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Swell Factor in Reclamation
Swell Factor in Reclamation
Gowrie Mine
River Hebert
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Lamp Cabin Memorial Park
Drummond 1873 Disaster
1872 Accidents
Springhill’s Novaco Mine
1860's Accident
New Glasgow's Linacy Mine
1913 Drummond Fires
1908 Princess Fire
Albion Mines 1913 Fire
DOSCO Miner
Cape Breton's TNT
The McCormick and Turner families
Payday Drunk
John Croak’s Victoria Cross
Atlantic Slag Company
Sydney Cement Company
1914 Coal Mine Cost
Dominion No 2
Canary in a Coal Mine
Draegermen
James Dinn
Pit Ponies
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
1877 Accidents
Allan Shaft 1912
William Fleming
The Story of Peat
T. G. MacKenzie
Trenton Steel
1930 Stats
MacGregor Mine Explosion
MacGregor Flood
Torbanite Products Limited
Abraham Gesner and Kerosene
1860 Prince of Wales Visit
Dominion No 5
The Royal William and Stellarton Coal
Tom Pit
Terminal City
1875 Accidents
Cannons in Coal Mines
Princess Mine Explosion
Dominion No. 26
A Tale of Two Mines
Franklin Colliery
Robert J. Grant
Springhill No. 1
Mother Coo
Submarine Mines
Barrachois Mine
Fundy Coal Seam
Dominion #14
Dominion #12
Dominion No 4
Child Labour
Joggins Colliery
Safety
Bootleggers
Richmond County
Mabou Mines
Stellar Coal
English Slope
Maccan/Jubilee
The Foster Pit Fire and the Poop Solution
Thomas Edison and the Chignecto coal mine
Henry Whitney and the Dominion Coal Company
Foord Pit
Hiawatha Coal Mine
Coalburn
Springhill Disasters
St. Rose-Chimney Coalfield
Stellarton, Dorrington Softball Complex
How Does Coal Form?
Drummond Coal Mine
Sydney Coalfield and the Princess Mine
Port Morien, 1720
Port Hood
General Mining Association
Thorburn
WWII and Nova Scotia Coal
Nova Scotia's First Railway
Samuel Cunard
Stellarton’s Mining Connections
Sydney Mines
Point Aconi
Victoria Mines
Sullivan Creek
New Campbellton
Inverness and Cabot Links
The Ghost Town of Broughton
Tobin Road, Sydney Mines
Flint Island Coal Mine?!
What does Colliery mean?
Cottam Settlement
Allan Mine
Sydney Mines
Sydney Mines, Cape Breton, played a key role in Nova Scotia’s coal mining and industrial history.
Sydney Mines was named after Thomas Townshend (1733-1800), First Viscount Sydney, who was British Home Secretary in the Pitt Government in the 1780s. He was an important player in negotiating the Canada-US border. He felt the British needed to keep Canada so loyalists – Americans who supported the British side in the US War of Independence - would have a safe haven to go to after the war. Were it not for him taking a stand on the issue, the Canada-US border would likely be much further north than it is.
Townshend was also the person who devised the plan in 1786 to send convicts to Australia’s Botany Bay.
Sydney Mines was originally known just as “the Mines” because of its coal mines. It also used to be called Lazytown because farmers found few people out and about when they came to sell food early in the morning. The farmers didn’t know coal miners woke at dawn and were already at work when the farmers got there!
It was long known that coal existed in the area. Governor of Canso and Isle Royale, Nicolas Denys (1598-1688), noted the presence of coal there in his 1672 book, “Description and Natural History of the Coasts of North America.”
Coal was shipped from Spanish Bay (later renamed Sydney) to Boston in 1724 and to Martinique in 1732.
After Fortress Louisbourg fell to the British in 1745, The British built a blockhouse fort at Burnt Head and mined coal from the Sydney area to keep warm.
After the second capture of Fortress Louisbourg in 1758, mining continued around Sydney, sometimes illegally – there’s a long history of bootleggers and smugglers prying coal out of outcrops for their own use or to sell.
In 1766, four Halifax merchants were granted an exclusive right to dig coal anywhere except where His Majesty’s troops were already doing so for the garrisons. They opened a mine at Spanish River (now called Sydney River). In 1777, forty soldiers were employed digging coal there.
During the administration of Cape Breton Governor DesBarres from 1784-1787, the mines were worked for the government and a wharf was built to ship coal.
Between 1788-1826 mining rights were leased to various promoters.
In 1826-27, the General Mining Association was given a monopoly on most Nova Scotia coal, which lasted until 1857. The first shaft at Sydney Mines was sunk in 1830. A temporary railway was built from the pit to the old wharf and an iron foundry with fitting shops, lathes and equipment for repairing mining machinery was established.
Another shaft was sunk in 1834 and a three-mile railway was completed from the pits to North Sydney. Locomotives were introduced in 1853.
In 1854 the Queen Pit went into operation. It was a shaft mine built to work the coal left by the Jacob Pit, which was abandoned in December 1854 due to a significant inflow of water. The Queen was built in anticipation of the Jacob Pit having to shut down because the GMA knew the Jacob was nearing its end.
The Queen Pit remained in operation until 1876, when it was temporarily abandoned. The area in which it had been working was taken over by the Princess Colliery, which operated for a century.
The Queen Pit was worked again from 1906-17 to recover coal pillars left behind by earlier operations.
Sydney Mines had many other coal mines, including:
- The Sydney Mines Colliery (1863-1962)
- Barachois Colliery (1884-1886)
- Greener Colliery (1896-1963)
- Sydney No. 2 (Lloyd Cove) (1907-1916)
- Florence (1908-1961)
- Scotia Colliery (1908-1921)
- Tom Pit (1920-1942)
By the turn of the century, Sydney Mines was one of the top coal producing communities in North America. Workers came from Italy, Poland, Germany, Lithuania, Austria, England, Scotland and Wales to work in the mines. Many Nova Scotians are descended from these immigrants.
Construction of the most efficient and modern steel plant in Canada began in Sydney Mines in 1902 to take advantage of the local supply of metallurgical coal and proximity to the iron deposits on Bell Island in Newfoundland. (Steel is mainly made of iron and carbon, and the carbon is derived from metallurgical coal.)
The steel plant led to a period of prosperity in the early 1900s and much of Sydney Mines’ infrastructure - sewer, water, electricity, paved streets - was built at that time.
Sydney Mines' first house, built about 1829, was owned by Richard Brown, the General Mining Association’s first manager in Nova Scotia. It still stands at 32 Brown St. He and his son, Richard Henry Brown, played major roles in building Cape Breton’s mining industry.
Richard Brown Sr. was the first to see the potential in mining coal under the sea floor. He built the Princess mine with its main shaft near the shore and the workings entirely under the ocean. The shaft was started in 1868 but due to issues with water leaks, the seam was not reached until 1876. The shaft had to be lined with metal through 300 feet of water-bearing rock to ensure safety. It was a significant engineering achievement and it paved the way for most Cape Breton coal to be mined under the ocean.
In 1864, Richard Henry Brown succeeded his father as manager of the General Mining Association in Cape Breton and ran the mines in Sydney Mines and the Lingan and Victoria collieries. He was also the first mayor of the Town of Sydney Mines.
Princes Colliery.