28th August 2007
NEW CURATOR FOR GEEVOR MUSEUM
Jo Warburton joins Geevor Tin Mine Museum
& Heritage Centre on 3rd September as Curator.
Jo was previously Curator and Head of Collections
at the National Maritime Museum, Falmouth where she built
a strong reputation for her fine curatorial and display work.
She was instrumental in helping the National Maritime Museum
gain the status of a national museum, an aspiration shared
by the Trustees of Geevor.
Jo is 33 years old and lives in Penzance.
She grew up in Scarborough and has an honours degree in History
from Lancaster University and gained a Diploma in Museum Studies
from the University of Leicester. Before moving to Cornwall,
she worked at museums in Nottingham, Buckinghamshire and the
National Maritime Museum at Greenwich. She joined the National
Maritime Museum in Falmouth five years ago as Curator/Head
of Collections. Jo said “I can’t wait to get stuck
in to my new job at Geevor”.
Bill Lakin, Chair of Trustees at Pendeen
Community Heritage, the charity that manages Geevor for Cornwall
County Council, said “Jo joins us at an exciting stage
of Geevor's development. She will make a major contribution
to the new museum gallery that we will open next year.”
26th July 2007
AUSSIE MUSEUM TO TRACE ST JUST MINERS
Staff and volunteers at Geevor Tin Mine are
working with the Moonta Mining Museum, 100 miles north-west
of Adelaide in South Australia, exploring the migration of
skilled miners and other artisans from Cornwall. Staff at
the Museum are particularly interested in family history and
keen to track families who left St Just and the surrounding
area to work in Australia during the late 1800s.
Traces of copper were found at what was to
become Moonta in 1861 and the discovery led to a rapid influx
of skilled workers from Cornwall who, with their cutting-edge
skills and technology, accelerated the development of deep
mining in the area. Cornish methods were applied in construction,
design, labour organisation and the mine works. Cornish families
settled in familiar village patterns around the mines, and
retained their traditions and religious beliefs. During the
prosperous years of the late 1800s, Moonta had a population
of 12,000 and is today recognised as a significant part of
the area alternately known as Australia's ‘Copper Triangle’
and ‘Little Cornwall’.

Hughes Engine House at Moonta, South
Australia
The sharing of family histories and images
of the Mining Landscape at both Geevor and Moonta will be
presented in an exhibition, to be known as the ‘Cousin
Jack’ Project, opening at Geevor later in the year.
Fiona Young, Geevor’s Education Manager said “This
is an opportunity for Geevor to work with this very popular
Australian museum and to explore the historical and visual
connections. There has already been tremendous response from
Cornish families keen to learn about their relatives and the
history of their families who settled in Australia.”
Children can join in the exploration of the
mining heritage of Geevor in a photography and printmaking
workshop to be held on 7th August, creating photographs, collograph
plates and prints and learning how to take a quality photograph
and print it. More information can be obtained from Fiona
Young at Geevor, tel. 01736 788662
9th July 2007
ARCHAEOLOGY WALK AT GEEVOR
Geevor Tin Mine is marking National Archaeology
Week with a guided walk to some of the local moorland sites
on Sunday 15th July, led by National Trust Archaeologist Paul
Bonnington. Paul is a brilliant guide to local antiquities
and has expert knowledge of Bronze and Iron Age culture in
the area.
Paul will lead visitors to interesting, yet
hard to find archaeological sites and investigate the huge
richness and history of the far west of Cornwall. The aim
of this annual event is to encourage young people and their
families to visit sites of archaeological and historical interest
to see archaeology in action and to take part in activities
on-site.
“The scenery is of course wonderful
and all we need is fine weather to make it perfect”
said Bill Lakin, Chair of the Trustees at Pendeen Community
Heritage, the charity that manages Geevor for Cornwall County
Council.
The guided walk sets off from the
car park at Geevor Tin Mine on Sunday 15th July at
2.00 pm and is free!

2nd July 2007
NATIONAL AWARD FOR GEEVOR
Geevor Tin Mine Museum & Heritage Centre
has been awarded a prestigious Sandford Award for Heritage
Education.
Geevor now stands alongside 150 Sandford
Award holders – an impressive list that includes Edinburgh
Castle, Hampton Court Palace, The Tower of London, the Roman
Baths and Pump Room in Bath, Kenilworth Castle, Blenheim Palace
and The Wallace Collection. Bill Lakin, Chair of the Trustees
at Pendeen Community Heritage, the charity that manages Geevor
for Cornwall County Council, said “We are all thrilled
to be joining such exalted company!”
Sandford Awards are presented by The Heritage
Education Trust to historic houses, museums, galleries, cathedrals,
gardens and historic artifacts within the historical and cultural
environments of the United Kingdom and Ireland in recognition
of the quality of their educational services and facilities
and their outstanding contribution to heritage education.
Geevor was inspected on May 24th by a panel
of independent Judges during a visit by pupils and teachers
of Buryan School. The current panel of Sandford Award Judges
is drawn from professional educationalists including OFSTED
Inspectors, former head teachers, education consultants and
heritage property based education officers. Jo Buckingham,
Geevor’s Education Development Officer said “The
children’s behaviour was impeccable during the inspection,
they were obviously enjoying their workshop and although the
school’s teachers were aware of the Judges, the children
didn’t feel that their experience of Geevor’s
tin mining heritage was being examined.”
The Award is an endorsement of the excellent
work in education undertaken by all the staff at Geevor. An
intense development programme of learning workshops has been
undertaken over the past two years and school visits to the
site have increased dramatically. Geevor’s education
team has ensured that the workshops available to schools link
into the National Curriculum and complement the work undertaken
in the classroom.
This year Jo Buckingham has visited schools
so that children can learn about tin mining and handle artefacts
before they visit Geevor. Feedback from the teachers has shown
that these visits are valuable in enhancing the visit. Pupils
studying tin mining at a Bude school were unable to visit
the site so Jo travelled to north Cornwall to take Geevor
into the classroom. Jonathan Palk, Acting Headteacher of the
school said, “Jo captivated them with her tales and
many thought that her session was the best of the week. Through
the objects and resources all the children had a chance to
get a real ‘feel’ of the mines.”
Fiona Young, Geevor’s Education Manager,
said “These are exciting times in Geevor’s development.
This award belongs to everybody working on site – the
staff pull together as a team to ensure that every education
visit is of a standard befitting the importance of tin mining
to the County of Cornwall.”
The attached photo shows pupils from Buryan
School during their visit to Geevor.

20th June 2007
‘HARD ROCK’ EXHIBITION
COMES TO GEEVOR TIN MINE
Geevor Tin Mine Museum & Heritage Centre
plays host to a major exhibition of art works created by pupils
of Education Out Of School, Hospital School (C.H.E.S.), Penair,
Pencalenick, Richard Lander, Roseland, Truro High and Truro
School.
The school groups collaborated on ‘Hard
Rock’, a major art project inspired by the unique mining
heritage of Cornwall, following a series of visits to Geevor
Tin Mine.
The students used a variety of media ranging
from wood to ceramic and worked with individual artists including
Diane Spiers, Artist in Residence at Geevor, to produce this
exciting exhibition. Fiona Young, Geevor’s Education
Manager said “What these young people have achieved
through this art project is truly inspiring. The standard
of work is quite exceptional and members of staff at Geevor
are thrilled to display the art throughout the summer so that
visitors to the site can enjoy their work. This is indeed
a celebration of our World Heritage Status”.
This is just the latest initiative in Geevor’s
ongoing commitment to broadening knowledge of Cornwall’s
mining history, and the county’s position at the forefront
of technological development during the Industrial Revolution,
through educational art experiences. Geevor is Britain’s
most complete tin mining site and attracts educational visits
from schools across the country and from mainland Europe.
Admission to the exhibition, organised by
the Combined Truro Schools Arts Events (CTSAE), is free and
the students’ work will be on show at Geevor for the
duration of the summer, from 29th June.
10th May 2007
GEEVOR’S CLIFF TOP CAFE´
REOPENS
The spectacularly situated Count House
Cafe? at Geevor Tin Mine stands on cliff tops with a floor
to ceiling, wall to wall window overlooking the rugged coastline
and Atlantic breakers crashing onto the rocks below. The new
management team, local couple Margaret and John Burford, prepare
and cook good wholesome food, using locally sourced ingredients
wherever possible. Customers can enjoy panoramic views over
the Atlantic and traditional, freshly prepared, home made
food at an affordable price, served in a warm and friendly
atmosphere.
The Café is rightly famous for its
traditional pasties, made from a generations old, secret recipe.
“They are our most popular dish - on a busy day we'll
sell a hundred or more” says Margaret “We only
use the best local ingredients so our visitors can be confident
they're getting a taste of the real thing - a genuine Cornish
Pasty." Margaret and John also make a vegetable and a
cheese and onion pasty option and a wide selection of snacks
and meals is priced from £2.30 to £4.70.
With a newly refurbished and equipped kitchen,
Sunday lunches at the Count House Cafe? are now on the menu.
Traditional roast beef with Yorkshire pudding, roast potatoes
and fresh vegetables, or roast chicken, is proving so popular
with locals and visitors alike that booking is now advisable
– telephone the Café on 01736 788662 - and with
home made puddings like apple pie, rhubarb crumble and steamed
syrup sponge pudding, all served with custard or cream and
an expanded range of home made cakes including Cornish Hevva
Cake, Lemon Drizzle Cake, Shortbread and Flapjacks, a brisk
walk round the Geevor site, the biggest mining history site
in the UK, is a must!
16th April 2007
VISITORS FLOCK TO GEEVOR
Managers at Geevor Tin Mine Museum &
Heritage Centre report a huge boost in visitors in the 12
months up to the end of March this year. The site, the UK’s
biggest mining history educational centre, attracted over
40,000 visitors for the first time, up 30% on the previous
year.
“With a new £3.8 million funding
package in place, Geevor is poised to increase visitor numbers
still further” said Bill Lakin, Chair of the Trustees
of Pendeen Community Heritage, the charity that manages Geevor
for Cornwall County Council. “Work is expected to start
on the next phase by the end of this month. This will include
a major programme of restoration of the historic buildings
of the site and the creation of a completely new set of museum
galleries. The project, when completed, will make Geevor not
just the best mining museum in the country but one of the
best museums in the world.” The target for the site
is to achieve the status of the National Museum of Hard Rock
Mining. “There are three national coal mining museums
already” explained Bill Lakin “and Geevor is the
most appropriate site in the UK for a hard rock museum.”
26th March 2007
FREE ADMISSION TO GEEVOR ON WORLD
HERITAGE DAY
Managers and staff at Geevor Tin Mine Museum
& Heritage Centre are to hold a World Heritage Day on
Sunday 1st April to celebrate the site’s World Heritage
Status. Unesco's award in the summer of 2006 of to the mining
landscape centred around 10 areas of the former mining districts
of Cornwall and West Devon.
The site, including the Museum, surface buildings
and the underground tour, will be open to all, free of charge,
on Sunday 1st April only. The highlight of the day will be
a unique chance to see how tin is produced. Local metalworker
and mining expert Geoff Treseder, who worked at Geevor as
a sampler for many years, collecting samples of ore from areas
of the mine that were being worked and analysing them for
tin and other mineral content, will demonstrate how the rock
containing tin ore is crushed, separated and smelted. The
entire process takes less than an hour.
Managers and staff at Geevor hope that as
many people as possible, especially those from the local area,
will take this chance to visit the site and find out about
the exciting new developments that will be taking place over
the next year, funded by a £3.4 million grant from Heritage
Lottery Fund and European Community Objective One.
The Cafe, now under new management, will be open to all as
usual, as will the shop, with a wide range of mining related
and other locally produced items.
27th March 2007
GEEVOR TIN MINE MUSEUM & HERITAGE
CENTRE
Last week, Geevor Tin Mine was a hive of
activity and invention as pupils from Mounts Bay, Humphy Davy
and Cape Cornwall Schools competed in Geevor’s Water
Wheel Scrapheap Challenge – to build a water wheel powerful
enough to pull a tram cart up a track way. Fiona Young, the
Education Manager at Geevor, said “The event was so
successful that we are planning to hold it every year. We’ve
also decided to open the challenge up to the public on Tuesday
the 3rd of April during the Easter holidays. So if anyone
is interested in taking up the challenge come to Geevor Tin
Mine and have a go!”
Visitors will design a water wheel to pull
a tram cart and build it, using glue guns and staplers, from
recycled milk cartons, plastic containers, plastic piping,
board and wooden pallets and crates collected from the Geevor
site and recyclable material provided by local companies supporting
the event. The water wheel that pulls the tram cart the greatest
distance within one minute will be declared the winner.
Next week, Jo Buckingham, Geevor’s
Education Development Officer, will be going into the schools
to award the prizes and the prestigious title of Scrapheap
Challenge Champions to the winning teams. Pictured is the
Humphry Davy Team, ‘The Terrible Twosome’ of Luke
Eddie and Forrest Harris with their waterwheel named Satin,
who won the prize of £200 worth of equipment for their
school for the fastest water wheel of the competition. Also
pictured is Cape Cornwall School’s team ‘The Lemonheads,’
Caroline Lay, Rosanna Evans and Rosie Brenton, who won a prize
of £50 worth of equipment for the design of their wheel
named The Wonder Wheel 2.
But the students took home more than prizes.
After the event, students from Mounts Bay School all said
that they had learnt something really interesting and that
science and engineering was fun, interesting and enjoyable.
For more information please contact Jo Buckingham
at Geevor on 01736 786059.
4th January 2007
NEW FUNDING FUELS REGENERATION
OF GEEVOR AND PENWITH
Shortly before Christmas Geevor Tin Mine
successfully overcame the final hurdle in its bid for a
£3.4m funding package that will bring new life to
Britain’s most complete tin mining site. Having become
a Scheduled Monument in 2005, Geevor was recognised by UNESCO
as a key part of the World Heritage Site for the Cornwall
and West Devon Mining Landscape in 2006. The funding will
be used to realise the potential of Geevor’s unique
heritage, the importance of which is now recognised both
nationally and internationally.
The funding package will help Geevor and
bring new opportunities to the local community. Trustees at
Pendeen Community Heritage, the charity that manages Geevor
for Cornwall County Council, recognise the need for properly
paid year round employment, and the need for career structures
that will help stop young people leaving the area, breaking
the pattern of low wage seasonal employment in tourism and
agriculture. The project sets targets to achieve these aims
and already the increasing visitor numbers have led to recruitment.
By next year there will 21.5 full time equivalent jobs at
Geevor and visitor numbers will rise from almost 40,000 per
year to 50,000. The wider impact on the local economy has
been assessed at £10m p.a. indirectly creating another
11 full time equivalent jobs. “This is just a start”
explains Bill Lakin, Chair of the Trustees of PCH. “The
next phase will be to develop more underground access for
visitors and give them the best underground experience in
the UK. The target for the site is to achieve the status of
the National Museum of Hard Rock Mining – there are
three national coal mining museums already, and Geevor is
the most appropriate site in the UK for a hard rock museum.”
The new jobs created both directly and indirectly
by the regeneration of the site and the increase in visitor
numbers will begin to address the problems of high levels
of multiple deprivation, low incomes, high unemployment and
poor health relative to the rest of the UK in the Penwith
district and areas surrounding Geevor identified by The Office
of National Statistics report of July 2006
The money will pay for local craftsmen who
will use their traditional skills to restore and conserve
19 derelict buildings on the site and create a new museum
in one of the old engineering shops. “We want to make
this not just the best mining museum in the country but one
of the best small museums in the world” said John Negus,
project officer for the works programme. The striking and
innovative design work for the new museum is being undertaken
by Gendalls: the Falmouth based design agency fought off competition
from the leading museum design houses in the country to win
the contract.
Bill Lakin concluded “In 2001 Pendeen
Community Heritage won the management contract to operate
Geevor and then, in 2004, Cornwall County Council extended
the contract for another 10 years. One of the central elements
of the tender submitted in 2001 was that Geevor had the power
to transform the local area. This new funding will enable
us to start to deliver this transformation.”