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  A meeting with a difference!
14th December 2003
   
   

A MEETING WITH A DIFFERENCE!

14th of December 2003

Photograph of meeting underground

All photographs courtesy of Mr. John Wood.

When PCH took over the running of Geevor, the County Council set up a ‘committee’ called the Geevor Partnership to bring together all those who have an interest in the mine and its future. Members include County and District and Town Council members and officers and representatives of bodies like the National Trust, the Residents Association and the local Mines Research Group.

PCH has over the last year put all the plans fro the proposed extension of underground access for visitors in front of the Partnership – and they have been really supportive.

We recently commissioned a report on the options for underground development form David Kneebone, a very well respected local mining engineering consultant [and an ex-Geevor manager] and we took this to the last Partnership meeting. It was the sort of technical study that anyone not familiar with mining would find a bit difficult to understand. When this became clear at the last meeting, the Chair [Colin McClary, ex-Mayor of St. Just and an ex-Geevor man] knew exactly what to do. ‘Right’ he announced ‘the next meeting will be held in Deep Adit’. Some members looked nonplussed but no-one dissented.

So, on Saturday 13th December the Partnership duly assembled in the rain at Geevor. Gone were the smart suits and the old school ties: a variety of boiler suits and the sort of things people wear for gardening were in vogue. Photograph of cliff descent

The group, carefully shepherded by PCH and Mines Group staff, climbed on ladders down to the sea at the bottom of the cliff and into the Adit.

An Adit is a drainage level – which means water comes out of it. An initial paddle past the steel gate that keeps out uninvited guests led to the ‘low bit’ where the members had to share a 3 foot high passage with about 12 inches of water. It was a good time to ask local politicians if they thought a bit of improvement work in that area was needed. They all agreed . . . .

Photograph of a person in a gunnis

Eventually the wet and tortuous route led into the wider and spectacular workings where in relatively modern times tin was won. The proposed areas for the ‘tourist circuit’ were pointed out and the ways of getting people there explained. It is a lot easier to envisage where a new shaft will intersect a working when you are standing there than it is to look at a diagram.

At the Shaft Station on 3rd level group photographs were taken – the County Council sent along a photographer with £1200 worth of nearly new camera which got rather wet and muddy – before retracing the route out.

Back in the Museum, coffee, tea and mince pies and a change out of soaked and muddy clothing promoted a quick recovery from an energetic mornings work.

With the support and enthusiasm of the members of the Partnership, PCH is confident that the project will go ahead. We are now working on plans to persuade members of the funding bodies – Heritage Lottery Fund, the Regional Development Agency and the Government Office South West – that they should do a ‘site visit’ to the underground: that will be exciting!

Bill Lakin

 

Copyright PCH