Hullo again! Today we are at another coal mining memorial. This one is the Morden Colliery and is one of the few remaining coal mining sites with "something" still visible
This is what it normally looks like! It's the head frame and tipple...
There's the information display but...
It's behind chain-link... so hard to read. But... the Morden tipple was built in the early 1900s and was one of the first on Vancouver Island. It's also the only one remaining on Vancouver Island today... In fact, it is one of only two in all of North America! The other one is at O’Gara No. 12 Mine in Muddy, Illinois...
Let's go exploring a bit...
We can walk in around behind the tipple...And... there is this!
It is the base of the old smokestack... the PCCM stands for Pacific Coast Coal Mine company...
You can see the smoke stack in this picture...
And in the bush, you'll find the foundations of other buildings... which tree roots are slowly breaking up.
It doesn't take long for the forest to reclaim its own. The Morden Mine was all that productive and sputtered to a halt in the 1930s...
Here... we have a Miners' Memorial...
This memorial tells us that the coal mined on Vancouver Island was of the bituminous variety, which means that the coal mines were among the most dangerous in the world because bituminous coal is quite volatile and can release gases... not good for miners and beary susceptible to explosions... It's kind of interesting that on the East Coast... Nova Scotia has a lot of bituminous coal mines as well... and explosions too.
Do you explore the mine next? Perhaps you should get some bolt cutters, a flashlight, and a hard hat next time you visit home depot
ReplyDelete@LF - Nope, no mine explorations... I think they probably backfilled the adits at some point. Although... the city does have problems with subsidence in some areas where the mine tunnels collapse and take roads and houses with them!
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