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NYBob

10/15/10 1:44 AM

#86 RE: NYBob #85

Moneta Gold Mine -

ME neighbor -
e.g.,
Hollinger Gold Mines -



Hollinger Mine. The headframe is the light-colored building
in the center, unusual in that it is built of concrete.
The dome-shaped building to the left is an ore storage facility.


The Hollinger Gold Mine
was founded by Benny Hollinger in Timmins, Ontario,
and in 1910 the company was incorporated by
Noah Timmins and partners.

The main Hollinger Mine operated from 1910 until 1968.

During that period 65,778,234 tons were milled,
producing 19,327,691 ounces of gold, indicating
an overall grade of 0.29.


The value of the gold produced is placed at $564.7 million.

Hollinger Consolidated Gold Mines
was later acquired by Canadian tycoon E. P. Taylor's Argus
Corporation.
Argus was later acquired by Conrad Black in 1978 and it
would become today's Hollinger Incorporated.

* Founded 1910 as Hollinger Gold Mine
* Changed to Hollinger Mines
* Changed to Hollinger Argus Limited 1978
* Changed to Hollinger Inc. in 1985



Hollinger Mine

Rumors of gold in the Porcupine area had been circulating
for some time, but every attempt to start production had
resulted in poor returns.
In June 1909 a group of prospectors found a rich vein that
would eventually become the Dome Mine, but at the time it
too remained undeveloped.
However the news was now out, and prospectors started
flowing into the area.

In October 1909 Benny Hollinger, a young barber from Haileybury,
and his partner, Alex Gillies, started prospecting in the area.
When they met the Wilson expedition they were told that all
the good lots were staked for at least 6 miles (9.7 km) west.
So they went west, past the already staked-out claims, until
they came upon an abandoned test pit near Pearl Lake where
Reuben D'Aigle had given up three years earlier.
The two were exploring the site when Hollinger dug into a mound
that demonstrated how unlucky D'Aigle was:

... Benny was pulling moss off the rocks a few feet away,
when suddenly he let a roar out of him and threw his hat to me.
At first I thought that he was crazy but when I came over to
where he was it was not hard to find the reason.
The quartz where he had taken off the moss looked as though
someone had dripped a candle along it, but instead of wax it
was gold.

They staked twelve claims near their discovery.
Because different sponsors had staked them, they flipped a coin
to determine how to divide the them.
Hollinger won the toss and took the six claims on the west.

Noah Timmins, who had early started a successful silver mine
in Cobalt, purchased an option on Hollinger's claims and
immediately started work on setting up mining operations.
He set out in December 1909 from mile post 222 on the
Temiskaming & Northern Ontario Railway (T&NO) with a crew of
twenty men, two teams of horses, and two tons of supplies.
Following an old lumber road, they had to blaze their own
trail where the road had become overgrown.
They arrived at the mine site on New Year's Day, 1910,
and within weeks began mining gold.

By the end of the 20's the Hollinger was the largest gold mine
in the British Empire and paid annual dividends of more
than $5 million.


In the 1930s Hollinger Consolidated Gold Mines
built 250 houses which were located in one area of the Town of
Timmins. These houses remained in place right up until the late
1970s. The three room homes were designed and built identical to
each other in every respect with the exception of the
impregnated tar paper the covered them. Every second home was
green with a red roof and the other was red with a green roof.

The mine was so big by the 1960s it had almost 600 miles
(970 km) of tunnels


Fire
Porcupine Mine Rescue Station

On February 10, 1928 smoke began to curl up from the main shaft
house. At first no one could understand how fire could take
place in a hard-rock mine. The Hollinger had its own safety
inspector, in addition to the government official, but they had
not visited all of the more than 100 miles (160 km) of
underground workings.


Hundreds of miners esca ped to surface, but the news soon spread
that others had been trapped on the 550-foot (170 m) level.
At that time mined-out stopes were not backfilled with waste
rock, but one on the 550-foot (170 m) level had been filled
over the years with mining debris such as powder boxes,
sawdust and wooden crates.
It's believed that the fire started as a result of
spontaneous combustion in this area.

There were accounts of individual heroism, and the Department
of Mines, the T&NO, many others, and the community itself put
forth a stellar effort to battle the disaster and alleviate
the suffering. A relief train was sent up from Pennsylvania
with rescue personnel experienced in coal-mine fires.

In the end, 39 miners succumbed to the smoke and carbon
monoxide poisoning.
An inquiry into the disaster recommended that mine rescue
stations be set up in major mining camps.
In 1929 the Porcupine Camp received the first
mine rescue station in the province.

Stompin' Tom Connors, the famous Canadian musician, composed
and recorded a ballad about another, later fire in
the Hollinger )in February of 1965), with Lord Thomson's
"CKGB Recording" entitled "Fire in the Mine".

The mine site was acquired in December 1999 by Kinross Gold
prior to the bankruptcy of Royal Oak Mines.
Most of the work on the site has concerned the management
of ground subsidence resulting from the collapse of drifts
and stopes that were not backfilled.
Extensive subsidence has occurred at
the Hollinger Golf Course to the SW
of the mine site -
----

Moneta Gold Mine -



http://www.monetaporcupine.com/s/Kayorum.asp