Beyond My Own Lamp's Beam
A Recent Attempt to Re-open Greenlaws East Mine
Charles Clark
£11.99
978-1-906775-03-2
When the Author and two friends decided to gain access to the east vein of Greenlaws mine in Weardale they had no idea of the effort which such a venture would require.
Closed for a hundred years, the mine had produced lead during the latter part of the nineteenth century and it also yielded fluorite crystals, fascinating in shape and colour, much in demand by collectors. Numerous unsuccessful attempts to open this old vein had been made over the past sixty years and the mine did not yield up it secrets easily.
On reopening some of the galleries the author found relics of the past which gave an insight into the incredible working conditions which the miners endured. Tallow candles fixed to their helmets provided the only light and crude ladders, pick axes and shovels were their tools. The team were able to explore a small part of the mine leaving many galleries and shafts at a greater depth undisturbed. Despite an unexpected conclusion to their venture the mine provided some impressive specimens of crystals and a contribution to the history of mining in the North East. There is still much to be rediscovered.
Charles Clark's account greatly adds to the heritage of metal mining in the 19th century.
Reviews received so far
"Worth every penny!...reads like a truly herculean spate of eccentricity on the cusp of madness...shades of wandering in the labrynth, only even more extreme than Theseus because of the horrible weather both above and below ground and the sense of exploring a catacomb...burrowing into the past.
Roger Yates, poet and musician, Bristol
A seemingly esoteric subject can be made fascinating by an authors' passion.
Newcastle Journal, Culture, supplement Tues. 28 April 09
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