North Mount Lyell

North Mount Lyell (full name North Mount Lyell Copper Co.Ltd.) was the name of a mine, mining company,[1] locality (sometimes as North Lyell) and former railway near Gormanston on the West Coast of Tasmania. It was absorbed into the workings of the Mount Lyell Mining and Railway Company following the failure of the smelters at Crotty.

The stage of building the infrastructure of the mines, the smelters, and port at Kelly Basin was photographed by John Watt Beattie.

Founder

The company was founded by James Crotty, and was for a few years a fierce competitor with Mount Lyell. Geoffrey Blainey gives a description of the rivalry and final amalgamation in 'The Peaks of Lyell'. As Blainey points out, the North Mount Lyell workings eventually proved vital for the Mount Lyell Company.[2]

Establishment

During Crotty's establishment of the company, and its operations the company had:-

The 1912 North Mount Lyell Disaster is also found in Blainey's work, but for decades later there were divergent and popular accounts from the official reports that followed.

The North Lyell locality (at which some of the workers killed in the disaster had addresses) was eventually overtaken by the Mount Lyell mine workings and ceased to exist. A rare photo of the locality is in Blaineys book.

Notes

  1. Strictly the name was North Mount Lyell Copper Co. Ltd. see - Julen, Hans (1994), A brief history of the North Mount Lyell Copper Company 1897-1903, H. Julen, ISBN 978-0-646-21345-3, and North Mount Lyell Copper Company. Railway Dept (1900), General regulations to be observed by all persons in the service of the Railway Department of the North Mount Lyell Copper Co. Ltd, [The Company], retrieved 24 May 2012
    • Blainey, Geoffrey (2000). The Peaks of Lyell (6th ed.). Hobart: St. David's Park Publishing. ISBN 0-7246-2265-9. - Chapter 12 'The Feud of the Irishmen' - for the Bowes Kelly and James Crotty rivalry - North Mount Lyell vs Mount Lyell
  2. "NORTH MOUNT LYELL STEAMER.". Evening News (Sydney, NSW : 1869 - 1931) (Sydney, NSW: National Library of Australia). 2 January 1899. p. 6. Retrieved 22 June 2015.

References

See also


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