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Minera Lead Mines

Coordinates: 53°03′03″N 3°04′56″W / 53.0507582°N 3.0823232°W / 53.0507582; -3.0823232
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Minera Lead Mines
The former Meadow Shaft in 2022
Location
LocationMinera (Near Wrexham)
CountryWales
Coordinates53°03′03″N 3°04′56″W / 53.0507582°N 3.0823232°W / 53.0507582; -3.0823232
Production
ProductsLead, Zinc
History
Opened1845
Active1845–1914
Closed1914
Owner
CompanyMinera Mining Company
Meadow Shaft of Minera Lead Mines in 1893.
The restored engine house and workings.

The Minera Lead Mines were a mining operation and are now a country park and tourist centre in the village of Minera near Wrexham, in Wrexham County Borough, Wales.[1]

History

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The first written record of lead mining at Minera dates back to 1296, when Edward I of England hired miners from the site to work in his new mines in Devon. Not all of them vacated the area, however, as mining went on until the Black Death in 1349, when it ended.

In 1527, two men bought the rights to mine on the site, but deeper workings were unworkable due to the presence of underground rivers, and the inability to prevent flooding. The inability to pay for steam engines to pump out water closed the mines again until 1845, when John Taylor & Sons, mining agents from Flintshire, formed the Minera Mining Company. They were able to build a stationary steam engine on site, and also blast caves from down in the valley into the mines, for extra drainage. The steam engine was a Cornish engine (i.e. a Beam engine), typical for stationary engines at the time.

John Taylor & Sons had used a £30,000 investment at the time, yet the profits for 1864 alone were £60,000 (equivalent to over £4 Million in 2008). By 1900, the price of lead and zinc had fallen dramatically, while the price of coal used for the steam engine rose. The stationary steam engine stopped work in 1909. The owners sold off the mines and all assets by 1914.

Transport

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For transport, the Mines had their own railway branch line, which connected with the end of the Wrexham and Minera Branch at Minera Limeworks. The mines also had their own steam locomotive, a Manning Wardle 0-6-0ST (Works No. 21) Henrietta.[2] The lead ore would be taken to Wrexham for transport nationally, and coal brought back. The line was lifted in 1914 when the mines closed, but was relaid again in the 1920s to serve two silica clay pits (Graig Fawr quarry and Tir Celyn quarry) which were run by the newly formed Minera Silica Quarries Limited from 1926. The 'Minera Mineral Branch' appears in a 1947 list of GWR lines, so would have become a British Rail line in 1948.[3] The track was lifted for the last time in the early 1960s.

Plans to build a tourist narrow gauge railway on the trackbed from the lead mines towards the Minera Limeworks were in the 1990 development plan, but were not progressed. Minera Quarry was still in use at the time, and it was not until 2018 that it came under the ownership of the North Wales Wildlife Trust.[citation needed]

Restoration

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The workings and local area underwent massive restoration and regeneration funded by Wrexham County Borough Council and the Welsh Development Agency beginning in 1988 to make sure the lead, Zinc and lime spoil tips didn't contaminate local water supplies, the Engine house was rebuilt and fitted with replica machinery, as the original steam engine was removed in 1914. A visitor Centre was opened for public use, and the engine house is part of a tour. It is a site of tourism for Wrexham County Borough Council.

In 2004, the site was attacked by vandals, but this was repaired by the council in 2005. By 2024 much of the heavy replica woodwork supporting the winding gear had become rotten and dangerous, and so it was removed.

Sources

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References

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  1. ^ "Minera Lead Mines - WCBC".
  2. ^ "LNER Encyclopedia: The East and West Yorkshire Union Railway: Locomotives and Rolling Stock".
  3. ^ Cooke, R A. Atlas of the Great Western Railway 1947. ISBN 9780906867655.