Grace's Guide To British Industrial History

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Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 162,344 pages of information and 244,505 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 147,919 pages of information and 233,587 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Difference between revisions of "Wheal Alfred"

From Graces Guide
 
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* 1814 "In this parish is Wheal-Alfred, one of the richest mines now worked in the county"
* 1814 "In this parish is Wheal-Alfred, one of the richest mines now worked in the county"


* 1825 [[Arthur Woolf]] erected engines at Wheal Alfred
* 1824 [[Arthur Woolf]] erected engines at Wheal Alfred. <ref>The Engineer 1871/03/03</ref>


* 1848 "The Great Wheal Alfred, a copper-mine which formerly yielded 1,000 tons of ore per month, and some other mines, are within the parish; but none are at present in operation, except the North Wheal Alfred, and even that is barely productive."  
* 1848 "The Great Wheal Alfred, a copper-mine which formerly yielded 1,000 tons of ore per month, and some other mines, are within the parish; but none are at present in operation, except the North Wheal Alfred, and even that is barely productive."  

Latest revision as of 09:01, 20 May 2014

Wheal Alfred in the parish of Phillack, Cornwall, in the deanery and in the east division of the hundred of Penwith, lies about four miles and a half east-south-east from St. Ives

  • "In 1811 the average duty of the three engines (Boulton and Watt's) on Wheal Alfred Mine was about twenty millions. These engines were at that time reckoned the best in the county." (Trevithick)
  • 1812 "Captain Artha recollects at Wheal Alfred Mine in 1812 the 66-inch cylinder pumping engine used a pole air-pump one or two whim-engines on the same mine also used them." (Trevithick)
  • 1812 "At Wheal Alfred they have a 64-inch cylinder; the air-pump is 20 inches, and the stroke is half that of the engine. They were afraid that it was too small; they then put another of 14 inches by the side of the first, the same stroke." (Richard Trevithick)
  • 1813 "I have also been obliged to take the small portable engine from Wheal Alfred Mine and have new apparatus fitted to it, to apply this engine for Plymouth Breakwater." (Richard Trevithick)
  • 1814 "In this parish is Wheal-Alfred, one of the richest mines now worked in the county"
  • 1848 "The Great Wheal Alfred, a copper-mine which formerly yielded 1,000 tons of ore per month, and some other mines, are within the parish; but none are at present in operation, except the North Wheal Alfred, and even that is barely productive."
  • 1860 Alfred, Wheal. Phillack, Cornwall, silver [2]

See Also

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Sources of Information

  1. The Engineer 1871/03/03
  2. 1860 Mining Journal
  • [1]. From: 'Parishes: Otterham - Probus', Magna Britannia: volume 3: Cornwall (1814), pp. 251-274.
  • [2]. From: 'Pevensey - Pickworth', A Topographical Dictionary of England (1848), pp. 564-567