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Mining legacy

Wheal Owles, Cornwall.

 

Work began on extracting tin and minerals at Wheal Owles in the 1850s. At its height it had 29 miles of levels and 11 steam engines at the site, a mile from St Just.

 

In an event which could have stepped straight from the pages of a novel, tragedy struck in January 1893 when flood water broke through the underground workings trapping one boy and 19 men. Their bodies were never recovered and the mine remained closed from that day. There is a plaque recalling their names on the wall of the engine house.

 

(extract from 'We Are Cornwall' website)

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Uploaded on November 13, 2015
Taken on April 8, 2015