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Derbyshire lead mining history - Mining customs |  | Derbyshire lead mining history - Mining customs: Encyclopedia II - Derbyshire lead mining history - Mining customs |  | Everything about the old lead industry, from the mining of ore to its sale, stemmed from the ancient claim of the monarch to all mineral rights. The whole structure was designed to enable the Duchy of Lancaster, a royal possession, to collect the king's royalties and, since these were farmed out, the miners paid them to the king's farmer. By the seventeenth century the local holder of the mineral rights was also the barmaster, who ran the industry, helped by deputies responsible for the liberties, and by the miners juries of the Barmote Cour ...
See also:Derbyshire lead mining history, Derbyshire lead mining history - Background, Derbyshire lead mining history - Mining methods, Derbyshire lead mining history - Technical change, Derbyshire lead mining history - Mining customs, Derbyshire lead mining history - Mine ownership, Derbyshire lead mining history - The king's farmers and chief barmasters, Derbyshire lead mining history - Chief barmasters and the 24, Derbyshire lead mining history - Deputy barmasters, Derbyshire lead mining history - Giving a mine, Derbyshire lead mining history - Collecting the dues, Derbyshire lead mining history - Title-holding and record keeping, Derbyshire lead mining history - Accidents, Derbyshire lead mining history - Mine drainage, Derbyshire lead mining history - Smelting by cupola, Derbyshire lead mining history - The end of lead-mining in Derbyshire |  | | Derbyshire lead mining history, Derbyshire lead mining history - Accidents, Derbyshire lead mining history - Background, Derbyshire lead mining history - Chief barmasters and the 24, Derbyshire lead mining history - Collecting the dues, Derbyshire lead mining history - Deputy barmasters, Derbyshire lead mining history - Giving a mine, Derbyshire lead mining history - Mine drainage, Derbyshire lead mining history - Mine ownership, Derbyshire lead mining history - Mining customs, Derbyshire lead mining history - Mining methods, Derbyshire lead mining history - Smelting by cupola, Derbyshire lead mining history - Technical change, Derbyshire lead mining history - The end of lead-mining in Derbyshire, Derbyshire lead mining history - The king's farmers and chief barmasters, Derbyshire lead mining history - Title-holding and record keeping |  | |
|  |  | Derbyshire lead mining history: Encyclopedia II - Derbyshire lead mining history - Mining customs
Derbyshire lead mining history - Mining customs
Everything about the old lead industry, from the mining of ore to its sale, stemmed from the ancient claim of the monarch to all mineral rights. The whole structure was designed to enable the Duchy of Lancaster, a royal possession, to collect the king's royalties and, since these were farmed out, the miners paid them to the king's farmer. By the seventeenth century the local holder of the mineral rights was also the barmaster, who ran the industry, helped by deputies responsible for the liberties, and by the miners juries of the Barmote Court. The lead industry is long gone, but its traditions are still maintained - the barmaster and the jury still meet in the Barmote Hall in Wirksworth.
It was the royal possession of the mineral rights and the royal wish to encourage lead mining, that dictated the two characteristic features of the old industry. Any man who could demonstrate to the barmaster that he had discovered a significant amount of ore was allowed to open a mine and retain the title to it as long as he continued to work it, and, secondly, mining took precedence over land ownership. No land owner or farmer could interfere with lead mining, though there were many attempts to limit its damage. In 1620 the Duchy of Lancaster's tenants at Brassington complained that lead mining was poisoning their cattle. In 1663 the Brassington manor court forbade miners from taking water from the village well to wash ore, on pain of a fine of 1/-, and in 1670 imposed fines of 3/4d on miners who left shafts uncovered or raised heaps of soil and waste minerals against fences, allowing cattle to climb over them. But the customs raised the possibility of ordinary families making a living independently of farmers or other employers and in the regular conflict between miners and landowners in the Wirksworth area the miners usually managed to hang on to them, though they did lose some of their fights.
Other related archives874, Anglo-Saxon, Bonsall, Brassington, Civil War, Cromford, Derbyshire, Domesday Book, Duchy of Lancaster, Elton, England, History of Derbyshire, Hopton, Lead ore, Matlock, Mining by region, Norman conquest, Romans, Sir John Gell of Hopton, Wapentake, Wirksworth, abbey, adit, ammunition, army, bellows, claret, galena, gunpowder, kibble, lead, limestone, methane, ninth century, ore, oxygen, parishes, railway, seventeenth century, shale, sixteenth century, smelter, smelting, wool
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Mining customs", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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