SOUTH CROFTY MINE

Mark Kaczmarek & Brian Jenkins on the croust seat. 400 fathom level, No4 Drive East at the start of the NPZ Crosscut. The 400-380 fathom ladderway (mined by Wayne Brown) is at the end of the chamber to the right of the picture Note the diamond drill collar point markings on the walls. Photo taken in 1997 by Edgar Bergstein.

South Crofty Mine is situated mid-way betwen Camborne and Redruth at Pool in Cornwall. Beginning its life as a small sett called Penhellick Vean in the 1590's, it grew as it absorbed the smaller mines around it, becoming South Wheal Crofty in 1854. Initially a shallow tin mine and then a copper mine, the mine workings went back into the deep tin zone from the 1860's onwards and copper production began to decline. In 1906 South Crofty Mine Ltd became the foundation of the modern mine. From the 1890's onwards the mine acquired other setts as the surrounding mines closed, including New Cook's Kitchen Mine, Tincroft & Carn Brea, North Roskear, South Roskear and Dolcoath Mine in 1930, to become a huge enterprise spanning nearly 4.5 km in length.

The modern mine was worked for tin, arsenic and tungsten during the early 20th century, but by the 1960's tin was the sole product. The workings eventually reached almost 3000 feet in depth, equalling Dolcoath, and stretched from Centenary Street in Camborne to Barncoose.

The mine closed, controversially, in 1998 after some 400 years of almost continuous work, still posessing significant reserves and several tempting exploration targets. It has been reopened (as of September 2001) by Baseresult Ltd as New Cook's Kitchen Mine and is now officially unabandoned. Although flooded to adit level (~140 feet) Baseresult intend to restart it as a working mine and will hopefully resume tin production within the near future. A section of the workings above adit, on North Tincroft Lode, have (as of October 2003) been opened for tourist visits with access from the Tuckingmill Decline.

I spent five years at South Crofty. It was a very unusual & rewarding job; it was what I'd been trained for and always wanted to do, but the place also had a very strong family atmosphere and I enjoyed the job as much for the people as for the geology. Whether it was sitting on the croust bench doing the crossword with Geoff Harvey, playing Quake against the boys from Tech Serv & the Mine Superintendent, listening to more of Peter Barnes' stories of exploits with nuclear missles, submarines and spitfires, trying not to get caught up in one of Sos's scams or watching Mark Kaczmarek stitch up another poor unsuspecting fool (sometimes he even got me....but then he seemed to get everyone sometime or other.....) there was always lots of 'crack' and fun to be had. Unfortunately most of those stories are unprintable and you really had to be there for some of them, but many of the guilty do appear in the photo section - you know who you are!

Trammers David Medlen (l) and Kevin Mutton (r) on the croust seat by the 400 fathom level, No4 Drive 100mE tipping point, with Nick LeBoutillier. Waste from the NPZ Crosscut was being tipped here into an old stope, using a number of wagons and the 5-ton Clayton loco in the photograph. Photo taken in 1997 by Edgar Bergstein.

Barring down in a shrink stope

Nick LeBoutillier. Barring down in a stope - Providence Lode, 400 Fathom Level. 1996. Photo by Simon Jones.

This section contains a page on the geology of the mine and a page of photographs taken between 1992 and 1997. Click on the relevant button to navigate to the page you require.

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This page last updated on 01/01/2006