Lecht Mine
I have often passed this site, but given a fine afternoon with the benefit of extra daylight hours earlier this week, I decided to detour and attempt the short walk from the Lecht Mine car park. The track, however, was impassable, shin-deep in mud and thawing snowdrifts.
"Mining first took place at Lecht in the late eighteenth century, when the York Mining Company established workings here on land forfeited to the government following the 1745 Jacobite Rebellion. Both ironstone and manganese ore were mined at the site and were transported to Culnakyle, near Nethybridge, for smelting.
The most prominent feature of the mining landscape at Lecht is a two-storeyed, rubble-built building with a large arched doorway, which was restored and re-roofed with local slate in the 1980s. It dates from a second, post-1841 phase of activity at the mine, and probably served as a crushing mill, powered by a water wheel measuring almost 8m in diameter which was set at one of its gable walls. Other remains include a mill lade, dumps of waste material, and mine workings which consist of vertical shafts and adits which have been driven at a shallow angle into the hillside.
When production reached its peak during the 1840s, 63 people were employed at the mine. By 1847, however, cheap imports of manganese from Russia made it unprofitable and the mine closed."
https://canmore.org.uk/site/74949/lecht-ironstone-mine
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Photo Information
- Taken with Panasonic DMC-GX8
- Focal Length 400 mm
- Exposure Time 1/640
- f Aperture f/6.3
- ISO Speed 1250
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