawr alone, saddest thing about this mine that sticks in my mind is something that I read stating that the average age of the mine workers here upon death was 34 years old, heavy metal poisening is a bummer.
 

coolboyslim

Mr Reality Hacker
28DL Full Member
Absolutely awesome. What an epic trip that must have been. Great pictures you got there and good memories aswell.
 
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