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Discovery of Gold at Dufferin
Hurricane Island
Fletcher and Faribault
Jack Munroe
Mine Apprentice Project
Small Gold Districts
15 Mile Stream
Tributers
E. Percy Brown and the Brookfield Mine
Barachois
Nova Rich Mines
Shad Bay Treasure Hunt
Montague 1937 Accident
Father Lanigan’s “Prospect”
George V. Douglas
The Stewart Brothers
Goldboro
Moose River's Touquoy Mine
Camerons Mountain
Jim Campbells Barren
Stanburne's Puzzling Gold Mine
Pockwock
Beaverbank Lake
Banook Mining Company
Deep Gold Mining
Wellington
Arsenic and Gold
Dynamite
War of Words
King of the Klondike
Oliver Millett
Kempt Gold Mining Company
Carleton
The Memramcook Fiasco
Love and Gold in Oldham
Montague 1893 Disaster
Central Rawdon Consolidated Mines
Cochrane Hill
Amateurish Early Gold Mining
Sable Island Gold
The Sea Wolf
Trueman Hirschfield
Alexander Heatherington
Prospector Joe Cope
Killag Quicksand
George W. Stuart
Wellington
Billy Bell
Cooper Jim Mine
South Branch Stewiacke
Walter Prest
Lake Charlotte
Acadia Powder Mills Company
The Ovens Anticline
Moose River Anticline
Avon Mine Explosion
Montague
Waverley Claims Dispute
Avon River
Moose River Disaster
Mooseland Scam
New York and Nova Scotia Gold Mining Company
Rosario Siroy and the South Uniacke Gold District
Blockhouse
Killag Gold District
Miller Lake
Baron Franz von Ellershausen
Mooseland: Nova Scotia’s first Gold Discovery
United Goldfields of Nova Scotia
Pleasant River Barrens Gold District
Lochaber Gold Mining Company
Rawdon Gold Mines
MacLean Brook
Gold in Clayton Park?!
Forest Hill
Meguma vs. Placer Gold
Uniacke
Voglers Cove
Gold River
Moosehead
Goldenville
Westfield
Indian Path
Harrigan Cove
Centre Rawdon
Nova Scotia’s Gold Mining History
WWII Gold
Middle River Gold District
Early Gold Discoveries
Halifax 1867
Paris Exhibition 1867
Mining and Tourism
An Act relating to the Gold Fields
Molega Gold District
Brookfield Gold District
Gays River
Halifax Gold
Caribou Gold District
Renfrew Gold District
Oldham Gold District
Whiteburn Gold District
Country Harbour Mines
Waverley Gold District
Robert Henderson and Klondike Gold
George Mercer Dawson
Cow Bay Gold District
Lake Catcha Gold District
Wine Harbour Gold District
An Act relating to the Gold Fields
In English, “staking a claim” to something means you have a right to it or that it should belong to you. The expression comes from literally driving wooden stakes into the ground to mark a mineral claim – a specific area where a person/company has the right to explore and mine.
The expression originated during the California gold rush which started in 1848 and came to be used figuratively in the late 1800s.
Staking claims in Nova Scotia began in 1862 when the legislature passed “An Act relating to the Gold Fields.” The law was in response to the province’s first gold rush which started in 1861 after the discovery of gold in Mooseland. It gave the government authority to establish and regulate gold districts. It also helped avoid the crime, violence and disease that accompanied gold rushes in California and Australia (1851) by establishing a legal process for staking claims and managing areas.
The 1862 law established a system of mineral claims – defined pieces of land - that could be staked for prospecting and mining. There were four claim sizes, each with a different annual staking fee:
• 150x250 feet ($40 annual staking fee)
• 150x500 ($80)
• 300x500 ($160)
• 450x500 ($240)
Government surveyors laid out claim lots. This imposed organization and discouraged miners from digging pits too close together, which could result in collapse or flooding (at this time pits were mostly just holes in the ground). It also helped keep the peace among prospectors.
Anyone who discovered a new mine at least one mile from other mines was given a free 150x250 foot claim – no staking fees for 21 years, a significant benefit since prospectors often had no money and claims often produced little to no profit. (It is said that merchants made more money catering to prospectors, investors, and mining companies than miners made from mining!) The free claim encouraged prospecting in new areas and led to additional finds as prospectors did exploration around the free claim.
Prospectors were given one week after a discovery to stake a claim plus 24 hours for each 15 miles of distance they had to travel to register the claim at the office of the Gold Commission, the regulator established to oversee the gold industry. (The law set the Commissioner’s salary at $2000 per year.)
The fact that the government allowed 24 hours to travel 15 miles is a reminder that much of Nova Scotia was wilderness at that time. Travel to and from historical mines was usually done by ship as there were no roads to most of these remote locations. Prospectors often had to fight their way through the bush and clear the land. As mining grew, there were sometimes cart paths from the docks to mining camps but conditions were rough. (This is worth bearing in mind when we consider the poor job those early miners did taking care of the environment – their lack of scientific knowledge reflected the era in which they lived.)
The 1862 Act established in law, pre- Confederation, that Nova Scotia’s minerals are owned by the provincial government on behalf of all Nova Scotians. This is important because it was the initial legal basis for charging mineral royalties, first on gold but later on other minerals as well.
The Act gave the provincial government’s cabinet authority to appoint a Bailiff of the District, a constable to police the area. These remote locations were often a “wild west” and the safety of citizens was a concern. Unscrupulous behaviour was not uncommon and alcohol was often a problem. Lack of supplies and food was a worry, especially with the sudden spikes in population that often accompanied new finds (i.e. 600 prospectors and miners arrived in Tangier, the first gold district established, within a year of gold being discovered there). And there was gold to fight over.
In total, Nova Scotia established 64 historical gold districts.
Staking claims today is very different. The same concept of staking ground (and the minerals underneath it) is used but in Nova Scotia we use an online mapping system called NovaRoc (https://novaroc.novascotia.ca/novaroc/page/flex/index.html?keepSyncToken...). Claims can be staked from anywhere in the world at any time (no more rushing to the Gold Commissioner’s office!). Staking fees are paid online and claims holders have to pay renewal fees every two years. They also must do a prescribed amount of exploration work to keep their claims in good standing.
There is a total of 371,978 claims in Nova Scotia which are defined by basically laying a grid over the province. 37,837 claims are currently staked, the majority of them for gold.
Claims are 16.2 hectares on average but their size varies slightly because they are based on the lines of longitude and latitude, which follow the curve of the earth.
Before NovaRoc was established in 2013, staked claims were managed in ledgers and a master set of 500 mapsheets, which were updated daily by hand. These were only accessible by physically visiting the registry’s office.
Mineral exploration creates jobs for Nova Scotians, attracts investment and ensures we have the essential materials that our society relies on.