Balaclava Mine

The Balaclava Mine was an open-cut mine in the Australian ghost town of Whroo, Victoria. It opened in October 1854, one year after gold was found at the nearby Rushworth.[1] By 1881 the number of employed miners in the area had dropped to 150, and mining in the Balaclava Mine ceased in the 1920s.[2] The site now operates as a tourist attraction.

Balaclava Mine
Balaclava Mine in 2016
Location
Balaclava Mine
LocationWhroo
StateVictoria
CountryAustralia
Coordinates36°38′43″S 145°1′23″E
Production
ProductsGold
Production£6000
Financial yearyear
TypeOpen cut
Greatest depth25m
History
Opened1854 (1854)
Closed1920s
Owner
CompanyJohn Lewis, Archibald Menzies[1]

History

John Thomas Lewis and James Meek Nickinson, two sailors, found a gold nugget in the grass at Whroo in October 1854. This happened to be the same month as the Battle of Balaclava in the Crimean War, thus the name of the mine.[3] Lewis and Nickinson opened the mine under a partnership, hiring 100 men in this first year. The profits from the first year totalled some £15,000. In 1857 Nickinson left the partnership, leaving Lewis to operate on his own. In following years the amount of gold mined dropped, and by 1859 the now Balaclava Hill Quartz Mining Co. was making only £6000 per year.[4] By 1881, there were only 150 employed miners in the Rushworth area. By the 1920s, there was little recorded activity at the Balaclava mine, and operations ceased.

The 1980s saw attempts to have the mine historically listed and protected, however these attempts failed. The open-cut mine now operates as a tourist attraction, though the tunnel through the mine wall has recently shut for safety reasons.[5]

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gollark: My school is planning to try online learning or something, which I am sure will go badly.
gollark: ```What will happen about exams?In England and Wales, all exams in May and June have been cancelled, including GCSEs, A-levels and primary school national curriculum tests known as Sats.Mr Williamson told the Commons on Wednesday: "I can confirm we will not go ahead with assessments or exams and that we will not be publishing performance tables for this academic year."We will work with the sector and [the exams watchdog] Ofqual to ensure children get the qualifications that they need."```- from the BBC
gollark: Not really.
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References

  1. "Whroo". Victorian Places. Retrieved 26 December 2016.
  2. "The Balaclava Works". Rushworth Mining History. 22 October 2012. Retrieved 26 December 2016.
  3. Moss, Tara (29 October 2012). "The Ghost Town of Whroo". Tara Moss. Retrieved 26 December 2016.
  4. D Bannear, ‘Historical Mining Sites in the Rushworth (Waranga North) Mining: Part Two: Site Gazetteer’, Department of Conservation and Natural Resources, May 1993, pp.8-22
  5. "Rushworth, VIC - Aussie Towns". Aussie Towns. Retrieved 26 December 2016.
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