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Mining on the Brendon Hills

The Brendon Hills are a range of hills in western Somerset, England. The hills merge level into the eastern side of Exmoor and are included within the Exmoor National Park. Iron ore and other minerals have been extracted for industrial purposes, primarily by the Brendon Hills Iron Ore Company in the later half of the 19th century.[1]

Ruins of the winding house at the top of the incline on the West Somerset Mineral Railway

Geology edit

The Brendon Hills are largely formed from the Morte Slates, a thick faulted and folded sequence of Devonian age sedimentary rocks.[2] An east-west aligned anticline/syncline pair known as the Brendon Anticline and Brendon Syncline folds these rocks. The fold couplet is itself offset by displacement of the rocks on the NNW-SSE aligned Timberscombe Fault System.[3][4] Over the centuries they have been mined for minerals, notably ironstone from which iron is extracted for making steel.[5]

History edit

Where lodes of iron ore reached the surface they were worked using bell pits from Roman times.[6][7][8]

19th century edit

In the mid-nineteenth century, the proprietors of the Ebbw Vale Iron Works acquired an interest in iron ore deposits in the Brendon Hills. Iron ore had been known there for centuries but not exploited industrially until the Brendon Hills Iron Ore Company was formed in 1853.[9] Initially goethite/hematite was extracted and later unoxidised siderite.[10]

At an altitude of over 1,000 feet (300 m) and remote from usable roads, the deposits needed a form of transport to get the ore to South Wales. The West Somerset Mineral Railway, which included a 0.75 miles (1.21 km) long gravity worked incline on a gradient of 1 in 4, was built to take the ore to Watchet Harbour where it was loaded onto ships to be sent to Ebbw Vale for smelting.[11] At Burrow Farm Mine a 25 inches (640 mm) Cornish beam engine was installed around 1868 to pump water out of the mine.[12] The mines provided employment for an average of 245 people between 1873 and 1882.[13] Accommodation was also built for the mine workers.[14]

Though sometimes productive, no nineteenth century iron mine on the Brendons was profitable and the venture as a whole was financially ruinous. From 1852 to 1883 a little over three quarters of a million tons of usable ore was delivered to Ebbw Vale, each ton costing the company £1.25 to produce and deliver for which it received 75p. Net losses amounted to £762,000.[15] Furthermore, the industry as a whole was prone to boom and bust, with a sharp decline from the early 1880s acting as the coup-de-grace.[16] In 1907 another venture, the Somerset Mineral Syndicate, leased the railway and resumed mining.[17]

Several of the structures associated with the mines can still be seen. These include the Ironstone mine ventilation flue in Chargot Wood,[9] and the remains of the Carnarvon New Pit.[18][19]

Individual mines edit

Many mines have been recorded on the hills. The following operated at various times between 1837 and 1909.[20]

Baker's pit edit

This mine is sometimes referred to as "Baker's mine" or simply "Bakers". Primarily aimed at Manganese, this pit was served by a siding off the West Somerset Mineral Railway (WSMR).[21] It was an early pit latterly developed and briefly productive in iron ore in the years 1881–2, but it closed in May 1883.[22][23][24][25][26] Scant evidence remains that the pit ever existed.[27]

Bearland Wood mine edit

 
Bearland Wood ventilation flue

The first adit was started at this iron mine in 1854, aiming to work towards Gupworthy. Little ore was found and working had ceased by 1864.[28] Later that year the Mines Captain, Morgan Morgans, decided to drive a new adit, which proved very successful, yielding 12000 tons of brown Haematite which was taken to Langham Hill pit by an incline operated by horse powered whims.[29] The ore was loaded on to WSMR wagons at Langham Hill. This incline was abandoned in 1866–7 when Bearland Wood mine was joined underground with Langham Hill pit.[30][31]

Mines on the tops of hills are usually sunk from above, with adits for drainage or access driven laterally to the hillside from the ore, coal or other target mineral. Bearland Wood mine was worked the other way round, with vertical working following lateral boring.[29]

Bearland Wood faced the universal mining problem of ventilation in a way which was both very old and radically new. Most industrial age mines were drained and ventilated using pumps, typically powered by steam engines. Morgans equipped Bearland Wood with a ventilation flue where a chimney stack was built above the mine's upward shaft and a coal-fired furnace was placed at the foot of the chimney. The furnace sucked air from the mine shaft which sucked fresh air from the lateral adit in turn. The air flow was guided by wooden ducts so that it always passed through areas where men worked. Miners extended or redirected the ducts as the working faces moved. This method long predated steam pumps, but as Morgans was erecting it at Bearland Wood the Mines Inspector at Risca Colliery (near where Morgans had been a colliery manager) declared steam pumps to be unsatisfactory and ordered their older ventilation furnaces to be reinstated. The ventilation flue at Bearland Wood is a scheduled monument. Its conservation was supported by the Heritage Lottery Fund.[32][33][34]

Betsy mine edit

This iron mine was served by a siding off the WSMR, it is sometimes referred to as "New Langham Mine". It was the last new mine in the area when it opened around 1875. It closed in 1883.[35][36][37][38] Almost no trace remains of the mine's existence.[39]

Blackland mine edit

This iron mine was operated independently of the Ebbw Vale Company near Withypool, west of the Brendon Hills. It operated from about 1875 to 1881 then briefly in 1895, leaving a large bank of ore stockpiled on site. In 1907 a Withypool mining company started transporting ore by traction engine to Minehead to be shipped north, but this ended in October. The Somerset Mineral Syndicate added this to their portfolio of Colton and Timwood and built a rope worked incline powered by a stationary engine to lower ore to the road. The workings were prospected but the ore sent to Minehead was almost all from the stockpile.[40]

Burrow Farm mine edit

 
Burrow Farm Engine House

This iron mine was served by a siding off the WSMR. It closed around 1868.[41][42][43] The shell of its engine house, which was moved lock, stock and barrel from Langham Hill mine, stands today, the ore field's only engine house to do so.[44][45]

Carew mine edit

Sinking the shaft of this iron mine may have started in 1865. The last ore appears to have been raised in 1871. A photograph shows that ore from Carew was handled separately by the WSMR so that charges and income could be allocated accordingly.[46] When the mine was surveyed in 1883 the shaft was flooded. Carew's ore was a target for the 1907 venture at Timwood Tunnel, but that venture failed before any ore was reached.[47] All that can be seen in modern times is a small disturbance on the surface near a car park.[48][49]

Carnarvon new pit edit

This iron mine was served by a siding off the WSMR, on the opposite side of the line from Carnarvon Old Pit. It opened in 1866 and initially yielded good ore in quantity, but it closed in 1882.[50][51][52] The ruins of the buildings have now been scheduled as an ancient monument.[53] Carnarvon and Raleigh's Cross mines were both very wet. Complex interlocking drainage and flood prevention features were installed.[54]

Carnarvon old pit edit

This iron mine was next to the WSMR, on the opposite side from Carnarvon New Pit. It is sometimes referred to as "Old Carnarvon Pit". It closed in the early 1860s.[55][56][52][57]

Colton mine edit

This iron mine is sometimes referred to as "Coltonpits" and occasionally as "Colton Pits".

There is evidence of ancient mining at Colton,[58][59][60] with the main site visible on maps just over 3 km ENE of Brendon Hill. The site was investigated in 1847,[61] but throughout the period up to 1875 when the WSMR was flourishing Colton mine was described as "insignificant",[62] though in the early 1880s, just as the whole Brendon venture was on the point of collapse, output was increasing and an extra siding on the WSMR was sought but not started.[63]

When the Somerset Mineral Syndicate Ltd attempted to resurrect mining and the WSMR from 1907 to 1910 it reopened Colton mine, but entered it through what had been a drainage adit in Galloping Bottom, some distance north west and downhill of the original workings. This location meant that whilst underground costs might have been reduced, it was difficult to get the ore to the WSMR. The original idea was to build an aerial ropeway, but a wholly new 2 ft (610 mm) gauge tramway was built instead. This incorporated a 600 yards (550 m) incline[64] to get the ore up to the top of the hill,[65][66] followed by a two-mile run (including a timber viaduct)[67] to Brendon Hill where the ore was tipped into standard gauge wagons[68] which were lowered down the larger incline then hauled to Watchet harbour.

The aim of developing Colton mine was to give an income until the Syndicate's main hope - Timwood - started to produce, but output was disappointing (a mere 4800 tons of ore was raised in 1908-10)[69] and what ore was produced caked furnaces and proved almost unsaleable. In desperation the Syndicate erected plant at Washford to turn the poor ore into briquettes,[70] thereby reducing volume, mass and impurities, but the undercapitalised venture failed in 1909 and all mining ceased, including Colton. The Syndicate voted to be wound up on 24 March 1910 and its assets were auctioned off on 28 June that year.[71][72][73] in modern times only the faintest traces of the workings, incline and narrow gauge railway can be detected.[74]

Eisen Hill mine edit

Eisen Hill is named "Ison Hill" on OS maps and sometimes "Eyson Hill" elsewhere.

This iron mine opened in 1854 and stuttered to an end by 1877, with patchy result between. The mine was in soft ground which warranted different mining techniques. The company had a powder magazine and three cottages near the mine, one of which was used as the mine offices. The WSMR took the first steps towards seeking powers to extend their line from Gupworthy (where at least some Eisen Hill output was transferred to their rails)[75] to Joyce's Cleeve to tap their product, but its poor prospects and their financial straits led them to back off.[76][77][78] No buildings survive.[27]

Elworthy Mine edit

This iron mine is sometimes referred to as "Yeanon" or "Yennan". A trial shaft was sunk in 1875 and, whilst seven levels were developed, little ore was found. In Jones' words it "never amounted to much." It had closed by 1883. A Liverpool syndicate investigated the mine in 1907, employing around a dozen men, but nothing came of it.[40] Only a small mound remains to suggest any workings ever took place.[79]

Gupworthy new pit edit

Digging started on this iron mine in 1871. In 1879 it closed with its neighbours, but was one of the few which reopened later that year, reaching its maximum depth of 427 feet (130 m) in November 1882, only to close with the rest of the orefield in June 1883. The WSMR built a branch to serve the pit, with a siding to bring coal to the engine house.[80][81][82][83][84] By 2011 no visible trace of the pit remained.[27]

Gupworthy old pit edit

In 1863–4, the WSMR built is western extension through this iron mine's pit yard, which rivalled that at Raleigh Cross in size. It had been taken over and revived in 1852 and was said in the mid-1850s to have "good ore in workable quantities"[85] which significantly exceeded pre-railway haulage capacity, leading to stockpiles. In the area's mid-1870s "peak years" the principal contributors were Raleigh's Cross mine and Gupworthy old pit. It closed with its neighbours in 1879, being one of the few which re-opened later that year. The mine reached its maximum depth of 461 feet (141 m) in October 1881, closing with its neighbours in June 1883. On closure machinery was brought to the surface and the mine allowed to flood. Some plant was returned to South Wales, most eventually went for scrap.[86] Closing the mine gave the WSMR an additional problem, as the only water crane south of the incline was fed from Gupworthy Old pit. The crane and header tank were moved to Brendon Hill.[87]

Gupworthy old pit had a permanent engine house, where a boy was killed in an explosion in November 1881. The miners' cottages were referred to as "The Square".[88][82][83][89][90]

When the WSMR's remaining assets were auctioned in 1924 the trackbed through the pit was sold to local landowners.[91] Some remains were identifiable in 1964, but in 2011 "not a wrack remains save for a datestone of 1864, rescued from the engine house."[27]

Higher Goosemoor mine edit

This mine is sometimes referred to, perhaps ironically, as "California".[92] With others it closed in 1879, but reopened later in the year, eventually reaching a depth of 257 feet (78 m) with four levels and two shallow secondary drifts, known as Richard's Pit. This site survived in production until all mining ceased across the Brendons in 1883. Portable pumping machinery was used and ore was carted to the railhead at Gupworthy.[93][94]

Kennesome Hill mine edit

This mine is sometimes referred to as Kennisham Hill.

A Roman coin was found in old workings at Kennesome Hill, suggesting great age. In Victorian times it had been worked on a small scale before 1867. In 1871 "Curtis's Drift" was started, reaching 100 feet (30 m) by September 1874. Considerable development took place at Kennesome Hill,[95] including an aerial ropeway (referred to locally as the "Flying Machine") to convey output to a siding next to Langham Hill pit,[96][97] where it was tipped into WSMR wagons.[98][99] This arrangement lasted until 1876, after which ore was taken from the mine to Gupworthy by a 660 yards (600 m) horse-drawn tramway.[100][101][102] The mine closed with its neighbours in 1879, but re-opened later the same year, going on with the Gupworthy pits to become the most productive of the orefield's final years; it closed for good in September 1883.[103] In November 1877 the company was fined for not providing a proper platform for workers at the mine.[104][105]

The mine had a permanent rotary steam engine for both pumping and winding. Unlike most other such buildings in the area its engine house was not demolished for its stone and still stood into the 1970s.[106] Its state, however, was "parlous", so the Forestry Commission blew it up on 7 March 1978, leaving only the pumping engine's granite base as a memorial, albeit at some distance from the site of the mine.[107] By 2011 this block was all which remained to show the mine had ever existed.[108]

Langham Hill pit edit

 
The ruins of the Langham Hill Engine House

This iron mine was served by a siding off the WSMR.[109][110] Work started on the mine in 1866 and it closed in 1883. The adit was horizontal into the hillside. [111] In 1877 the company was fined for failing to provide proper ventilation, proper fencing and proper drying facilities for miners' clothes.[112][113][114]

As well as ore lifted from the mine itself the site served for periods as railheads for ore from Kennesome Hill and Bearland Wood mines. Neither route was straightforward. Ore travelled from Kennesome Hill via an aerial ropeway, thereby crossing a sharp, deep valley and ore travelled up from Bearland Wood via an incline operated by horse powered whims.[115]

The mine had a substantial stone and slate engine house with a rotary beam pumping and winding engine. In 1878–9 the machinery and its engine house were dismantled, moved to Burrow Farm mine and re-erected, leaving bare foundations at Langham Hill. When the mines closed the Ebbw Vale Company not only had to bear considerable losses [116] but it also became liable for duties and charges it had entered into in the heady early days when the Brendon Hills seemed like Klondyke. James Insole, owner of the Chargot Estate,[117] entered litigation with the company for costs associated with the cessation of mining. This eventually went to arbitration, where the main beneficiaries were lawyers and the main loser was the Ebbw Vale Company. In the midst of this the Ebbw Vale company covered the Langham Hill engine house foundations with the pit tip, landscaping the site to appease Insole.[118] Remarkably, this had a beneficial outcome, as it "preserved" the foundations so that when the Exmoor National Park Authority excavated them in 1995–8 they were found to be in good order.[119] They can be visited to this day.

Raleigh's Cross mine edit

Before its expansion in the 1850s the mine was referred to as the "Tone mine".[120]

This iron mine was served by a 310 yards (280 m) branch off the WSMR, which was relayed early in 1876.[121] It was one of the mines which Ebenezer Rogers examined when he started the major development of the Brendon Hills orefield in the 1850s, crystallised by the formation of the Brendon Hills Iron Ore Company in 1853. The workings at Raleigh's Cross were progressively deepened,[122] reaching a vertical depth of 94 feet (29 m) in 1858. Mining in the area before this time had been sufficiently small scale for horse-drawn cartage of ore to be sufficient, but "the mines at Gupworthy and Raleigh's Cross .. proved the existence of good ore in workable quantities"[85] making industrial-scale transport necessary, this in turn led to the formation the WSMR company (Royal Assent was granted on 16 July 1855) and construction of the railway itself, which was in full operation to Raleigh's Cross by March 1861.

The mine was substantial both above and below ground. In 1857 an extensive and expensive adit was driven from the lower workings to emerge from the hillside below Sea View House. This involved extensive trialling of a tunnel boring machine which proved "greatly underpowered and in danger of knocking itself to pieces".[123] This adit drained the mine to a depth of 110 feet (34 m), but considerable machinery was needed to drain the mine's eventual depth of 692 feet (211 m) (achieved in 1879, the year the orefield first closed) and to wind ore to the surface. Raleigh's cross mine was the only one in the orefield to require an engine for each role. The engine which wound ore to the surface was mounted in the first floor of the substantial pithead buildings, it pulled the mine's narrow gauge tramway wagons along the sloping drift out of the ground and onto a platform above a standard gauge siding so the ore could be tipped directly into wagons beneath. The same building also housed a heated room for miners to dry their clothes and a Miners' Literature Institute. Raleigh's Cross and the two Carnarvon mines formed the nucleus of the mining community of Brendon Hill.[124]

In the years up to 1867 Raleigh's Cross and Carnarvon New had produced over 100,000 tons of ore, peaking at an output of 400 tons per week. At Raleigh's Cross in 1856 two men, both until recently agricultural labourers, attempted to tamp a black powder explosive charge with an iron instead of wooden rod. A spark ensued, detonating the charge; one of the men died and the other was badly injured. The coroner's verdict was "accidental death".[125] Raleigh's Cross and its neighbours were wet mines, necessitating extensive works, plant, interconnections and flood countermeasures.[126]

The mine closed abruptly along with its neighbours in 1879, but reopened later the same year. It finally succumbed in 1882, followed by complete closure of the orefield in 1883. The branch to the site was lifted in 1884 and the engines dismantled and sent to Ebbw Vale for reuse.[86] The mine buildings were blown up by the Syndicate to provide ballast to gravity work the incline and, in 1909, hardcore infill for the timber jetty at Watchet.[127][128][129][130]

Only faint traces of the mine remain, visible only to the knowing eye.[131]

Smallcombe Bottom mine edit

This iron mine was also known as "Smoky Bottom mine". It had closed by 1867. All traces have been removed or landscaped.[132][133]

Timwood tunnel edit

The workings at Timwood are sometimes referred to as "Timwood adit" or simply "Timwood".

Timwood tunnel was the last venture in the orefield. It was the brainchild of the Somerset Mineral Syndicate Ltd which was formed on 11 March 1907 to work mines and lease the WSMR to carry output to Watchet harbour. The syndicate took over Blackland and Colton mines, as described above, and started new workings at Timwood.

The Syndicate expected Timwood to be its prize asset. It was the only mine at the foot of the Brendons, aiming to do on a grand scale what some mines had done on a smaller scale at the top, i.e. drill horizontally into the hillside (or even better, drill at a gentle upward slope to drain water and assist tramming ore and waste) until it encountered veins of ore previously worked from above at Carew and Raleigh's Cross mines. This approach had been suggested but not tried in 1854.[134] It sought to reduce the cost and effort involved in pumping water and raising ore to the surface only to lower it down again using the incline to Comberow. It came at the price of having to drill much further to reach ore and carried an increased risk of not reaching ore at all.[135]

As at Colton the workings at Timwood used 16 in (406 mm) gauge hopper wagons underground,[136] but the mine entrance was so close to the WSMR[137][138] and so close to its level that wagons could be hand worked[139][140] to a movable crossing over the WSMR line then tipped direct into wagons bound for the harbour,[72] thereby avoiding multiple handling. Apart from small amounts discovered while pursuing their main target, this method of working remained an aspiration, because the Syndicate ran out of money in 1909, it had many costs and almost no income. It voted to be wound up on 24 March 1910 and its assets were auctioned off on 28 June that year, with Timwood's tunnel 1,600 feet (490 m) long "but still well short of ore-bearing ground".[141]

Unlike mine buildings at the hill top, those at Timwood were small and appeared temporary, none being built of stone or brick. The Robey steam engine from the incline winding house[142] was installed to drive the compressor which powered the drills used to create holes for explosive charges. A second small building served as a smithy and the third was a mess and a dry for miners' clothes.[143] The mine has left no visible evidence above ground.

Withiel Hill mine edit

This iron mine, also known as "Floriel Hill Mine" and "Florey Hill mine", was sunk in 1866, but little development work was undertaken. It continued to give regular, three-figure quarterly tonnages until it closed in April 1876.[144][145][146]

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  122. ^ Jones 2011, pp. 34–35.
  123. ^ Jones 2011, pp. 35–37.
  124. ^ Jones 2011, pp. 115–122, 155, 180–198 & 202–206.
  125. ^ Jones 2011, p. 111.
  126. ^ Jones 2011, p. 156.
  127. ^ Jones 2011, pp. 324 & 330.
  128. ^ Sellick 1970, pp. 31, 16–19, 25–29, 32–38, 46–48, 52–55, 60–62, 73 & 99.
  129. ^ "The mine's remains on a navigable OS map". National Library of Scotland.
  130. ^ "Raleigh's Cross mine". West Somerset Mineral Railway Project.
  131. ^ Jones 2011, p. 376.
  132. ^ Jones 2011, pp. 139 & 378.
  133. ^ "The mine's history". Exmoor Heritage.
  134. ^ Jones 2011, p. 310.
  135. ^ "The mine's history". Exmoor Heritage.
  136. ^ "Timwood mine". West Somerset Mineral Railway Project.
  137. ^ Sellick 1970, p. 98.
  138. ^ Jones 2011, pp. 108 & 325–330.
  139. ^ "Timwood and Colton 16 in gauge tippler". West Somerset Mineral Railway Project.
  140. ^ "Timwood adit". West Somerset Mineral Railway Project.
  141. ^ Sellick 1970, pp. 73–76, 97 & opposite p.80.
  142. ^ Jones 2011, p. 276.
  143. ^ Jones 2011, p. 326.
  144. ^ Jones 2011, pp. 130–131, 136 & 157.
  145. ^ Jones 2011, p. 130.
  146. ^ "The mine's history". Exmoor Heritage.

Sources edit

mining, brendon, hills, brendon, hills, range, hills, western, somerset, england, hills, merge, level, into, eastern, side, exmoor, included, within, exmoor, national, park, iron, other, minerals, have, been, extracted, industrial, purposes, primarily, brendon. The Brendon Hills are a range of hills in western Somerset England The hills merge level into the eastern side of Exmoor and are included within the Exmoor National Park Iron ore and other minerals have been extracted for industrial purposes primarily by the Brendon Hills Iron Ore Company in the later half of the 19th century 1 Ruins of the winding house at the top of the incline on the West Somerset Mineral Railway Contents 1 Geology 2 History 3 19th century 4 Individual mines 4 1 Baker s pit 4 2 Bearland Wood mine 4 3 Betsy mine 4 4 Blackland mine 4 5 Burrow Farm mine 4 6 Carew mine 4 7 Carnarvon new pit 4 8 Carnarvon old pit 4 9 Colton mine 4 10 Eisen Hill mine 4 11 Elworthy Mine 4 12 Gupworthy new pit 4 13 Gupworthy old pit 4 14 Higher Goosemoor mine 4 15 Kennesome Hill mine 4 16 Langham Hill pit 4 17 Raleigh s Cross mine 4 18 Smallcombe Bottom mine 4 19 Timwood tunnel 4 20 Withiel Hill mine 5 References 6 SourcesGeology editThe Brendon Hills are largely formed from the Morte Slates a thick faulted and folded sequence of Devonian age sedimentary rocks 2 An east west aligned anticline syncline pair known as the Brendon Anticline and Brendon Syncline folds these rocks The fold couplet is itself offset by displacement of the rocks on the NNW SSE aligned Timberscombe Fault System 3 4 Over the centuries they have been mined for minerals notably ironstone from which iron is extracted for making steel 5 History editWhere lodes of iron ore reached the surface they were worked using bell pits from Roman times 6 7 8 19th century editIn the mid nineteenth century the proprietors of the Ebbw Vale Iron Works acquired an interest in iron ore deposits in the Brendon Hills Iron ore had been known there for centuries but not exploited industrially until the Brendon Hills Iron Ore Company was formed in 1853 9 Initially goethite hematite was extracted and later unoxidised siderite 10 At an altitude of over 1 000 feet 300 m and remote from usable roads the deposits needed a form of transport to get the ore to South Wales The West Somerset Mineral Railway which included a 0 75 miles 1 21 km long gravity worked incline on a gradient of 1 in 4 was built to take the ore to Watchet Harbour where it was loaded onto ships to be sent to Ebbw Vale for smelting 11 At Burrow Farm Mine a 25 inches 640 mm Cornish beam engine was installed around 1868 to pump water out of the mine 12 The mines provided employment for an average of 245 people between 1873 and 1882 13 Accommodation was also built for the mine workers 14 Though sometimes productive no nineteenth century iron mine on the Brendons was profitable and the venture as a whole was financially ruinous From 1852 to 1883 a little over three quarters of a million tons of usable ore was delivered to Ebbw Vale each ton costing the company 1 25 to produce and deliver for which it received 75p Net losses amounted to 762 000 15 Furthermore the industry as a whole was prone to boom and bust with a sharp decline from the early 1880s acting as the coup de grace 16 In 1907 another venture the Somerset Mineral Syndicate leased the railway and resumed mining 17 Several of the structures associated with the mines can still be seen These include the Ironstone mine ventilation flue in Chargot Wood 9 and the remains of the Carnarvon New Pit 18 19 Individual mines editMany mines have been recorded on the hills The following operated at various times between 1837 and 1909 20 Baker s pit edit This mine is sometimes referred to as Baker s mine or simply Bakers Primarily aimed at Manganese this pit was served by a siding off the West Somerset Mineral Railway WSMR 21 It was an early pit latterly developed and briefly productive in iron ore in the years 1881 2 but it closed in May 1883 22 23 24 25 26 Scant evidence remains that the pit ever existed 27 Bearland Wood mine edit nbsp Bearland Wood ventilation flue The first adit was started at this iron mine in 1854 aiming to work towards Gupworthy Little ore was found and working had ceased by 1864 28 Later that year the Mines Captain Morgan Morgans decided to drive a new adit which proved very successful yielding 12000 tons of brown Haematite which was taken to Langham Hill pit by an incline operated by horse powered whims 29 The ore was loaded on to WSMR wagons at Langham Hill This incline was abandoned in 1866 7 when Bearland Wood mine was joined underground with Langham Hill pit 30 31 Mines on the tops of hills are usually sunk from above with adits for drainage or access driven laterally to the hillside from the ore coal or other target mineral Bearland Wood mine was worked the other way round with vertical working following lateral boring 29 Bearland Wood faced the universal mining problem of ventilation in a way which was both very old and radically new Most industrial age mines were drained and ventilated using pumps typically powered by steam engines Morgans equipped Bearland Wood with a ventilation flue where a chimney stack was built above the mine s upward shaft and a coal fired furnace was placed at the foot of the chimney The furnace sucked air from the mine shaft which sucked fresh air from the lateral adit in turn The air flow was guided by wooden ducts so that it always passed through areas where men worked Miners extended or redirected the ducts as the working faces moved This method long predated steam pumps but as Morgans was erecting it at Bearland Wood the Mines Inspector at Risca Colliery near where Morgans had been a colliery manager declared steam pumps to be unsatisfactory and ordered their older ventilation furnaces to be reinstated The ventilation flue at Bearland Wood is a scheduled monument Its conservation was supported by the Heritage Lottery Fund 32 33 34 Betsy mine edit This iron mine was served by a siding off the WSMR it is sometimes referred to as New Langham Mine It was the last new mine in the area when it opened around 1875 It closed in 1883 35 36 37 38 Almost no trace remains of the mine s existence 39 Blackland mine edit This iron mine was operated independently of the Ebbw Vale Company near Withypool west of the Brendon Hills It operated from about 1875 to 1881 then briefly in 1895 leaving a large bank of ore stockpiled on site In 1907 a Withypool mining company started transporting ore by traction engine to Minehead to be shipped north but this ended in October The Somerset Mineral Syndicate added this to their portfolio of Colton and Timwood and built a rope worked incline powered by a stationary engine to lower ore to the road The workings were prospected but the ore sent to Minehead was almost all from the stockpile 40 Burrow Farm mine edit nbsp Burrow Farm Engine House This iron mine was served by a siding off the WSMR It closed around 1868 41 42 43 The shell of its engine house which was moved lock stock and barrel from Langham Hill mine stands today the ore field s only engine house to do so 44 45 Carew mine edit Sinking the shaft of this iron mine may have started in 1865 The last ore appears to have been raised in 1871 A photograph shows that ore from Carew was handled separately by the WSMR so that charges and income could be allocated accordingly 46 When the mine was surveyed in 1883 the shaft was flooded Carew s ore was a target for the 1907 venture at Timwood Tunnel but that venture failed before any ore was reached 47 All that can be seen in modern times is a small disturbance on the surface near a car park 48 49 Carnarvon new pit edit This iron mine was served by a siding off the WSMR on the opposite side of the line from Carnarvon Old Pit It opened in 1866 and initially yielded good ore in quantity but it closed in 1882 50 51 52 The ruins of the buildings have now been scheduled as an ancient monument 53 Carnarvon and Raleigh s Cross mines were both very wet Complex interlocking drainage and flood prevention features were installed 54 Carnarvon old pit edit This iron mine was next to the WSMR on the opposite side from Carnarvon New Pit It is sometimes referred to as Old Carnarvon Pit It closed in the early 1860s 55 56 52 57 Colton mine edit This iron mine is sometimes referred to as Coltonpits and occasionally as Colton Pits There is evidence of ancient mining at Colton 58 59 60 with the main site visible on maps just over 3 km ENE of Brendon Hill The site was investigated in 1847 61 but throughout the period up to 1875 when the WSMR was flourishing Colton mine was described as insignificant 62 though in the early 1880s just as the whole Brendon venture was on the point of collapse output was increasing and an extra siding on the WSMR was sought but not started 63 When the Somerset Mineral Syndicate Ltd attempted to resurrect mining and the WSMR from 1907 to 1910 it reopened Colton mine but entered it through what had been a drainage adit in Galloping Bottom some distance north west and downhill of the original workings This location meant that whilst underground costs might have been reduced it was difficult to get the ore to the WSMR The original idea was to build an aerial ropeway but a wholly new 2 ft 610 mm gauge tramway was built instead This incorporated a 600 yards 550 m incline 64 to get the ore up to the top of the hill 65 66 followed by a two mile run including a timber viaduct 67 to Brendon Hill where the ore was tipped into standard gauge wagons 68 which were lowered down the larger incline then hauled to Watchet harbour The aim of developing Colton mine was to give an income until the Syndicate s main hope Timwood started to produce but output was disappointing a mere 4800 tons of ore was raised in 1908 10 69 and what ore was produced caked furnaces and proved almost unsaleable In desperation the Syndicate erected plant at Washford to turn the poor ore into briquettes 70 thereby reducing volume mass and impurities but the undercapitalised venture failed in 1909 and all mining ceased including Colton The Syndicate voted to be wound up on 24 March 1910 and its assets were auctioned off on 28 June that year 71 72 73 in modern times only the faintest traces of the workings incline and narrow gauge railway can be detected 74 Eisen Hill mine edit Eisen Hill is named Ison Hill on OS maps and sometimes Eyson Hill elsewhere This iron mine opened in 1854 and stuttered to an end by 1877 with patchy result between The mine was in soft ground which warranted different mining techniques The company had a powder magazine and three cottages near the mine one of which was used as the mine offices The WSMR took the first steps towards seeking powers to extend their line from Gupworthy where at least some Eisen Hill output was transferred to their rails 75 to Joyce s Cleeve to tap their product but its poor prospects and their financial straits led them to back off 76 77 78 No buildings survive 27 Elworthy Mine edit This iron mine is sometimes referred to as Yeanon or Yennan A trial shaft was sunk in 1875 and whilst seven levels were developed little ore was found In Jones words it never amounted to much It had closed by 1883 A Liverpool syndicate investigated the mine in 1907 employing around a dozen men but nothing came of it 40 Only a small mound remains to suggest any workings ever took place 79 Gupworthy new pit edit Digging started on this iron mine in 1871 In 1879 it closed with its neighbours but was one of the few which reopened later that year reaching its maximum depth of 427 feet 130 m in November 1882 only to close with the rest of the orefield in June 1883 The WSMR built a branch to serve the pit with a siding to bring coal to the engine house 80 81 82 83 84 By 2011 no visible trace of the pit remained 27 Gupworthy old pit edit In 1863 4 the WSMR built is western extension through this iron mine s pit yard which rivalled that at Raleigh Cross in size It had been taken over and revived in 1852 and was said in the mid 1850s to have good ore in workable quantities 85 which significantly exceeded pre railway haulage capacity leading to stockpiles In the area s mid 1870s peak years the principal contributors were Raleigh s Cross mine and Gupworthy old pit It closed with its neighbours in 1879 being one of the few which re opened later that year The mine reached its maximum depth of 461 feet 141 m in October 1881 closing with its neighbours in June 1883 On closure machinery was brought to the surface and the mine allowed to flood Some plant was returned to South Wales most eventually went for scrap 86 Closing the mine gave the WSMR an additional problem as the only water crane south of the incline was fed from Gupworthy Old pit The crane and header tank were moved to Brendon Hill 87 Gupworthy old pit had a permanent engine house where a boy was killed in an explosion in November 1881 The miners cottages were referred to as The Square 88 82 83 89 90 When the WSMR s remaining assets were auctioned in 1924 the trackbed through the pit was sold to local landowners 91 Some remains were identifiable in 1964 but in 2011 not a wrack remains save for a datestone of 1864 rescued from the engine house 27 Higher Goosemoor mine edit This mine is sometimes referred to perhaps ironically as California 92 With others it closed in 1879 but reopened later in the year eventually reaching a depth of 257 feet 78 m with four levels and two shallow secondary drifts known as Richard s Pit This site survived in production until all mining ceased across the Brendons in 1883 Portable pumping machinery was used and ore was carted to the railhead at Gupworthy 93 94 Kennesome Hill mine edit This mine is sometimes referred to as Kennisham Hill A Roman coin was found in old workings at Kennesome Hill suggesting great age In Victorian times it had been worked on a small scale before 1867 In 1871 Curtis s Drift was started reaching 100 feet 30 m by September 1874 Considerable development took place at Kennesome Hill 95 including an aerial ropeway referred to locally as the Flying Machine to convey output to a siding next to Langham Hill pit 96 97 where it was tipped into WSMR wagons 98 99 This arrangement lasted until 1876 after which ore was taken from the mine to Gupworthy by a 660 yards 600 m horse drawn tramway 100 101 102 The mine closed with its neighbours in 1879 but re opened later the same year going on with the Gupworthy pits to become the most productive of the orefield s final years it closed for good in September 1883 103 In November 1877 the company was fined for not providing a proper platform for workers at the mine 104 105 The mine had a permanent rotary steam engine for both pumping and winding Unlike most other such buildings in the area its engine house was not demolished for its stone and still stood into the 1970s 106 Its state however was parlous so the Forestry Commission blew it up on 7 March 1978 leaving only the pumping engine s granite base as a memorial albeit at some distance from the site of the mine 107 By 2011 this block was all which remained to show the mine had ever existed 108 Langham Hill pit edit nbsp The ruins of the Langham Hill Engine House This iron mine was served by a siding off the WSMR 109 110 Work started on the mine in 1866 and it closed in 1883 The adit was horizontal into the hillside 111 In 1877 the company was fined for failing to provide proper ventilation proper fencing and proper drying facilities for miners clothes 112 113 114 As well as ore lifted from the mine itself the site served for periods as railheads for ore from Kennesome Hill and Bearland Wood mines Neither route was straightforward Ore travelled from Kennesome Hill via an aerial ropeway thereby crossing a sharp deep valley and ore travelled up from Bearland Wood via an incline operated by horse powered whims 115 The mine had a substantial stone and slate engine house with a rotary beam pumping and winding engine In 1878 9 the machinery and its engine house were dismantled moved to Burrow Farm mine and re erected leaving bare foundations at Langham Hill When the mines closed the Ebbw Vale Company not only had to bear considerable losses 116 but it also became liable for duties and charges it had entered into in the heady early days when the Brendon Hills seemed like Klondyke James Insole owner of the Chargot Estate 117 entered litigation with the company for costs associated with the cessation of mining This eventually went to arbitration where the main beneficiaries were lawyers and the main loser was the Ebbw Vale Company In the midst of this the Ebbw Vale company covered the Langham Hill engine house foundations with the pit tip landscaping the site to appease Insole 118 Remarkably this had a beneficial outcome as it preserved the foundations so that when the Exmoor National Park Authority excavated them in 1995 8 they were found to be in good order 119 They can be visited to this day Raleigh s Cross mine edit Before its expansion in the 1850s the mine was referred to as the Tone mine 120 This iron mine was served by a 310 yards 280 m branch off the WSMR which was relayed early in 1876 121 It was one of the mines which Ebenezer Rogers examined when he started the major development of the Brendon Hills orefield in the 1850s crystallised by the formation of the Brendon Hills Iron Ore Company in 1853 The workings at Raleigh s Cross were progressively deepened 122 reaching a vertical depth of 94 feet 29 m in 1858 Mining in the area before this time had been sufficiently small scale for horse drawn cartage of ore to be sufficient but the mines at Gupworthy and Raleigh s Cross proved the existence of good ore in workable quantities 85 making industrial scale transport necessary this in turn led to the formation the WSMR company Royal Assent was granted on 16 July 1855 and construction of the railway itself which was in full operation to Raleigh s Cross by March 1861 The mine was substantial both above and below ground In 1857 an extensive and expensive adit was driven from the lower workings to emerge from the hillside below Sea View House This involved extensive trialling of a tunnel boring machine which proved greatly underpowered and in danger of knocking itself to pieces 123 This adit drained the mine to a depth of 110 feet 34 m but considerable machinery was needed to drain the mine s eventual depth of 692 feet 211 m achieved in 1879 the year the orefield first closed and to wind ore to the surface Raleigh s cross mine was the only one in the orefield to require an engine for each role The engine which wound ore to the surface was mounted in the first floor of the substantial pithead buildings it pulled the mine s narrow gauge tramway wagons along the sloping drift out of the ground and onto a platform above a standard gauge siding so the ore could be tipped directly into wagons beneath The same building also housed a heated room for miners to dry their clothes and a Miners Literature Institute Raleigh s Cross and the two Carnarvon mines formed the nucleus of the mining community of Brendon Hill 124 In the years up to 1867 Raleigh s Cross and Carnarvon New had produced over 100 000 tons of ore peaking at an output of 400 tons per week At Raleigh s Cross in 1856 two men both until recently agricultural labourers attempted to tamp a black powder explosive charge with an iron instead of wooden rod A spark ensued detonating the charge one of the men died and the other was badly injured The coroner s verdict was accidental death 125 Raleigh s Cross and its neighbours were wet mines necessitating extensive works plant interconnections and flood countermeasures 126 The mine closed abruptly along with its neighbours in 1879 but reopened later the same year It finally succumbed in 1882 followed by complete closure of the orefield in 1883 The branch to the site was lifted in 1884 and the engines dismantled and sent to Ebbw Vale for reuse 86 The mine buildings were blown up by the Syndicate to provide ballast to gravity work the incline and in 1909 hardcore infill for the timber jetty at Watchet 127 128 129 130 Only faint traces of the mine remain visible only to the knowing eye 131 Smallcombe Bottom mine edit This iron mine was also known as Smoky Bottom mine It had closed by 1867 All traces have been removed or landscaped 132 133 Timwood tunnel edit The workings at Timwood are sometimes referred to as Timwood adit or simply Timwood Timwood tunnel was the last venture in the orefield It was the brainchild of the Somerset Mineral Syndicate Ltd which was formed on 11 March 1907 to work mines and lease the WSMR to carry output to Watchet harbour The syndicate took over Blackland and Colton mines as described above and started new workings at Timwood The Syndicate expected Timwood to be its prize asset It was the only mine at the foot of the Brendons aiming to do on a grand scale what some mines had done on a smaller scale at the top i e drill horizontally into the hillside or even better drill at a gentle upward slope to drain water and assist tramming ore and waste until it encountered veins of ore previously worked from above at Carew and Raleigh s Cross mines This approach had been suggested but not tried in 1854 134 It sought to reduce the cost and effort involved in pumping water and raising ore to the surface only to lower it down again using the incline to Comberow It came at the price of having to drill much further to reach ore and carried an increased risk of not reaching ore at all 135 As at Colton the workings at Timwood used 16 in 406 mm gauge hopper wagons underground 136 but the mine entrance was so close to the WSMR 137 138 and so close to its level that wagons could be hand worked 139 140 to a movable crossing over the WSMR line then tipped direct into wagons bound for the harbour 72 thereby avoiding multiple handling Apart from small amounts discovered while pursuing their main target this method of working remained an aspiration because the Syndicate ran out of money in 1909 it had many costs and almost no income It voted to be wound up on 24 March 1910 and its assets were auctioned off on 28 June that year with Timwood s tunnel 1 600 feet 490 m long but still well short of ore bearing ground 141 Unlike mine buildings at the hill top those at Timwood were small and appeared temporary none being built of stone or brick The Robey steam engine from the incline winding house 142 was installed to drive the compressor which powered the drills used to create holes for explosive charges A second small building served as a smithy and the third was a mess and a dry for miners clothes 143 The mine has left no visible evidence above ground Withiel Hill mine edit This iron mine also known as Floriel Hill Mine and Florey Hill mine was sunk in 1866 but little development work was undertaken It continued to give regular three figure quarterly tonnages until it closed in April 1876 144 145 146 References edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Brendon Hill mines Sellick 1970 pp 48 71 Geochemical and geophysical investigations in Exmoor and the Brendon Hills British Geological Survey Retrieved 8 January 2017 Webby B D 1965 The stratigraphy and structure of the Devonian Rocks in the Brendon Hills West Somerset Proceedings of the Geologists Association 76 1 39 60 doi 10 1016 S0016 7878 65 80014 1 Geology of the Brendon Hills West Somerset Mineral Railway Retrieved 8 January 2017 Brendon Hills Everything Exmoor Retrieved 8 January 2016 Mining iron ore on the Brendon Hills wsmrmining Retrieved 8 January 2017 Roman Lode Ironworkings Heritage Gateway Historic England Retrieved 8 January 2017 Mining iron ore on the Brendon Hills West Somerset Mineral Line Association Retrieved 8 January 2017 a b Historic England Ironstone mine ventilation flue in Chargot Wood 1150m south west of Langham Farm 1020189 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 8 January 2017 Brendon Hills Somerset England UK Mindat Retrieved 8 January 2017 Exmoor Mining Victoria County History Retrieved 8 January 2017 Mining in Somerset Cornish Mining Retrieved 8 January 2017 Accidents in the Brendon Hill iron ore mines West Somerset Mineral Line Association Retrieved 8 January 2017 Historic England Brendon Hill 1114687 Research records formerly PastScape Retrieved 8 January 2017 Jones 2011 pp 29 amp 176 177 Mitchell amp Smith 1990 p 60 Sellick 1981 p 40 Historic England Carnarvon New Pit iron mine and section of mineral railway trackbed 300m south west of Heather House 1021352 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 8 January 2017 Jones M H 2006 The Brendon Hills Industrial Survey 1993 2005 Industrial Archaeology Review 28 2 97 106 doi 10 1179 174581906X144398 Map showing Brendon Hills mines 1837 1909 West Somerset Mineral Railway Project Jones 2011 p 254 Sellick 1970 pp 40 45 amp 59 Jones 2011 p 165 The mine s remains on a navigable OS map National Library of Scotland Materials on the mine West Somerset Mineral Railway Project The mine s history Exmoor Heritage a b c d Jones 2011 p 380 Sellick 1970 pp 17 amp 28 a b Sellick 1970 p 40 Jones 2011 p 137 The mine s history Exmoor Heritage Jones 2011 pp 37 8 amp 378 9 Bearland Wood ventilation flue West Somerset Mineral Railway Project Bearland Wood resources West Somerset Mineral Railway Project Sellick 1970 pp 39 41 amp 101 The mine s remains on a navigable OS map National Library of Scotland Jones 2011 p 138 The mine s history Exmoor Heritage Jones 2011 p 377 a b Sellick 1970 p 74 Sellick 1970 pp 39 41 amp 100 The mine s remains on a navigable OS map National Library of Scotland Burrow Farm mine West Somerset Mineral Railway Project Jones 2011 pp 130 5 157 8 377 The mine s remains Somerset Life Jones 2011 p 246 Jones 2011 p 74 Jones 2011 pp 115 155 246 amp 376 The mine s remains on a navigable OS map National Library of Scotland Sellick 1970 pp 31 37 and 46 7 The mine s remains as Carnarvon Pit disused on a navigable OS map National Library of Scotland a b Carnarvon pits West Somerset Mineral Railway Project Historic England Carnarvon New Pit iron mine and section of mineral railway trackbed 300m south west of Heather House 1021352 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 30 January 2017 Jones 2011 pp 155 6 Sellick 1970 pp 27 amp 31 The mine s remains as Old Quarry on a navigable OS map National Library of Scotland The mine s history Exmoor Heritage Jones 2011 pp 115 154 MSO7702 Colton Pits Exmoor Historic Environment Record Exmoor National Park Retrieved 11 February 2017 Collected Coltonpits information West Somerset Mineral Railway Project Jones 2011 p 23 Jones 2011 p 155 Jones 2011 p 236 Sellick 1970 p 73 Colton 2 ft gauge incline West Somerset Mineral Railway Project Sellick 1981 p 49 Sellick 1970 Opposite p 81 Jones 2011 pp 315 323 Jones 2011 p 327 Washford briquette plant West Somerset Mineral Railway Project Sellick 1970 pp 11 27 72 3 amp opposite 80 amp 81 a b Map showing Timwood and Colton outlets to the WSMR West Somerset Mineral Railway Project The mine s remains lower right and 1907 tip at upper left on a navigable OS map National Library of Scotland Jones 2011 pp 376 7 Jones 2011 pp 167 172 6 Sellick 1970 pp 17 28 38 51 54 61 amp 102 Joyce s Cleeve near Eisen Hill on a navigable OS map National Library of Scotland Sample Eisen Hill output West Somerset Mineral Railway Project Jones 2011 pp 152 3 304 376 Sellick 1970 pp 38 44 47 54 55 59 amp 61 Jones 2011 pp 166 168 a b Gupworthy and its pits on navigable OS maps National Library of Scotland a b Gupworthy mines and community West Somerset Mineral Railway Project MSO8961 Gupworthy New Pit Exmoor Historic Environment Record Exmoor National Park Retrieved 30 January 2017 a b Sellick 1970 p 18 a b Jones 2011 p 176 Jones 2011 pp 192 243 244 amp 309 Sellick 1970 pp 16 18 27 29 43 47 50 55 59 amp 61 The mine s history Exmoor Heritage Jones 2011 pp 16 169 amp 196 Jones 2011 p 357 California mine on Edwardian 25 OS map National Library of Scotland Sellick 1970 pp 44 47 54 amp 102 Jones 2011 p 170 Schematic of workings at Kennesome Hill West Somerset Mineral Railway Project Sellick 1970 Opposite p 97 Jones 2011 pp 158 161 Kennesome Langham aerial ropeway 1 West Somerset Mineral Railway Project Kennesome Langham aerial ropeway 2 West Somerset Mineral Railway Project Sellick 1970 pp 46 amp 102 Jones 2011 pp 165 amp 168 Kennesome Gupworthy Goosemoor tramway West Somerset Mineral Railway Project The mine s history Exmoor Heritage Sellick 1970 pp 11 40 43 47 49 51 55 amp 101 Iron Ore pit and Langham Pit s remains on a navigable OS map National Library of Scotland Kennesome Hill building in 1933 West Somerset Mineral Railway Project Jones 2011 pp 147 161 amp 162 5 Jones 2011 pp 379 380 Jones 2011 pp 113 amp 253 The pit s remains on a navigable OS map National Library of Scotland Jones 2011 p 146 Sellick 1970 pp 39 40 47 49 52 55 amp 101 Langham Hill pit West Somerset Mineral Railway Project The mine s history Exmoor Heritage Jones 2011 pp 40 140 146 amp 157 160 Jones 2011 p 177 Jones 2011 p 113 Jones 2011 pp 177 178 Jones 2011 p 378 Jones 2011 p 24 Jones 2011 pp 229 amp 249 250 Jones 2011 pp 34 35 Jones 2011 pp 35 37 Jones 2011 pp 115 122 155 180 198 amp 202 206 Jones 2011 p 111 Jones 2011 p 156 Jones 2011 pp 324 amp 330 Sellick 1970 pp 31 16 19 25 29 32 38 46 48 52 55 60 62 73 amp 99 The mine s remains on a navigable OS map National Library of Scotland Raleigh s Cross mine West Somerset Mineral Railway Project Jones 2011 p 376 Jones 2011 pp 139 amp 378 The mine s history Exmoor Heritage Jones 2011 p 310 The mine s history Exmoor Heritage Timwood mine West Somerset Mineral Railway Project Sellick 1970 p 98 Jones 2011 pp 108 amp 325 330 Timwood and Colton 16 in gauge tippler West Somerset Mineral Railway Project Timwood adit West Somerset Mineral Railway Project Sellick 1970 pp 73 76 97 amp opposite p 80 Jones 2011 p 276 Jones 2011 p 326 Jones 2011 pp 130 131 136 amp 157 Jones 2011 p 130 The mine s history Exmoor Heritage Sources editJones Michael H 2011 The Brendon Hills Iron Mines and the West Somerset Mineral Railway Lydney Lightmoor Press ISBN 978 1 899889 53 2 OCLC 795179029 Mitchell Vic Smith Keith 1990 Branch Line to Minehead Preservation Perfection Midhurst Middleton Press ISBN 978 0 906520 80 2 Sellick Roger J 1981 1976 The Old Mineral Line 2nd ed Dulverton Exmoor Press ISBN 978 1 84114 692 8 Sellick Roger J 1970 1962 The West Somerset Mineral Railway and the story of the Brendon Hills Iron Mines 2nd ed Newton Abbot David and Charles ISBN 978 0 7153 4961 8 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mining on the Brendon Hills amp oldid 1083688137, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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